'.1 . .it.tt . ..: - . - 6,1,0-........11:rp0b1ic4.:_..t1.4, - itlkt [ 1) nrEfir.rit. Enrroit AND ritornirron VOL. P 0 E T Y. from the Baltimore Patriot I Could not Noy Farewell. I:= o. l who can say, Farewell! When the heart is on thr , tangl?? 'his sadder, than the hineral knell, (ler joys departed rung. J left thee—in thy bloom, With n•hat anguish who can tell , .1 tore my heatt away from thine, - .131/t could not say—farewell ! I narked the sini le upon thy lip, I lilt I:new it only mask'd thy g, , And could not ! I =ate the tear-drop in thine eye, And I;ksed it ere it tell— I thy velvet hand in mine, Ilut could not say--rminwELL! We think it gill do no body any harm to read these stanzas until they are heart•learned. A goo d man wrote theni and he must be a good man who puts them into practice Npeak Gently. Speak gently : it is better far To tole by love than tear. Freak gently: let no harsh words mar The good we might do here. Speak gently : love loth whisper low The vows that true hearts bind; And gently friendship's accents How, A treetion's yoke is kind. Speak gently to the little child, - Its love lit sure to - gain :" - Teach it accents sort and mild, It may not long remain. Spell; gently to the young, for they Will !Hive enough In bear. Pass throuttli this life as best they riia Tis full of anxious care. Speak gently to to the aged one, Grieve nut the careworn heart ; Th e , an d s of life are netuly run, Lot such iii peace depart. • Speak gently, kindly to the poor, le•t no harOt tone be heard; They have enough they must endure 41rthout an unkind word. Speak gently to the erring—know They nitist have toiled in vam : Perelmnee unkindness made them so, Oh win them back again. Speak gently! it who gave hi:4 life Tu bend man's stubborn %%ill, • NVbert ektrunits mere tierce , With ;trice, t•zttid to them, "Peace, be still.". -Speak gently : a little lying nntpped in the heart s deep well ; The good, the joy which it may bring Eternity shall tell. • 31 1 S A INT Prom the New lurk Observer. S IV ARIZ° IV'S PASSAGE OF Till GLARUS 11 V 11 EV. J. T. HEADILY . Forty-six years ago, one night in Sep tember, the peaceable inhabitants of the Muotta Thal were struck with wonder at the sudden appearance among them of mul titudes of men of a strange garb and lan guage. They had just gathered their herds and flocks to the fold, and were seeking their quiet homes that slept amid the green jutsturages, when, like a mountain torrent, came pouring out front every defile and mountain pass, These strange unintelligible beings. Front the heights of the Kenzig Cohn—from precipices the shepherds scarce dared to tread—they came stream ing with their confused jargon, around the cottages of these simple children of the Alps. It was, Suwarrow, with twenty four thousand Russians at his back, on his march froin Italy to join the allied force of Zurich. Ile had forced the passage of 8 .!• Ilothard, and had reached thus fir, when he was stopped by the Lake Lucerne, and was told that Korsakow and the main' Russian army were defiNited. Indignant and incredulous at the report, he would have hung the peasant who informed hint as a spy, had not the lady mother of St. JoscplCs nunnery interceded in his be half. here, in this great Alpine valley, the bold commander found himself com pletely su rounded. Monitor and his.battal ions look 41 down upon him from the stun- In it (lithe Muotta Thall ; Mortier and Mas t-vita blocked up its mouth ; while Lecon rbe hung on the rear. The Russian hear was denned, and compelled, for the first time in his life, to order a retreat. Ile wept in indignation and grief and adopted the only alternative left hint—to cross the Pragel in Glarus. Then commenced one' of those despe rate marches unparalleled in the history The passage of the St Ikruard 'by Bonaparte was a comfortable marelt compared to it; and linnuilial's world re• nowned exploit a mere child's play beside it. While the head of suwarrow's column had as oonded the Prag,el, and was lighting desperately at Nietels, the rear guard, en cuinheredwith the wounded, were strug gling in thii .. Alttutto Thal with Massetia and his battalions. Then these savage soli tudes shooNt to. the thunder of the cannon, arid the roat of the musketry. The star tled a Val:melte came leaping froln the heights mingling it sullen thunder with the ; roar of battle. The frightened chamois paused on the high precipice to catch the strange Uproar that tilled.the '' The shnple-hearted peasantry snit . .their green pasterages covered with battlingar mies, and the snowcapped height erirn soned with the blond of men. Whole coin- If ever - you find patties 101 l like snow wreaths from the looking savaged take *As, while the artillery ploughed through Bredled—at a lots for the dense mass of hutium flesh that dar- don't trouble him.' kened the gorge below. For ten succes-1 GOOD NATURE. sive days these armies marched and cons- IL-ill the misery of human life might be batted ; and yet here, on the eleventh, they extingaished, would meh alleviate the gen struggled with unabated resolution. Una- oral curse they lie under, by mutual offices ble to force the passage to Ntetels, Stywar- of compassion, benevolence and humanity. row took the desperate and awful resole- There is nothing, therefore, which we lion of leading his *eary and wounded ar- ouitlit more to encourage inourselves and my over the mountains into the Orisons. ! ofllol'B, tIMn that disposition olmind which Imagine, if you can, an awful solitude of in our language goes under the 'fiat' ol'good mountaMs and precipices, glaciers piled nature. one • above themther in solid grandeur. I Good nature is more agreable in conver- Cast your eve up one of those mountains, ! cation than wit, and gives a certain air to 7,300 feet above the level of the sea, along' the countenance which is more amiable whose bosom in a zigzag line, goes a nar- than beauty.. It shows virtue iu the fair rdw path, winding over the precipices and est light, takes off in some measure from snow fields,. till finally lust in the distant ! the deforinity of vice, and makes even. summit. 171) that difficult path, and into and impertinence supportable. the very heart of those fearful peaks, was There is 'no society or conversation to the bold Russian resolved to lead his 21,- be kept up in the world without good as 000 men. lure, or SOlllething which must bear its 10, , To increase the difficulties that beset pearance, or supply its place. For this him, and• render his deslruction apparently reason mankind have beets forced to invent inevitable, the snow fell on the morning a kind of artificial humanity, which is what he set out two feet deep, obliterating all tra- we express by the word good breeding.— ces of the path, and formingos it ,were, a For if we examine thoroughly the idea of winding sheet for his army• Its single file what we call so, we shall find it to he no and with heavy bearts, that mighty ~host, thing else but an imitation and mitnickry one alter another, entered the snow drills of good nature, or in other terms, fallibility, and began the ascent. Only a few miles complaisance and easiness of tel re could be made the first day, and at night, dueed into an art. without even a tree to kindle fir light around These exterior shows and appearances their silent bivouacs, the army laid. doWn of Iminanity render a man wonderfully in the now, the Alpine crags around them popular mill beloved, when they are found fi)r sentinels. The next day th e h ea d of oil upon upon a real good nature ; but site column reached the ridge, and lo! what without it are like hypocrisy in religion, a scene was spread out before them... ..Nu. ona bare form of holiness, Ivhich, when it one who has not stood on an Alpine sum- , is discovered, malA a makes a man more snit can have any conception of the utter detestable - than professed impiety, dreariness of this region. The mighty Good nature is generally born with us ; mountains, as far as the eye can reaeli, health, prosperity, and kind treatment from leaning along the solemn sky, y'hile . the ! the world r .are great cherisherS of it where deep silence - around is broken by no they find it ; but - nothing Is capable of lin-- ing thing. Only now and then the voice ! ding it up, where it does not grow of itself. of the avalanche is heard speaking in its ; It is one of the blessings oft happy • eon low thunder - tone from the depth of an aw- ; stitution, which education may improve MI abyss,' or the scream of a solitary eagle- lint not produce.