THE PILOT EUI3LISIIED IE - VEY TUESDAY MORNING BY JAMES W. M'CRORY, (North West Corner of the Public Square,) at the following rates, from which there will be no deviation: Single subscription, in advance Within six months Within twelve months No paper will be discontinued unless at the option of the Publishers, until all arrearages are paid. No subscriptions will ho taken for a less period han six months. QLlpire poctrn. THE LAND OP THE LIVING. HY J. D. BADDIT I am bound to the land of the living 0, hinder me not on my way; The sunlight is brightening before me The flowers that bloom in my pathway Breathe odors that waft me right on ; They lure me no longer to tarry But weloome'earth's time to be gone. I am weaned from this land of the dying; Decay is enstamped everywhere; Earth's pleasures are seeming and fleeting— lily soul has grown weak with its care. The Joy-rays of life are remembered Like sleep-thoughts that float in the brain, The flesh and the spirit are weaving, Each striving the mastery to gain. I am waiting the summons that bids me No longer a pilgrim to roam, But, leaving the past in this death-land, Make the land of the living my home. The messenger•angel stands waiting The,signal to wisper to me, That the place is prepared for my dwelling, And the Master is calling for me. The lead of the living is yonder; There life to its fullness has grown; There sin, and temptation, and sorrow, And sickness, and death are unknown. There the songs of redemption are chanted By a holy, harmonious band; 0, when shall I leave this clay-casket, And fly to my home in this land? (Thoo6 Stun). IRENE ATHERTON. BY CLARA. ELIZABETH "'Tis not the fairest form that holds The milcieet, puresteoul within." "Why so sad to-night, pet?" and Judge Clifford's hand was laid caressingly on his daughter's dark hair. Mary started, and the tears trembled on her lashes as she replied,— "I do not know, father; but, after Dinah dressed me for tea I sat looking out on the lawn, and all seemed bright and beautiful.— Suddenly a dark cloud appeared and spread so rapidly that in a short time the whole landscape was obscured. Then I felt a strange presenti ment of evil, which I cannot shake off. The shadows seem to have entranced my heart. A frightful precipice seems before me,'and I dare not look into its yawning abyss." "Stuff and nonsense? Why, is that all? .Cheer up; we will order lights,—and here comes the boys." As he spoke two young men entered—one with the rich dark beauty of sunny Italy, the other fairer, with clear hazel eyes and. waving hair. But, while they are recounting the ad. ventures of the day, we will introduce them more formally to the reader. Judge Clifford belonged to one of the first families in the old dominion. His home was a stately mansion; his broad lands extended as far as the eye could reach, while willing aervants waited to do his slightest bidding.— To all but his daughter the judge was a cold, stern man; but her glance and smile were the magio key which unlocked the fountain of tenderness somewhere down deep in his great heart, When Mary was scarcely five summers his only sister died, leaving her orphan boys to his care. Through the long years which followed the judge had been to them as a father. Rich ard and Arthur were unlike in everything ex cept the love which they possessed for their cousin, and even here their motives were dif ferent. Richard looked upon her as a plain girl of seventeen, the heiress of his uncle's immense estate. The other discovered in her noble qualities of mind and heart, and for these he loved her with all the,strength of his artist soul. But Mary, looking merely on the sur face, preferred Richard, and was now his affi anced wife.' Her life thus far had been very quiet. From her childhood her education bad been conducted at home, under the charge of competent and amiable teacher. But now , Miss Marvin was gone—married. to her first lore, a quiet New England clergyman; and to night her successor was expected. Before we iuterrupt their conversation we Will glance at the new governess, seated in Judge Clifford's carriage, on her way from the railroad station to his stately residence. Irene Atherton was the only child of a poor widow. When quiet a little girl, attracted by her great beauty, some wealthy ladies determined to give her an education, that she might become a teacher, and thus occupy a station of respecta bility and trust. Accordingly they placed her at an expensive school ) and lavished every kindness upon her. , . , t •!4‘,/ • . kr' 'ff iffkiNi i/' . 