el)t. ' tolitt':o „ reirdaufn levkef rat nierritiitihistrld; • DOW & -..qb‘rt.l (Mee .on liteleett aide of the ; Ptiblie MO=o -.. 1 ,;1 • . TEIiMS4IO.I:IOT.LIiR a year in aditineiK' ' One :Do lla# Fifty Ceifta•if notinid .inendss, and f delayed . mail after AIM ti t ettiiiVO &Ilan wilt ' Dnaxinfil aptinital;wiih the Ptibilibemcim, less arrearagia are paid( Le 6i the On' 'business withl • N; bsVof. fuze mastisa4iost,Paid toiinenre attention:: 111. ni, tirOrtis. • . t _ Tex; /MD.: ..; Foretell Eifel 'iiienses . Atha ; And the' vrillid is geoilrimg Aid,: It • , Tieofig.,o 4 4 l lflA I :9uarne•iight , •• , Like 1111 a agTlit.pf tike n ,liightr • coidor,,eolde; Urnid R ate R ' valroi•'ehill`;' • ' • &roar tkettattby:•odOr - grow • i • I offieltthe moOlabove,the roe t Weleaftwe life' !*- -41 h retmois aiellaipa revives; Clonilifeara and *pp Attlora. . Fly u#,.,10,dpiv,!4.-I,lArnl7. • O'er the hearth. there comes a bloom ; • warl4,Pieumetfoi4ipor bold - lam tim:roie4 above tho moulil.l • ' f • Tile aper 1, tit VIoW.eTS. B=EM= There .1814Realiee; whose name is Doak. .And,w(di WS sickle-keen; , • •,. , „ lie reaps ate beard ed . gviin at4 .! ) , reat A And thdifiewers drat grow between. • " , 'Shall I Nave naught that is faint';' maid , " Haveilaught.bot-thq bearded.grain ? Then& the breath of thorn d e w" is sweet lathe, I wt. give them • . ~• , ,C He gatlipa the floweeswitblearless eyes, He kie4d -their drooping leases, .• It was for, he Lord of l'edadiSe He boutki them 3'elle~ves i 3 If " My Lori bath tiecabof these fiewletsTaY,” The Re4eit saidiMael mailed 3: " Dear tins of she earth are they, Where e was ',cenc6A . chtild. They shall* bine& iii - fields of ligbe, • T ransphlpted may- cane; ,• • • And saints;.•uppr! theirAiNpents,; 7o l.l4te. These wired bloasoms wear." • And the miither gaga, in team and pain - The doviera she most love; She knew he could find them all . again. In the *h oflight aticWe, , 1- • 0, nisi in i*aelty, nntin wytth, The 114er came that day; , 'Twas an iingel visited the green earth, And tt4 the floivicis tiWay: Ittiorellttnn. " KAC#ED SOUNIAIM-ME,AILILIT IiZT. J. T: EIE/bLtT, There are some mountains standing.- on this sphered of ours that seem almost,.con; scous beiris;• and if theY Could but Speak, and tell Ist they have seen 'arid - felt,'tbe traveller litho pauses at their base, would tremble wish awefaxidnlarra... • ... For.somh good reason, the Deity has us-• tally choseU mountain summits, and those which•are isolated, as the theatre Where he , made : the girandest exhibitions of himself.--;: It may be tiecatisel those . grand striking fea-1: tures in nt*ure fixate locality of events so that they inn never fade from the ,memory of men. The' giving of - the law needs . no lofty cohniin to Ceinteeitiorate it MOtint Ararat lifteitsuwfill form tot aids the elciudi,' a perpetua4 , unwaiting Monument.' God's, 1 exhibition Of, himself to the aw-struck proph- i et, as be . kpassed hy him heralded by the storm, theearthquake,,and the flame, needs no pyraroiMo 4,_itheloeulity in history.—J Mount Horeb r tellS,„Wisere • the .:Almighty, dimmed iiiii glcui,limit ; coveted the human: face with his earf u l hin, so thatliis.bright mess might ram' destroy" the being that Wntild gaze upor4 .hint. ' 1 The transfigliration . of the God-tin reqtfires .nekisillar of brawl to , arrest the iye and aid„the.; senses as man contemplates the spot Where the ,wondrous, scene tratillited÷Mounf Tabor is'itsever-: lasting tnettiorial.: Thui do' moUtitain . siuni-, wits tami',..lbe silent yet . moat eloqUent his- - .toriatis of *Ewen and earth.,i - - - - 1 4knotheqeason . r hy mountains have been chosen by., the Deity for his zpost ,polemn, revelations may be that their 'solitude and' far remova l 'from human interriiPtiOn and . .. the sound4of busy life, .render them better fitted .forl"tich .elnumunications- than . , the: plain and e city..'. : . The fi 'i n tile ist. of Sacred Mountains - , is Mount' ' i itiat. - The first named summit; in human Itiatory, it emerges from thillOOd:' and lifts4l , heath over-the water tditiirkl' down on : -41 coming *aerations to the efid! of time. "blither ii_was changed in that; mighty cofulsion whiehdrowned the world, or wherhot its - 'lolly ; peak which saw ' the: swelling.. wttite,rs and ‘ marked . their - steadri rasa-remaiti:ed the. same . ,.,we know not. , :, At, ail events, he mountain.looked 'dOwn at the: swaying' World iitilti feet; us cities - floated from theiq foundations 'and came dashing; .against itsiiidesi ; behddra Wilder scene; than ever ore* a btittle,field,,asitheank and saw sr a gen - er ... cMa.,sh_riek and sink. to., gather. lint* * ' t ii '' May have been -its: former hbitory;''' ' qi* . ' stands iii the Walt' ; memorial of the! fiOndi , 4 , Rising like 'it itigik.: loaf from Ote' plain, its.ksp-: is covered Irith!,l perpetual iuow, =h as seldom been pro-'1 failed by *ma:•:.'; Bit- lhere was . sij time arlum,!zhe• dlnsist! itiand might •' 8 ier mm08,4414-4* , yet ,airept.: dies..aes,': thundere94ll,gl' v!ite.