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LITERARY EXAMINER. Ibiag ler r cmuxa iwais. There's not a cheaper thing rlh Nor yet on half e dar. , . . ... 'Tie worth more than dialinguhOVd birth, Or thoasaB-U gam'd ' T'"r: It lead lbs dsy new delight; 'Tie virtne's firmest shield. And adds more beauty to the night, Tnan H' t way yield. It tnaketh poverty content, To sorrow whisper pence; It Is a gift from heaven eeut For morula to increase. It meeta yon with n entile at uioro; It lulls yoa to repose; A flower for peer and peaaant born, An everlasting roue. A rliann to banish grief avay. To enatch the frown from care; Tarn tears to smiles, make dullness fay Spread glad ness every where; And yet 'lisclieap as summer dfw, That gems the lily's breast: A Uiisiiian for love, as trno As ever man posacss'd. As sHiilos the rainbow through the clonJ, When threatening storm begins As iuunc 'mid the tctnpest loud. That still its sweet way wins As springs an arch across the tide. Where waves conflicting foam. So cornea this seraph to our side. This angel of our home. What may this wondrous spirit be. With power unheard before Thischariu. this bright divinity T GOOD TKMI'fcli nothing more! Good Temper! 'tis the choicest gift That woman homeward brings; And can tit poorest peasant lift To bliss, unknown to k-ug. 1 .La..) t maiA tA mi:cjlr inr uncommon wu as I took it off, turned it round and round in mv hand, and thoroughly examined it ... , , w , That they all took me lor a loieigticr i could readily conceive Iwt then I was not the fint foreitier that had passed through Prussia, and 1 knew it could not be the cus tom to stare at every strauger a though he were a wild be3nt. At ihe last station be- fore reaching Hanover I jumped out and rushed into a refreshment house, ostensibly for a "glass of beer, but really to examine myself in a looking glass, to see if there was anything wrong. 1 couiu uiscovei nothing- and went back to WV car as much ...0 nt n Irvra as over. I most certainly should have Biked the conductor what it all meant, and il there pitml anv Rimnidons about me. but for tw that I could not speak his laneuaee. and the other that I had a spe cie of sneaking presentiment that 1 would hear something not very complimentary to myself. At the railroad depot at Hanover, next morning, 1 once more Dougm a niot vhk ticket, and I must ad mit that it was with no little uneisiness 1 started toward the train to take my seat for liar bur e, the little place from which a steamer is taken for this citv. I hunt back until nearly all the pas- sengers had procured their places, and then went up to the conductor and showed him my ticket. If he did not take me to a car, and the only one, in which there was not a I single person, then am I not a true man: Y or this blow 1 was not prepared; all l could do. however, was to sit and bear it alone and with patience At the different stations every lounger would make it a special point to get a good look at me, as though 1 was a great forger, or revolutionary agent, or a runaway from BlMMrin la. iMdta. 1 Am a-gratlaa. IMady la Ancient Times. Stranpra are veiv much surprised to see I Our young beir is far too deeply steeped monkeys romping flout on the tops of the in luxury and idleness to venture on the houses in Madras, or dashing across tho rougher chase of the hipopolaiuos, or of bisects; and sailors, on landing, are greatly the crocodile. Ho is too foppishly staid to amused with them, and try to catch them, disturb the stern serenity of hh appear- or hit tlim with sticks or stones; butull in ance by that vigorous throw of the barbed vain, as they soon jump out of the way, and spear and the rapid cast of the noosed rope iJiensho their teeth s if in contempt for which such chase requires. Why, be the assiiilant. Some years ego these ani- would ruffle his garments, discompose his mals were so numerous, so mischievous, and flowing hair, disarrange his flowery garlands, ho des'j jctive to property, especially in and make himself excessively hot and un- I Wins- thm ranid aoioum that he made I in Belgium, in 1810, Napoleon, accord- nr ta hi habit, went one moruuiK, O .... . . IL .1 I very plainly dressed, to wsi. in mo piu- ' r Uow Ike Vsslissi aamlM Uvlag. ' A writer in the Boston Recorder, who ha lately traveled through Connecticut, thns d scribes tho way In which the people gain a live- 1:1 J. uiv"-. I"-" r . ... Ji Ueginning in the nortliweslern partol enaol the iaciten t aiace, KBmT"" "i the Stalewhere, by the way, some of na- an aide-de-camp, where he met a young lure's true noblemen dwell we find many man who was occupied m arranging some furnaces smelting down iron ore of the best flowers. He was pleased with the frank quality from their own mines, making each and prepossessing feature of the young bot. ' t J:M mwA V. h tfn Vnmflf lAfl Willi hlUl. from two to three tons oi pig iron per uiem, on.-., j-" - - j . k ..,m;r . unr& blast of I The voung man who was the son oi oiiu caiu wiifuuiiui o i the ... i sf I ..y. . . j l L..J 1 k at.wl.sH Vltll VTPflf 'M,.(r.; H :r.tnl!n from neonle comfortable fcmnnnn,!! No- the rentle eleven ninths a million bushels 01 cnar- neao-garurncr- . a '""B -- a--! i . - ---------.0 ? . r,, ,,,: .r.r, a the market and :he bazars, that it was dc sport ol angling, the trannuil cast and drag coal, i nere is a siiop uuuju.aa.tu. ttrminod to put the depredators in cages, I of ihe net, lazily and sleepily, or some care and economy the hiscory of the vege- : 5 Lr ika A-iirma and best cudeiv: and Uble world he could name, without ten. ill 11JJ I Wt "W wvn w,a-w--- ' 4 ' tnd carrv Uiem off to the d'istantiucgles ; ... - .