5, 1r!'.34:1„ 1 • .-tts: I $1.50 1.76 2.00 GREEN CASTLE, PA., TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1863. NO. 2. She proved an apt and brilliant scholar, and soon distanced all her competitors; but in her heart there was no gratitude for those who had so benefitted her. God's government, she said, was unjust; for, one had as much right as another to fortune's favors. Now leaning back in the carriage, her red lips curled scornfully. a fierce light flashes from her blue eyes, all be cause she, Irene Atherton, mast occupy the humble station of governess. As the carriage rolled up the broad avenue leading to the house, the storm, which had for some hours been gathering, broke forth with fury. The rain descended in torrents; the tall trees bent before the tempest, and red lightning darted above them. But within all was bright and cheerful. As Irene stood beneath the chandelier, her hat.nnd shawl having beer, re moved by the obsequeous Dinah, and felt that she was very beautiful; and, before the even ing was half over, each agreed that a noble soul must inhabit so fair a casket. Long that night Irene sat by her window, looking out into the tempest; but she heard not the thunder's roar, saw not the darkened sky, rent with the fierce lightning, for visions of triumphs and splendor arose before her, as the wife of Judge Clifford, and mistress of Linden Groye, his beautiful southern home. CHAPTER II The winter passed quietly away. Mary, young and impulsive, learned to love her beau tiful teacher. With her she climbed the diz zy height of science, and drank deep at the fountain of wisdom. Yet the same dark cloud lingered. She eve❑ fancied Richard neglected her for the society of Irene. But, as he still professed to love her, she repelled the suspicion as unjust. Oue afternoon, having wandered farther than usual., and seated herself on a high ledge, overlooking, a deep ravine, she was startled by hearing bee narne; , r The voice. was Irene's ; it continued— "Mary is in my way; the foolish old judge wilt never make me his wife, but I am sure Richard loves me. If it were not for her he would have all the property, for Arthur cares no more for money than for his cousin's govern ess. Yes, I have it! a little poison in her evening bevera! , e—thenall will be as I wish." And, with a low laugh she passed on. Mary heard;sone in'a dream. The future seemed to darken around her. , "From the anguish of her spirit came a moan— A 'avail of utter dreariness, I sigh oUinward weariness, Of confidence o'erthrown." Frt;En a child :she' had the' strange power of assuming the appearance of death, which had deceived her most intimate friends; and this she determined should be the test of Richard's love, as with a heavy hart she walked home in the gathering twilight. Entering her likFurious apartment, she went directly to a side-table, on which was placed a small silver pitcher; containing her "evening beverage," clear cold water. With a slight shudder she dashed its contents from the win dow, anOthenearefully refilled it. Soon after Irene entered and began to talk with animation of their studies for the ensuing day. "I am weary and faint," interrupted Mary; "will you give me a glass of watet?" Irene started. The color forsook lip and cheek as she handed the fatal cup. Yet be tween her clinched teeth she muttered—"lt is well," as Mary lay before her pale and ap parently lifeless—as Arthur knelt by her side in uncontrclled grief—as the old judge was borne unconscious from the room. Slowly the hours passed, until at length Richard a returning footsteps were heard ; on the broad veranda. "Now," Mary thought, "I shall know that he loves me. The fearful acting will end, and we shall' be happy again. When he entered her darkened chamber Irene was by his side. stood for some moments gazing on . the pale sleeper, when Richard said--- "She is young to, die; but now , „ Irene, beauti ful Irene, you can be my, wife. I never loved my cousin. It was her wealth I sought. Now that will be mine, and the only wife I could ever love." Together they left the room. Mary longed to follow them, the murderess' and deceiver, but her will had no control over her muscles. The fearful trance continued. Though perfect ly conscious of all thatpassed around her, she was unable to speak ormove. She knew when they placed her in • the coffin, with white rose buds on her pillow: When they bore her to tile gray stone church. She heard the low pealing organ, and her father's sighs; felt his last kls on her forehead. 