—.lddison. circling-round sonic lofty crag. The bold Russian stood and gazed long and anxious :lV on the scene, and then turned to look on his straggling army, that, as far as - the eve could reach, wound, like a huge ana conda, over the white surthee of the snow. No - eolumn of sinolie rose in the desert wilds to elteerthe•sight, but all was silent, mournful, and prophetic. The winding sheet of the army seemed unrolled before them. No path guided their footsteps, and ever and anon a bayonet and a feath er disappeared together as sonic poor sol dier slipped oft' the edge of a precipice and 1U into Ihu abyss below. llondrcdo, vercome and disheartened, or exhausted with their previous wounds, laid down to die, while the cold wind, as it swept by, soon wrought a snow shroud for their, forms. The descent on the southern side was worse than the ascent. A freezing wind had hardened the snow into a crust, so that it frequently bore the soldiers. Their bayonets were thrust into it to keep them from slipping, and the weary and worn creatures were compelled to struggle to ; • I c ing borne away over the prcei- Ipices that almost momentarily stopped their passage. Yet even this precaution. was often,vain. Men saw their comrades, by whose sides they had fought in many a battle, shoot, one after another, over the diz zy verge, striking with their bayonets as they went, to stay their progress. The beasts of burden slipped from above, and rolling down on the banks, shot a way in wild eonffision, men and all, into the chasm that yawned at their feet. As they advanced, the enemy appeared BE OF Goon Cm Et: rt.—.PuEss on the precipices around, pouring a seat-I Though the hour be dark, though the dun tering, yet destructive th'e, on the straggling geon door be bolted and barred upon us, multitude. Such a sight these Alpine sol- strong hands and stout hearts can and will holes never saw—such a march no army cause light to shine upon the darkness, and ever made before. I n looking at this pass ntake a way of escape. Then be of good the traveller cannot believe an aria Y cheer, oye of little faith, hope for bright. 21,000 men were marched over it through jen days, when misery and ruin, and pov die fresh !linen snow, two fret deep.-For, city, shall no longer Mantle the earth in live days they struggled amid those gorges sack-cloth and ashes ; when the oil of joy and over those ridgeS, and tinall'y reached , shall he given for mourning, and the gar. die Rhine at Jianz. For four months al.! uncut of praise for the spirit of heaviness, ter. the vulture and eagle hovered inees- when bright roses :411;111 grow over the santly along the line ot march, and beasts grave of despair, and die placid breeze of of prey were gorged with the dead bodies. morn and even wall naught but happiness Nearly three thousand men were scattered and love. But with all thy hoping, labor :11110114 the glaciers and rocks, and piled in ; to aecomplish the desired aim. • Work as the abyss, and the bones of many an'unbur- if the glittering object were full in view— ried soldier may still be seen bleaching in and though oftentimes the heart may faint the ravines of the Jattser. 'under almost insuperable difficulties, learn to labor and to Wait. Press on—look not back until the goal be gained, and thy reward will be sweetened ten thousand times by the difficulties which have been in thy youth A DREADFUL OCCURItENCE.--A corres pondent of the Michigan 'Washingtonian, Taunts, IN DIFFERENT ASPECTS.-- writing, from Flint, relates this dreadful . Loxorm.Low says—The little that I have tale of crime and suffering. At the distil- I seen of the world and know of the history Ivry near this place, the venders sold their! 1 IsorsTay.—Alan must have an Oceupa. of mankind, teaches me to look upon the poison to an Indian—got him intoxicated , lion, or he miserable. Toil is the price of ! errors of others in sorrow, not in anger.- -then toqk his rifle as security for the . sleep and appetite—of health and enjoy- When I take the history of one poor heart debt. Ruh when the Indian partially re-' "sot. The very necessity which over- that has sinned and suffered, and represent covered from this lit of intoxication;he re-' comes our natural sloth is a blessing. The to myself the struggles awl the temptations collected that the ritle,was a borrowed one. 11 world does not contain a briar or a thorn 1 it has passed through—the brief pulsations gain Ile then attempted to gainadniittanqpisto that Divincinercy could have spared. We. of joy ; the feverish inquietude of hope the building to obtain his property, and be - 1 1 , are happier with the sterility which we' and fear ; the tears of regret ; the 'feeble jug overtaken in the act by One of theowni cannot overcome by industry than we * :less of purpose ; the pressure of want; ers of this sink of pollution, he.was pound- could he with the most spontaneous and the desertion of friends ; time scorn of a ed