-i-ii for the people had a great aversion to kui them. After much trouble many were caught; but they were so very refractory, . ...l I IDai 6OJ10 Ol UlCUi ICtCUCU a uuttii instiva ,o very gooa reasons-one o. .d were 8ert far away. Many of at I could not speali a solitary w3ra oi kh-nm .nJ nnw IUC1M I'JUIIVA wvil g'-u-i tho inhabitanu ars as much troubled as ever. the stronger exertion of bringing down the water-low 1 by means of the slings, stones, and sticks before mentioned, these are the utmost effbi U of which his energies admit. And these weary him soon and long. And there he sits, while his slaves row the light boat, or keep her steady ngainst the bank, or moor her to the fctrong reeds which grow up in a marine foicst about him; and lying thus beneath the shadow of the awning, or within tho protection of the high gunwale, ho watches the stealthy steps of his trained Mm v-aK' arrrlaa Rilri. Mr. G. W . Kendall, of the ISew Or leans Picayune, recently set out from Paiis on a tour to Germany, received on his route 1 justice of some sort, or a traveling menage a vaiittv of marked attentions which seem-1 rie. To make a long story short, 1 came ed to have puzzled lus philosophy, and oil all the way to Hamburg, solitary.nnd alone, which be gives the following account: land what with the journey of the previous On coiiiff to the ticket omce at Cologne, day I had now come between three and lour and ou being asked which class car I would I hundred miles in a fine car all alone to my take. 1 if plied, as any American naturally sell. m mm m. Ivs 1 - would, "first class, ol course. 1 he price Ul course there is very Utile company in paid for the ticket, although I do not recol- being thrown ainonc those of whose lan lect how much it was, did not seem to be Iguage you do not understand a word; yet it hiftt: and as I showed it to one of the con- was a positive relief to me to be thrown doctors, he very politely pointed to and open- among die miscellaneous mass I found on ed a t ar into which 1 at once stepped. So the little steamer on which you cross the Llbe Irora ilarburz to Ilanibure. 1 mieht be goin; a little too far were I to say that I expected the clerk, or some one on board, would show me to a lone room, which was to be all niy own; but had they donu so I should have resisted most certainly. I had had enough of solitary confinement enough to convince me that it is the very woist punishment you can imi.ose upon a man- almost worse than hanging without the ben efit of clergy 1 he distinguished stranger finally obtain ed a solution of the mystery at Hamburg, where, falling in with a German whom he had known in New Orleans, the latter, with a scream of laughter, on being informed of his dilemma, told him that in Germany, "only fools mid Piinces travel in first-class cars Within the last sight or ten months they have played all kinds of pranks in our house ; for as we are obliged to allow the doors and windows to be open on account of the heat, they can very easily get into any erartmenL 1 bad the mortification to find one day that a young lellow had got I er kind to come admire her hold of my Pilgrim's Progress, and had ac I come help to feed her brood tually torn down the plate where the 1 11-1 Perhaps if not over-.'tupi grim receives his "parchment roll ; and, as he saw me, he leisurely marched on, seem ing to say, as he turned round to look at me, "Have 1 not done it I Another rogue had n doubt seen some one use a tooth brush ; and he carried it completely off. My wafers they are perpetually stealing, and several times they have taken away the box. Nay, the steel pens were quite in their way ; and one day when I was nearly . . I- another making huge anchors and chain ca- tation, we lorwgn ana compi. I u . i . . .1 I.L.. L. I..na.l hats mvsn ntf fn I il bles for our navy, fiom iron wrought at meir umi uio 6 , - ownpuddling.furnace. k"'fT Fifteen miles eastward lies a village oi prouucuui.n uj umc. r" fifteen hundred people, situated at the out- Scdosanthe, the Arisloloche, the Kahoa,the Utnf a solendid sheet of water, which, in Sceroxilon, the Hydrochardee, and thou. its descent of one hundred and fifty feet, ands of plant with ditticuit names, as another would nave taiaeu oi spumm ano parsley. He knew the nature and property of each plant in short, it was botany per sonified; in a young man of twenty-two. "Are you comfortable in your situation here?" says the Emperor, speaking with iu- " es. Sir, replied the young ar- carries all needed machinery. Here the hnsiness is sevthe makire. Another town 1 is famous for its brass kettles an article made nowhere else in the nation, and the trade of making which, it is said, was sto- c.Ht and favorite, irhnimmon na thtv nlnn?e I len from England. Hard by are two con- among the game, or he lazily listens to the liguous towns, made densely populous, even terest cries of the decoy-bird as makes some internal reflection on her treachery ; then turns away thinking that all is good, even an ichneumon's craft, and a decoy-birds falsehood. The sun shines down through the tall reeds and water- ?ilants; his glossy hair runs thick with per umed oil ; his servants bring him fruit in small baskets covered with leaves and flow ers to make the purple figs and golden eranes vet more tempting: and some Ian nliA mmm law Itntn itinnAiilir tnA runic Ol she calls her wild- Ion the rugged mii-maes, ana inaepeuuemjj u, wW ri --p -- - nest of eggs, or rich by the manumfacture ol brass ciocas. me person wu lumys ...... . of young. These articles, of the ordinary kind, cosi-i in ine miust oi w iv. .. d by luxury, he ing from nine shillings to two dollars, are an assistant to trie ncaa buww. v,3 I r t . wnrlH at an advance Ol DUU or I eon never Qisappioveu oi ouiuiuw. I flUlVl V V V B IIIV we mim - - a He had remarked in the young florist bis 1 nnfl nor rnt ' Coming further eastward, into Hartford I profound study, and the interest he took in county, you find a gang of hands diggingl his profession. "What would you like?" conoei ore earth; then you enter a town of a thousand O O . -w. Wl 1 ....... . T- 1 f.nni the ho we la of luoUier savs he. "Oh. naid Uie young Belgian. "what I would like is madness. "But people, supported entirely by making axes. I still let me know, sas the bmperor. "it Following the Farmington river, and pass-1 would require a fairy to realise the dream n mnov esiah lis hmentA. vou aliehl at a I that Das onen occui.ieu iuv ujiuu. ou. "6 ' i a I . , . ... . I town of fifteen hundred inhabitants, right not a fairy, replied Napoleon, smiling in ' ' ' ... ' ... I. , i . -l . l:. iikni I am ihAiii lh TMrwm a the blaming a servant, it was found that a mon- away the Dies which crowd in myriads liom in the gorge, wnere mo river, iu iu uaaim.5 ui. . 