Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1849 : Weekly), 1853-10-04 page 1 |
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rmfmmm m , , , M ; . , . . " ' : -- IIIWl 't-f'Jf e30M''tf it-'! VOLUME XLIV. COLUMBUS, OHIO, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1853. NUMBER 6 lUccldn Oljia State Journal 8 PUBLISHED AT COUJMUUS EVERY TUIBDAY MORNIXO, IT 6C0TT ft BASCOM, JOURNAL itnLIHKO", OIUH UO niU .maW MT1UK0I OK Rlfll. TFllMSlHvarin'fyiit ii'tvine.: In Columbus, --J0O. Jarl by mall, SI CO ; club of fuur and upwanla, j of rn Rjid upward, SI 11. 'I'll 11 UA I I.Y JOURNAL Li furoMu-d to elty NulMeriben at 96.(1(1, tnd liv mail at a )f,ir. Tilt) T.tl ll'I.Kiil.V JOURNAL la 83 .00 ! HATES nFADrtillTlSlHO lim WREKLY JOURNAL i 1 a t'.l HI'I ia fioifto "o r H ISo! l.quiu, W, 7f.l 0U1 Kl 752 2S3 0)t CM) (V TOO MI.S W Siqiiam, 761 251 '53 KB 504 00 5 00 6 008 TO 13. 15. 8.,.i.r, il 001 -,hi A'u'1 H 50 6 (Kill 60S (1011. 117. ;Z1 Mflliutw, 1 'St'l 353 604 00 6 OOfJ 008 (1010. 11. ,23. S. n aquar., cl.anKvablo tliontlilv, S'JOft J'taTJ wwkly , column, clinnsFHlilH qimrtfrly Mi noltimu. ctin.iKealilt. iln.rtfrl. enluuin, I cliniHji-atl qinirtrjy 10 llnwt of Ihla .It1 (ypo I. rwknne.1 a a'jnara AdT.rttwnjant, nnbrwl on tbo In.W. f xrlu'tif ly, double til abn.a retafl. AU laadml nnLitya chawd double, and moaaurnd u If wild. . 20. .,35. .00. .lluO. illisccllcmr). Frtiin Unrpers' Marseille, AUTUMN LOVE. In an early season of lifo I saw Itnchnol: when my eyes iirst i -11 upon b r countenance, it-j beauty seemed a daylight dretiin. She was ns a Grace in her father's homo, In my memory alio is still pictured : slight, delicate, fair, but llur-ht-d witli timing tints of cnrm-tion. Her figure was moulded to realize t ho soft dignity of her demeanor; her bond, classical in diupe, won, wi lb its dawn-bright treafes iu Grecian brums, nn uir of gentle pride ; and in lior eyes mild hb iho eyes of a young saint wishing for heaven all lit r maidenly emotion worn expressed. I loved Hadiue! soon: it was to uie the best joy of life tti lio with her aweoler to hear lior vuieo ibuti to list-Mi to the saddest music, lor il came to my ear charged with holier melody. In bur tburu wm tint alono the beunly of ibo sculptured Kvo, 'I'Iid ninitct'H lory WdS truly on lior f-ice ibo i'liili 'if (iuidu'rt Mary, tu iticrukiitittA of tlalvi's nun. I would bavo Titiiin h gobloii iutiril tn tlx bcr fl:tiiug smilo, and Carlo Dolni lo imiJioriiliio her it irs. Um, miilimn mnl tboulii-fal, bo bud sotircln il llm wind. mi if niiitiy d,.yn: slio know bitoko, and y.itruT-il ilu'ir wojib m bi-r mind : bo win no liht, iisncitnl biuuty, blown liko a May blotaimi alonj tlio Innks of ttmo. but q pOBSL-Sf'-r ol timt around iiovt(Jtnco of ilnnihtf wliii;b in docib to iho erf'tiii-r orovidt-nco (if nature. H lien 1 know lli it 1 luvi'd ljclia'T, I wan c undid to myself, t Inti-d llir.u -Ji a long fuluro, ar.d tuiilidrd in my own fniili. Hope l;ttd muuy 'td- in t!io m-omul, and t cxporit'd the m all to .lower. But I lung bid ilit'xo tl)nilita. Alono I counted ovr my viionury joys. Without willing it, I was mum itpn-trunily inait frt-nt in Itulnel thiiii to most otlit r frit-ml. Is 'ldum epokp, rxci'iit on i:ointniii toptctt. to ber : slu', however, convrrBed tniicli with mo, and wo with oI'umi to fjoiiier. 1 know hlio wan Itindly di.p-ined toward tno, liT lior manners wiro I'rii'iidly, abd for n timo she rnUicr eoulit than a voided my society, (irndually, bowi'Vor. us 1 b.';; in lo litid oxprraei"n for my Direction, I i;iw ibtt tn liist it wast miiundorntood, ihcti it wnti doiiitcil. then it m ihotcht u illimioti, and ihcn it wti roppllod. Wh -ti bIio (Jistuvrttd my f-TidiK si, her fifht ftvlina; was ouo of utigi-r; lint an'or an I turn d into perplcxi d pity, and that i uddoticd inlu sorrow. What I nrvnr with pl dn wordti ilomrt-d, ttho t on Id not in woi'dx tli'i.v; but n mv lovn wun known without l)L'iity told, so hor r'j:r'i"ii ol i'. win kii;dl but uno ipiivocalty clnr. Still, buoy, nit as I was in bnart, fr o in spirit, with nil inngiiifltiori coloring all thin.rs hrtUijtitly , 1 wnt not bipnrt'd in hopo. 1 sorrowed', but drfpmidcd nvt-r. i vinnly, indeed ronitiod over the inst, but I v.tpnply otintrl nu Ibo future. At lt, without n Conf'ssi'-n in form, I osprecned tlio nmiimont which ruhd in p. ticbiiirl, whoso Ibouchta all moved on 1io hi"h Uv of vtrln-. desired to eparo nio nmro i f, but sratn !y knw bow. No ouo knew of uiy love lor Iter, 'flm interrjourso of our (amilh's wrta su eimilunt lh:it tb:y almost set'ini'd combiti'-d into one. Sn could Do' po from lint, and I could not stay lnm lnr. W hen sht ap'ik- i)l p'lriins n ih bt-'t, I boed Iit no snrrow-tutly t'i bt mo remain anion;; h:r commnn fi irndit. that sho ronssn'ed. Suo even boli'vd that thi would bo my cure; for nui-h a ynu hful fi rvi'y, so imp-ttioim nrid no HM'lilt'ti, Wuii 'd uiidouhT'lly wait.i iUt U a'.vny. Tiinf, vnrioty, Ibo iiitortits of tlio world, woufl, sii cnlid' titly Uiouu-h' as she sincerely drsirpd wear out an altoctioti which was never tomptnl by her, never beckont d to bo forbidden, but WHiidorrd over in n desert, flhelterlens, wiilmut a pl:ic lo iay its bond. Yi-t I loved her with an iucroniifi love. M tny I snw with beauty, and youth, and hrihiueMB of do-maaimr, and ma;iy with 'iiuocenre and g-nile wi-dom ; hut uouo like Hu hatd, who wai al"no in h r :irine and sncred still. I was unlnuuty. I aerlud- d myeHf in Iho darknoss of rny own tuonhis. I mmle nd-:so-lation, and dwelt in it. li.irraftonini; ami tnttt-r wt-ro the complaints of my despair, 'i ho tl wns ot m in summrTS, Iho plunder of in, my upriu',''. I;iy nl my f'-oi; but ono snowiinp, one violet, ouo valley lily, wis nil I wiuled, anil tbut one I could not bavo. What wat ths use of Inying nut p iideus of Imp, if Rich ml w,is not to bo iho ttweottst blo-iioiii ilierc? What was ido glory of n whole Coriulh of palaces, ii Hacliaol would not bo their quern