SLNGLE COPIES, } VOLUTE X.-NUMBER, 45. THE POTTER. JOURNAL , PODLISEIED ZWEILY TUURNDAY MOUSING, BY Thou. S. Chase, To wbom all Letters and Communications should be naresied, to -secure attention. Teems.-Invailalgy In Advance : ,1111)25:per Annum. tit", A . Terms of Advertising. ks q uare [lO lines) 1 insertion, - - - 50 J 1 ,gg . • " 3 " •- - - $1 50 f Each subsequent insertionless than 13, 25 F l Square threi months, 50 . 1 1 " six , 44 4 00 1 !„: " nine " 550 " one year, - 6 00. f i ?;olo and 'figure work, per sq., 3 ins. 3 00 1. - Zvecy subsequent insertion, 50 ~.:,__ Coliinati six moiths, 18 00 1 4i " it 10 00 4 u. •" .07 00 "4. " per year. 30 00 4 A( iS II ' l6 00 )ouble-column, displayed, per annum 65 00 gi " six months, 3 00 " three " 16 00 " stone month, 600 1 1 " per square • . of 10 lines, each insertion under 4, 100 rParts of columns,will be inserted at the same • rates. Adafinistrator's or Executor's Notice, 200 Auditor's Notices, each, 1 50 ;Skteritr,s Sales, per tract, ' 15u Xarriage Notices, each, • 1 00 dpiroree Notices, each,, 1 50 Administrator's Sales, per square for 4 tinsertions, Znsiness or Professional Cards, each, mot exceding 8 lines, per year, - - 600 Special and Editorial Notices, per line, 10 par All transient advertisements must be paid in advance, and do notice will be taken of advertisements from a distance, unless they are by the money or satisfactory reference. gifOilitSs Carts. = JOHN S. MANS, ATTOWNEY .AND COUNSELLOR AT LAW, iudeisprt, Pa., will attend the seretitl Courts its Potter god MFieau Counties. Alt lousimas eatruQM4 in his care win receive prompt atteutiou, Gthue o l Mailist— 01)P0- site the Court House. 1.0:1 F. W, KNOX, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Couderspprt, Ps., will regelarly attend the Courts in. Potter and the adjoining Counties. 10:1 AIi~.QUI G. 0 14-MSTED, ✓ATTORNEY 4 COENSELLoR AT LAW, Coudersport, Pa., win Attvad to 0.11 business entrusted to his care, with promptues and fidelity. 'Office in Temperauce Block, sec ond-floor, Main St. 10:1. ISAAC BENSON. ATTORNEY AT LAW, Cotiderport, Pa., will attend to all business entrusted to him, with care and promptness. unice corner of West and Third sts. 10;1 L. P. WILLISTON, ATTORNEY AT LAW, Wel'shorn', Tioga Co., Pa., will attend the Gana!! in Potter and IFKean Counties. 9;13 R. W. BENTON, AIISVEYOR AND CONVEYANCER, Ray- Mond Y. U., (Allegany Tp.,) Potter Co., Pa., will attend to all business in his line, with e!Lre and dispatch. : 9:33 NV, K, KING, SURVEYOkt, DRAFTSMAN AND,CONVEY ANCER, Smethport, iii'Nean Co., l'a., will attend to busioess for pop-resident land - holders, upon . reasonable terms. Refren ees given if required. P. S.-3laps of any part of the County- made to order. 9;13 O. T. ELLISON, ;PRACTICING PHYSICIAN", Coudersport, Pa., respectfully informs the citizens of the, vil lage and vicinity that he will promply re spond to all calls for professional services. Office on Main st., id building formerly oc cupied by C. W. Ellis, Esq. 9:22 COLLINS 11.11ITII. SMITH Sr. JONES, fiIIALERS IN DRUGS, MEDICINES, PAINTS, Oils, Folacy Articles, Stationery, Dry Goods, Groceries, ac., Main st., Coudersport, Pa. 10:1 OIAIST-q), pEALEIt IN DRh GOODS, T,tEADY-114DE CLgthictz, Crpckery, Grgeeties, 4c,„ 3l4ig st., Pf4derSpOrti 10;1 )1: W. MANN, DEALER. IN BOOKS & STATIONERY, MAG AZINES and Music, N. W. corner of Hain iad Third sts., Coudersport, Pa. 10;1 1l R. 114.REINGION, 4EWELLEI, Coudersport, Pa., having engpg. ed a window-Schoonutker Jackson's Store will cAzry on the Watch and Jewelry huiiness there, , A fine gssproneut of Jew elry constantly on hand. Watches and Jtfirelry carefally repaired, ip the best style. on the shortest notice—,all work warranted. 9:7,4 HENRY J. OLMSTED, (sUccEsso TO JAMES TY. DEALER IN STOVES, TIN & SIIEET .1110. N WARE, Main st., near& opposite The Court House, Coudersport, Pa. Tin and Sb6et Iron Ware made to order, in good style, on sitoq notice. 