77'. TZ r7 key was the thief. As for tumblers and va- the marsh, or lower the awning chequered freaks, like a lover without eyes, instead of Emperor, and be could, il he knew them, rious earthen vessels, I know not how many with bright colours, which screens away making its way easily and honestly down realise your wishes. ' ou are too good, they have broken; and loavea of bread, if the sun; and he lies in that byblus bark to New Haven, breaks iu way through the sir. a.d the young man. It is certain . uj : ,v, ,u :,ioi r v,; i.,..:.,.,., vT. Tlrntt mountain for the nurnose of ma- that the Emperor could be the lairy that 1 HUl H OICIICU Jl ULf, UD OWU lit U1V I UIO IUCBI VI UUUUSU UAUIIVUOUCii v 1 1 I - far all riiit, thinks 1 to myself. Ihe car w.as very neatly ami comfortably furnished nothing extra aliout it, however, that I could discover. 1 could ml see that it differed materially, or in ftet that it differed in any way, from tho' on both sides of it Passenzers were bustling about in the usual hurry that precedes the departure of a train; and as there appeared to be a crowd of them, it was with no little satisfaction that 1 saw many of them pass my car and sieD into those adioinine it insured me ad- diuonal elbow room and of course addition al comfort. As the lime approached for an 1 .1 t surung, a middle a-u cenueman wun a very pretty ami veiy neatly dressed young l;dy on each arm his daughters very like ly rame hurriedly along looking lor a car Here was a chance, not only to pick my company, but to be civil, and 1 accordingly opened the door for the party. One of the vounr ladies bowed, and at the same time said somethine in German, thanked me, 1 supp"s, but strange enough, as I thought, ihev went on to another car. I must ad mit that 1 did not like it, yet of course I could say nothing. Bye and bye the last bell rang, the loco motive commenced pulling, the train whirl ed alone ami 1 was left the sole possessor and only occupant of the car had it all to myself. This t comfoi table, thought I, as I stretched back with plenty of room, and opening all the windows on both sides 1 was soon busying myself in surveying the country through which we were rapidly passing In an hour's lime we were at Dusseldoif, and here a halt of ten minutes is made. The conductor as again very polite in opening the door (or me to step out, and as he did so I noticed that the ordinary crowd of loung ers was more dense aiound my particular car than was the ca.se with any of the oth ers. They stared at me, too, as I descend ed, and ai 1 thought a little harder than there was any necessity for; but at the same time there was nothing positively rude in their gaze. Additional passengers, on their way to Hanover or Berlin, came flocking to the depot, and now I certainly thought that the car in which 1 had come would be filled; yet not a soul entered it, although I left the door wide open. One look at it seemed to suffice, and every person would pass on to the next. Again the bell rang, again the train started, and again, like Juan Fernandez on his island, I was left alone to myself. At every station where the train stopped the scene was pretty much the same. The idlers would all take a special look at my humble self, and some of then: even condescended to touch their caps or hats, and bow. 1 knew that the Prussians were all very polite, and that 'the custom of touching the hat was common; but why were they so polite to me in particular? That was the question. And again, why did they take so much more notice of me than of any one in the adjoining cats? This bothered me. At almost every place I got out for a minute or two, and examined my fellow passengers in the neighloring cars, many of whic h appeared to be crowded full, and among them were many very hand some ladies. 1 watched the new comers, too, and made all the room for them possi ble, with the hope that they would enter and keep me company. If the cholera had been in the car they would not have avoid ed it more studiously. In this way we went on till past the mid dle of the afternoon, and until the train reached Minden. Here a stop of nearly an hour is made here the cars are chan ged and here, thinks I to myself, I shall certainly find some one at least to accom pany ne, but no. The conductor was a new one, and like his predecessor, could not speak a word of English, and when I showed him my ticket he very politely opened the door of the tar in which there was 1 tot a soul. In doing this be passed two or three cars that were not more than half full, and as I made a demonstration to enter one of them, he met it by a gesture which was as much as to say "that is not your place." I got into the one he pointed out, and the door of w hich he otened and again I was die sole possessor of six as com fortable seats as ever man could desire. By this time I not only felt lonesome but nervous. I had ben stared at, all hooch I not in a ruue way u is true, ana spue 01 all my endeavors they would persist in giving me an entire car for myself. There was something pointed in this it could not be the result of accident il meant something and the more I thought of it the more un easy 1 grew. 1 looked at my coat; it was plain coat, and should not attract atten tion. So with the rest of