• to abiretas. t • 'fr4 „star -4 Fy - ROZERT WRITE 1:=1,74119011.1 4 .1 1 (3 6.1E3 ;-6 W F, k A : 4l Wtr' .1,- ,4-'" -"With sweetest flowers enrich'd, From various gardens culi'd with care•" , i j•The following highly creditable production is from the pen of Mum. LTDTA JANE PaEnsos, of Liberty,Tiogacounty,Pa..the writer of those very pretty articles recently copied into our paper over the signature of "LYDIA JANE." FROM"TrIF: TIOGA COUNTY P/ICHNIX WIGHT'S or wortrAiv. ariirmA JANE I'IEII3ON. It is her right to love, to hope fur bliss; To give her heart in all its wiarni fresh beauty Imo a mortal s power— (Alas! Alas! For the young holy heart, that knows no e;uile, Whose utterance is all truth and which expects Like truth from others. 0 how rich its offering Its faith is like the pure deep arch of Heaven, Reflected in a calm bright world of waters; It gild., it occupies, it fills the whole.) 'TIN woman's right to give such holy heart, With such engrossing love and faith, to man; It is her right to hope for full returns Which in fruition would be perfect bliss. If she sees Her bright hopes blighted, her deep trust deceiv'd Wrecked like the blur arch's shadow in the deep, When the tierce storm God drives across its breas When she feels Her fond lore met with coldness or contempt, Whon cruel scorn or bitter jealousy Arc knowing on her life strings, and her heart But late so fresh and joyous, feels the blight, The withering blight of hope's last struggling sigh. That breaks life's tuneful chords, and wuunds the soul, While the poor fragments of her broken heart, And withered hopes, and wreck'ci and broken joys Still cling around the lov'd, the careless one— Then 'tis her right With meek cndurnnce and a patient smile To bear her lot in silence—silence? Aye, To whom should she complain? if he for whom She left her father's hearth, and watchful care, Her mother's soothing voice, and gentle eye, Her brothers frolick love—and the sweet smile, And fond endearments of that cherub band, Of young and joyous sisters, and the haunts Of laughing childhood, and uublemish'd youth; Scenes and companions, which no after joy Can e'er supplant, and which the ills of life Bind closer to the spirit's memories Aye if he For whom her young heart made with cheerfulness So great a sacrifice, has pierc'd that heart, And smitten that confiding spirit through With many sorrows—Oh to whom on earth Shall she reveal her pain, and deep despair? If he has broken up her trust in him, Who can she confide In? Then 'tis hers To lock her grief in silence in her breast The while it drinks life's flowing fountain dry, Her-heart is broken, yet its shreds are his, Her eyes are humid—yet they court his smile, Her feet are weary of the load of life, And yet she follows with his destinfes The strange and cold world over—'Tis her right When wrong, or scorn, or injury cloud his brow To soothe him, or endure his cold repulse Without a bitter word —to seek his case, To labor for his comfort—to deny Herself, and seek hie happiness alone, Making its emanations all her bliss. 'Tis her right To bollix friend when all the world forsakes, To sootho the wound that treachery has made, To vindicate hie name and speak his praise. 'Tin hers to watch with soft and stealing tread. Pale cheek, neglected dress, and hollow eve, By tears and watching faded, round his bed When pain and fever prey upon his To soothe his anguish, to assuage his pangs, To cool his burning brow, and calm his soul, Performing cheerfully each irksom ta•k, Aid meekly bearing all his peevishness. • While one kind word, or glance of gratitude', -lfakes her heart throb, and brings the thrdhug Is! rb, gone days, thro' her poor blighted br ast; Ah! momentary flush of joyousness— . It leaves a spirit sadder than before 'Tis hers to prove What 'tis to be a mother— all th pangs, The hopes, the fears, the anguish, the delight The cares the w itchings, the solicitu.!es, Experienced by maternity alone. Oft 'tis here To See the counts bud blighted, to behold Her cherish'cl infant pte.• and waste away, While all her cares ar• •x..reised iti vain, Her prayers unbe..ded. and her hitter teors Shed utterly in vain her child must die! With swimming brain she puts its wither'd lips To her full breast, it cannot sip th. balm That fed its little life; leeble it moans, And lifts its heavy eye with wistful look, To her who eaniv t save or soothe death's pangs, And they she feels the bitternesa of dralle— Agairetit hers. (0 Father! front my lip Withhold the brim of this moil bitter cup) . - .;;;To see a dear young daughter, beautiful, "Aid pure as morning, e'er one stealing foot pass'd amongst its dew drops; e'er one breath e come abroad upon its balmy air; - 75 An innocent but too confiding girl, Deceived, undone, and lost for ever more! ••-• Then 