*TpWf4 ,i -. i, • - •,-4 . Thoughi-the Mediate tOpearstaceof ,s ; flood thaiNdtiad iitilian = 4W wOrlitirtia' en eventlhatlifiggeridlittnitilelief;'*. Noah, aerditsit-t. the . salute( hearciii* p a his 4 4: 8 4.05- .41oFaiktits, Or that; does not lain there jsk!lok.a.fulipr ante*, luvianiii.'''e merely :ems ` 'ttsion; * : mitetl. ei,eirksiniriireiold Of iiiiirtillajf:# dozen of slientithist IliiiiimiedOrlideldlibei rest is wilippedinlimpenetrablesmySter ied, We are too that dm-world was drown but.the tostrtieul so 91, .thigAesrifit seenr4re left '!.Ptireitiri;#,..ii .403 k 1 ..9'0e d*irition a .the Via* ths'ioae . -* welt liiiskit iheir itilial'OCCiiiiiitioiiii;" . ing and thinking and nutreyintaid giihi: 1 . 4 ...-- .. —_______.,— *.,,.„ . • . , . ' ' If sl . ' !.;',... ".4 v . ~..{' "' ' , ... . s i ' ••dt ,:•—•—•.--,-,!-- L-4: ...„,... i , :.... ; , .1 .. .i;.: 1 i.. '•:! , 'l-• * . ..." 7 ';'- 'I I 7 ;, ' .:I.i .„,.: , ,1%-, .4r t -:, .; ,; - :.,.4 ••4 , t, . r i -t'; ;.• i'- :4 : e %dez.n. : $,,.. ..--4 t' -, tiii - :: ,‘ i • ,-- ' ..1.. , .''it • ..., ' 14,- , , 11 „ I -. ...,1„ . „ . El it r,, ,!.. :*,' '1 „1.? i l.; 11 7 .: $. g . .. . , , , , .' l'ir . l' ....,..,:: 1,,,, ,'' ' . 1.-. 'IA 1; f;' . 1 ,, ,t;..— ';„:••• , -,;'!.. I: _14 4 _, ..‘„, ....„ T ..., _., • . t•. •,.2i„ ~..,..,, ...„ .2 ~ . . , • . ~.. ~ ~, ...„.,..„ ~!Ly, eif2' Ist rr.,-; •-,, 1 • ; 1, , '.. • .......1.,-. ~_,. i„, :,•,...' d,- 'y _ , .i..ki : 7- Ai , "k' s '''. ''..l ,•-• ;:it,i--.. , ,,p,..1 ,-. ,; i.• :',- ,•• •ni,•,•s. - ;;; ; ,•- • • --„, . • , , - .. , • . . ;IA _ ~,„ r , , •, - • rli it . . , e 4 16 VERY E _ 'RE FERENCE 91' OPINION IS NOT' A' tortkEN,cE .- ! - r EFrY• i , : pal, i 10 , ... , • • .t..!+•• ..:1,1 :!:,f...:,4i,:,,, 'IOOIIIIMEMOO ~ v • itftaarriage,i4dl the:.flood• came f and swept - them all ay,r,y,„",,that tye ,get fury data - by . 'which 'weVartlirrialinyling . ;;fitefiion of • the critilttP,OheigAet,thkri i sjinrt,„staternent is worth everythmg r and with it before me, I have neeMetitneri,thought J :.could almost . , hit: the aelie. , ,- Noah, ; whom. (red was whitened lify r ihe'ffeses Of di centimes, laid the founditiAllirf Lai liiike'Veski on a pleas mit day, whert,all.,was,swrie, and tranquil. The fields were, arailitig O r verdure before his eyes ; lllriiiirlinled brehiei floated by, and the muitikoor'birdritint - sounds of busy life were about him, when he, by faith alone, laid the ftftilie'gni artinit Structure which warktb?scill over ia i hdriedi Ohmic' When 'Men, on inquiring.: the design of that huge. ' edifice,iwere told its purpose, they FOuld '• hardly 'Ciedit,their , gentles; and Noah, tho'' accourrtedly iilJ'a very upright ridd respect= - able man, became a ,jest pr children. As the farmer retuined at evening ,from his fields and die', gay; citizen otthe'town drove past, they christened it "Noah's folly."-- These more aged and-Sober shook „their heads Wi,seljr, saying, !It!** Allah is mad." ' Even the workmen eugaged upon it laugh ed as they drove the nails and hewed the plank, yet, declared- they oared not so long as the foolish, man ervas,-ahle i to pay. Still J the ark went' up';' mid' the day's wonder 1 ceased to be talked'ithollt. When it was finished and curiosity satified, it was dis- I missed from, the mind et.a ,passing-folly. Yet I' hive' 'soitietimes 'wordeled what- people thought when they saw the beasts of the field and the forest; and fowls of the air, .even ,the venemous serpent and the strong limbed lion, coming* pairs to that ark. This must lave staggered them amaztagl i y,, tied made the ark tar a' tilde a fresh topic, of ' ebriversatiOn: - 'At 'length, the patriardi with t-. his fainilyeatered-:= the door was shut ripen the-face of the %world, and he sat down; on *e strength [ of a single premise re- await the momentous issue. That night the sun, went '' down. over the green hillS'beautiful rig ever,: and the stark curate oui in the blueirky, and nature breathed J ongaml peacefully. In the morning the sun rose in undimmed splendor and mounted the heavens. Deep •withiethe tiuge Siiireture' Noah could bear I the' muffled'. soturd'• of tiff vvithOut. ' The : lowingef herds camel on his ear, and the song of the husbandman going to his toil, and the rapid roll of carriage-wheels as they -hurried past, and perhaps , the ribald shout , sml,larigh of those without,- as they.expend . ed their wit on t ,him- and his, ark together, o say nothing Of 'the , improbability of the event, the idea was preposterrms that such lalelmless, helpless afihii, could outride a •wrecked world. • Thus day after day had _pissed on until -a week had gone by, but ,still the faith of that old man never shook. 1 At length the sky became overcast, and the =I ME i gentle rain descended-=to Noah the begin ning of the flood, to the world a welcome shower. The farmer as he housed his cat-‘ Ile, rejoiced in the refreshing moisture, and the city never checked its gaity or the man l of wealth his plans. But as the rain con tinued day after day, and fell faster and flercel on the drenched earth, and the swol. 