t What was Iho delight of pnxpority, il it r.so lik" a h irvest in nn un pooplrd isloT Wlrit was Iho promu of fame, if ih prophociL-s so'.iudt d ImIIow lo u tlexidii'e h art T It i-r.htnd knew this now. With her kiml linens aiid pin-cious sistorly aUer.Uon, aweotly olu'iod, but rolusi l by my lanmhrd lovo, sho ng.nn oskod tne (nrnestly io leavo her. I winded, for a moment, that sho would thon peremptorily forbid ino to see h"r, but I would not, could not, pti itncoaipelb d. I miht t'nnn have bont my hnid noou my Innds, nn.l p oia blind frm ber siht. But hr entreuiy was not a column ml ; ami as it was, sho said, for my sake, not for hrr, that slio desired it, I felt no p iwer to nl oy. t-'rom tint time, aha was Btudiously guarded in her mtinivri. Shiuj-times an impulse uf grateful fondnexs rose in her h"arl but alio rhorked v, let sho niiht mistake mi evane-cent tond rnesi for tlio kmillmg of tlio Into limp, which alone, sho know, mi'i'u tn burn and mingle iin light with mine. Wiim upok" to Ii t in word b.di Uttered and enipmiilic pliini.s. rbo brsotifht mo ut to ttlduluo in bopr that would make ino wretched, ti'io aid 1 slio'dd thatie; but then replied lli it shoniht clvitiiff too, wlin h piieved her; for sho atw tliat 1 would fondltt my h c ireh s of ibo a rrw they mi--,'lit brint A in"rt.d m-'lancholy rn:noovor in",aiid I thought h.) would r- I'uoo mo all i'i jivn, Aud the days pvsed, and tlio tiinti'lH tmd year. And still I love:!, nod li ichael OAfuei) uo lovo lor me. When in society, ri was to mo, im tn oilers frank ud friendly; but wii-ui nlouo, she wai s-iioiis und cold Hut I saw dial fho w;,s not unmnved by toy do-Tout alb'cti 'n. I troidileil h- r rt p uo. I saw lior aomoiimes lonkinif nt mo with an earnest, wondrriti.' look, us Ibnupb tier own heart were q icsii.ining it si If, ml I frit, Willi oxnlMnz tloli 'lit, ih.it, alter Un-so mu tnenta, she w is mom freely nll'-cttonnto. Hrr nmnners nftoned; thnupli, whenever I rxpri'SHfd any thiriht of this change, tho t'rnvily I ber fnco rctuni 'd. ntid her beauty scorned to retire from my luvt;. Ktill I w is Doris reconciled in bop deferred, and Bi ll iho time went nn. At lust, sho was parted from lior homo for a while. Aba went to i ilis'anco. I yearned for h-r rotnrnt but as her absence was prolonged, it was 1 -is pain'ul. 1 j felt a more patient paiion. She camo ha k. Hy her first imputing look, I knew bho auht to discover what inllueiico our separation bud produced (in mo And when I looked back lovo into ber eyes, I saw she amtled Huon aficrwo frio.isly conversed. I wrote Iter n letter; she replifd, and once more bepged me. besought mo, once more to consider whether u would nut be better to leuvo bur, for my own sake nho did not say for hers. Had sho said for hers, I would have gone; but sho stid lor mine. I answered, hl'o milit be bappy or rniner.iMo, but nor presence was like t lint Arabian amulet, winch inadn all wounds hirmlen while it was worn. Onto taken nw:.y, the heart would bleed mortally, anil I should peritli. I waited n liti:o timo, nnd ihen went to seek her. I i " In r in Iter lather's p-mlen; sho aluie. A purple an ii'un evoning bn-h"d n'l llm wtirid. Il Whs i 'i,e I p etty, petloiiKd ldi ll.i' I,i i. nweets of tlio Hiwcrii.tT b'ihou, I. ng a'li ys and I'ali in slopes wero hhmled by In. quels and trove from the cherry red deepening Iijht which p .un d, warm utid mellow, from the wot. A soK wi.id, moist ivilh dew, wander d among the tnurmureus loaves, utill li.i;iatii with ibo farewell breath of tho summer, i met Ha- chael on a lwn, such as fancy minht picture, bri 'hi with llucracciii'a vieiU f virgins liir ns mii"nl'.':iit dancing amid iho lilies and Iho dew, ll aiiiir: their I'loini locks in the clear air, and wavering in a lutry line io the musio of golden llutes. lu It idiaol's soft smile thnro was a welcome. 81m gave mo bcr hind, but spoko nothing. I looked into her conscious face, i aid, "I bavo ciimo to you, Uichao!." "Then y ui wtil atay with me," alio replied, in n very low tone, I I answered. "I tnust st ,y with ymt, if 1 It a cbael, 1 will slay with you fi. rover." I pii7.ii! apiiti into ber countenance. A light deeper, richer, more rosy Ihuti a July sun-Bet glowed through delica'.o iltfhes on her clr-'-k ; it played in a gobl-m mi!o on h"r bp; it paused li'io an anullc ilream over her brow; it cime tike morning into tho bluo oms tb it now w re Ktill'ioi'd with no sorrowful tears. Her ftV, till then c d"iles as a snow drop, thinned ns a snowdrop might llush in iho rod evening, tiill pain, but will) paloness teen tlm'tih rosy air X saw tliat her bosom r"e nod fell, and I lonked once more into her eyes, and through their di ep violet bo renity. I taw the young love born lio a now atar just trembling into l.tvan t and she fall unon mv nock ; I embraced her to my bosom, and without a ipokeu word the bond of betrothal wna between us. Woj Intdwd toward tho western sky ; liltlo vermilion clouds ware atil! g. owing liko isluels in iho liquid blue, and tho sk'hing breath of the evoning passed over my heart, and all tho bloanoms of its hope expanded in a moment! into (lowers, I.iko morning melting into day liko two stars blending their liht liko iho Itboiie in I.e man Lake, wo iWd hive bton from the unspuken pledges of lhat hour. tor that was tlio hour to which my expectation nait been turned. Tears had watered my heart in desire for it ; sorrow hail Imrno modown iit despair of it ; all the pray era of my affection, all iny prophecies of hone, nil my fancy's pictures wero renli7.etl now, and Ha-chael, whom I so ireusured, was initio ; she was mine in undiminished beauty; she wan mine iti adrreiidered love. The increase ot her youtli s wisdf.in, anil knowledge, and virtue the gaincry of many years was the dowry of her ripened tenderness to mo. Sho gave ino all in placing hor band iu mine, As tho nightin gfilo. wounding its breast against a thorn, sorrow while it drinks sweetness from the (lower, to sing it forth ngain in tlio night, ho my heart, wounded by loving unloved, had pai ied itself by eternally repeating its musical mi'crcrc to Itichnot. As b ynunir, um lpened resn A roii unripeiied yet, but red, lllimlic from It ilnmftked lied, Anil Willi udomui potsl nlowi, ' hMe tho Hgbt, ri'll-rti-d through, I'uriile in lu piirpin huo, tin thy brisuty b!unhiJ to ran, Ami lay bosuiu h lowed to thco. S'rano wantoning of human nature! Surprise and fear siartcd in my feoliuga when I found that, claiping Ittcbiiel lo my breast, I was not stirred by llinse ot. rmy cmoiiona which moved iua when, iu days past, alio sal fur In on my Bide. I waa conscious of a cold mood ; I tried to think 1 wiib happy; I assured mytn-lf of my own delight. Hut, dnuhtai I might-wonder oh 1 might sorrow us I might I could not I j iit confess to myself that had won this maiden's lovo when my own had begun to wane. It was all gone all tho passionate affection which grow with each hour, nnd increased with every look; all tho abuutiiiisg and burning lovo which had been my movititr iimuilso for years wiib gone. It was gone tlio dovoti il faith which counted a day too long lo be absent from Uichrtel, and a life too abort to oiler its sacrifice of tender rniui.itries for her. tor dun tig uer uhseuco i imu, ut lust ns a mero refugo and ihen us u pleasure, Betight the society of ih g'.-hleii-locked Lily, wIiofo curia bail lluttered against my check at a bill. ISho was no more liko Itachaol tliitn a Cu'elly is like a star whic'i melts its liquid silver hit i the night, throwing off tipples of hutro to glance and tUfeh along the mellow blue, film was only n prucciui, tairy-ieoiiM creature, innocent, tumpto, glad in her own trustl'uttiess, who mistook fancies for lln urhU, and would live on lovo liko a beo clinging to the honeyed bosom of a rose. Nn one had taught lor u.iy tin a mid it th-y hail it would bavo bxod in her mind only two idea- that the good were lovable. and the bail hatel'ul ; nod llt il juvipto ou;ht to be kind 1 1 ench otln i. and tiiin"; more or mornta than money Her trdk was tet-drr prattle; alio seldoni expressed even lhe, ;o lhoii"hts. but they were brrown.and when 1 Bomi'tirocB Fpoko with her, and met her in her own piiliotic mood, and chatted in a low tone about lb" stilVS'iin;s id' Hie heart, ami seemed passionately to urge thtvir'ii" and tho power of love, all those ex litt'it.ni.,8 whii ii then were meant tor my ntM-nt iia-niiael, sounded lo Lily as on interpretation of my fe I- ingilor her. W bile I Ihoti.lUof liachaet, Lily thought ot iip' gra;lually, however, Imr ontirn reliance on my , wordt, le-r frank utter. -nco of ber gladness in seeing, me, her eoft, wiiisomo way, her sweet voice, her ex j quid e Bp.nYtiveuem, her purity of sentiment, nnd Uie child-like h tu'y if her aspirations, iitl'iencrd me; all tliat was dear in ber was higher and dearer iu lEuhv-l, yet wuen I pressed II ichael to my heart my thoii'jliia wandered hack to Lily. I was startled by iho c onscioiiHtiess, I refused to Indiovo it. Surely I was unchanged ; I would not admit tho thought ; yet my enio'ieiiN would move in their own sphere; I ilciseil myif lf with Iho memory of Iho gnldeii-h'cked on-., wiiilo I lorhado myself to dwell on tho idea of her. I rfsclenl to bo l.iiilil'ul lo Ruhael, but I knew rny h 'art was already f-tlse becauBo it needed a resolve.This lor awhile went on. I saw Rachael often: knnw more of her ;:o"dfiPfB; I meuaured more proudly the worth of bur imblu mind ; I saw moio than ever that fhn wiib ci'cat'-d to be loveil, nnd yet 1 loved her h-Hi. I s d.l, in h", d, not a word of my change, and I wasincero in my ib't'-nni'mion not to change, I voulti l.ivo liichel. Hot I Uol.ghted lo meet Lily, persaud-ir'tr my elf, by tho eaMii-urv of s-lf-justilii'.ation, that .hIio u;h no more tloin a I'latonic frienl most fatal term, v hit !) overs a in il'ieide of sins ! I dared In lie l itis of hi;:-. I claimed ptivih g s with her; and MH. MAC ATIL AY ON "JUNIUS." Tho following letter written by Mr. Macaulay, is just published for the first lime in a new editiou ol Lord Ma hoh's History of England: At.nifr, January 3, 1C52. j Suit lam obliged to you for the now number of the Quarterly Hoviow; I cannot Buy that it has shaken my opinion. I wonder, iudoed, that so iugeniuua a pariou as the Reviewer faliould think that his objections have made any impression on tho vast mass of circumstantial evidence which proves Francis to have been "Junius " That evidoixe, I think, ditl'ers not only in degree, but in kind, from any evidence which can be adduced lor any other claimant. It seems to me, ton, mat oue-nou ot ino argument of tho It'iviower i" answered by tho oilier half. First, we are told that Francis did not write the letters, be cause it would have been singularly infamous un him to writ" thorn. Then we are told that he did not write them, because lie did not owu I hem. Surely this reasoning does not hang well togutli-T. Is it atrange that a very pr-nid man should not confess what would disgrace him 1 I have always believed that Francis kept hileiice because he was well known to have received great benefits from persona whom he had, as " JuniuB," or as " Veteran," abused with great malignity. It is odd that tho Reviewer should infer from the mistake about the Draper's half tny that "Junius" could not have bee n in tho war office. 