my garments. My cap was nothing but a plain, ordinary traveling car. there was nothing strange up, hands of these gentry ; and when the ere a- turea have gono a short distance, they sit dewn to look at us, and then begin to eat. I ought to have said before, that they delig'it in my letters and notes; and, after looking gravely at them lor a short time, they tear them to pieces. Sometimes they get on the bed, and stretch themselves, then roll about in their gambols, and leave a plenty of marks be- h:nd. At other times they admire them selves in the looking-glass, and try to touch what they believed to be one of their own kin. Not long ago they broke one of them, and carried off a beautiful silver watch. They were soon on the top of a neighbor's house, and commenced their ex periments; the glass was forthwith broken, the seconds band, which no doubt astonish ed them by its movement, was torn off, and the other hands were served in the same way. The "lick-tick" of the watch was the greatest puzzler of all. The sen-ants were after them ; but, no, Jacko could run well, and did not wish to part with his prize. A fine loaf of bread, however, was brought and placed at some distance, and pug could not resist that. He left the watch for what to him was much better, and the watch was regained, though sadly injured. This un fortunate transaction, however, had only ex cited their curiosity ; and they one day suc- Egypti will not ask bis thoughts as he thus rests, holding die line and rod so carelessly; we will not inquire what fair form his visions take, as he wraps hi linen robe decorous ly graceful about him, and composes him self to sleep with the thick rushes bending over him. Be she some proud lsa'.c pries tess, regal in her birth and glorious in her beauty, or be she some simple country maid, kine a union with the Connecticut. These people are Scotchmen, making carpets. But this is only a part of the establishment; the remainder is located ten or ulteen miles noitheast, where is found a community of eighteen hundred, from the same countiy, er gaged in like business. Observe here, in these two towns, are three very old-fashioned Presbyterian churches. wish for, for it all depends on him. Dur ing a journey that 1 made for my instruc tion, I saw in France the gardens of Mal maison, with its eleven bridges and Turkish Kiosks. The Emperor, 1 understand, has given this charming place to Josephine if a fairy were here, 1 would ask for nothing more than to be bead gardener to Josephine. Vou see how modest 1 am." "I will think I . r PI I L I r I .... t?mnAv KtfktrttUitiJ worshipping at the shrine of his refine. 1 1 assing ny a community 01 oaaKers, wno oi 11, mjiuwwuww, ment, and loving him with that intense un- supply the land with garden-seeds and his incognito, "but do iM)t despair or Tairy I hmnms. and Hazard's well-known powder. I lore;" and after some further conversation a - sr " 1 - . pull the lord of all this ship of other and honest hands, you find a I recognised the Emperor, to express to him 1 boy's foot smahed, or a wt n an in 1 r . . . I r . 1 1 , . . l.i . r r 1 : I f . II .l.ir.i-i- wtt-i own domain aeain he I town 01 three tnousana lnnaDiumts manu laimoai n jiecic ui ouorauon. 1 urs luuuiu mp uru ur me. r.ir3ti' lanl Baeoa. In Loid Bacon's style of living there was something that struck his contempora ries as peculiarly magnificent. The secret ceeded in dragging from a table a large old was, that he did everything in a high and natural taste. In compartments of h J rooms, he had pictures painted on the wall from the stories of Grecian mythology. His garden was laid out after the ideal pattern of his essays, with evergreen and other shrubs to suit every month in the year. His feeling, indeed, for nature, was the main side on which his great philosophy ran into poetry; and vented itself in a very graceful as well as grand enthusiasm, befitting one of the high priests of wisdom. He was fond of meditating ir. groves, after the custom of his predecessors of antiquity; and when he sat down to his studies in the house, he would often have causic in the next room. He had the flowers and sweet herbs in sea son, regularly set nn the table, "to re fresh his spirits," and took such delight in being abroad among the elements, that when riding in an open carriage, during the rain, he would takt; off bis hat to let the shower come upon his head, and say that he seemed to feel the spirit of the universe up on him. Nsfcla Neatlaaeaia. This in an agreeable world after all. If we would only brirg ourselves to look at the subjects that surround us in their true light, we should see beauty where we be hold deformity, and listen to harmony where we heard nothing but discord. To be sure, there is a great derl of vexation to meet; we cannot sail upon a clear coast forever; yet if we preserve a calm eye and steady hand, we can so trim our sail and manage our helm, as to avoid the quicksands and weather tlie storms that threaten shipwreck. We are members of one great family ; we are traveling the same road, and shall arrive at the same goal. We breathe the same air, are subject to the same bounty, and we shall lie down upon the bosom of our com mon mother. It U not becoming, then, that brother should bate brother; it is not proper that friend should deceive friend ; it is not right that neighbor should injure neigh bor. We pity that man who can harbor enmity against Lis fellow; he loses half the enjoyment of life; h embitters his own ex istence. Let us tear from our eyes the colored medium titX invests every object with the green hue of jealousy and auspi. cion ; turn a deaf ear to scandal, and breathe the fpirit of charity from our hearts. A few W !.. far CfeiMrcs.. You were made I) be kind, generous, and magnanimous. : If there is a boy in the school who has a club foot don't let him know that you ever saw it. If there is a boy with