'tis her lot to sorrow o'er a son -.ll .. duiled of young life's innocence, and hope * Whelna'd in the vortex of licentiousness, ..Shun'd by the guiltless, pitied by the good, Hated, and aimed at, by self-righteous men; And feared, and itied, by the innrx•ent And this is he upon whose boyish days She looked with joy, with 'wide, and ardent hope, For whom she watched and prayed, and who at last Brings her no mood but shame, and prayers and tears— These complicated ills 'tis hers to bear And smile beneath their pressure when the heart is swollen almost to bursting, and the tear Lies ill the eye lid ready to gush, forth; And the deep spirit feels the venemed wound That is of all ills hardest to be borne— Still she endures— A h blessed be His name Mahal; accorded even to her a right In Christ our consolation—when she sees The hopes of this world blighted, and the joys On which her young heart dotted fall away, And all her brilliant expectations change, As the bright vapors of a summer morn Change to dark clouds, that render night more drear; Oh then how precious is the right divine That makes the christian's consolation hers, Amidst the wars of life's mad elements, She proves the peace that passes understanding, MO feels that 'tis a blessed right to die, T. sleep in Jesus, and awake in Heaven— T. •se, these are woman's lights, assured by God A d man accords no other! LOVE THEE, DEAREST! ) Love thee oty,„tweal? Hear me—never Will my Mid vows be forgot! May I perish, and forever. When, dear maid, I love thee not! Then turn not from me, deareatt— Listen! Banish all thy doubts and fears! And let thine eyes with transport glist en ! What bast thou to do with tears? Dry them, dearest!—Ah, believe me, Love's bright flame is burning still! Though the hollow world deceive thee, Here a heart that never will! Dost thou smile?--A cloud o(sorrots , Breaks before Joy's rising suu' Wilt thou give thy hand?—To•murrow Hymen, dearest, makes us one! AUTUMNAL EVENING. When day, with fearful beam Mays Among the opening clouds of even. And we can almost think we pow Through golden violas into Heaven: Those hue, that make the in. decline. Stll soft, Ito radiant, Loa; art thine!. ~/i• I 4 My good render, you must excuse my enthusi ft has been said that Niagara cannot be scribed. I think it can be. Cannot one record in paper the thotufitts provoked by the objects of grandeur and magnificence that have met his c•rc! Verily, I trove so; and I will try. The first mi -, talse corrected by an approach to Niagara, is tai width. Von have supposed it an outlet front one lake to another, pressed into narrow bounda ries and urged on by irresistable impulses. You were deceived by fancy. The river is like some bay of lin ocean; as if indeed the Atlantic and Pa cific, one far below the other, should meet, by the firmer being narrowed to the width of one or two miles. and falling to the depth of more than two hundred feet. with rocks and islands on the edge of the vast gulf, frowning and waving between. Very HOOII we reached the Pavilion. The se lection of an apartment, visitation to the barber, and the donning of a cool summer dress, were all speedily accomplished. The ceaseless hum of the Falls was in my hearing—it shook the win- 1 dows of the Pavilion, front which I gazed. Below, at a few rods distance, the mighty Niagara plung ed into its misty abyss: above, to the south, it seemed US if an ocean, fierce as that tide which 'keeps due on to the Propontic and the Helles pont,' was rushing madly down to some undis covered cavern, where its fury was lost and sus pended forever. Descending through the garden and the open common which intervene between the Pavilion and the distant river to the eastward, we struck the road, and observed the sign which pointed 'u•To •curs FALLS. Here let me say a word, which I think will give the idea of Niagara vividly to one who has never seen it. It seemed to me, as I looked from the window of the Pavil ion that the river was very nearly on a level with the house. Well, I passed over the places I have mentioned; and at the guide-post aforesaid, we began to make a most precipitous descent, over rude stair-cases, bedded in miry clay. In a few moments we were nearly on a level with the river, which was in full view, and close at hand. At that instant, the first impression of the vast power of Niagara struck my mind; but it was faint and feeble, compared with those that succeeded. For miles, looking upward at the stream, it resembled a foaming ocean, vexed by the storms of the equi nox. We proceeded to the house which heads the perpendicular descent to the bed of the river, at the foot of the Falls. Those who dress for deeds of aquatic daring with more deliberation than myself, would have changed their ordinary attire for those simple and coarse habliments usu- , ally adopted by those adventurous spirits who get; their drenched certificate for going under the sheet—but for my part, I had not the patience.