10:1 • COUDERSPORT ROTEL, F. GLASSMIRE, Proprietor. Corner of Hain and Second Streets, Coudersport, Pot ter Co., Pa. g ; 9:44 ALLEGANY HOUSE, SAMUEL M. MILLS, Proprietor, ColoEbtri Potter Co., Pa., Bevan miles north of Coe ou Qat; Walkrille Road. 9:44 irriginat Ifittns. WC stood, that quiet summer hour, - And listened to the breeze ' That, with a thousand pleasant tones, _Moved through the harp-like trees: Our spirits sweet communion held, Although our lips were still; Her hand lay in my own as light Aa sunshine on the hill. I blessed her for her love and said : " The sun shone not for me Thro' the long hours When thou vast gone ; I only thought of thee. .• "Jhanks, that the Father's kindly hand • Hath led thee back again; Thanks, that my prayers and ceaseless .ivatch 'At List have fruitless been I " I paused, and IoW she answered me, In trembling tones of pain " I am a wearied watcher, too— My watch 'lath been in vain. " Day after day the morning sun Lights up an:empty hall ; Night after night the cloud of woe Across my heart.musti fall; " And hourlY o'er my buried hopes The ghost-like shadows pass, Whose dark feet never stir the flowers, Or tufted plumes of grass. " Eva! we all are watclMrs here, The best can ouly take God's teaching fur their And wait until the morning break." Between the leaves LIM moonbeams fell Upon her face, so white , I thought of other flowers, as fair, Long folded Motu my sight. ELM I am a watcher once again: From toe light birch The rain drips n'er a htsie mound With Spring's. first musses Bess:el. I miss thee from the slope Wh;.:'re tir.nt the sunbeams wake ; Tarry nut low.;, hel...)%ed mine. L t s 4 ;.+l, this tired near'. 'should break!. EVA gtiati gals. TAE, SXJAISWS WE CAST 4. A child was playing with seine building blocks; and, as the wiatic castle rose he fure his eyes iu grae r efulpropurtions, a new pleasure swelled in his heart, lie felt himself to be the creator of a " thing of beauty,' and was conscious of a new born power. Arch, wall, butress, gateway, drawbridge, lofty t , ,owcr and battlement, were all the work Of his hands. He was in wonder at his own skill in thm creating from an unseemly pile of blocks, a-struc ture of such rare design. Silently he stood) anti gazed upon his i castle with something of the . pride of an 1 airehiteet who sees, after months or years' of skillfully applied labor, some grand con ception in his art, embodied in his imper.l - stone. Then he moved around, i viewing it on every Side, It did not seem to him a toy, reaching only a few inches in 'height, and covering but a square foot of ground, but a real castle, lifting itself hundreds of feet upwards to the blue sky, and spreading wide upon the earth its ample foundations.) As the idea grew more and more perfect, his . strange pleas ure increased. No+ he stood with folded arms, wrapped in the over-mastering illu sion—now walked slowly around, viewing the structure on all sides, and noting every minute particular and now sat down, and. l I bent over.it with theLfundness of a mother{ bending Over her ehild. Again he arose, purposing to Obtain another and a wore distinct view of , his ,work. But his foot struck against one of, the buttresses, and instantly, with a crash,.wall, tower, and battlement fell in hopeless ruin. In the room, with the boy, sat his fa tifer, reading. The crash disturbed him; and he uttered a sharp. angry rebuke; glancing, for a moment, towards the start led child, and then returning his eyes to the attractive pages before. him, uncoil- scions of the shadoW he had cast- upon i the heart of cliil4. Tears came lute those fair blue orbs; dancing -in light_ a moment before. Frrn the frowning face of his father, to whitili his glance was sud denly turned, the child looked hack to the ' shapeless ruins of- his castle. Is it any wonder that he bowed his face in silence ) 1 upon them, and wet Itheui with-his tears. For more than fivci minute's, he sat as still as if sleeping; Ithen, Iwo. mournful I kind of way, yet almost noiselessly, he commenced restoring to the: -box from which he had taken them, the,niany shap ed pieces that, fitly pined gibether, had ' , nom] into 4 a noble ktuildiu