ragged clothes don't talk about rags when he is in hearing. If there is a lame boy, assign him some part of the game which docs not require running. If there is a hungry one, give him a part of your dinner. If there is 11 dull one, help him to get his lessons. If there is a bright one, be not envious of him ; for if one boy is proud of his talen'ji, and is envioui of them, there are two great wrongs, and no more talents than before. If a larger boy has injured you, and is sorry for it, forgive him, and ask the teacher not to punish him. AH school will show by their coun- I .. n tenance now mucn octter 11 is to nave a great soul than a gnsat fist. Horace Mann. The Jews, unchtinped, have survived the changes or centuries. A striking instance of the fulfillment of the prophesy, that they shall possevs die ga!e of their enemies, is seen in the present erection of a new syna gogue, in Canterbury, England, on the site of the ancient house of Ihe redoubted "Knight-Templars," once the unrelenting foes of the persecute. Israelites, but now themselves swept Jwa the face of the earth. . watch belonging to tho writer of this paper, and carried it to the top of the house ; but they were detected in their villainy, and were frightened away. "Well, but why not kill them !" say my young friends. I did shoot one, but I shall not soon do it again; he looked so much like a hum? n being; his companions also made such a noise, and hooted me for days after ; then the natives were much offended; so that I cannot try that plan again. Then I offered a large sum to any servant who would catch one ; for I determined to make an example of him, and trim him up a lit tle ; and crop his ears and tail, so that others might be frightened ; but all in vain. We jot a large rat-trap, and put some bread on lU An inexperienced young monkey set at it; he was caught; but he worked hard, and his tapering head assisted him, and after some deep scratches, he escaped, and short- which woman of eveiy land and faith and climate do feel, be she loveliest dancer or sweetest songstress of the choir whom to love with devotion would be a stain on his gallantry, be she high or low, rich or poor, partrician or plebeian, he were no true man if she did not fill his dreaming thoughts as he rests there within his byblus bark on the dancing waters of the blue river ! The fish are cahght, the birds struck down in sufliciet quantities ; the sun rides high, and our dandy must away to the gay banquet to which he has invited his guests this noon day. His boatmen wealth back to his own domain : again traverses his well-kept farm, passing through orcharda rich in fruit trees, and through gar. dens gay with flowers, cooled by water- tanks and fountains all about ; and once again he enters that ancient cottage ornee of old Egypt, while his car is harnessing to bear him back to the grandeur of the Eter nal City of the Gods. Surely we must ad mire that elegant and graceful chariot. W here can we find a lighter shape 7 where a more gorgeous equipment? The large wheels are bound with metal ; the sides are painted, gilded, and caned ; the beautiful bow-case, richly ornamented, hangs with studied negligence from the rail of the frame ; the harness is embossed, painted, and studded, the horses are trapped with mag nificent caparisons, gay plumes float over their proud heads and mingle with their flowing manes ; the bronze nails set every, where in the harness and the car flash and glitter in the sun ; and the whole equipage is one of beauty, elegance, and color, un equalled throughout all Mizraim. The Nu bian horses too, large, black, end powerful, might well make the Cushite dandy proud as they fly with him through the broad where the "villsnous saltpetre" is made in to an abomination to cost missiles at the Mexicans, and also some distilleries, too de testable to blot paper with, you enter a 1 1 . T I . -. wiln toe young ooianisi, napoieon wuu drew. He left Brussels on the morrow. During the two months that followed this conversation, the young gardener could erowiiie town where are made paper, cloth, I scarcely think of anything but the wand of I utes and a half. How many fu.e nf, ... . 1 . 1 I r 1 .l i f I J 1 - I t I 1 .r r of different kinds, ironware, ana caraia tairy ana uie piace o. urau gmucuc., uth the last set to order, and in quanti- when one day he received a sealed packet ties sufficient to straighten all the fibre with the arms of the Empress Josephine which ever grew on a sheep's back or a cot- upon it; it contained bis nomination to the ton plantation. post he had so rhuch wished for., he hasten- Passing through the city of Hartford, ed to the spot, ana was very soon mtroaucea which our bird's-eye view acorns to make to the fairy of Lacken that mak who only a mart for trafficking in the workman. I res cot nothiso, and in whom he only - til. la.rlc. ". 'M id the crowd I needl nuiM hnm Aye, labor day by sav ' But I st nd my thouhU to a inUer And mj fauciea Ui away In the fesh Vm cloud enctpaW Through the gloom ray path A.. L In the sptrtt. by ecol w.wY UnOc. tunny akica am 1. Do not pity me, my brother, 1 can see your fciuntaim. play I can are your atreanu. meand. Flashuig iu the tioW.tu Uy. And nun ear doth duuk yn.'i Sons f bu.U or nppl,n I, iSt , ' Or the reapers staves Min; blith-iy Mid the np brown baiiey shUi I go forth at will, and gather Fio em from ganfen.