and- bruised by this monster, in the unbounded proNsion. . The body and the' world that has little charity ; the desolation worst a way imaginable ; so much sp, -that! mind are improved by the toil that fatigues , , of the soul's sanctuary, and the threaten he became alarmed ; and took the poor sul--I,tbemt that toil is a thousand times reward- 1 ing vices within 'I . health gone, happiness fere: into the garret of some bnilding, and! e d b y the pleasure which it bestows. '.lts gone, even hope, that remained the longest, dressed his wounds for fear he would die.: enjoytnents are peculiar : no wealth can . gone ; I would fain 'leave the soul (minty But the weather being extremely cold, his ! purchase them, no insolence can touch fellow man with Him from whose hand it legs were frozen, so that they were ampu- ! them. They only flow from the exertions , . came. - tamed above the knee. The ; poor fellow i which they repay. ' I lingered a few days in the most agonizing i ' ..._ torments, and died a most horrible death. • .... -----,---------..---• I skiing at Watertown, was' waited upon, a _....___________ ' . • 1 Dr. SELar, charged with. being access°. ' few days since, by the assessors' of that write fire is very cold," said ani old O f . . per, who was trying to warm his toes in rv, to the offence of procuring dead bodies town, to ascertain the amount they should. I — or - . dislection, in the neighborhood of Ash- assess him toward the expenses of the town. the moonlight on-a wow bank. - ' ' an editor abrapt, or ' tabula, Ohio; was recently convicted. in After inquiring and being told the ,amount , _ it .for granted he is .` SENATOR YULEE IttA married Miss Wick', and to be imprisoned twentv d thin county, and sentenced to pal , a fine of of the whole taxes . to.be raised, he desired a word or idea-and We., daughter of the ex-rostmaster Gen. ! dam* i n the assessors to 'charge the % - hole,aituount I . l; evil. I . I the •common jail. __ _ ________, toltim, : _____:__ - .. . . - --- ---'-z-- —-- GETTYSBURG, PA., FRIDAY EVENING, APRIL 24, 1846 • LovE Oxf: AxoTitEn.—Do we not often fail to manifest that Love . we : proless, and which serves as the central link in our symbolic chain and is .emblazoned in let tors of gold upon our proud and lofty ban ners ? Do we cherish the principles as we ought,—do we practise it in our conduct, our speech and writings towards our breth ren when they walk uprightly and when they wander from the path of honor and sobriety? We *iliould remember• that the follies & false steps of a brother should call forth our love more strongly, and,our-mor.e. zealous exertion that we may win him back and encourage him to walk uprightly and surely. It is not unfrequently that we are friendly to the pure and honorable and that we love those who love us, and whose conduct is in unison with our own concep tions of what is really good. But if such men falter through weakness, are found in dulging in one evil habit, or speak or write in a tone that is offensive, we arc too like ly to withdraw our friendship—suppress the love we cherished for them, and mani fest a coldness toward them, au entire in ditrerence to their respectability and wel fare. In this respect we are prone to turn from the example of hint in whom "we trust," to fOrget the power• of love kindness to reform and bring back, and to exercise that haSe principle which drives the wan derer farther on. When ereatore: stray Farthest from God, then warmest toward them horns Ills love, even as yon sun beams holiest out The earth when most distant. [Corcartnl. "FEARLESS AND )FREE." . . ._ . . . WORK AND ITs 11I.EINGS. 1 The following statement, says the National In- C. Al.elligeneer, l. Clay's "True American" comes; which we Mid in N. I-. the regular Wash in an improved dress. The follow in ton ( orrespondeneeof the N Tribune, agree .s- ! Ill f . • I so p,tanaany %% oh what we have heard/ related sage closes a short article upon a : nect, ' here, and have ream») to Nelieve correct: tieipation of manv.men : which comes home to the business and an- owl Al 1r I It he "when ..a I% t I I:INTER .e.t. State De - - I 'partment, in place of being a delimiter as I it appears that there was "Gladdentin! with its sunniest features, and gloss ' 1 1: i s been chf ir .r e d, it over with its richest hues, and it becomes apoor 1 , a halumu., paid to him - long after he and painted thing, if there be in it no toil—no c t When Mr. Webster left Mr. 