— Endowing myself with an oil-cloth surtout, I be_ gun to descend the stair-cosi) leading to the base ! of the cataract. The descent seemed interminable. I thought I had travelled an hour, still moving round and round—in darkness, and alone. It was a solemn probation, during which I had time to nerve my spirit for the grandeur and the awe with which it was soon to be impressed. At last, I made my egress from the stair-case into the presence of the Wonder. My first idelt-was, that a tremendous storm lamed since I began to descend. Beverl! rails to 42 1 _11 3 1:3a21)J143 Oct- The New York "KNICKEREOCK ER con ceive to be tale of the best periodicals extant We are never disappointed when we open it—hut always find its pages filled with interesting and amusing articles The productions of one of its contributors alone (OL LAPOD) are worth ten times more than the subscrip tion price of the work. To give our readers a sample of 011apod writings,we copy from the Knickerbocker for October the following account of the author's visit to, and description of, the FALLS OF NIAGARA. AT the distance of five miles from Niagara Falls, you catch the first distinct view. Is it su blime? No—for distance so softens and deceives, that you cannot appreciate it.. You strain your onward-looking eyes, till the retina aches with gazing. What do you see? A cloud of appa rent smoke, along the northern border, the nil ultra of the lake you are ploughing; and on ei ther side all is apparently a wide shore of rocks and woods—and beyond, a terrible gulf, of which you see nothing but the ceaseless cloud that rises at its dim and dismal edge. 'And that is Niagara!' said I, as the moun taninus spray, volume after volume, swelled up ward in the sun. 'Well I seem disappointed. 'Do your said my friend, the legislator, with a triumphant accent on the first branch of the inter rogation. 'You see the cataract is as yet afar,pfri: : just put your hand to your ear, guaillim*Orm the tumult of the machinery, and tell me if you do not hear something?' I did so; and sonorous, full, and replete with a sense of awe, the voice of the cataract swelled in my ear. All now was expectancy and enthusiasm. could scarcely stand still. • Before me, like the pil lar of fire to the host of the Israelites, rose tha eternal column of snowy mist, tinct and garnish ed by the sunbeam—and I had caught the soutu of Niagara! I scarcely know' how I left Chippewa. I am aware that all my travelling movements and pre cautions were executed with habitual discretion; but I cannot explain to any one the new sensa tions I experienced on our way to the Falls.— When at the distance of some two or three miles from the cataract, there seemed to be an increasing shadow, like that of an eclipse, in the atmosphere. The dimness increased; and on passing a lapse of woods, and emerging again in sight of the river, I felt assured that a storm was coming on. I or dered our postillion to atop. 'ls there no house,' I enquired, between this and Niagara? There is a thunder shower coin ing on; I hear it growling.' It would have done your heart good, to have heard the laugh of that driver. It was loud and long; it bubbled up from his heart, as ifjhat he hail just heard was the best joke he had listened to for years. 'Bless your soul, friend, it's not going to rain. What you see, is the cloudy mist, and what you hear, is- the roar of them Falls, yonder. Jet wait a minute—and then—, 'Stop!' said I, rising in our harouche, gilded by the westering sun, I caught, as we wheeled around n clump of trees, the first view of the vast green gulf and circle of the Horse-Shoe Fat "I WISH NO OTHER HERALD, NO OTHER SPEAKER OF MY LIVING ACTIONS, TO KEEP MINE HONOR FROM cortsvprioN."--siteari ezewtex.n.avP24l,, rpacb, auwp:Dazr 0 Oeia 3 421atrliaiLa ad. aotuao "Who made the world, and heaped the waters far Above its loftiest mountain." Whence came those ceaseless and resounding floods? From the "hollow hand" of Omnipotence! Fancy stretches and plumes her advgnturous ons from this point: she goes onward to the Lip, per Lakes, and their peopled shores; she pursues her voyage to the dark streams and inland seas of the west; and returning, finds her delegated waters pouring heavily and with eternal thunder down that dizzy steep! Thought, preying upon, itself, is lost in. ono deep and profoundT - r,,,t c w me,ollectio , n—of prospect. 