- trim snj f,. Or among theahady woulla-O Culi the swm Uoouw hut.,.,- .. Little wof you, O! my bioUn r, " While I tod with swtat iOmw Of the leisure that doth wait m ' '.ieath the far-off toret bosgh. Litth) wot you, liokinj upwsid At tlie smoke wreaths kmnur Ufa That uy TMMMB is nu U-umUtl By this dull aiul niuik) an. That these thick che tin t-'.nj m, At my biJiliiijr niU tjuite, ' And the rn fa-lows hetore me And the green buia e.o ntl w'.u, kL Do not pity me my brother, God's dear love to me hth etti Comfort "nisi the stnle and tmi,, And mjIiic IUtiuk) umlf i kravra In the CttU I iu tl4id eufiuij-i' In the gliium my t-Jt. jr. hti.y, But I oemf my thought to ai..Vr. AimI my raurira Ui away And they bung me tien.ih fc.iti.l And swift NoUlf , dy by dy. Aaaertcaa Harry. The Americans are ala ia hurry Nothing ran be done coolly lj u,. e J( eternally on a rush are horn, mauird, i die, and are buried, io a hurry. LventU, goes on the last douhle action, hiijh pir,; Diinciple. It is all Meaii-tfa.u rail We bolt our meals in a twinkling our business at a jerk slerp a if wager and finally pa of) the e t,,M before we aie known to hae tfotloVn k It 13 a pity we tan not avoid thi. turtiu activity, and imitate, lo a mod, raie b:Ut the aidnei a.n.1 rjliniiM J l. i., l uiiu A writer thus sensibly discourses on tta point. ankee Blade. T-.li at tl fl.-.tr tl. . ..I rustling in, in the mi.l.lle of a pi- r ; aul ;. fore the curtain Ix-gins to fall, or iU to be spoken, or the nioial txpli-,i, V start a hundred people iu a uen.i ikIous h,j ry to get out, as if their very livts.lrjni-j t is X & wYiar 1 . .M- ruin. 1. . f .1... cert have we seen utteily destioyrd ly tij ill-mannered and indecent I.SMr. Cits i ferry, and long before the l-oai anive, tl thirds of the passerigeis are c iowJ J at the head of the roat, ready to iuxi. -j.-i.atr ... .... , ,. , i risking me ana luno to se ten t-coml. of time a child is kbuclrd cveitaiJ a He still occupied the place of first botan ist at Malmaison when the Empress Jose phine died. L' impartial. Hai-Faite lave Cbarca. Bella. The sound of bells produced upon Bona parte a singular effect, w hich I could never account for, he listened to them with de light. When we were at Malmaison, and walking in the avenue leading to the plain factoring various sorts of brass ware, to mention which kinds would be to write half the names of articles in a hardware shop. Hooks and eyes must be particular bed, enough to hook together all the ladies' dresses in the land, beside those of one-half Queen Victoria's subjects. But to return over the Connecticut river, for in our rapid flight w e have already cros sed it twice, and, in making our way into Tolland county, we entered the region of of Kuel, how often ha the tolling of I a sentimental I.idy s lap. that man now walking leisiidy up tie street, got ashore nearly half a minute ear lier thin he would have dune .iJhenui run the same risk, and cause J ptibpiie accident. "(ict into an omnibus, ar.J wi'J or.e J. on the sit p and the ollur in.-ide, the i ret pulls the door to, whips up his hor. ard you are pitched head fust into a stout o!J gentleman's diaphragm, or t lie Jown ii.io ly returned with another to show him the paved roads, and make the simple pcasan i nev cjk.auui.eu 11, nuu waiKeuiiry compare nun 10 some uoa on a rain cotton and woollen; and here at the outlet of a beautiful lake, rendered memorable by the "Life of poor Sarah, who died on its banks, you must stop to see a village of twelve hundred people, grown up in the course of a dozen years, having some six or eight mills making satinets and the nicest cassimeres in the country. In other sec tions of the country are furnaces cotton and woollen mills, machine shops. Here, too, is a town, and it is our own dear "Mantua," with four or five silk facto ries, where tlie great part of our tailors ob tain their Italian sewing-silk and twist Here tlie screw-auger was invented. But lime will fail to speak of all. Hard by, in the village bells interrupted oar most se rious conversations. He stopped short lest the moving of oar feet should cause the loss of any of those sounds which charmed him. He used even to be vexed because my feelings on those occasions did not ac cord with his own. So powerful was the effect produced in bun by the sound of these bells, that his voice would falter as he said. "Ah ! this recalls to my mind the first years I passed at Bricnne ; (Napoleon's first school conducted by monks ;) I was then happy. W hen tbe bells ceased he would resume his gigantic speculations, and launch into futurity, place a crown upon his head, and hurl kings from their thrones. V- I . - . 1 r , .low, wnai in uie iiaine oi voukr 11 the cause of all this ? Do we pla an thing? No. Do we enjoy anything in this everlasting rush ? No. Ik we 1 ve longer or die more happily ? No." machine. away! The next day we tried again ; and they so managed the matter as to carry off the bread. I procured poison, put on bread and butter and preserves. An old fellow Windham county, is a population . of Boiirrjaine'i Memoir of fiapolco Ho. eighteen hundred, making cotton cloth. In I naparte. bow-mcteor, passing swiftly through the air. After the bath, after fresh ointments are poured over his supple body and a whole alabaster vase of precious oil is lavished on his false tresses, after he is wreathed with seized the prize, chewed a little, then looked young flowers, gay chaplets, garlands, and at me ; put it out of his mouth, shook his loose bunches all before him, after he has head, and bid us good morning. A yojng put on other and more costly garments, and fellow came, and he did exactly the same changed the fashion of his jewelry for gems I informed me, made $2bO,000 worth of pa thing. Wet.Jur, Off. more brilliant even than those he now per per annum. New London and Sto- the eastern part of the county, in the valley of a single stream, in the space of twenty miles are at least twelve cotton factory villages. In New London county is manufactured India rubber in a variety of forms. In Norwich woollen and cotton mills abound. And here one sinrle paper mill, the owner Maaaaaur. It may not be altogether superfluous to explain what Strauss and tbe (iouuns icr. by a Konian'-R-ist (?MH.i.r). Tbe Ro manticist is one who, in literature, ia it arts, ia religion, or in politics, er.ce-vora revive the dead past; one lii if lus.