1 talked that matter over more than ten years ago. when I wasSe-cretary-at-war, wilh two of the ablest and best informed geitllomou in the departmoul ; and wo all three camo to a conclusion the vury opposite of that ut which the ltviewer has arrived. Francis was chief clerk in the English war offices. Everybody who drew half pay through that otlice made the declaration which 'Junius" mentions. But Draper's half pay waa on tho Irish establishment; and of him tho declaration was nol required. Now, to in .5 and th so whom 1 consulted, it Bcemed the most natural thing in the world that Francis, relying un his official knowledgo, and not considering that there might be a dillerence between the practice at Dublin and tho practice at Westminster, should put lhat unlujky question which gave Draper so great an advantage, 1 have repuutedly pniuted out tho circumstance tu men who are excellent judges of ovidence, utid I never found one who did not agree with mo. Il is not necessary for mo to sny any thing about the new theory which the roviewer has constructed. L'jrd Lyttleton's cluima aro better than those of Burk-- or Barre, and quite Hi good hb those of Lord George tSuckvilte or Singlespoecb Hamilton. But the case against Francis, or, if you please, in favor of Francis, rests on ground of a very ditli:uli kind, and coincidences such aa would bo sufficient In convict a murderer.There is, bowover, one si rung objection to iho iheo ry of the reviewer which strikes me at tin first glance, "Junius," whoevor ho wits, wrote a long let ter tn G our go (Ircnville, which was preserved ai Stovvo many yours, and of which I have seen a copy in Lord Mahon's ponsesidon. The letter contains no decisive indications of the writer's ittmliuu. But, on tho whole, it seems to bo written by a man not very high in ranks or fortune. The tone, thouLdi not by any means ubject, is that of nn inferior. Tho author doclurei himself to be the writer of a squib, thon famous, culled "The Grand Cuiir cil." Ho says that (jreiivdlo must soon bo rrimo Minister. " till Ihen, I wish to he concealed even from you ; then I will make myself known, anil explain what I wish you to do for me." 1 quote from memory; but this is the itiuManco. 1 lie original 1 have not seen ; out I n told that it is the handwriiing of " Juuius's" letters. Now, this circumstance seems lo be decisive naiust L'ird Lyttleton. He was George Grenvillo'a cousin. The connection between tho fcjiowe family and the Hagly family had, during two generations, been ex tromely close. Is it probable lhat George Greiivillo would not have known Lyttleton's band 7 Is It possible that a letter written by Lyttleton should have lam ai S'owe eighty years, and that none of the cousinhoot! should have been struck by the writing T But, iu truth, tho airongeat arguments against the reviewer's theory nro the argument which in my opinion prove lhat Francis wns iho author of the letters. I have the honor to be, sir, your faithful servant, T. B. Macaui.av. L;t.'ii!mil!y all her iieipniot,ini conceded them to me, And yet, even lo mytvll, I pretended not to know that I was doing wrong. Lily beloticed to entirely another crcln to that which I! icha"! formed the grace; and ihust:iy f"lly was favored. 1 was loving Luy without intending win her, I had won Uai h od without ciMitimiHig to lovo her. Wlii-pen, h 'Wevi r, c nn to tho Gnhlen-Licked line, at I called her; iimi in h-r simplicity sho asked mo, without reserve, whether I win alii meed. Sad Lily! Her namesake. Iliwor, bruised and trodden, never Initio on iis stem and wept nway its beauty iu peatls of i!ew more mournfully than he b owed her Invid and let l",,ll her humblo Ichm. Iler countenance, whii li h'ul r!i uie m the young moon, now paled as tho moon pal' N when 1 1 iuTii;hutit sunlii ht fl tilled the sky ntl anenid. But that light wai datkne.ss ti Iter; I h r.v Ida'. I had injured a g 1 heart. I h id dotio n double wrong ; f"rl had loved her. and, loving her, w. u'd n t aee pt tho lovo she giv-j to me. It ji hael I It ul uouid win!" I loved iK-r.aud won when I loved her no mom. A i the solo atonement I cail.t make, I told this to R ich ie). She listened, qk I I know from hor face at firt siirprifleil into ttugni-ti, tint then sha-led by a proud, iiidignoil c tl'ti that a siokne.s had fallen on lior he irt. i'h p il-'n-m spread even into h-r eyes ; tej- ct iui dro.' e 1 in her la-hes. quivering with t- ars too piier.in to f ill. N' reproach passed through ber co'd lips ; bd' iu th -ir pallet iu one upward look-in her countenance, in her form what n winter of re- proarhen r mie rigorous nnd chill about me! The whole current of my form-r lovo poured out uf.esh. 1 im- nli red, nml snared no plea, ttiat Hacliaol would lerBft me, nnd forget ill- nat. Sho owed it to me, alio said, to pardon me, but f-lie. owed it to me also, as to herself, to remember ny broken faith. win Vrbiddett to thin of her more. iNovt-r, she vowed, uould h he irt desert ill own; never should another hand clasp her s ns mine had done, hut trom tiie unerring testi mony df actions by which I had deceived her and duped niyui If, I could not tmw trust myself any more 'b in "ho could trust mo. Il was better, then, tliat wo should ti Tl So we parted. Itachol had f-w words to say, for she could not fonllin, anil xronld not unorani mo. It ici"l. anil did not gain Lily THE TBUB BEAUTY OF HOME. Tho country is a true home of beauty, nnd horticulture is die free school ot ins'e, in which all our renders may become apt pupila if they choose, and gratified and useful professors it they will it, and fielp to cr ate us much beauty in their spare hours ns the wealthy citizen can purchase with th" gains of years to decorate his brick and mortar place in tho metropolis. There is no mere orn unent, iu the house or out of it, so cheap and so tasteful as healthy plants and (lowers, and you will hear ten persons o boiiso Lilmiiiug your geraniums or fuchsias, where one will notice your rich curtains and tall mirrors. And out doors, the eye that would never bo attracted by glaring paint, cornice or column, will be instantly arrested by the living ara besqne of a native creeper, or tho umbrageous outlino of an Ameticuu tree. Do you not admire that simple little cottage, with its graceful trees from our ua'ivo woods f Tho vines making beautiful while they conceal tho rough out Irjilding; ibo liltlo "front yard," or muro fitting lawn, mined witli shrubbery ami sparkling with I lowers; tho neat walks with a tinge of velvety turf, or natural