After the 17 box was ailed, he replaced the cover, and' laid - i. carefully uponia shelf in the 'closet. Poor child !The ;shadow Was a dee one, and long in . paisiug away, I His moth er found him half iin hour afterwards, asleep on the floor, with cheeks flushed - to an unusual brightness. She knew noth. fug of that troubled passage ;iii his young life; and the lather had forgdtten in the attractions of the book - he read, the upp tueutary annOyance . exprect,e4 iu words E. A. JONES 'beboteD to ill& iyzeiples of ihtto Detooehop, hjoilfitp, ifehatyi a qtid or the' Potter Jourual WATCIIING. DT T• S, 4/ITEILT. COUDERSPORT, POTTER COUNTY, PA., THURSDAY, MAY 27, 'lB5B. and tone, with a power in them to shadow the heart of his childi A young wife hadbusied herself for many days in preparing a pleasant sur prise. for her huSbadd. The work_ was finished at last; and now she awaited his return, with a heart fUll of warm emotions A dressing-gown, and a pair of elegantly embroidered slippers, wrought by her own skillful fingers, were the gifts with which . she meant to delight hiin. What a troop of pleasure fancies was in her heart! - How almost impatiently did she wait for the coming twilight, which was to be dawn not approaching darkness to her. . At last; she heard- the step of her -hus band in the passage, and her pilfse leaped with fluttering delight. Like - a bird up on the wing, she almost flew down to meet iMpatient fur the kiss that awaited her. To men in the world of business; few days pass' without' their disappointments and perplexities. It is men's business to bear this in a manly spirit. - They form but aportion of life's discipline, and should make them stronger, braver, and More.eu during. Unwisely, and we maisay un justly, too many men fail to leave their business cares and troubles in their stores, workshops or counting rooms, at the day's decline. They wrap thenrin bundles and carry them home to shadow their house ' holds. It was so with the young husband on this .particula`r occasion. The stream of business had taken an eddying whirl, and thrown his vessel backwards, instead of onward 4, for a brief space, and though it was still in the current, and gliding safe ly onward . against it, the jar and —disap pointment; had fretted his mind severely. There was uu heart-warmth in the kiss he gave his wife, and beeause he had let care overshadow love. He drew his arm around her ; but she was conscious of a diminish ed pressure in that embracing arm. '• Are you not well ?" With what tender concern was the ques tion .asked "Very well." lie might be in body, :bid not in - mind; that was plain; Ibr his voice was far from being cheerful. She played and sang her favorite pieces, hoping to restore, by•thecharm of music, brightness to his spirit. But she was conscious of only partial success. There was still a gravity in his manner never perceived before. At tea-time she smiled upon him so sweetly across the table, and talked to him on such elective themes, that the right expression returned to las countenance; and he looked as happy as she could desire. From the tea-table, they returned, to their pleasant parlor. And now the time has come for offering the coveted reward of glad surprise, followed by sweet.kisSes and loving words. Missile selfish ? Did she think more of reward than of the pleasure of she would bestow ? But that is questioning too closely.. . " I will be back in a moment," she said; and, passing from the room, she want lightly ,up the stairs. Both tone and manner betrayed her secret, or rather the possession of a secret by which herhusbabd was to be surprised. Scarcely had her loving face faded • from before his eyes, when thought returned, with a single bound, to an unpleasant event of the day; and the waters of his spirit were again troubled. He had actually arisen, and crossed the -floor once or twice, moved by a restless concern, when his wife came back with. the dressing-gown and :slippers: She was trying to force her countenance into a grave expression, to hold back the smiles that were