- accept the fiatof Li.story; refuses to aiki&nl edge tit at die past if pat, that it is gru old and obsolete; one who regards the pr ent age as in a state of chronic maWy, u ble only by a reproduction of some Jisiat; age, of which the preent is rottheciu but the aoorfioii. l'oets, who ve j only in the Middle Ages, who look upon fairy tales and legends as tiea.sti.es of tte deepest wisdom; painteis, w ho en noa ine pictorial in the world around thetu. the- Advice ta Aavglara. When I would enjoy a fishing day, I take my slenderest rod, my tiniest flies, and finest tackle, and seek some shady burn, where stream and pool, in keeping with their denizens, the tiniest common trout, presents a miniature of the river on whose banks and braes the happiest hours of childhood were passed. Though in other pursuits luckless, toiling all night and catching nothing, on whatever waters my angle may may have been thrown, it has fallen in pleasant places, alluring, as with a spell, the finest fish from tarn, and loch and river, brightening many a motherly, good house wife's eyes and filling many a hungry man's belly. Vet, honestly and truly, though af fecting not to despise success, even in this inglorious art, tlie most abundant take from the richest salmon stream, affords me fewer pleasant thoughts than have visited me while little trouties have been flirting with my smallest flies in some nameless brook. There, without care thinking, without sor row remembering, can 1 laugh with joyful heart at my own childishness and acknowl. edge how easy it is for the proudest human mind to bow to the circumstances of its earthly . being. Scorn not an old fisher's word. Whatever be thy pursuit in life, if thy mind has not been chastened, if thy heart has not been humbled, thy skill may be marvellous, and thy labor crowned with success, but tlie spirit within thee follows only a shadow, and disquiets itself in vain. Fraser'i Magazine, Tall mt la Vtmf. Tbe season of the fall of tlie leal bas come again, with its sad and salutary teach ings. Who can shut his heart against its gteat lessons! Who, as be the frost withered leaf driven by the fitful winds, is not reminded that such is human life? Even as a leaf when the frosts have dried up its sap, and its stem clings no more to the pa rent tree, no is our life. It may be green to-duy and float gaily upon the summer breeie, but the frost; of death are gnawing at its stem, and we know not if it shall wav. there to-morrow, or be driven away by fie wintry blasts to eternity. Happy are we, if Nature preaches not to us in vain; in this her solemn day. Every virtue carried to an eicess, proaches its kindred vica. Burke., wears after, in a word, he has exhausted all that Egyptian gold can buy, and all that Egyptian luxury can command, he repairs to his gorgeous chamber where his expected guests would assemble. The furniture of I this room surpasses all that we have yet seen. The linen is the finest which Egyp tian looms can produce ; the tapestry came from Babylon : the carpets are Lydian ; the nington are growing rich out of the whale fishery. Lyme, situated at the mouth of the Connecticut, furnishes sea captains for the London and Liverpool packets, and sea men to man their yards. Sailing up that river, now filled with seines for shad, you pass a quarry of free stone. Then you en ter a shop, a branch of a Urge establish. ment located in Meriden, which monono- iv .1 . 1 I . r f (aartlT. How BCAcrircL, is charity. Shegoeth forth like an angel, with consolation on her tongue, love in her heart, pity in her eyes, and relief in her hands. She in clines her ear to the sufTeiin and the poor. I oloeians. wlo can .ee no reco.ni ion tile She seeketh out distress, nor ceases from I Dnsiwakahlts rurnt in uoer.-4;-.n. morning until evening her mission anions I acknowledge no form of worhi, hut t ceremonies of the early church; p"1 who would bring back "nieuie Eng!-i'l into our own sad times by nwr.uis of arum, pastimes and white waistcoats inex all Romanticists. It U unite !ear tb. however modern the name, the Romani ij not a new phenomenon. There hi eve. been will ever be men wtio, rap ing from our bailling tnigsleiih ihePi the homes of the sorrowin'T.' Sh heeds not the scorn of the proud, tlie shrinking of the fearful, the eyes of the inquisitive, nor rain, nor wind, nor the bitter frost, but keeps on, ani her way is compassed about with gladness. 1 be hungry, the ili-c'ad. the sick and the despairing rejoice at her approach. Thoy behold her shining like a celestial light amid the daikness of the world. She shuns ostentation she has I ent, dream of a splendid Future, wbeie cj ..a a a -. . - I . tables are of expensive foreign woods, or if I liaes the whole business of manufacturing no set time for her labor, but weffketh al-J cunistance is plastic to then theories. of native, then brightly painted and thickly ivory. Here you find ivory combs, piano ways, lor want, and sntienng, and gitcf, turn themselves lovingly towanf- uie i gilded; the chairs are hung with gold and forte keys, umbrella tips, dice, and all kinds are ever among men ever in her path. in whose darkness they discern sou streak scarlet and deep blue ; their frame-work is of ornamental work made of the elephant's Kor f 063 806 unrewarded. The recollec- of light, made all the more brilliant uom a very study of elegance in design. Some tusks. lions of virtue, mingled with gratitude of the contrast this light being u ihni only Deacon oy wnicn to sicei. -iu-- had iu UtopisU and Houiantims, as have our Humanitarians anJ IWvite--"" Edinburgh Review. are massive, covered throughout with rich drapery ; others are light, with lotus buds ana flowers, volutes, scrolls, and orna ments, forming the sides ; some have cap tives, others birds, gazelles, lions, and goats, as their supports ; all are rich, ele gant, and splendid ; all suit well with the heavy Egyptian luxury. Each smallest