'Tyler's hearty—hard work. The laborer t•iglis for i epw-e. ; left 1 " ; Cabinet he requested the Clerk who has Where is it' Friend, whoever thou art, know it ' is to be found aton e i n work. No good, no we:it. the care of the contingent fund, to settle up i Hess, no progress, is gained without it. Work,' the account and see how it stood. The then, and faint not, for therein is the well-spring uf clerk wrote to Mr. Webster that there was human hope, and human happiness. - I the sum of $l,OOO lbr which their was no Mr. Clay is young to know that.. Not voucher. Mr. Webster said that the prop to know it young, is sometimes the heart's . er voucher would vet be found, but in the case of the Young aspirant. To force it • mean time h e w i s h- e d. the accounts o f t h e out when habits of constant labor have 1w- Department fully' settled up, and for this' egine fixed and have produced what con-' purpose he sent on $l,OOO, and the ac- stmt labor and economy generally produce, counts were settled. The proper-certif . :- cdinpetence—to force'it out then, seems to ! cafe afterwards appearing, the .thousand belie all former premises of hope, and the dollars were refunded to Alr. Webster.— suiTerer sees that his labor - to produce that 'BO that, in place o f being a defaulter, he which will allow of hoiurn and rest. has al-' had actually - overpaid the Department, and so produced the habits of mind :old body, 'this overpay was refunded." that will admit of no rest front toil: 'foil-' _ some days and tiights arc appointed to the I • A GENUINE COMPLIMENT.I I is said I industrious and the enterprising. Wart- ! that a lady Of extraordinary- beauty once some days and nights are 'appointed unto : confessed that the only real compliment him who has no einployment.' But Mr. ' she ever received was from a foal heaver, Clay is right—work, work, work,;"there- i who asked permission to light his pipe in in is the well spring of human hope mid her eyes. We have met with another corn human happiness." This country has no' Aliment paid by .a sailor, who was directed place for the . . idle but the almshouse.— by his captain to carry a letter to the lady There is no c'las's pith which the Unwork z . of his love. The Sailor_having pertained ing - indi' affiliate. Th ere i s no resp ec i a . ' his errand, stomigazing in silent adnaira bilitY for the man that does nothing—no , lion upon the countenance of the lady, for place for him who has nothing to do, In she was "beautifttl, exceedingly." "Well England, in Cermany, in France, the spir- I my honest man," she said, •"for, what do it begins to work. There was once, a' you wait? there is no answer expected." place in''all these countries for those who "Lady," said the sailor, "I would - like to had no occupation—a place where one or i know your name." "And why?" she re two generations rested from the labors a l plied, "why should you seek .to,know my their ancestors, whose toils won that place.i name ?" "Because,'' said he, "because I But the time of labor is so far back, that re- ' would mil upon it in, a storm and save ne wed labor is necessary, and now no man I some ship from sinking ."—N. E Eve- I can -have deserved distinction, no man be I stint; Mirror. regarded there, without labor.. The idle THE IV .tV THIEF TREAT AN EDITOR 'DOWN EAST. —1 he happy editor of the Hingham Patriot has not only, 'in spite of, his being an editor, persuaded a pretty girl to take him "for better or worse," which were bliss enough for one life, but his lady neighbors, in admiration of the mutual cou rage of the contracting parties, have sent in a few donations toward the house fix ings of the adventurous couple. The edi tor announces that he will keep.his open "a few weeks longer" to recei fur , ther donations, and acknowledges a ready GREAT MEN 01 , OUR COUNTRF.—The the receipt of the following, viz. a hand . • New-Buryport Herald states that Daniel I some centre table. a parlOr stove, a set of China ware; a solar lamp, a handsome car- Webste friend Europe, to guess whose were the American names better and more univer. boxes pails and buckets, . together with a I vanity, of small articles. sally known and admired in England than all other American names put together.