ones over it, all in koeping, and all suited to tho moans et me tastetui owner, it you nave tieen nolo io nu the veil that hides tho lifo wnhin, have you nut found real comfort and true buttiuneas th-T, and uro not tito in there, and aro not iho inmates really deserving; of wnat if my enjoy t And how m odi in time and money has nil this cost? Perhaps ls than a lithe of what your rich neighbor mis expended to rear thai great puo m tioiriis ami sbingVs, fir more ambitious mountuin of brick nu I mortar, with a countenance as blank as an overgrowing idioi's, nml as barren of beauty aa a lumber yard or a brick kiln, nnd not a thing except weeds iu tho ground or paints on tho walls eiilnr greener or brighter than the man who can deem his huge abortion ihe ne flm ultra of architectural taste. Tt u to one he why built ih i. dwelling, if a farmer, is ouo of those who " would r ither have a bill of potatoes ilian a rosebush," and would sooner raise a snarling cur tin ti plant a beautiful treo Prairie Farmer. GRACE GREENWOOD. flection, wns the cousei"tiMtiess that I had invoked llus tre!ie voi'iow int.) tho world. A virlii 'tls will has almost iho power cf a fate; but 1 bey who would be happy in the enjoy menl of au in'rne, exalted, supremo dei.o, most iiewr f r a moment fail in truth. One falo net made a desert forme, end I am condemned to live in it alone. I hear that Ilieh"! in still llmotiu whom I loved; ael it my m-mory ii ever revived to tier, kindly I know will she think of mo. Lily i- blith" again; lor h'T heart, free from i!a regrets, wakes a!-wayu with tho fprim:, and all lb" It-awn of autumn are swept nwuy when Juno 11 iweis bloom in tho valleys. But I sit iu tho shade of a A il! w aud perhaps it is not only in drc. tins that I imagine mysill onctt m're res'nred to happiness in Ino t "termed love ol Kacliel. uuinmn she gave it to me: m notiimu i lost it for- hips on s'uno coming autumn evo it may b restored tu me. The vigor which marks the wri'itigs of Grace Greenwood, evidently belongs to her chiracter also. After eighteen months fore-'-u trnv d, during winch she In bored nsddiMusly at hor two-fold vocation of writer nnd sight seer, sho comes homo and sets tu work funh witit. Iler first business waa to revise tho series of letters written on her Kuroiieati tour, with a view t And 1 lost their immediate publication tu a Volume a volume Vore than nil other which, our readers know, will be very full of interest, REMOVING A RING FK0H A Y0TTNG LADY'S FINGKH. Dr. Castle, of Chariest m, communicate! lo the Boston Medical and S irgical Journal, tho following ingeni ous method, devised by him, lor extracting a young Inily'n flag r from a ring which was too small fur her. Wo give his hi lory iu bis owu language: " An iuteresliui young lady, about seventeen yenrs of are, had presented to her a g.'ld ring, which she f irceil over the j unls ol her middle finger. After a few minutes tho linger commenced swelling, nnd the ring could not be removed. Thu family physician, Dr. , waa Bent lor, but could do nothing. Tho familv, aud Ihe young lady especially, were now in 'hegrent-nt consternation. A mweler wm nt for. After many tu'd attemri'i to cut the riii" with culling nic puis, nnd to saw it apart with n line saw, ami alter bruism? ied hi-ernttng tho flesh, warm loin-uitatiniis and I elicit were npnli. d, but nil wiln ui alli.rilinj; the alinh'e-t bonetit. Dr. request" d tny pr' ence, wilh tho loinplimeni that " p-uiiups my iicm b ir.i.-al itv LMMiuiiv ion-lit siiLjest something. 1 ul hiru procotibd to tlio house of tho patient, and found Iho voting lady it. n nunt deuIortttlotateol men tal noiiy, iho doctor mbarrai.ii d, nnd the family Iti a tiigh slate el excitement. I i,incore(l sutue prepared chalk, and iiooiied it hotwnen tho ridge ot swollen ll"hh, and all a nm ml the finger, nnd succeeded in drying iheeoing and nbraib d tleh J then with a narrow pit co td soft linen I succeeded in polishing the ring, by ilr iwing it gently round tho ring bdlwen ihn swol len parts. I then epphed quicksilver to mo wmuo surface of the ring. I'i lea., than three minutes the ring wiih broken (by pressing it together) in four pieces, to the great relief of all p al lies. " In a similar manner (without the chalk) I some limn since extructcd a aniall bra-s ring from tho ear of a child, who. child like, had innerti d it into Its ear. The opcrn'iou vvasnmre painful anil tedious, but wns equ dly successful. The modus operandi : Thoqut'-kailver ntotiee per- in-tales tiie metals, if clean, (wi'h tho exception id iron, sieul. D'atmu. and one or two others ) ami amal ganiaies with Ibeui. It rrystalizes and lenders tho metal as hard and ns brittle as glass. Hence the ouro with which metals amalgamated with quicksilver enn be brokcu. WASHINGTON NATIONAL KONUSIENT, Wo h ive roctived tho circular of tlio Washii'p''' ' National Monument Aiociaiion. The momim-nt ;a Qowottu hundred ami forty-two feet high, au l ci rtainlj if any object deserves thcattenMon of Amevicau citizens, it is its completion. Now, if each man in tho Union wonld give but the small sum of live cents, this monument would be carried forward and co'ii''i d without any further difficulty; and it does seem to ut that every mail should contribute something to tho erection of fi meinoriul which is intended tocommemora'e the virtues aud transmit to future genoratioits ihe heroic achievements of tho great Wasiiisotun. Tho ( Ian proposed by tho committee is that, at every elect'iou, either of a local or general nature, a " Washington monument box" bo placed at the polls to receive the contributions of voters nnd oilnrs choosing to contribute. We submit the circular without further comment: As Elections fur Members of Congress, &c, will be held djripg tho ensuing months iu several States id the Union, iho Hoard of Managers have deemed it their duly to request the Judges or Conarniitiuners who may ho appointed to take th ballots of tho voiers, to