13at when they -- I placed her in the family vault beneath the church this dreadful consciousness gave way to oblivion. CHAPTER 111 After the funeral Irene left Linden Grove; but darker shadows were gathering around it. Judge Clifford was dying. A brain fever, brought on by grief and excitement, had done its work; and the weeping servants gathered around -to see "old massa" die. Arthur left the vicinity the day following the funeral of Mary; but, with his hand in Richard's, the broken-hearted father passed away. They laid him by his daughter's side, and Richard Leslie walked the old halls alone. Spring, summer and autumn came and went. At Christmas Irene was to become a bride.— And was Mary.forgotten ? No. Her young face often haunted the gallery of tnemory. Once, at the twilight hour, she stood before him. Richard fancied he drempt, as. her voice fell on his ear; but the words haunted him for many a day. They wero "beware, be ware !" Thus a dark thretid was woven in his golden dreams of happiness. Again and again the same sad face met his view. Upon his wedding day, in his stately southern home, out on the broad Atlantic, amid ancient ruins, and in the• galeries of att. Irene saw it, too, and day by day the rose faded from her cheek, the lustre from her eye. It was sunset in Venice, and the rich mellow light gilded palace and dome. Seated on .a low balcony, Richard and his young wife gazed up on a scene of rare beauty. Above them hung the deep blue heavens, and below floated many a light gondola. . Irene dreamily touched .the strings of a guitar, but wildly started as a familiar voice tell upon her ear. It was Mary's, but her only word was - "beware," as she vanished in the gathering gloom. As soon as she disappeared, Irene, pale and trembling,' exclaimed— " Richard, I will tell you all. It is .of me she warns you. It was I who put the poison in her cup ;" and, with a piercing shriek she fell at his feet a helplessmaniac. CHAPTER IV When all had left the church, Arthur, im pelled by a strange attraction, returned in com pany with the , gray-haired sexton; tolook.once more, upon his cousin. As the glass lid of the coffin was removed, a pale face met, his earnest gaze— "Pale 6.3 IN wreath of fallen 8110 W; While round it, like a silken veil, Dark silken tresses flow." Could this be death ! Even as Arthur asked himself the question, he fancied she moved. Yes, the fatal trance was broken. Slowly her dark eyes unclosed, and wildly gazed around. The old sexton fled in affright, nearly upsetting, the lantern in his haste to depart; while Arthur received the faintin..irl in his arms. "I cannot go home," she murmured; "take me to cousin Lucy!s." Accordingly they bor-.; her to the nearest plantation, and placed her in the care of her mother's cousin, a kind judi- mous woman The weeks which followed were a blank to Mary; a page blotted out from the book of memory. When the crisis 'lf the fever Was passed, the news of her father's death brought her again to the verge of the grave; and not until spring had yielded her flowery sceptre to summer did she again begin to rally. But happiness seemed gone forever. Though, she deeply deplored her deception, the past could not be recalled; and the future, but a few months ago so bright, now seemed wrapt in impenetrable glooin. . In affliction, as :well as prosperity,. Arthur proved himself the best of .friends.. Indeed it seemed quite natural to Mary that the love .. so, soon rejected by Richard led the beautiful but unprincipled Irene to the altar. All this time Arthur had been absent from Linden Grove, and Mary was believed to be dead. Of course we need not state that it was her bodily presence which appeared to Richard in the library, followed him across the ocean, tracked his footsteps on the continent, and whis pered amid the fading light of that rich Italian sunset. Startled by Irene's shriek, Mary returned in company with her husband, who waited in an adjoining room. Amid the gathering shadows, and while the bright stars looked forth one by one, all was explained. Each felt they had deeply sinned; but humbly forgave the other, even as at last they hoped to be forgiven. Together they returned to. Linden Grove, beautiful Linden Grove. The sun shone as brightly on the proud ancestral trees; the grass was as fresh and green, the birds sang as gaily L 1 as when they left it. Yet to the cousins it could never be the same. Years passed on, and childish footsteps and childish laughter echoed through the old house. Joy and mirth once more became its inmates. Yet "TJncle Richard" ever moved among them like a dark shadow of the past. Grieved at his evident sorrow, they often tried to interest him in their plans and hopes, and wondered at his sadness, never dreaming of the darkened chamber inhabited by his maniac wife, the twice beautiful IRENE ATP-EATON.