continually striving to break in truant circles around her lips, when a single glance at her husband's faro told her that the spirit driven away by the exorcism of her love, had returned again to. bosom. He looked at her soberly, as she came forward. " What are these ?" he asked, almost coldly repressing surprise, and affecting an . ignorance in regard to the beautiful present she held in her hands, that he did not feel. "They are for you, dear'•, I made them." " For toe ? Nonsense ? IYhat do I want with such -jimerackery I This is woman's wear, Do you think I would disfigure my feet with embroidered slip pers, or dress up in a calico gown ! -Put them away, dear. Your husband is too witch of a man to robe himself in gay colors, like a olown or an actor." And he waved his hand with an air of contempt. There was a cold sneering manner -about him, partly affected and partly real—the real burn of his uncomfortable state of mind. Yet he loved his sweet wife; and would not, of set purpose,. have wounded her for,the world. This unexpeeted repulse—this.cruel re ception of her.presenyover which she had wrought, patiently, in golden , hopes, for many hours,--this dashing to the earth of her brimful cup of joy, just as it touched her lips, was more than the fond young, ,wife could bear. To hide -the tears that came rushing to his eyes, she turned away frOm her husband; and, to Conceal the sobs she had no power to rePres's, she went almost hurriedly froni the:room ; and going back to the chamberfrom whence'slid had' brought the present, she laid it away. out of sight in a closet. Then kovering her face With her hands, she sat down - and strove with herself. obe calm. But that. shad , ow eras toe deep---the heartache to heavy. In a little while her husbarid, followed . her, and 'discovering, something to his surprise, that she was weeping, said'in a blightly reproving voice.:—" Why, bless me ! nut in tors! What a silly little puss you are! Why didn't you tell me you thought of making a dressing-gown and a pair of slippers, and. I would have vetoed the matter at once ? You couldn't hire me to weir such - ,flaunting things. Come back to the parloe r —he took hold of her arm, and lifted her from the chair —"singand play for me. ' The Dream Waltz' or"‘ The Tremolo . ," Dearest May,' or The Stilly Night' are worth more to me than forty' dressing-gowns, or a cargo of embroidered slippers.". Almost by force, he led her back to the parlor, and placed her on the music stool. He selected a favorite piece, and laid it before her. But tears Were in her eyes; and she could nut see a note. Over the keys her fingers passed in skillful touches; but, when she tried to take up the song, utterance,failed; and sobs broke forth in stead of words: , " How foolish !" said the husband in a vexed tone. ' I'm surprised at you !" And he turned front the piano, and Walk ed across the room. A little while the sad young: wife re mained where she was left thus alone and is partial auger. Then, rising., she went slowly from the room—her husband not seeking to restrain her—and, going back to her chamber, sat- down in darkness. Die Aadow which had been cast upon her spirit was very deep; and although the hidden sun came out again right early, it was a lung time before his beams had power to scatter the clouds that floated in love's borrizon. The shadows we cast ! Father, hus band; wife, sister, brother, son, neighbor —are we not all casting shadows, daily, on some hearts that are pining for the sun light of onr faces ? We have given you two pictures, not as a mirror, but as a kaleidoscope. In all their infinitely varied relations, men and women selfishly or thoughtlessly—from design, weakness or ignarauce—and casting their shadows up= on hearts that are pining for sunlight.. A word, a look, a tone, an act will cast a shadow, and sadden a spirit for hours and days. Speak kindly, act kindly, be for getters of self, and you will cast but a few shadows along the path of:life.. The true gentlemen is always tender of the feelings of others—always watchful, lest he wound unintentionally--always thinking, when with others, of their pleasure instead of his own. He casts but few shadows. Be gentlemen—ladies, or—in word that in cludes all grace and excellencies—Chris tians ; for it is the Christian - who casts fewest shadows of all.