put up boxes at iho ditl'i-rentlocalities whore elections will bo held, for tho purposeof receiving such contributions as the admirers of the Illustrious Father of his Country may think proper to deposit in aid of the great Monti moot, now in oourso of en-ctiou in this city to bis memory. Thoy feel assured that when this noble nnd patriotic purpose is presented to iho peoplo, thoy will not howi late to give ihur raite for such aa object; and it now becomes mtr 'crssnry, as Ihe funds of tho society . uto rapidly liiniiitisiiing ami may not soon be adequate j to csrry on the work. A Bmall contribution from each I citizeu or voter throughout tlm United Stales, would be ttlbcietit to complete the Monument, a work intended to add to their glory as well as to honor the memory of the illustrious deud. A half dime is but no ' inconsiderable, sum, nnd yet a half dime contributed by every inhabitant of our country, would rear tho grand structure, now in progress, to its destined completion. It will be pilitiil, wondrous pitiful, if nut of twenty-five millions of souls who inhabit this great country, rendered independent, prosperous and happy inaiuiy uy iim uxerii.ms hiiu uovoiiuo io ill cause, I lie sum necessiry to erect a Monument worthy of such a man could not bo completed for the want of the small pecuniary aid which every American should ft el it his pride, as well ns bin duty to afford. At tho luBt Presidential election, the plan of obtaining contriimtions nt the polls (thus testing the patriotism and lib.-rality of thu voters and others) was attempted, though tho previous arrangements weio not such ns to insure a very full collection, the result was as satisfactory nn could, under tho circumstances, have been expected. It is therefore desirable that this system should be continued in tho dill -rent States at nil futuro elections of a local or general nolurn; nnd the Board of gera indulge the hope that on t occasion at the elections to bo held in tho respective States of Maine, Vermont, fljassn'-tiuinlts, is.-w iorlt, New Jersey Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Soii'h Carolina Georgia, MUtdiMppi, Ohio, Micltigin, Wisconsin, llli uois. Louisiana and Florida, coiitribuuona will hi undo in nid of tin Monument worthy of the Country men ot ineir iihibimoui neneiaeior. GEO. WA TTRItSTON, Secretory of the W. N. M. Society NEW GRENADA. The first of this month commenced a now era in the history of this tioblu country. Tint day the cut in severance of Church and State became the law of ihe land. Amid the booming of cannon, tho strain ot martial rnusio, and the glad hurrah ol Ihe peoplo, the reign ol political priesicralt came to an end. Theop-iio-ilion of the priesthood, the treason of the Aiclt- Itishon, and the Allocution of iho I'ope, has nroved ot no nvail to stop, or even to postpone tho triumph of truth, and this, too, among a people almost exclusively Kouian oaiuouu. ho aoiiugo irom I lie Now York Post, this memorablo decree: 1, All inierforenco of Government in filling ecelesi' asiicnl benefices, fir in regard to ihe wnrehip of Ca'bo-lie or any other Churches has ceased. . roreed ontritmtious lor iho support of religion is abolished, and all liabilities, to bo treated as other nidi v'nlu'il liahiliiies. II. Clergymen and laymen nro placed on nn equality brl'ire iho law. 4. Churches nod church property to belong to the inhabi'ants of pariiln s, except wlr.'ro ipteial bequesfi have been iiiimIc. 5. N official diameter to religious corporations, (i. Nocoen im in religious m titers allowed. 7. No spiritual envoy from the pope will bo received by the gov"rnm!i,t. fi. The Jesu ts ate excluded from Ibo country. !t. Tho protection of CithoMo worship exieuded t all other denominations. 10. Provinces exempted from t io compulsory support of religion in tho diocesea to which ihey b dong 11. Catholic churches turn cathedrals belong to Hie Catholic inhabitnntsj Vi. Tho State is absolved f-"!rii nil cuuuexion wilh the Cliurch, and the Church u no longer lo interfer-matters of State. I f, 1 tio hiinisiied prelates may return, the pnni-cu- iion agamsi inein oeing oroppeu. with the exception ot mo s:tt article ot tho (focn o. which letuns to exhibit a needless alarm at the old JoMiit bugbear, these enactments exhibit ajudicium-ne-s, wisdom and familiar trquaiutriico with the pi in-plea of a free government, which civ us now hopes for Ibo ultimate em-rgeiice of the It -publics of South America trom the cut no ot lieiug cmlrolteit ,y n Ingot o.f priestcraft. Cm. Gazette- ! OERMAN LOVEftS. "The universal prudery," says Mr. Brace, in b8 Home Life in Germany, ' which so lumpers n, man in America, nnd makes him ignore hall llcit.ictsot lite, for fear of treading on some unknown tielim'o sen sibility, U never seen in European circles. '. is hoi iy assumed, what every ono knows to be the fact, that both sexes aro equally aware of a great variety of things; aim wnero mo nututon is liatuiut, no one troubles himself about it. There were in our company, this evening, two who wote invited ns betrothed, and I was very much struck with iheir maimer" towarda one anoihor. I think in an An;loS.(Xon company, the faci would h rvo been dropped out of view as much ns possible, nnd --erlainly the slightest cxpri'f-sioii of their feeling would have been dreaded by the pirtiei. Uuttieru lliernwas, tint whole evening, an tltico.,ici"U beautiful expression of ath'ctton and confidence, which really, I think, gladdened the whole company. You never th -light ol wai--hmg them I r it, but you never thought of anything else with them. L vo (teemed to speak out ns liiihnalU hem their tones, nml glance, nod manner, ns friend y leeling did with im. Nothing else C'orrrspimdunce ol the Torcit ("My. THE NEW SCHOOL COMMISSIONER-8HORTE8T CATHOHlSil. 1st. Qnrs'ion. Why did H. H. Barney leave his schotil in Cincinnati aim visit Uievel and i Anticcr, To viiit the Cleveland schools, of course. But they don't " keep Saturday's." Cd, Q Did any d tho Cleveland teachers conclude to vote lor him? A.