1 , 0 a:. change one word from Byron, to exprerN icy meaning: "By those that deepest feel, is ill cxprest The indistinctness of the laboring breast: Where thousand thoughts begin, to end in one, Which seek from all the refuge found in none " Front the spot of which I speak, you can easil imagine that there has come upon you the deluge. or the day of doom. The voices of eternity see] to burden the air; look up, and the dark rocks, like the confines of legethon, seem tottering to their hill; where you stand, the whirlwind which livars upon its pinions drops heavier than those of the most dismal tempest that c' IT rent the wilder ness on land, or wrecked an armament at sea, is moaning and howling. Castilla a glance at the tipper verge of the Fulls, you see the turbulent ra pids, thick, green, and high, shrinking back, as it were, from their perilous descent, until a mass of waves behind urges them, resistless, onward; to speak in thunder, and to rise in mist and foam, the children of strife, yet parents of the rainbow, that emblem of peace. I once asked an elderly friend, in whose domicil I was a favored inmate, and who suffered much from the gout, whether there might be any pain, known to myself, which would compare with it. "No!" he replied: "I never met any thing of the sort in my life: there is nothing on earth like i 4 and I am destitute of any descriptive comparison. I tun not dead at present; I hau'n't been as yet to Tophei ; and therefore can't tell whether gout is like that, or purgatory; but I believe it to be as j near that as any thing." It is thus with Niagara. There is no emblem: it has no rival—it is like no rival. Its mullAdinous waves have a glory and a grandeur of their own, to which nothing can be added, and from which nothing can be taken away. It has been said, that the tremors or presenti ments of those who march to battle, are dissipated by the bustling of caparisoned horses, the rolling of the war-drum, the clangour of the trumpet, the clink and fall of swords—"the noise of the captains and the shouting." Some such kind of inspiration is given to the thoughtful and observant man,who goes under the Great Fall of Niagara. As I moved along behind my sable guide, holding on to his dexter, ••Even as a child, when scaring sounds molest. Clings close and closer to its mother's breast;" while the waters dashed fiercer and more fiercely around about me, methought I had, in an evil hour, surrendered myself to perdition, and was now being drugged thither by the ebon paw of Satan. Shortly, however, tho stormy music of Niagara took possession of my soul; and had Abaddon himself been there, I could have followed him home. For one moment, only, I faltered. The edge of the sheet nearest the Canada side, from its rude and fretting contact with the shore rimw.mrmiwiwrffmm/Immm Near Termination Rock, you pass by that dim border of the Fall, and exchanging recent dark- nerve for the green and qpectnil light struggling through the- - I - hick water, you are enabled to dis- cem where you are. My God! It is enough to make an earth-tried angel shudder, familiar though he may be with the wonder-workings of the Eter nal. Look upward! There, forming a dismal curve over your head, and looming in the decep- tiro and unearthly light, to a seeming distance of many hundred feet, moaning with that _ceaseless anthem which trembles at their base, the rocks arise, toward Heaven—covered with the green ooze of centuries—hanging in horrid shelves, and ap- parently on the very point of breaking with the weight of that accumulated sea which tumbles and howls over their upper verge! There is no the south, the Falls, dimly seen, boomed and thundered with a noise so stunning, that I was almost distracted. At my feet, there rolled on ward what seemed a lake of milk—having about it nothing dark—not even a glimpee of water-co lor. I saw, near by, a tall black figure, smiling graciously, like some good-natured Charon, ready to transport his customers across the River of Death. He announced himself as the conductor of gentlemen under the Falls. Taking his hand, I approached them. At a certain point, as wo drew nigh, I begged him to stop. The mist had surged upward from my vision, and before me broke dawn, as it were, Me Atlantic, from a height, so dizzy that it made the eye shrink from gazing; the distant side of the vast semicircle hid from view by a rainbow, and the awful mass of green, mad waters, rushing to the abyss, with a noise like the breaking up of chaos! What in like Mat scene? It is itself alone; to depict it, comparisons fail. You must describe itself. I know not how it was, but such a RC of awe and majesty descended at that mornen n my spirit, that I burst into tears, and MA ' ''..cl t t through every nerve. What an awful hum otid moaning pierced the hearing sense! Above me, hideous rocks rose for hundreds of feet; dark shelves, wet with the eternal tempest around tl4m; and at every moment a stormy gust would drive a deluge of water in my face, taking my breath, and chilling me, as it were in the depth of