— I The Chamlier of Commerce of N. York His friend answered, Washington and j has sent to Washington a protest against Chief Justice Marshall, No, said Mr. i the Sub-Treasury Bill, of which it says; Webster, I mean living persons, and they "It will be found extremely difficult, if not are Judge Story and Peter Parley ; for impossible to carry out;" and which cannot while the former is known to every law- fhil to exercise "an important INFLUENCE yer in England, and generally among the FOR EVII, upon the various interests of the educated classes, the latter has entire pos- country!" session of the young hearts °fold England i The body,thus addressing Congress, is —that wherever he went into an English composed of men of both particular parties: and the children were brought in But will Congress listen? There arc move and presented to him as Mr. Webster, an moots in that body, which show a dispo- Mneritan gentleman, they would be sure, ' sition towards independence, but these are with scarcely a single exception, to ap-f atllowed by other expiatory acts of evident', proach him, and looking him in the face, submission ; so that it is difficult to tell in with the utmost anxiety expressed in theirs, what temper the Sub-Treasury may find! would say, do you know "Peter Parley ?" the "Deinocratic party" at the time of vo -1 ling. BENEvoLENcE.—"Not for ourselves but I for others," is the grand law of nature in- ; SHOCKING OCCURRENCE ON THE READ scribed by the hand of Cod on every part Exo RAft.noAn.—About two o'clock on of creation. Not for itself, but fur others, Tuesday morning, a train of burthen cars does the sun dispense its beams ; not for while in motion, came in contact with a themselves, but for others, do the clouds stationary train near Pottstown. , The distil their showers ; not for herself, but for force of the concussion caused live of the others does the earth unlock her treasures; cars to be thrown oil' the — frack ; the death not for themselves, but for others, do the of the engineer named J. Hill, and the• trees produce their fruit or.lhe flowers dill breaking of the leg, Mr. Geo. B. Sterling. fuse their fragrance and display their va. The latter was fien to the Philadelphia riot's hues. So not for himself, but for oth- Hospital on Wednesday evening. crs, are the blessings of God bestowed one Mr. Bill was from Salem, Mass., where man. He who lives only to himself, and his family reside. It is said that he was consumes the bounty of Heaven upon sus, a worthy man. lusts, or consecrates it to the demon of The cause of the disaster resulted from avarice, is a barren rock on a fertile plain I neglect on the part of the officer having the —he is a thorny bramblestationary tpain in charge. We learn that van grave o f ' ; he is thein a fruitful vine- i god's blessings the company promptly discharged him lie is the very Arabian desert of this mo- from its employ. ' rap world. • SOLEMN REFLEcrioxs.—Preily good. —"Robert," said ,rosy the other day, very seriously, "what d'ye think ?" - "lion% know." After a solemn pause,—"Brawdklawth, the tailor's dead." "ls he Josy !" es." "Well, don't be so sad about it . .rosy ; was lie a relation of yot , rs ?" "Oh no, but--" a long pause and a heavy sigh—'l owed him a bill Robert." "bid ye though, Josy !" "Yes." Anotker pause, and sundry' apparent inward compunctions ; at last Jo sy got it out, and said, "Robert, you don't know any other tailor that's in ill health, do ye. P' nobleman is thelaughing stock of his age, if such a person is to be found. Those who, will not toil in the thousand ways of improving themselves and their kind, have to leave the scene . of labor and travel, trav- el, travel to avoid work We repeat itoliere seems to be no place left in Europe or America for the idle.— The spirit of the age is one of movement, of work; and }Hunan hapiness is depend- Pu,t upon the fulfilment of the work A LIBERAL TAX PAy:R.—'l'hc Haver hill Banner states that Mr. J. I'. Cushing, agentleman of handsome fortuni!, now re- TERMS—TWO DoLVATtS PER exam. ] I WHOLE NO. 838 FLOW r.Rs ix BED ROOMS-CAUTION.-- , Recently* in London, a young lady weurto bed in good health, and was found the next morning dead ! The physicians who were called in declared that the sole cause of this catastrophe was the poisoning of the air by the exhalation of a quantity of Mlles found in two ° large vases ou a low fable in the room.—Rose,s tuberoses", jassamines, and in fact, most flowers may in the same way, produce effects,, if not mortal, at least very injurious.. Their influence acts most powerfidly on nervous persons. JACKSON THE PEDESTRIAN.—:/ nis great runner says he will give any man that can be produced a half mile in twelve, or three quarters in twenty, for any amount above $5OO. Or if any gentleman will bee him $lOOO to $7OOO, against dee= en miles in one hour, he will remain and close the match, and run it about the mid dle of May, either at Philadelphia or Bal . - timore. RISING TIIE. WORLD.