- frur etaropmAtniti. LETTER FRO;tI NEW YORK. From our Regular Corrcgpondent. NEW YOR4i, May IA 1858 . MR. EDITOR: The second week in May of every year, for us sojourners in Gotham . , is . always. a season not only of freshets but of great refreshing. The clouds at that genial springtime -season pour out their fatness, and spouters from every part of the country,' just full , enough for utterance, pour out their; platitudes upon the just and the unjust. Every—institution of our country which thrives by talk, and grows on freedom of speech., holds -an anniversary here on - the second week in May to compare notes, hear reports of committees, -lay plans for future operations, discuss ways and means. and go into a little harmless mutual ad miration generally.- - But which of the many anniversaries shall I attend? Where shall I go to pick up the- most interesting incidents. for your readers ? I am attracted most where there is strife, agitation, commo tion; where there is eoinhat - between opin ion, struggle of ideas againstideaS, con tention among, intellectual giants. That place, 'preiiminent over all others this time, is the .anniversary meeting of the American Traot Society. There a mighty question. is under discussion—shall the i Society publish a trait -against Slavery? —and the _cohorts of either host have mustered fronuall parts of the country to mingle in the combat. Fifteen hundred clergymen and laymen filled one of our commodious • churehes at-9-in the morn ing and' Dr. Adams, Chairman 'of the Publishing Conamittee, read a tell argued and temperate ;report, - setting,. forth, the I ditEdalties which had arisen unexpectedly i during_ the year to prevent the publica -1 tin of the.anti-slavery tract, - and stated that, the committee had simply delayed its issue to confer farther with the entire . , . . Society. Then ishop[Mellyaine of Ohio and Dr. Tyng o this city followed ; the one in _enthusiaStic support of the com mittee, and. the ther in an able and well considered spec h,. alo supporting i the committee, but : closing .with a motion -to instruct, the. , coMinitte,e to publish ,the tract, during the coming year or as-soon . as practicable. .IDr. Tytig's motion was voted down. Then came other sinillar propositions and along With theta a scene of confusion, noise and disorder seldom witnessed in a,churcli. Cries of "ques tion," ."order,'" "Mr. President," laugh ter; applause and hisses resounded from tinie to time through the house, and for many minutes at a time. Dr. De Witt, pastor. of the church, had repeatedly to appeal to members to "preserve the sanc tity of this house." • The occasion was certainly the rarest specimen of "church militate_ that ever came under my ob sertration. Dr. Bethune of Brooklyn, Dr. Bacon of New Haven and Dr. Thomp son, editor of the Independen4 were the principal gladiators wlitil contended in the arena arid commanded a hearing in spite Of distil, batice,'and they mach wretched havoc with each other,inositions. As an impartial obsetver . I should say much of the confusion arose from the amiable inefficiency of the President of the assembly. In his endeavo - r to hear all sides and respond to. every call on "Mr. President," he failed to protect a speaker after he had assigned him the floor, and so the audienCe fell into con fusion from slicer lack of government, rather than .from any specie.' . proneness to disorder or determination on the part of the members to create confusion. Af ter a contest of six hours the report was adopted and the committee sustained by re-election, which is taken to he air indi cation that no tract against slavery will be issued for some" time to come. The -next meeting where passion ran high and the clash of argumentative arms reverberated to the .echo, was the Gar risonian