- Waverley Mag azine. LETTER FROM THE ARMY HEADQUARTERS FIFT:I ARMY CORPS, • • January 24, 1863. DEAR PILOT :—Without a doubt, our friends at home have been speculative and anxious concerning the issues of 'the late movement of the Army of the Potomac. It is over—the boys once.again comfortably domiciled in their rustic shanties, with pleasant ' anticipations based on the probabilities of sojourning there a fortnight, perhaps a month more., The-cas ualties of this rencounter are, not so frightful as those of the recent Fredericksburg disaster, nor was the repulse occasioned by rebel strata gem and valar. Mitd this time was the author of our discomfiture ! Laurel-crowned Mud is extraordinary ! GENERALISSMO MUD our tri umphant enemy I! Facts concerning Virginia mud are incredible, even to eye-witnesses with their, crural extentions, by sad experience, clotted as high as the genuflecting pointy -and citizens of Franklin county at, home, could scarcely conceive its positive depth and copi ousness. We will just state facts as we saw them, without comment. On Tuesday, the 20th instant, the order WAS given " to strike tents."= About . nine;the army commenced moving; we followed in the even ing about four. It was very cloudy, but no rain had fallen yet. The guard had gone per haps a mile, when they met a regiment-pitching tents for the night. The duty of the Provost Guard, on a march, is to arrest skulkers and stragglers; hence we could not pass this regi ment, es our place la in the rear, and the Cap tain (who always has our comfort at heart) ordered us 'to "right-about-face," and return to our old quarters foi- the night: As wo.el peoted to lea; o 4'llo, jrpinitig, we did not take the ordinary precaution to-night in the adjust- ing 'Of our "shelters," but sinipli stretehed the, flies horizonitally and fastened them to the opposite bogs. Gathering our corporealities under this teaporary fixture; and assuming as comfortable a " pasish" as possible, we' re signed ourselves to Morpheus. About midnight we awnke with rather • unpleasant sensations, and were not a little " 'rigged" to find our feet lying in three inches of water, and'our blankets abundantly saturated with the same ' liquid.— We hastily arose - and . " established a base"— the soldiers term fora 'big fire, and 'dried our selves 'until- day break, when We resumed - our " onward march."' The peculiarities of Vir ginia soil are such that a little fall makes a big slush, aid by the laws of geometrical ratio you'can have an idea of the effect a big fall, like the present, has on terra firma here. 'We, of course, "picked our steps" in marching; and yet actually every succeeding pace sank our feet at least four inches, and frequently more. We remember the accounts given by 'newspaper correspondents of the " mud and mire," before Washington last spring, but none would have done justice to the present 'state of " under-foot" in- this vicintty; We caught up,with the army in the evening. It had halted because it could not advance.. -We:never wish again to:see the Army of the -Potomac in a plight, such as we saw it this evening. . Sta tionary cantons 'were eVeiywhere visible. We saw sixteen horses attached to one in the vain endeavor, to extricate it. Four more additional quadrupeds of the long-eared species were at tached, and then, by very much * yelling, more lashing and not a small amount of army pro fanity, it was eventually drawn out. This is only- one of many similar scenes. Stalled teams were numberless. Many wagons were tongueless, and not a few in possession of only three wheels: Just before we turned in forth night we saw a squad of artillerists appropriLl .ing several convenient dead horses in the pacify of a bridge, the better to the passage of their pieces over a low plat ; The .scheme was successful. It rained all Ty. On Thursday morning we were ordered iek to our old camp again. It was still raiping, and had Peen all night. About ten o!