the solstice, even to the bone. As we shouldered the dark ledges which extended under the sheet., I al most shrank from the desperate undertaking; and never did lover, howsoever deeply skilled in 'holy palmistry; press the jewelled hand of his mistress with .such ,affection as that wherewith 011apod grasped the sable.,fingers of his African conductor. His splay feet, and amphibious-looking heels, seemed to stamp • him some creature of the de ments; a Calihan, schooled to generous offices by some supernatural master. When you approach within ten feet or so of that tremendous launch of waters, then is the time to pause for a moment, to steep and saturate your soul with one preeminent and grand remembrance. For me, if millimm of human beings had been around me, I should have felt alone—and as oho who, having passed beyond the dominions of mor tality, stood presented before the marvels of his God! It is a place for the silent adoration of to heart for Him Iscene of sublimity on earth comparable to this.— You stand beneath the rushing tributes from u hundred lakes; you seem to hear the wafflings of imprisoned spirits, until, fraught 4,14 filled with the spirit of the scene, you exclaim-;--“Tortc is A Gold—and this vast cataract, awful, overpow ering as it is, is but a play-thing of his hand.!" There is one dreadful illusion to which the un trained eye is subject, under this water-avalanche. You know, travelled reader, that when you jour ney swiftly in a rail-road car, the landscape seems moving past you with the speed of lightning.— You see distant trees a:A fields, apparently out of compliment to the Leomotive, wheeling otT obse quiously to the tir.ht 5;..: left. Every grove seems engaged in a rigado;.n. This Musa thus is par ticularly discernible on the face of Niagara, when you are beneath the Falls. Look at the sheet but for one moment, and you find yourself rising up-' ward t% ith the swithicso of thought. Turtling your eye to the rocky wall whisll bounds you, for a moment you give a side-long glance at its dizzy extent. Heavens!--what was that noise? Did not a portion of the rock above—some massy mountain of stone—then till? No—it was only the thunder of commingled rupids, which united at the edge of the precipice, and rushed impetu ously into the abyss together. It is this which makes such heavy music—such solemn tones—in the distant voice of Niagara. A most thorough bath—such an one as I never took before—gave roe, after my changed dress, and proper probation, a superior appetite for joining a supper party at the Pavilion. • I q.ernember the pleasure I once enjoyed, during a summer sojourn at West Point, among congenial spirits. Every day, at dinner, in the large mirrorswhich bedeck the dining saloon at COZZEN'I4 capital establish ment, what time we discussed viands and wines, I could see the reflected Hudson and its shores— the distant mountains towering into the sky—and steam-craft moving; while . —"from town to town, The snowy sails went gleaming down." You seem to think, if you are any thing of an economist, at Niagara, that you are likely to get from your host the worth ey your money. He gives you "green or black tea," and all the appoint. ments of a good supper, and he flings in a view of Niagara from the, dining-room windows, without any extra expense! Its music shakes your hand as you lift your coffee to your lip; its bounding and agitated lapse smites your eye, as you sip the juice of the Moca berry—yet you never find it i' the bill. If you wish to be fleeced, however, employ a. guide to tell you when is the time to . say "Good gracious! how sublime!" and to show you the thousand little nothings in the vicinity of the Falls, which, compared with them, arc, as it might be, to pit a flea in fight against a lion or an elephant. Ye blind guides!—door-keepers of the gates of sub- limity, which you cannot speak of or describe, save its the stale terms of business!' Ye tell .a man Whoso heart, and mind are overflowing with awe and wonder when to use his eyes! Ye arc varlets all; akin to that enterprising man, mentioned, if I mistake not, by Goldsmith, who issued proposals to bite off his own nose by subscription!—or rath er, to that builder of chateaux, who exclaimed, in a paroxysm of delight, as he stood ut the foot of the Canada Fall, "By the Lord!