-. Wo ,'nc, not. 3d. Q. How did tiis Wiu result wilh Oviait, I. is brother democrat ? A. Ak poor deluded Oriatt, who dares to think ami act for himself. 4th. Q. Did the Plain Dealer lie in slating tint Barney took no part in common with othr teachers In recommending Lot in Andrews for the i ilico id' 3iate Commissioner ot Common Schools? A. Barney acknowledges that he did co operate wiih the teachers, at Dayton, in tho above recommen dation, the Plain Deabr and A.D. Wright to iho contra- ry, notwithstanding. 5th, Q. Wi)t3 re tcfra this informant of Ihe Plain-Dealer and Democratic Stale Convention, a'- the lime of the Dayton Association? A. Don't know. Wright was not "Air." (iih. Q. Why did not H. II. Barney himself offer the resolutions recommending Audrows for ihe above uilhe? A. Ho would have done It. but lianlly suggested that being himself a democrat he could da more to teenre tkc election of Andrcwi tcitk kit party by not praenling the TCtvlution. bnl would cordially support them. 7Ui. Q, Whu pledged Hamilton county tor An drews? A. Echo nnsw-rf, H. II. Barney. (A lino demo crat.) 8 'Ii. (. What pro t have we ol iho above r A. Any number of reliable witnesses, and Baiiiskt into tke Bargain. .Jin. ( Who tietrnyed liiB masier witli a risst A. Judas Israriot. 10th. Q, What ia Barney's excuse for this das tardly betrayal? A. lie bw mat his acar uomocratic nreuiren were going to nurninatu n very inferior man, by tho namo of (iilson, a man totally unlit for th ollice, utid Im stoop, ed to the betrayal from pure pitrinlitm. llth. (, Will Ihe Plata U-mier support a man who was engaged with those infamom teachers at th IMyMi Association, in 'FOltESf ALLfNG The PeopleV Will it support a leading man iu the Mutual Admiration Society? A. iho nam uealer does unit very thing. Heii-io. Tnc Recest South Carolina Dckl We tmblishcd a telegraphic despatch some daya since, announcing a tatal duel at Utiarleston, ihe papers ol which city have been silent as to the nature of th dilliculty, The Washington Star of Saturday, however, gives the following particulars. Baltimore paper. Mr. L"garo was engaged to a young lady iu Colum-bi i. Her fiteiidn inquired of ) itiovint what was the churae'er nnd hihi's of L. This coining to his ears, he inquired of I), whit lio had answered, nnd found tint h i h .d spoken favorably of him. But not satii-lieii wilh a vetlml statement, hodenanded t' in wri-titig, which was relusi d. Leg.ire ch illongt d on this pfu"d Tlio dUtoieo wm twelve paces. Legare fired ni tll" word " one," nnd mi-iied. Dunovant fired at tho word t-vo," ami it i I It Tt his antagonist. Th't survivor wns vvlmlly ui..i!tilhd in Ihe uo of I lie pistol, having ii'jver before hud anything to do wiih a duel. Legate, on the contrary, was notoriously n cr.n k shot. having, a lew (lays before the (itl'i' VsW'', in practising, placed lortw ig'm out of WlMfrflffn a card, at the word. Ho beeame very reTran on starting for tho groii'iU, nun remuiu-a niiiiis leita iiri'smitin (hut lie w uld fall, notwiihstaiidiiig Ins skill with the pistol tie was formerly in iho navy as n midship man, trom wntcn no was doiuiisseu, H tn anal, tor run ning a sword through a marine. political TRUTH CRUSHED TO EARTH WILL RISE AGAIN." ' Not one not a single one of the leading thoughts which now sway the mind of the country, is of ' Whig ' origin." Wathington Union. This is a position which is to be deeply deprecated, if it bo true. The Editor of the Union has certainly won for hitneir a very unenviable position. It reminds us of nu anecdote which we recollect to have rend of Mr. Wehstek, as amung his earliest e Hurts at the bar. It seem that Mr. WKiisrKK bad a pretty knotiy case, nnd one which he wascertiin la lose, unless he could do away with the testimony of ouo wit ness, wh i was a m m that seldom paid any attention to what was pasting around him. To accomplish this end be spent days utid nights iu scheming and devising somo nioatin to a iswer his purpose. He had almost given up the chase when an idea struck him, and he procured the services of a fellow who was on the most intimate terms with tho witness, and instructed him aa to the modus operandi of his proceedings. Hii agent went to tho old gentleman, and saluting him iu u fa miliar arid confidential manner, told him he had been to such and audi a place and had aucn audi and such things, (all, as a nutter of course, relative to the cate of Mr. WxusTKit) and give a version of tho case ns Mr. Weutkh would have wuhed it lo bo. Tho old getnh-nmn listened attentively until the agent closed his communication and then went on his way. Iu a few days lie saw tho old man again aud told him the same la'e, apparently aa if he had never mentioned it before. In a few days afterwards he saw him again, and ngniu went over the rigmarote aa innocently as before. Well, the consequence was that the trial camo un and iho old mau was subpoenaed, and al though ho knew the circumstances originating the litigation, his mind took coloring from the tale of the agent, and he swore through thick and thin against his own knowledge of the affair. Now, whether the editor of tho Union bo actually so ignorant, or resorts to such means wi'h dishonest motives, one fact ib solf- evideut, aud that is lhat he has wittingly or nuwit-tiugly endorsed the old man's example, aud litid against Ids better judgmeut. Tho Whig party, long ago, contended that it was ono, and tho moat essential duty of the general gov enimeul, to divide the proceeds of the public lands, ( r the lands thms-ilves, among the Slates. Tiie nu terrified democracy then war red against the measure, and branded tho movers of it, as corrupted aa so many thieves and robbers, and with a vigilance altogether unprecedented in tho history of any party, guarded sacredly tho packet of Uncle Sam from thu encroach ments of his legal and hatural heirs. Tuey