`clock we com menced our journey. We thought we would play strategem, as strategic moves are all the go now, and flank G.EN.llup by taking a near ADVERTISING mifik (W4A, Advertisernoits will he inserted in THtatror et the following rates 1 column, one year c.OO of a column, one year.. I.E of a column, one year 1 square, twelve months :St • 1 Pctuare, six months 1 square, three months 4.04 1 square, (ten lines or leas) 3 insertions 1.00 Each subsequent insertion 26 Professional cards, one year 5.00 road. But lo ! he is as übiquitous as old Stone wall himself. We met him in greater force to day than yesterday, and it was by dint of very strenuous exertions and at the expense of feet, rather mirabile dictu ! that we once more saw ourselves at home ! The whole army was ordered back on Thurs day, but in consequence of the impossibility of the roads, its progress was slow. The pioneer corps was increased by large appointments pro tenzpore, as much of the way had necessarily to be well corduroyed before they could succeed in bringing back the cannon. All obstacles, however, were successively surmounted, and the boys once more occupy their old quarters. We are not militarily schooled sufficiently to say anything about the virtue of the more, or probable strategem manifested by the Generals who ordered it; but would modestly state as our opinion, that it was well planned; and had not the unfavorableness of the weather prohi bited its execution, would likely have placed the rebel army across the river entirely hors du combat. Hooker, with his grand division, changed position from the centre to the right. You remember this General before the Freder icksburg battle, wished to cross about the ene my's fortifications, and come in on his rear, but Burnside vetoed the plan. It seems as if this time be intended carrying out this first idea.— Recent developments, however, lead us to won der whether the whole movement was not a feint after all; and that the inclement period (any one could tell from the appearance of the morning the army moved, that a " storm was brewed') was chosen in order to make it appear that the weather prevented its being carried out. We wonder whether it was not done in order to prevent suspicions of some probable future movements. This opinion is strengthen ed since report has it that the Army of the Po tomac is broken up—part of it to go to South Carolina and the rest to Washington. The rebels have their jests over our ill ono cesses. They have, in letters legible, at a distance, written on a board, nailed to a tele graph post—" Yankee Notions, Burnside stuck in the mud, with pencil sketchings below of an army hopelessly endeavoring to extricate itself from deep quagmires. They hailed our pick ets, telling them, that if Burnside did not get himself away soon, they would send " Stone wall"'`with a detail to help him. Another ex- pressive report comes across the river—they have theye'on their hand-boards, instead of so many miles to Fredericksburg, so many miles to "The Burnside Slaughter House." We did not see these rebel puns of which we writes-- Not wisbin& to bore your readers with a lengthy letter, we are Yours, ever, TO UNMARRIED LADIES The following items of advice to ladies re niainihg in a state of single blessedness are ex tracted from the manuscript of an old dowager : If you have blue eyes, languish. If black eyes, affect spirit. If you . have pretty feet, wear short petti coats. I/ If you are the least doubtful as to the 7 wear them leng. While you are young, sit with you ' 1( the light. When you are a little advan ' your back to the window. If you have a bad voice al low, tone. ,i If it is acknowledaed t ' voice, never speak in a hi. tone. If you dance wel'7) d ~. seldom. = ; - ' .14 you dance ill, n: dance at all. Ifyou sing w e ll e puerile excuse. If you sing i n . - rently, hesitate not a mo ment, when, yo , e asked, for. a few persons are incompet 'judges of singing, but every cue is sem i 4- a desire to please. I t i s a l sin your power to make a friend i by sm i 8 .-, what folly to make enemies by frown u are envious of another woman never a,,,1- it but by allowing her every good quality perfection, except those which she really ossesses. • If you wish ,to let the world know you are in love with a particular man, treat him with formality, and every one else with ease and freedom. , If you are disposed to be pettish or insolent, it is better to exercise your ill-humor on your dog, or cat, or servant, than your friend. If you would preserve beauty, rise early. If you would preserve esteem, be gentle. If, you would obtain power ) be condescend ing. la N. D. R. in flit with speak in a on have a fin*