Abolition and Disunion Society. There the - flag of the Union was torn to, tatters, the church denounced as the "Bulwark of American Slavery," the late revival of religion chara r eterized as spu rious, Russia patted on the back for eman cipation of her Serfs, and all our political parties, Democrats, Auericans and Re publicans, were consigned-to one common infamy as alike recrcant to freedom,- Dere l also, sharply defined .antagonisins jutted out, prominently luckless oppo nents were mercilessly impaled on the spears of warriors madd skillful by the drill and practice of years in the arena of debate, and whb, despising carnal weap ons, make all the wore trenchant use of the sword of the spirit.; and here too the cheers of the faithful and hisses of those who were "sound on the goose" every where prevailed. Then came the Convention of Women and those who do battle for the rights of women.. Mozart Hall, one of the largest( in the city, was kept full two days, and three sessions a day, to hear the olcistag ers and prominent debaters on the "We man Question." Here the . women, as usual, had things pretty much their own, way. The large and intelligent audience seemed to have coine, for instruction rath er than for dissent. The principal right claimed by the advocates was the right to rote—all other rights, it was contend ed, would follow.and be gained for women in that single central one, A - few speak ers wandered .off into anti-marriage and impracticalisms of that. sort; but they were mostly outsiders and the convention was kept pretty,firmly to the question of the ballot: Mrs. Lucy Stone Blackwell and the Rev. Mrs. 'Antoinette L. Brown, exhibited the case, propriety and dignity with which women could,en , * a ,, e in the lighter brandies of agricul ture, and maintained that there was the best kind of remuneration in it: The crops raised by a woman would sell at as - high a price as. those of the sturdiest man farmer. It is a ina4im in commerce everywhere, that corn is corn and "eggs is eggs," and there could be no cutting down to half price because produced by a woman. Mrs. Stone said there was a woman in the audience, and, she. had a o.ood mind to ask her to let the audience see her, to shot how delicate, refined and womanly she was, who last year made $1,600 by two mouths work of her own hands in her - OWn little strawberry gar den.. In view of results like these, Mrs. Stone continued, she was ashamed of ever baring claimed clerkships and the paltry wages thereto attached as belonging to the sphere of woman. Our Bible, Missionary, Sunday School, Temperance and, other Soeibties held their anniversaries according "ta i the usual pro gramme, and were troubled with no bick erings nor bomb shells. There has been a slight falling l otr in the ;general funds, but that, it is thought, will be more than made up this year by thereeent r additions everywhere made to the elmrch. From the strong meat of old folks let me pass on to milk for, babes. The slaugh ter °four innocents by the Putridity known as " swill milk," though twig ago detected, NOUR CENTSt,.., TERMS.-x 51.25 .PER is at last overthrown.' There liiii:hither to been money etiongh. in . noOke ts,ofArs tillers to buy impunity of,tiie.corfortitions and courts of all, this cluster of Itiei i but the monster shrink's into , the artli, in presenec . of the light thrown - oti,it4 critiieo by one single, determined; uriptireliaSible press. Frank Leslie, for a fortnight past, has been tracking the concern'ol, along i s milky way and publishing t e Street and number of all the patro .. of :the nauseating fluid. They -were fo ilkgen erally to be the poorer 'claim o l people (just those who could least airtdtolie i made sick by it) and the lower' .c 16 4. of. v restaurants and boarding houses" 'ho -Pat ronized it because it .was cheap. Jetting in the light, however, is working 'an 1111_ 7 mediate abatement of the niiisaqe; thus accomplishing at once and without diSor-_ der, by individual enterprise, wtat.tev ernment, backed by all. its ; batteries, is powerless to