—what a glorious place f o r washing hats!" Hero let me play the counsellor to the visitor at Niagara. I offer my opinion with confident diffidence. Doubtless you desire to receive at the Falls, and to carry away with you, the strongest impression. Do not therefore go down to the foot of the cataract on the Canada aide. Take your coup (I'm'il a. you drive in your carriage to the Pavilion. Take your supper there, as did the goodly company- of your adviser, 01lapod. Sup posing you are an American—which I trust you are—you will of course feel a sort of pride in be lieving, that the best view is on the American Hide. And so it is: yet to look at the United States' part of the cataract, you would say it was a mere mill-dam. It is thus that distance deceives You cannot see the movement of that far-off wa ter, or hear distinctly the horrid sound with which it plunges from its cloud-kissing elevation to the depth below. But if you would obtain the deep. est and strongest thoughts of Niagara, do as I say. Observe the semicircular cataract on the Can ada side from the esplanade of the Pavilion—bu do not go down to the base of the Fall. Let the view remain upon your mind as a beautiful pie- Lure; keep the music in your ear, for it is a stern and many-toned music, that you cannot choose bu hear. Order the coachman to transport your lug gage to the ferry below the Falls—some mile or so. There embark: you will be frightened, doubtless, as you gaze to the south, and see the awful torrent pouring down upon you; hut you may take the word of the ferry-man that for some dozen or twenty years he has never met with an accident: you may believe him, for the air of truth breathes through his large grim whiskers. You will see the waves curling their tubrulent tops, and dark rocks emerging from their milky current and seething foam, within a yard of your prow but be not afraid. You are soon at the foot of And here, after all, kind reader, is the place for a view. Do not look about you much. Be content with the thunder in your cars, and wait until some practiced and tasteful observer, kindly acting as your cicerone, bids you stop just at that point on the stair-case where the plunging river, on the American side, dashes downward in its propulsive journey. There, by the onward plunge of the cataract, which bounds in a ridge over the abyss, describing as it were a circular fall, the, view of Goat Island is completely cut off, and the whole sweep of the Falls—Canadian, American and all —is seen at once; apparently one unbroken waste of stormy and tumultuous waters. You must be a demi-god, if you can stand on that hallowed ground,' shaking with the accents of a God, span ned with his bow, resounding with , his strength, and laughing in his smile, without emotions of indescribable wonder. Thus, with a trembling hand, and a spirit saturated with the grandeur of the scene, 011apod pencilled his hasty, weak, and inexpressive scrawl: Elena speaks the voice of God! Let man be dumb, Nor, with his vain aspirings, hither come; That voice impels these hollow-sounding floods, And with its presence shakes the distant woods; These groaning rocks the Almighty's finger piled— For ages here his painted bow has smiled; Mocking the changes and the chance of time— EternObcautiful—serene.—sublimel Vataf The Gambler. What a miserable being is the gambled .How racked and torn his heart! How uncertain in all his ways! The increasing avarice for more of that which is rot his, gives him no peace. The regularity of business and the acquisition of wealth in the usual way, are too monotinons. His fa mily presents no pleasure for hiM. The smiles of his wife—the prattle of his children—the bright, peaceful fireside at home—are exchanged for the society of blasphemers, drunkards, revilers, extor tioners and murderers. Watch him a moment in the course of-his mad and ruinous cnrrcer. The night is rude and gusty without—but not more so than his bosom. He has left his home. He win,Lq his way—not through the public street—tart gropes along some dark and noisesome lane. How loathsome a passage to a pit. And the voice of rioting—the !torrid curse— the exulting laugh—the noisome smell—affect his senses and a momentary feeling of disgust runs through his frame, yet onward he rushes, and is in their midst, n gambler. The implements of ruin aro well arangcd. A round the room are seated the high and low, the rich and poor—men of every clime, of every age— here there is no distinction. 7'he wheel r f Poriane acts well its part. He stakes and with the rest waits anxiously the result. "l'is gone! He stakes again, Nis won, again, 'tis lost. How exciting! Each moment adds new impulse to go on. Again he looses, and is more excited, and then with hor rid oath, stakes ALL. • A wandering thought of home—wife—children, flies across his brain: a pang of sorrow—hut 0, how quickly drowned in the intoxicationg - r1:;• , ! Drink, drink, drink! The wheel is turned—the die is cast. arc counted, and, as with heavy presses his burning—beating brow, cries lost, He is out in the cooling breeze. shines brightly out. And hero aul little twinkling star, peers its way through tin cloud. One moment, and his wife, his chitdror., his fireside flit by. But no, he has ruined them-- they are hiniseless, friendless, how