—Wheri. some one was lamenting Foote's unhappy fate in having been kicked in Dublin, Johnson saidthe was glad of it. "lie is rising ; in the world," said he, "for when he was in Eng!• land, no one thought it worthwhile toklek him." . For the "Star and tanner.'! Reflections a Grave Yartt.• - Conic, gentle reader, take me by the hand, and let .us go in yonder gratie-yard, and there learn a lesson upon the moulder ing tombs, where they have laid for ceti tunics- untOuched, unharmed,. save by the hand of time. Trace back the years, when they . were first foma by the hand that lies mouldering Within them. He wag a being, endowed with life like ourselves, perhaps contemplating the mvstery of life; death or time—wondering. Mid anticipating generations 'that were to come and pass away as he has done,. unknown and forgotten even:by those with - whom :there existed" the *tenderest associations. 'Who eau say that human being has passed-,a;• sway ? None. lie will rise like one of us: An all-wise God has watched over him as he does over every living thing upon the earth.. Nature was then robed in all its glory, as now.; there were as. many stars softly beaming from the heaven's then 1 1 as at the present time; the same dazzling sun shone upon hint ttat, now, shines upon us; the pale moon shed the same lustre at night; the earth moved with the same reg:- ularity and on the same course; and all things present the same -aspect as when . this world first sprung into being. Amid the impressive stillness of-the place, while an unearthly awe conies stealing o'er sad dened spirit in the silent dead, is there.niat a 'power, some "still small voice" that whis pers in your car, that reaches the: inmost recesses of yoniheart there is a GOD, and all things animate-and inanimate are gov erned by His power. Can there be a human being who in the exercise of reason and with sincerity: of heart can doubt ? No, there cannot. The very' words. in which the thought is con veyed, Would be uttered with fear and 'in sincerity. There is a Power-whose agen , cy and influence must ever be recognized even by the most reckless and abandoned Atheist. This Power gives us light, teaeli es the reason of man and guides him iii the hour of darkness to a hat 4n of safety. When guided by spiritual influence and divine lightonan's soul rises higher than earth ;- he is the son of God made after his own image, and his spirit shall ascend to the starry beavens t and add /one more to the countless thousands of Heaven's bright luminariestliere forever to shine in glory increasing and increasing in dazzling ex cellence, even until the consummation--of ' all things, when a new - heaven and a new earth shall appear and. the old pass away. This is man's Eden ! But let us pursue our meditations. Here we see a new tomb stone, erected to the memory of an Old, well-known, but depart ed friend ; one that you have known from childhood. You'pass . ed through the pe riods of innocent childhood and buoyant sunny youth, hand in hand and heart bound to heart. He now lies• numbered with the dead. Is your heart chilled by the specta cle of the inanimate body, reposing in the cold embrace of death? Does your heart yearn for' the departed ? If-he-was-a—chris tian, learn to imitate him, You know not but that your departure maybe close at hand, and ho may be an angelic messen ger to welcome you to bliss and joy inheav en. The ways of Providence are inseru table,and past finding out by. the wisdom of man. , We have been placed hero by the divine ruler not to waste our time .in idleness, but with industry to learn to know ourselves and contemplate his•glory.- Few— approach ii?is silent earthly home, but must _ acknowledge that throughout their earthly pilgrimage, t h ey have. been • more or less under the influence of the two:great Pow trs of good and evil, and 'that their ':liVes have been controlled brone puthe other. ' As death approaches,thehopeebf rewards or fears of punishment are.increased.' How many are there in the world,whosb, hearts at one time-beat. high with hope but who, through the bitterness and ealumn3r.- et an unfeeling world,:live, in silent , grief, , Aucl hope to find peace for the ir,hr . uised . hearts in the deep lovideep of the -nap py are they who:die thedeath of the right eons. , 4Ltatingdou foutttaltip-'2._ ~,~_