box is a gem for artistic beauty ; each vase and cup and basket of gold, or porcelain, or the true and the false murrhine (the last is the production of Theban work-shops,) is a thing to be examined for ever ; while those of the "pigeon's neck" manufacture, that strange substance of such varied dyes which change in every light till you may not tell what the original hue, are sure to attract crowds of the idly curious to gaze and still gaze on the wonders of light and color. Monthly Magazine. BY C-LOER CAMMEUU Te who the lack of gold would plead aa lack Of power to help another, think not ao'; Bat where the atambling steps of alckneas go, Follow with friendly foot; and ia the track Of life, when ye encounter, 'midat tho snow. Bewildered wanderers, torn not proudly back, Bnt lead them gently from their walks of woe By auch kind worda aa caat a brighter glow Than gold aronad them. Oh, be sore of this The alma moat precioaa man can give to man Are kind and truthful worda; nor come amiss Warm sympathising tears to eyes that scan The world aright! The only error is, Neglect te do the little good wo Ani An intolerant religion is the religion of a sect, and of a sect in e&r.Isaac Taylor. Let your rule of conduct be frugality, temperance, modesty, and economy. Let each person confine himself io his particular calling, and iu duties, which will insure their being well performed. Then you need not smile at a veritable establishment for making patent inkstands, employing thirty men. Next you will find a shop turning out axe-helves; next a screw factory. Then you pass, on the bank of the river, another quarry, a rich vein of gneiss, splitting about as readily as chestnut timbers a vein about twenty rods wide, from whence have been sent vast quantities of stone, to various parts of the Union, and to the West Indies. And then another quarry of red sandstone, employing three hundred Irishmen and their overseers. I had almost forgotten a whole town, made rich by tbe manufacture of all kinds of bells, such as sleigh, horse, clock and cow bells. In this city it is no eay task to tell what ia manufactured, except coaches, clocks, intellect, theology, law, and physic. Fairhaven furnishes the whole of New Eng. land and some portions of New York with oysters. Waterbury, with almost four thousand inhabitants, makes buttons, brass wire, and pint by the ton. And then there is Bir mingham and Ansonia, two contiguous vil lages, making cutlery, pins, and hardware. Just above them, a large establishment ma king augers, chisels, and the like. Thence you will pass westward into the north part of Fairfield county, and here you make ac quaintance with the hatters in abundance. Here it is the superb hau for the New York, ers are made. those who have enjoyed her beneficience, make her life a perpetual delight. Inspired by her, man performs the noblest deeds, and woman is exalted into an snjrel. D We once knew a boy who said that he liked "a good rainy day; too rainy to go to school, and just about rainy enough to go a6ahing." Of all actions of man's life, his marriage does least concern otlwr people ; yet of all actions of our life, it is n.ost meddled with by other people. Scuren Utile t-ravea. Sacred places for pure thoughts and holy meditations, are the little graves in the ( a T raw I Mr. The mere lapse of years is not life- ! . 1 .1. . 1 .1 ... . k atntfrC t" churchyard. They are the eritories of e."Jtt u"7 "' w " "j, the mother's sweetest joys-half unfolded Ti , lS f 1.1 Cii : i. ..-., . . mill of habit and turn Ue wheelol uiuuvcin.c, uiuiiauiij liijl uy ill. urst irosis of time, ere yet a single yet a single canker-worm of pollution had nestled among iu embryo pe tals. Callous, indeed, must be the heart of I him who can stand by a little grave side, and not have the holiest emotions of bis soul awakened to thoughts of that purity and joy which belong alone to God and Heaven: for the mute preacher at his feet tells him of I life begun and life ended without a stain: and surely if this be vouchsafed to mortal"., ty, how much purer and holier must be the spiritual land, enlightened by tlie sun of In finite Goodness, whence emanated the soul of that brief young sojourner among na? now swells the heart of the parent, with mournful joy, while standing by the cold earth-bed of lost little ones! Mournful. because that precious jewel glitters in the diadem oi the Redeemer. to make reason our book-keeper, and t-ru thought iuto implement of uaJe itJ not life. In all this, but a poor fiacuoa the consciousness of humanity isawsl11 and Ihe sanctiu'es still slumber whkh nU it most worth while to Inr. KiWS truth, love, beauty, gom Ws faith can give vitality to the niei har-wii of ence. The lauh of miiih, which. iw di rough the heart; the tears, hi-h ueW the dry wastes within; the music, that wm. childhood back; the praj er that calls future-near; the doubt, which a- meditate; the death, which startles V rnyry, the hatuVhip, that force struggle; tlie aniiety, that ends in txu these are the true nourishment of our ral being. The Ideas, as well as the children of our youth, often die before ns, and our minds represent to us those tombs to which we are approaching; where, though the brass and marble remain, yet the inscrip. tions are effaced by time, and the imagery mouldera away. The pictures drawn in our minds are laid in fading colore, and if not sometimes refreshed, vanish and iisap-pear.J-Oci.!. It often falls out that he who thinks him self the master-wit is the master-fool.. -iir-i la-rriatiaa- The Hingham Patriot says the most beautiful and touching inscription be seen on a grave-stone of pure whits ble, in the cemetery in that town. lbo"j woids are these: -OCR MOTIIEI? mi. asLisr Nov. IJ, 1310. JE,iU When will thj morning con'" N. P. Willis describes a girl k a tall figure, like a woman in tosyi-. blea, ccainected by a hyphen at tbe i n-i-tf..-,, r