can he meet them? Never: the hist, the infatuated resolve of him, who thus forsakes the honorable and manly walks of life is made. • • He is a suicide. Review of Glib. What a variety of pleasing and painful thoughts and feeling's does the recollection of past years excite in the mind! I have seen days of prosperi ty and gladnem, and days of adversity and sorrow. I have enjoyed the love of 17:•!:ti‘e: . - f, lends. and conversed with the Win and good. Pt:t ma ny of those who were the nearest and deare:J. to me, are gone down to the grave;' and I stand an aged tree, surrounded by, a now genc; - .li6n. The spring is past; the summer is ended; the autumn is almost closing, and winter is at hand. Shall I indulge in sadness and grief! No: I would most thankfully acknowledge the divine goodness. I have enjoyed numberless blessings and I now put my severest trials among them. What blessings in Providence haVe I to recount; God has preserved me, provided for me, guided me, and "done all things well." I have had friends and benefactors. The evil which I feared did not befall me; and good things which I never expect ed, have been granted me. Truly, it becomes me to be thankful. Whorl I look to spiritual blessings, how shall I express my gratitute! I might have been left to spend my years in ignorance, pride, and folly; but in the tender mercy of the Most High, I have been made acquainted with the way of life, and peace, and everlasting blessedness. I might have been at this moment a careless, presutning, miserable trifler on the borders of eternity: but "by the grace of God, lam what I am." . But what shall I say, on the review of my con duct? What have I rendered to the Lord for all his benefits? What have I done for his glory, and for the good of men? When I look on the talents committed to my care, what shall i say respecting my use or abuse of them? Have I faith fully improved my spiritual blessings, and fixed as a true follower of Christ? Alas! I have not fully and rightly improved any ulent; and mercy; any portion of the divine bonn y. atlnter not into judgment with thy servant, O Lord; .fur in thy sight shrill no man living be *ustified." But I trust that, through divine grace, I have not been altogether faithless, inactive, and useless. I have reason to be ashamed and penitent; but I have reason also to be thankful and rejoice. I have not wholly forgotten God, and his word, and the duty of the true Christian. I now find it an easy thing to discover how I should have acted; what I ought to have done; and I chide myself for my former indolence and perverseness. How much of life has been wasted n doing nothing! How much of it ha been spen in fine speculations, airy fancies,specious purposes, and inefficient resolve! How small a portion of good for myself, and in doing good for the benefit of others! What reason have I to admire the goodness and forbearance of God; I would magnify his grace, by which I am what I am: by which only I have been enabled to order my conversation in any measure aright. I would magnify that grace which has done great things for me; but I would take shame and confusion to myself, when I con- eider how littlo I have done fur my divine Belie- I acknowledge my. numberless transgressions and my unprofitableness: and I extol tilts - divine goodness, by which, I trust, I have been redeemed from ignorance, sin, and death: and I cannot re fuse to cherish the hope, that He who has been good to me will yet continue his goodness to me, and that I shall praise Him for ever—Jehovah— Father, Son, and Spirit—the Creator, Redeemer, and Stinctifier. O my Soul! thou bast been made to take the Bible for thy teacher and guide. Thou haat been enabled to receive, in somo measure, the offOred blessings, and to rejoice in the consolations, of the gospel of Christ. Thou knowest spiritual things in a spiritual manner. Be humble and penitent. as thou considercst thy past misconduct; and grate- fully acknowledge the divine goodness. While the outward man totters and decays, while thin world is receding and fading from thy view, let [VOL. 77-NO. 33. - ,14unact:rstistittizazzumeniciNWP faith prevail !'t illy hr gratituifp and p ra i se . ''my li i • :ill-ill imto Thrr; P1:1; C , 31;1. : t i `15.1 all tl , t , il.iy Thou art now, tt I.ly . .11ir t Upon t f,•1111 WhiCh tho past and the two:T. llothol - with v:hieli !lon hf. , t f " ;:r a 1.. (jrir and in wl,:r1) :hy cro ' n to liPir)rtl 0100 c,. the cov.a.,i c.t thy 4:•&:-/ri, art world Wi'. l )9lli 0,31. ie eve Value, 1) my r...^,...ant tliy earth. Use. a grCa ter 01 1 .4;1 , i:cc! 11 , 1dEty. thy last iiivs 111 %.*.it•!;- ageous !ero the even till the .tun for ever from coo •e - a If ; . 