'len streams went, surging by, men cursed the storm that seemed determined never to bfeak up. The lowlands were deluged; the streams broke over their banks, bearing houses and cattle away on their,, maddened 'bosoms. Wealth was destroyed, and lives lost, 'till men began to talk of ruined for feits, famine,' and general desolation ; but still it rained on. ' , Week after week it came peering from the clouds, till it was like one falling sheet of water, and the inhabitants 'ceuld - no longer stir from their doors. The rich valleys that lay along the ricers were flooded, and the peasants had sought the eminences around for safety. Yet still the waters rose ; ground, them, till all through the !alley waiting but little black islands of he- Man beings werU.seen, on the surface. 0, then what 'fierce'`struggles" for life there were among them: 'The' mother lifted her Anfruit thove ,herltead.; .witile she strove. to .insintaitbertincertain footingin the sweep ,ing. waters; the strong, crowded, off the Weak is each sought the highest point ; and liielibing mass Slowly . crumbled away until the ' water ';'itarefit.' isnibizah' and ''taiiselessly .shove thenr.alh- : Men Were 'heard talking ; of the number of lives-lost and the; amount of wealth ~deilftityp t il , and , that seciyi flood 1 ! Miff net' fiiiipitietilitt the remembrance of Vie' oldist titan:'' 1 1 0 Cite yet ffidetheil of the Illtiglilgroundirbeitig covered, lease' of all the ,sisountains. , t ';To '',,firawn. the woad' it mutt ;tiqn tillithedweatiiitself was filled eboSe its level ter : miles, and so men feared it not, [44 tica,glit for amusement within doors till idle istinid slicidtlibate. 0, whar s'een'Of iiiee.aid Amine. and - brutality and''ievelty i distAblit storm,witriess in , the thronged city, -and what unhalloWed- scmgs mingled in the . pausevilf,thip idast i that s!rept . hy,.. . 1 , .„ . l'ililt nie - lingiknnother sound was heard ;that ;lent patentis:tiOeireryelleili;'ind'eliain ,edeverrtonguaqvinute lenior.' It was a .tar distant goirAlptbutlearful,- yet sound. iPg 'Pore,Aseinci 'O4 04l*na...oxery nso- Meta, till if,filled,llo air. - The earth trem bled and'iliiie - under it is if an earth quake was on its march; and vier' and - anon . _came a crash i ...naf.4lhe,.‘MiNl i of nature" ,ifrcr, lui'aging.: 1,0 m: and, louder,._ and iiiiiiie l feiiible' it jrev,' " s nll s ' ipen forgetting s t ;ilikertheir titurkand tkiii'nner 'rushed Outin•tho whispeiittg "The' imdf-the flood"— n iunl. 16 I a nelorwelsi &Ake ofiwhieh • P? , AP. ar . 4 1 4; ver.*ni.tbefore, ,muneol li ng ovekdie ern chlag, earth..., filtretekangitoot bOrlion to li 'rlion, ii far afilie: l eye could faith; 1044 Welt like • n' limitless nit ' ih .the clumlsabOe; iticame pouring-144- eOn namisiamit,n, :waters, while:•the !innitthitud 0 0 -rapo: o 4 oll 44Nliprfol*P4o4 , nithlirr" iii iiiiialii4uinktnMonntqns - that 11 o ,!r' 4 ilteraii o6 o Ili itt'o4age, - aiiiViliei iiiiii itirilikieki lirmiettedlliniiiriVeriii;ilidtik 'orens.hore ~ deneininrmir t" o f Vii -1 oa -1 ,fwthiug . . 10; after liftYl4ind king' ; dom _after ' loom, Aliseppeared wade A scene ..! 2 f.te.7o= 04 . 079 F, imollAive,ble.— e Tie fointniksirtise griat'ilelt:vii . e:6rt 1 'kepi i s p;lll , , ,_. ,I• I v :: .:), ^ ' .. , .= • rlri ..... ',t r., ,i,..t ~ ,: , 'l, But rthe last cry I:if :human- -agonY , wag at ' lila gtithiiihrieiin Met , ocean in its:flow, mind the waves , sweot:on witliout.i.ainhore.= ,0, what a , ivrectk wins' there! the•'wreek'of renlthousaint , yeartf,, ,, with tier , citiesit its Milk ',sreteil•-.fields,;ol:l Irdightyr;pritiulation. , • , Not lailiiveted. , masts: had brcikeM-fitithera, •Ithe *lick of some gallant vessel, wereseenon , that surf/nee, i : thit•fragraincits of iititrashed and broketvw • '',, , ,. ' 4f .'. -AT '.:;n11 - 0.- bleiwreeksplendiiitei.,2 4 .'''''7 , f;:, „,. - Llehr-- 6 °lll 'Palacsigal' Opp : ''',„'. c :..-r,_ ' ulatt'4' •1 1 ,i`caltiLandlugurydftweatr , - ,-_.' .`us ers itig the bosom-of the --deluge;iblcoNitutumn. leaves: the surface of eonie•-forestinteantk': l' But amid the sudden midnight : that:bid iirappedi , •the.letittlo and: rthe , fretrifrinfrithe elements and ~utteij ritekthrott and chaos ao i f *lV:things ; there • is , one heart that irear.zur, , Qmly'asAn sleep; one brow over which ~, - • ~. I nearreatli,dlr passion or of fear passedt[iir ~ iii the solitary ark that lifted to the-heaving , dillowe the;aged,patriachltrieltin prayer.= Amid the surging'4l , that ' fierce ocean, his inice , may not ;hare been heard by mortal 'aitt,rbut the - light of 'faith . 