secure. It has been 3410- tat hit for Leslie; for,-in proportion a;s the. milk no longer went down, his paper went up; though his artists rtid reporters did suffer some. from -milk and brickbatS' iu sketching. the originals and getting up the designs. It was comical to witness _par .chasers of the papei..paSs out of the..neWs offices, reading as they wptit; with - up turned nose, and mouth at half gag, as if they really tasted the disgusting mixture and smelled the animalsand stables which the pictures delineated and. the: types del scribed. Some three weeks since Captain Sands of the LT. S. Steam Taigate . Susquehanna was arrested for disobeying the. Health Officers of this port. Saturday Cap= t i.r Judkins, of the British Steamer rer sia, was arrrested for okaying the sane Offi cers. His ship had .brought a case of small pox and was placed on quarantine with strict orders to permit no one.to land on any pretext, A Custom House officer wanted terribly to get,ashore: Cari..Jud kins would'ut let hind—Quarantine renv. lotions would'ut permit it.: . the officer did get ashore; he obtained the arrest of the Captain under U. S, anther , ity, and Mr. Cunard becatie bill fOrliis appearance to answer the charge. of:dee tainipg and obstructing a U. S. °Maar..., There is another rather stiff little sea breeze brewing in the-Shaye of intittial digoation meetings among shipmasters and owners who are down on the British West India Squadron for . the outrn& -. of searching vessels suspected as' sial:7ers, though sailing under the. American At one of these meetings our patriotic!, rage took the shape of the following among' other similar resolutions-:' Resolved, That "our flag - _ covers the cargo," whether that cargo. consists .of gets or nothing—and that "freedom front' search" is an American's inalienable rigll at sea—as much. so as freedom from the' intrusion of foreign police in our dotideils , on shore. Henry William Herbert, extensiiely kn:gvn throughout the United States_at4' Graet Britain as an author of celebrity, and More especially for his works On sport;-' manship, under the nom de plume or " Frank Forester," committed suicide OR. Monday morning, at the Stevens House, Broadway, by shooting himself through: the heart with a pistol. Though ,Over fifty years of age he recently married' a . young lady of twenty, from whom he was separated a few weeks after marriage.' He left several letters, from which it would appear that domestic differenceS led to commission of the rash act. ' WRATZ:s AN APOLOGY` FOR HAVING LOVED FORE. - ' They that never had the use Of the grapes' surprising juice; To the first delicious cup All their reason render up r. Neither do, nor care to knOur Whether it be be best or no. So they that are to love inclined, Sway'd by chance, not choice; Ar arl To the first that's fair or kind, , _ Make a present of their heart. It is not she that first we love, -, But whom dying we approve. . , • : To man, that as In th'evening Made, Stars gave the first delight, . - • ( Admiring in the gloomy shade 1 Those little drops of lighti . ' . - }- Then at Aurora; whose' fair hand i Removed them from,the skies,. L He gazing toward the east did.stan She entertairi'd his eyes. . But when the bright sun'did appea, All those he 'gap despise ; • 7 :_I His wonder was determined there, And could no, higher rise.; r i He neither might - nor wished-to krics. A more refulgent light; -• . .. For that (as mine your beatities nowj. Employed his utmost sight. pratuda. IS EPIGRAM—FATHER. APAZ • He laid him down and slept—and'from his' side— ' - . s A woman in her magic beauty rose'; d Dazzled and charmed, ho called' that roman; bride, - And his first sleep becaine hislast 1.49,50.` RAII. to the timely 'welcome of-an ina 11.,! Hail to the room where home and cheer begin I. Where all the frost-bound feelings milt away,' And soul-warM sympathies begin to play; Where independence sllows.her manly mien, And sterling traits of human life are seen) —R. ifentywitery. BM 111 Bt.. ;
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