4 a world which thou nrt to lug the 'spirit of that world on with! , that) act ntw 't to enter, the conclusion of thy nice be like a fine autumnal eveninr clouds and dark shades; but shall shine forth; and then thou ic with, hope, and peace. Most merciful and gracious Lord, r thankfiet: acknowledge thy goodness to me during days. Mercy and goodness have hitherto 1;4 me. ' , Cast me not off in the time forsake me not when mrstrength fr.ileth;* .r.Ct me penitent and humble - , thankful and , . . enable me to spend the residue of life to 77 y,, , 42,ry, and to the good of fellow-creatures; throtiglis Christ our only Saviour, Amen. VARIETY. /ZEAL 1, 1 11'. • HT JO+ . ' , 3r A. III:WITT. thou. lovel‘•:inet M .: - lip i 041 the got 4 1 !,• , ; (I.:aft With melting eyes v . :urn th, .1 1 1 ,, e1:Te• rt , l , y gem each drop th.th r ht rlittering in the c, stal n';-1t„ Our ii TA i- ;:.“ drink the smiliag beam, 1,!.,•dg0 to Rosabol I The het drop now i. en my lips, It hangs there trembling wiirdelay; Each si;fi‘ - tl,e tv,fay;• Or r lilend it with the • - That glistens whil" I imeatile Fare:; if; erink the two to memory dear, heart-f . e% pledge to Rosabel., honi,h to thee—it is the last, - : .:nti , C.ol," ) ..lss away! no rot.;.tl the rnt.k.""Artt;f4 4 : C, %!'7 . 44 hat Wirh 1,!. minstrel's hair!--tbo' rpa, Beeh - I.rokort part still owns one raven— Ono silent mentory is nil that's leT For thou and him, fair Rosalie! 'WWI!' A orix;;.(sts or WED LOC K.—There is a great deal °firm!' end feeling in the subjoined piquant description of the discomforts of the bachelor.— May the married be thereby reminded to ciprcei iate their comforts, and the ascetic to expericnco practically, how the cares of life a.,-' 'i.;:': iiii dlel, and its joys increased by the presence of a soother of the former, and an enhancer .7f the latter. allone but the married man has a home in his old age; none hat; friends, then, but he; none but he knows and fi.els th a n -,...!.ice .Ithe (I;l:nestle heart, none but he lives anitcres.l."ri in b:4 green old age, amid the affections of his thilit:-;ra. Tbero is no tear shed for the old bachelor; there is no hind hand and ready heart to cheer him in his loneline4 and bereavement; there is none in whose eyes Ito can see himself reflected, and from whose lips ho can receive the unfailing assurances of care and love. No. The old bachelor may be courted for his money. He may eat. and drink, and revel, as such things do; and he may sicken and die in a hotel or garret,with plenty of attendants about him, like so many cormorants waiting for their prey.— But ho will never know what it is to be loved—and to live and to die amid a loved circle. He can never mow the comforts of the domestic fireside." DINNF.II ANEeTOTE.—Tho capabilities of a boiled edgebone of beef, may be estimated from what happened to Pope the actor, well known for his devotion to the culinary art. He recei ved an invitation to dinner, accompanied by an apology for the simplicity of the intended fare— a small turbot, and a boiled edgebono of beef— “ The very things of all others that I like,” ex claimed Pope; «I will come with the greatest pleasure;" and come he did, and eat ho did, till ho could literally cut no longer: when the word was given, and a haunch of venison was brought in, fat to be made the subject of a new poetical epistle. "For finer or fatter, Never ranged in a forest or smoked on a platter, The haunch was a picture for painters to study. The fat was so white, and the loan was so ruddy." Poor Pope divined at a glance the nature of the trap that had been laid fur him, but ho was fairly caught, and after a puny effort at trilling with a slice of fat, ho laid down his knife and fork, and gave way to a hysterical burst of tears, exclaiming, "A friend of twenty years standing, and to be ser ved in this manner."— Quarterly Review. LOGIC CIA ss.—Chip of the old Block.—As a specimen of the past utility of Logic Class in the University of Edinburgh, an anecdote is ,current, in which the son of a factious baronet, whose re sidence is not five miles from town, acted a part worthy of his descent. He was called up by the worthy professor of the time, and asked the note. ble question, "Can a man see without eyes'?" 'Yes,' was the prompt answer. "How, sir'!" cried .the amazed professor, ""can a man see without eyes?" "Pray, sir, how do you make that out?" "Ho can leo with one, sir," replied the ready-witted youth:, and the whole class shouted with delight ,at the triumph over tnetaphysics.—Loadon paper. Dn. .Totts.:sos..—A pedantic young man who eloteavored to imitate the superior writings of Dr. Johnson, and had even considered himself in sonic respects, his equal, one day said to the Dr., what do you slippage the world thinks of tisr Why,"gays thn Dr. , "I suppow they think mo ull dog, and you a tin kettle tied to my fait!." trzsly r:riuous are altrall . r happy. =MED