'shone• round his aged form, and the inoving lip spokewie pose as tranquil as childhood's on the bostiat of :maternal' love. , ' The - patriarch's' - God , tinted that wild scene, and Noah felt his frail hark-:quiver in every timber, without Arne Mentor himself.. Up-borne on the flood, the heaven:proteeted ark rose over the buried 14ities and mountain, and floated' stray on ~.the shoreless deep .: Like a single drop of I dew this, round /mere of dtirs hung and trem .bled—a globe'of 'wafer in mid heaven. I have oftemivondered. what the Conversations were during the long day and night that Lonely ark was riding on the deep. As it• rose and fell on the long-protracted swell, sPassive ruins would go thundering by, Whale lbrests sink and rise with the billows, while ever and anon art upturn hill, as borne along by the resistless tide, It struck a buried' Mountain, would loom for a moment like name black monster over the waves, then' . plunge again to the fathomless bottom.— amid this wreck and these sights, the ark nailed on in safety. How often in imagine lion have I-pictured it in the deluge at mid hight. To a spectator what an object of in 'fierest it would have been: Round the wide harsh the light frermi its solitary window was the only indication of life that remained.- 7 9ne moment it `would be seen far upon the (rest of the billow,' a mere speck of dame ttadd the limitless darkness that environed it, and -then disappear in the gulfs below as it'extinguished forever. Thus that gentle tight would sink and rise .on the breast of the-deluge, the last, the only hope of the human race. Helmless, and apparently •uideless, its wreck—seemed inevitable, .bm the sea never rolled that could extinguish that star-like beam that told where theark still floated. Not et-en the strong wind that the Almighty sent over the water to dry it Op, driving it into billows.that stormed, the heavens, could sink it. 'Though it shook like a reed in their strong grasp, and floun-. pred through the deep gulfs, it passed un erringly on to the summit of that mountain int which it was to rest; and at length struck ground and ceased its turbulent motion.— (Noah waited a week, and then- sent forth a raven to explore the deep. Though the Waters still -swept from mountain to moan- Min, the myriad carcasses that floated on the surface furnished both food and resting Once, and he returned no•more. He then sent forth a dove. It darted away from the place of its long confinement., and sped on tepid wi ng over the flood, now turning this. I pay and now 'that, looking in vain with its •gemle.eye for the green earth, and at last turned, back towards the ark of rest. The frip of its snowy wing Was heard on the 4-inctow, and the patriarch reached forth his band andtook it in.' The fierce pantings til its mottled breast, and-its drooping pin ihns,, told too well that earth gave no pia& d-repose. But the second time it was sent abroad it -returned with an Olive led in its mouth, showing that the earth had risen feoniits burden, and was sprouting again in ierdum . Then the patriarch went forth with his family and stood on Mount Ararat, rilnd le, the earth was at his feet, but how e.haiiied. -. Cut into gorges which showed 'here strong currents 'swept; and piled into fidgen, Whore' in every part marks of the , ins,* thnt, had ravaged it. Noah and his farailY ivere,alorie in the world, and he built 'I IV altar tlier 'on the top of the solitary Nrantaiii; curd lifted his voice in prayer, and e'AlniWiti talked With him as “friend ' t hetli'Wlth ,friend;" bidding him go forth find occupy did earth: And ps the flame of the *e. rose from ;the mountain :top bear*the ' triarcb's prayer heavenviard, 1 _ . Abe pTottose as ginen that the earth should .bevey!ctri swept by a, deluge, and 10, frod'Singnet..ring .-appeared in the .clouds; 4trehing tbe,tnan :of Gcxl,-.and shown seta *arrant that the 'covenant should never be broken:. ,-, ' - -,, ti Baltized, by the flood—consecrated by the inhar—illuminated rby the .first _fresh ;rain bow, Mount Ararat stood a sacred mountain . . .. . en t h e eart h . . ~ r . . . REIDLEY From the -New York Oblserver. P 'S'LETTEIS !HI LONG LAZE. Long Lake Julylo. r I ispo,ke in *pastor the faiiiing mipibil ities'tirounA thug Lake, and'itthe ' Wong : pre , 1 *hill 'lo.inia 'to be abdtilon •'a par— either ' kink very' great oi'veri enticing. :y4emitilui, iiiiiieter, , did hot refer to the ,Anti "'Beyond '" Long Lake 'im 'the furdiei lifotPea: an they stretch • to . ' the Black"rivet 40tonni , '''''Thii . regiOn I hare lint'slightb , frinitWarietita lia it is moin 'tete! and fir ile than that partioal have been describing. t ' inf. F Benedict of Vermont - Univer4itY, as 'ffoneover, thi s enpie eeCtion of the Shill ? .;a:lii - iepi. iil'llie' Intailjry:diftereii,tp ' ll 644:'lt4ret;Laifg`nntrin? on: :West, „Pia ' l ,o':vrAte . ` ,of the connt%As,, very ,ext, etonve, • pii_lio s IREt4e 01 .PPi correct mi.r.Y,CYM 114 `4iiiiin, of T . ol:_ii evsr 'eiecated--Nner 0 11440 li a t*940firin th'!. g ia ll ic,l tl*Atir 5. 1 1 4 -,, •-,... :Biif iiir fait ivu soon Off 'the' land and ; 4 ~ '..otetlia.seeti&y. I' did not 'comei.lierq to , spedelate:ia' town-lots, to - found a colony ; 'for triibservett the interestl of lend holder.; j•Beirig , after 'health, t sought the fatiguing' Irattivand course fare of the woods. .• It :was ahtit day asWemerged from the *vitas on the shore of Long Lake, and 'the sun came down, with:zilch scorching 'power:that .1 marked Friday July 10th, in• etilen= der v to tree if the temperature , •;tras• corresi• Iporidingly high in New York and' the settle. meets. Well, this burning day I Mile in a lumber waggon through -the . woods over Jrcioti, and 'rocki seven 'miles,' walked seven •milea and rowed a—beat eleven good day's work , for!an invalid fresh front the doctoes hands. Along the road you would see trees nt certain intervals, marked Hothich, after vainly ettemPtingto aceonnt for, I-finally inquired' the reason, of. I Oh, in means Highway," was the reply. rather comical way,..hoWever, of tinffirming one he was oil the highway, is not after all, or rather • was not, without its use, When the first rude path was out, a man would •iaoi have deemed himself on -a public road if he was not told it in •some way. As 'we, passed along; we wool' crane ' upon 'fires built over a hugamcle i 'the middle - of the. treat, compelling' us to take Rimini-circle in the woods. On enquiring the cause of this, to me, singular procedure; I was told that menfwere working the road, and' in the ab sence of drills, took this - Method of breaking the rocks to piece. Being sand stone / the fire slowly crumbled them apart, so lhatthe crowbartir handspike 'ecfuld remove . them. I thought . of Hannibal, and his fire and vin egar on the rocks of the 'San Bernard pass, and men seemed going back to their tive state, Instead of cutting down the'trees that stood in the way they hewed' off the roots, and then rope to the topl, polled them overwith oxen. And thus they work and toil away herein the depths of the forest, all heedless of the great world with out.. How strange-it seems to ' behold men thus occupied, living contentedly fifty mileit from a post office or village, and hear their enquiries' about the wet' with Mexico, ask ing of events that had - been quite forgotten in New York They have their ambition, but its object is a few acres of well cultivated land, or the reputation of a good burlier"; and they have their troubles; but they are barn and die in the bosom of the forest. --r• Men toiling for a bare Subsistence, for the coarsest, fare, poorest dwellings,- and meagre comforts of civilized hilt, always set me musing, and this veiled life of ours grows •still more mysterious, and man, god-like, immortal man, strangely like b mere ani mal. But on the broad lake, before a brisk breeze, and bending to my oars, these - thoughts soon left me. The tiny waves rocked our cockle-shell of a boat like- a plaything amid the bubbles, while a bush I had erected in the centre made it fairly roam through the water - as the swift blast came down though the Mountain gorges.— Far away to the southwest the golden sky shone glorious, and over its illuminated depths the fragmentaryclouds went trooping ifs if joyou's with fife, while the !northwest, towardS'which our frail: craft was driving, ihe:heavens were black' as midnight, , aii% The retiring storm-cloud, looked dark as wrath, retreating thought still unconquered. The sun was hastening to ridge of the sky seeking mountains, and his departing beams threw in still deeper contrast the under side of the clouds. But still the waves kept dancing in the light, as if determined not to be frowned out of their frolic, and 'it was with no little pleasure I watched the awful looking, mass that covered the northern heavens yield to the trldrieus, balmy, yet swift careerin., breeze that came sweeping the heart of the lake. I Was after Mitchell, the Indian whom I had &rmerly i taken with me, and who I was told was on a fishing. excursion, with •his fa4r and sister and some others, in Cold River. At length, just as We were glancin. b awalfrotri,the head of a beautiful island, Isaw i a boat coming to wards us, impelled against the wind by the steady strokes of a powerful rower. As it shot near, I beheld the swarthy and benevo lent face of Mitchell. Me lay on his oars scarcely a mipptute to hear my salutation and my propositiOn, when he, pointed to a deep bay a mile distant, around which stretched a white line of sand, and again bent to hi' oars. I followed after, fcir I knew there, was his camp, and soon after poi boats grated on the smooth beach, rind Were sittir beside ti bark shanty and discussing our fn are plans. But thole few barks, piled a„.mnst some poles were not enougltto , cover 9,,and soon every one was at work meling spruce trees or Picking hemlock bouglusfor oar coildh.— The cloudless sun Wentprouclly, pay, to sift triumphantly, to his royld couch,' timid the mountain summits, and , eis twilight'deepel ed over the land Scape, bur catrip.fire sliOt its cheerful flame heavenward, apd we lay scattered around amid t!he treeti l m delight ful indolence. Already my syqena began to rally in thepresence of 'nature4ad though a miserable invalid,.witti the biitichitis to boot, I felt that I could! lay my head lit neath the, forest and sleep without a fear. 1 Mitchell had caught ,nme trpatright noble ants!:- . -and,those,, stith the contents 14 . 1 our knapsacks,promised s:a_rioble, moppet: The trout were ro'lleat Indian l men), owl friettin iiPan'We had Isi lA, excePt tt ter' that were spitted on Jon sticks,: that ivitn one cud stuck : n i the gro nd, with, t 4 othe h i held ''their tempting b 'Ahem above thP smoke and flame. 1. - a144 off i fres,h chip tor a Platio . • - all, „Oich 4 ,,.ggeP( l my debciou trout, with` ti,.joteen of; jilinny : calm by, Jill, , side, -and plaMoog try bac i k against a .iamb{ held . him with 0 P?. hag t„1 0 . 1 1 1 § , mY r bunting-knit p ‘ 0404 bll tml#?°T c °,Pi sides uin, limit tettiptipir:, Ifeicole orrog, i lfell, 1 I ate with_ lia appetite a d !ipenlepell 4, AR beepf a itt4Or, ,tu- fty: . itionthq,, and :I efli asked T4itF*l l .K WrP,Oopla.9,9tiget a, ,q' 4 ,fu t ire gOingl i i I '4: 1 49 WittaTePtlit'dia.,l ll / riieet don. thatJ * 6 -ti°l4494i ;AFIR , it This /104 1 4,dt * gt,r,fyillielfrtl IR:#9 I °C4F plice,loi - diereCwiis liolitirmg out to-night. NM ,g• 4,'• -,1 4- ~ --t i; '' The wiratliful li ' a *ells Otihie, j rnriiigfu, rionily!' tigairist be Oticeendik lie eli,.lBtid' the tall tree-to i'S 'Swayed' . tii . : and ,fro c and sighedliti';the b cisti'aad Oar roughly fanned fire thiew its'skr'rkwitPiliift - eildieci.iheatleit-1 ward, and kilf. Wild;''Sideraii,.atid almost li t fearful! No b at must leave the' ach fi> night, I and so Tirefid i ti loading o r , rifles and setting., them' itp*Ogainst theirees,we began to 'prepiiiO for rout night' s.` topese. Soineivith their; heads' inar the .b#k shan ty, their feet tb the fire, 'others iii - the'Open‘ forest;' with their heads icerose it , - ifiek of wood; lay atretehed their fiill''lingtiiii',kiion the earth: I lttyl dowtifor ti whilethat the wind' that-had •mereaSed - tit' the gctilig down of . .the faun now :blew furiously, culcl' crash, went -,4 tree in' tbel forest, - sOuniliiit'llii, all_ thewotld' like the dull treilott of distiiiit C;iii oon. ) could•tior sleet), alai so - 4113 itg 60 . in my Ouch of boughs,l'l''went, 'au 4nd sat ' down On the- _ und;wallooked - a d' listen-' ed. Thegtead : !roar Of' Ole wave on the' beachlielow Ifni gled iti with the 'ru hOf the 1 blast above, whi e the 'tall trees iiia)ted ded• swuntion everyide,and..flimgouttheirlimig mots to the: iiil i, their ss leafy tresse.. tstream. ing het:we-diem' : and :groaned 'oil' eir an. , cient oundatio s with a deep and steady soundithat filled my heart with ernOtions at once :'solemn:; 'd fetirful. - , - .'Som#titnei- I thought. one of • ese gigantic' •fii6is must fall inAbe strag le- and crush ism Of ,our comptjny into tl e earth, and then again my. soul !paid how to the lordly mus h till that great drimeval 1, est seemed one vacit, harp-- their gongs an 'branches the mighty wires, and that strong 'last the 'fierce and fearless hand that sivep them. Now fain and far in - thelAisiance , could !catch` the co fag an / 1664111 swelli' g fuller and clearq in its rapid- march, it it ,leng,th went ove4me with a•roatthitt wili;dettfeaing, then did away, like atretiring wave, on the far tres tops. -7- Sometimes my,lWakened, imagi nation would compare the , first so ad to atroop of !wise whose steady! tram p,loiV„ and , ,ipdistinct, ; t shook lthiOarthithiltfc,tread, theit sudden ly and'fiercely , deping by, gradhally lost itself in the dist' a ce. 'The steeds Pf the air were 4ut, and t h e ir successive squddrOns, as they tent trail' ing oyer the belling tree 'tops itiade ,the 'r . reit trenible. Go' seemed neer, lheiv in 'th solitude pad aight,seemed speaking , : to me IlOw calm she, sleepers around me lay 'n the firelight, reposing as quietly amid thi wild uproar as. if nought but the clews wore . gently distilling, and yet how helpless they seemed in their plumbers. God iilone was , their' keeper, Foal I never felt more deeply the protection Of that paren tal hand than here at midi - fight. i The moon at' a length arose on the dark ness, mt*? *hid lulled, gradual ' into si lence.! I threw myself on the ~ iind and watched 'the bright orb as it slowl Imonnted the lahivens, till I finally, weariness prevailed and lislept. The crack of a rifle startled me Own' my riipose before an hour had passes' i by, and sprang, to ,my feel._ That was a'irude wak tg to one not acustomed to a banter's life hat nothing butapoor rab bit hadi suffered' . One of 'the go i ng men t bad shot him as e was stealing arpund the camp-fire, attract d,by rood wehadleft scat tered about. --- • The welcome ,morning at length came, and a little afte - :r daylight xv.e wefe afloat, steering for f 17 - take some trout tor br A; Bil .. In an in.__ , lie Calli optan'Society.6olEineroy au. ~.e4ry Col ledge, by the 1 'v. Jmnes blehain, we find the followin iiiipotiant thoughts. l u a . Someseem to ' 'nkthatthe greaVobieet ot intellectual eal tu e, is toleonvey into ihe mind something from ithout i it. They makeit a receiving cistern nstead ofa,bubbliiigspring —a pure ros e oir,...instead of a gushing fountain. -The deem it, ,enoug h for the mass to take in t le thoughts of. ptr- men, and acquire. k owledga which . the more gifted hive ma, ready , for theicl hands. The mind is ind • ed designed to receive ma ny things. from ,• ithout, itself, and much from Others. •S. l , do the bubbling spring and gushing fun tain. :They do nbt make the limped strea ii s which .they sefid forth to quench thirst s l • ater, the earth; a;id bean tify,th4 landsea . . They receives the 4 li quid streams fro , many a secret frill, and by matiy a littlej , Ip. i But: what . , alley re ceive, they . m. -, their, 'own, andi send, it forth ito fresh.an.. F ,sparkling as if each drop had ben made,in .their r own mystio chain- bier's. So it is one part of educatio4 town vey thughts to thers v ..hut it is to be so Ira* as to la a Othees th_oughtOts. ,own thoug ts,,and to, ring thens7out b,earing the i i. inarks,pf having sed:through Aliti, -process Ofitsit`wp lab° tory., d` 4f : : the ...mo4..cag pelt :beimade to,yield gold And siivet likethe mine, It ;eini at,' ast, he ;made !.0 . ,,, t* aud stamp Ihein like , k mint. ;;It l is 1 k,:great object . ~ot+ intelle 'ai - liaining'l,44 . 419 .30 take, iii the mind, rpm, igTithdut l',. itself, _as to -bring out -ori tselflimn, ;within, r r , Toi educate it, is equilre„ to-, Ang,i - ci . out,, to , delehape it, Aso 4, 8, " illd.:il inotoo:4 40 : IVA& ,11, OM r blank , ' for.'others to write th eir houghs in. ..*Toan7s mi' d ,shouldnotbe, memory just' oiretain Aai - ,others teach,hi ..; It is to yiki t lik: the thoughts , others that it may firing out . thotigka r ef. itS own, ..iti it -to tiring **Atm ,einitoe with . Ate ; Possepik .0 higher thindsitthat ~ it* y r bring , ot NW' t its : : - ti t F rs- L, i:, :17. :-, -,:•. ' I'. , I - o .f , . :t•?- The great poi tin. 4nt inpoessf4 to gain 0 103 .pg 1 4 10 .0jr! , ~Ii 4niklfr 1 ?c taught quirerapdiy, an, !retain it, yrell • s;land..stkil IPA nOlv. *IT -10,r 1 , .....iik,1.440 .- -AP. ?ODA ,1..)P liF'ciPiiiileil .tore 80noqmqgt.iptefloAilik for itoo 4. b .o qiiel, 7 . 0 0 0 dejpyczys., ,- , kith, 3bgt ftne4pAbk air q -tft 1,04 of i riii3.4o,ty,m4igh 1 tlattersii„ipm ;tin ' _. l tq l t..misipteef 4 ipittering, viiiilil regards ai eripg frofe,odietwia-ipdipt ' n a j i P utt( k# ll o , , -- 4 I Yrirot: eithiusatinglyv,,Rarii amt„ A ap , y,i i iost then, inodestly i t full* Y ard : in . 111440: ,!yArak, its ~o wn : nacfn liif., - :!1' : **is . o ql44.lhitt iv, 114,iilop#it cifi-I*9n. 1 itißtiel*ptiv, rf - ,740411,1149 Oililmv-:4At gents ,wied, wlter,- -IMd ate= T may be ..—......,...." 6 ,... —,, ----, P ,": i•i:•_,O . , id ff'lli , , :iff'i 1 l' • ' ,: •‘ ,-- i • '% 1 . ' ' • Ton*, *I" Ad.te — AKl - ig. ' - 1 • : • ....—"...1.: .. . . - ~i "..-Advertioeinenta emipiedou4yfaserteditt-t4iisti=. al f*es,4)(l,4l.,,,zoits.T!.l6s.+lnuire finish - 60m and Tweaitt !Iva , CIEs additio nal for eackaat t le4neat •ineertiera ; :itit4v. 7 - It; :.‘..',- ," .:. 1,. ~r , .....4 i, , ~ ,•1 , Yearly .ktivertisemenia, yritlt. 41A..pfiyi.lege,glal teration, mai to exit ed ' - 41 - vikier • .„ 1 i c e Qaartereattinnm she ' ;Pe” v altr;-' 4'4 60 Half ablipilA ri !, .. t , A 0.;,.. :;.:-.1,.i... do ; 1 a.:op Oiie.cOlasit i, .. . tlo ,•• z! .. do ••, .: 1 4 ♦ ,00 Butit4sit Oath," - "'` dO - V --: :di) ~. . 1 400 All' other adve • meats jrukel l tejtafttaadaible -rotes. t • F.-.,:4 . ~ + ., .'; I f; :-.1,q1t.t 1 -- .;! •,--A l lNSi§sft. ' peat , till be, *wind with *nay oci Of utzeraoas relidired. t I'l ••,. 1„-a -' -; . i. ~ ~ , :hrOuga to em: n any Nv y wefease. -, Let it nianhe - train thus toithink : i - and then his ,mind jia his_ ow . OtherWise:_it'belongir to iothtrs Ati*:the 'mostly , govern it:: „Let it be taughttlius fit hink,and it easily learn si f to acquire; Th nit can successfully Nose cut", any r,profe ton-to wilichtkt mitylend its powers:...; Z7 - 1' i n .r. yj, Anothnri.nsosliimportaitt point: hi ...mental culture kto„train the rmed to:speakai well na .tpthitik. -,lt should learn- to .'get • , good .thoughts; it. shco.iMnlsci be- able to. , give ‘ out those 1;941 thoughts:in gOod words - , viiththe living veice,-..and.iv: strong lied; ' However valuable: jhtty, onf'si thoughts may be,. if canOnt,c4Mitnumeate.theatlo others hy- wri 7 .ting or.spet4tingithey4lo"he :et but.littie .service tO any fput lifitleif: Of ialturt use ,would. berthe, miter which:: the -:earth " l con- _ twins;.: ;£; it, neAr, ,came , forth :-in gushing sprirmstind- filing rivers, tto ,reere.ah-lhe facnobf neture,, nd satisfytlie wanttrofteeint Qfiviat:mie would all, the gold )and :oilier .or the ; mines be; if they were never ogoetart of their turtive bds, and sentto the mikitnitd art u placed iiiithe 'at's hands ? ir :)0, It is alOnc m t: important pirticelarin intelleetuel trai ing, to devekipenot merely . a corner tit' the itul, not only one.side.;:of it, but thci whol of it. • This irondr?us it- ' gent is not all. nienna6F, .',,nr . all Imagniation or au intellect: 1 It hitt ,Combinatien-..0f-all these poWerit. ; ;Eich has r. its 'proper-vlace ; ,each is tut imtioitant eleminitite'ourlitippi• nessandtisefuln'ess. Thereforeeach should be cultivated in flue proportion; so attoforin the . inner, mien el . man) i one::loymiretrical whole.:; You wOrild, not-so trainanittrim: a notile,treetta.to have it•grow.all on one, side, or all trtink; , or all branches... Of .this noble tree of mind, in i telleet is the trunk, itnagina tion and are the leaves and branch es; .and geed thoughts are the fruit. iThere fore, so miltivate it that it shallhavea strong -trunk, graceful prencher, and rich fruits:T. .Thia . iieducation, this bringing .Out the mental_ - powersd this training the Mind to think, tic:think closely, protractedly, dis criminatingly, tand. honestly, to -think for itself, this educating it to give 'rout ; its thoughts by the tongue and pen, this dulti vating• in Ivymmetry and ;harmony; the item -1 ory;itgagination and intellect. i - - - i .'' ,- ":... Pipa , Ish . 41140' strates. 1 ;. - I n the sate n mber. of the Itreigit Quar terly Reiiiewo, e following anecdottis told, to illustrate the;Corruption of-the • punish lgagistraey : ' ' ' - ... ' 1 ' 4IS A rich mill r in the ,country . was fixed . upon bybree i . ersons 103;a fitsubject -to be plucked:...,lt so chanced, i that shorty before the time appointed foi the attack of the house, Ji.pany of trnv4lling soldiers had r i quested lodging. of him for the night„-which :he had granted; t and these soldiers were Sleeping above, when the'robbersarrived and demand ed his mcley. i The, Miller told them he Would go and fetch it;-he awoke -the•sol xliers;.amtwith their ,assistance kill d the three theives and left them lying on ithe ground., The next day s tts it was pr the ,authorities shouhi he made acquaint With, 1.4. e ,the circumstances, he went to the habuse of the alcafde- m agistrate ; - 7 , 7 of his village, to call.hiin til Inake . his .. 0 ' ihations. The eletilde was . nettit hotnest on •• i ' whioh he,.preceelled to, the neat - in otrien, \ hci - was not et;loine - ether.'• #e - went o to .the think tfeither was this one.-ta be fon duor ti,. , did anybody know. any ;thing of either orthe three.. At last, Itherefori lite _returned home` and:preparesl to bury them himself,l when on takineoff. the mask, whiCh concealeti their, faces, -10, and behold, therelayMe three alcalcies i ~,,- I ITO ' SWEAR NOT A ALL !=l-Yesterday, ,in the ConitherePleas,la witness, on being,pfaced on the stand to ' ake the usual preliminary 'bathe; on being quested to place his hand ori''the *colt', refused, Saying :'that if. they wiehed hii:rersion -of thehusinesiander cou'-. sidertition'be tepid do it Itistakwellivithout ',,fihirig'ihivegh - suchirriptous cereniOtiteii,.4te. 'ffe was tiled askedth held up his, his, te.nd:Tor the purpose beitig'SWOrli; but this ke:iliwy Objected to; and leommeheed repeating in , a solemn' tilde the well :known ‘, iapage, 1 ‘ Stietir itet at a l'heither by iteliir,it, or it is Gud'illirop "; ner by. the terthi, ter itis His Toot sthol ; neitheishalt-thou swear by Jerusalem.'; - 7 " 1 ','" ' , i " But you will affirm l" asked tire I " Let yoUr coMmunieution- be yea, yea f and nay,, , , nay—whatsoev er , is Anore • than theie coreeth iiifyil." ' . , - -:- Finding; that he Weida neither kite; „tle biiok, swear: by, die uplifted lyind met:Firm, t hii , Se . Piii4Advpot: o 4 6 c, l l) l e , Was' 11).44440 ni . elpi4 110questieued: 1 , syhiehM:dld yfily deliberately' shakin g the dust off kipi , feetat i theAper, Ithil' , muttering ~ to - himself ~as„ he pa,ised,a(*n the etaircpse, "Wir ,:;usito you Imiyers," acc4:- - -/V: Y. 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OK ' d ' ti1 , ..,10 1 0, :09,ilkttr# 1 .4ii?Rr -0 1 1hitki44 404 0181 w c: 111 1 nefees4o4l* •bjt4,11444 , jii,e,a,."*llit-1'4!,-9r far ,d(Mit;,,.ke4eiki'fi ll -hili 9PgrOlt-Y4llMs4ll'li4gcrw, 4a spark RC*. iiritt f i it e 41 1 R4 1 .t0 iliai ( 444 W44-14P - 41.,thee RiYo4*;eta 4 -fliiii?,#:4io -will;raVent#:- 0 1 1: 1 'Firii4ii) 1f1i4t47,4144i 4"4,•:***• 1 4-4 s t-- 4 i1u511. 3 .-Nq *OO :!9 ..--'4e Arilk;aPifit, iintinia4n*hii 04, 1 . irikf.144417,4-448 1 0: 4 1V. #ll -7 4 v, l!ke 4, Oki IFILA. tha PIO, *-11 A 4ifiiiiiiksifgit glicAwkiii*L4 4o ler .lieloiiiffol44e,niF4l,l, 4:,.(,)thib.*Alikti4 - 44.4 144*okihz,iy4lii*Willmkirtfrit , 10, him frielY; Or, fie* alit!l7* - }74ther, , .--who,i4 in : hpaven, Ovetb it tg t)10. ~, • I , 1114;riogati*Itt.0114441in:the Willi ' okkomeo I tloil; likeni-:Si isi*sitine: *eh* ' !none. , - .-= I .'', -e1 -. 4i- 1. ' ; -; mmEm I=ll