declared th i measure unconstitutional, and that ueither the TO THE RESCUE. The a-ithor of " That OrZt OldS'tmet," has had the honor of being laughed at more heartily than any other man of bis size and age in Ohio. Ho woke, one morning, and fuuud himself famous. He had perpetrated one of the most pompously Billy, and aurperla-tively ridiculous articlea that ever appeared in tho anna! of Western literature. It was a moat rich and rare specimen of rhetoric. It incontinently took lhat one atop which is said to exist between ihe sublime and the ridiculous. The thing was received by one loud gulfaw from the lakes to the Ohio river. Cox at ouce became Sun Set Cox, an nppollallnn ho will weur as Ion? as he resides in the Buckeye S'a'e. At first he waa disposed to be pouty about It thought ho was not well used, &c. But, finding thnt every body else was laughing at him, he finally concluded the best way to get out of tho acrape waa to luugh wilh the reat. This was the most sensible step in the case, and he contrived tn get a little legitimate fun out of his own folly. Tho turn he gave it was clever, and aome felt disposed to forgive aud forget. But that oilier goniua,(?) who goes by the universal name of Smith. has come to the rescuo! Taking advantage of Cox'a nbseuco, he hii entered the field, thrown down the gauntlet, declared that tho Cheat Old Sunset" articlo was a marvelously proper attain in short, thnt it wu a "dem Joint " specimen of composition, a groat many times liner than any of ihe men can write who havo made n much fun about it. Smith don't believe these laughing critics could write any thiug " half aa good." He sort of hints that these men are vampirea that suck the brains of other men, and tome of them evon suck the Statesman! Heaven preserve all inch calves ! Ho thinks the mon who laugh at tho Sunset nre " flat aort of fellowa.who havo not capacity or genius enough to appreciato, much lei to write audi sublime articles aa the Sunset aforesaid ! " This Smith is wit'y wiihil; f ir Im sayo that if tho author of the Sunset was mm), then lime who laugh nt it are foots. Wo should feel disposed to laugh at this tremendous sally, it' wo were not suddenly checked and made sad by tho n .lection thnt if this Baying is true, the fools have such nn overwhelming majority, that we fear there is uo hope for tho rest of mankind for at least three generations to come. Can't the rest dent editor of the Statesman fix up this matter so that thore is ajimo chance for poor human nature? It wonld be kind in him to do no. If the author of Ibo Sunset does not exclaim in tho hitterness of his vexation, " Save me from my fi ienda !' then lie don't understand how n semiblw man would act in such an emergency, A Lim-i: Ivcmr.sT. A Imchrli r friend of ours was riding, a day or two ago, through Alhol, in this Stale, when he overio.-lt a little girl and boy, apparently on their way to school, The liitlo girl appeared to bo five or six years out, mm was as heauHiul as a lairy. Her eyes wero lit up with a glomi of intense hat-:uet, and hr r cheeks glowed wilh the hues of health. Our bachelor looked at her Cora moment, admiringly. 8h met hi glance wiih n smile, and with nn eager voice saluted him wiih, " Have you got a bjby ?" Ho wns, struck all i -k by the question, and something like a regret stole over his mind, ns ho looked upon tho nniina-' ted nnd beautiful futlo face before hint. "Nvi," ho answer"!. " Wt II," replied she, drnwiug her liny form proudly up, " are Afire,'' mid pass' d on, mill smiling, to tell iho joyous news to tiie next one she might meet. What a world of hnppim- to her wss concentrated in that ono idea a baby ! Aud in her j y alio Cult as i1" nil must have the satno delight n herself; nnd it wis a matter of ntl .ctioiiato pride to her, that lifted hnr Hi (lit heart above th" re tch of ordinary envy, lor in tho luby was itT w.,r!d, ami what else hud sho to crave? Such was Iho rell cti'n of our friend, and ho remembered it long I'no'mh to tell it to us yesterday, in State street. ftos'on Pott. fixes tho brand of duplicity and bad faith upon Mr. Barret. Wo have seen nothing of either. The conviction was npou the minds of all who knew tho course of the Locofoco candidate before, but this direct and poailivo evidence was perfectly crushing and conclu sive. Mr. Ha r.v it will never dare deny a word ol it. The main facts aro known tu ao many other prominent teachers, that there is not a particlo of doubt about them. Mr. Barnrt did favor the nomination of Ak- tirkwb, and ho has atutiqicd a stigma upon his own character by a denial of it that ho can never deface. Ho has mined himself in the estimation of the teach ers and friends of education in the Stato by bis double dealing, and no worse fate could befall the Common School interests than to entrust them to the hands of a man s'anding ns he does before them. Let the friends of our School systom remember this when they aro asked to vote for Mr. Barsjkt. AnisroTi.v. .ti Ar.KXANiiF.n CoMrAiun. flow different nre our eonqut ts from his! how ddV-ront our Inemh! not united for rob b ry and revelry, but joyous in discovery, calm in meditation, nnd intrepid iu research. How often, nnd throughout how many nges, shall you bo n r. fugn from such men aa ho nnd his ac complices: how olt. ti will th" s'lidious, tho neglected, the deserted, fly toward you lor compensation in the wrongs of toriutio. mid f.r r-loco in tho rigor of ! tiny ! His judgment Beat is covered by his sepulchre; nhi.ut, ono year hence no appeals are made to him : of- ier ten iiioiiHami inero win lie momentous questions, not of avai ice or litigation, not id" violence or fraud. but of reason nnd of science, brought behwo your ptdgmrnt-e:tt, and settled by your decree. Dyers nnd tailors, carver and gilders, grooms and trumpeters. m il;o greater men th in G d makes; but God's Inst long r, throw them whero yuu will. Landor. Her next all'jir wai to prepare to issue, on the lirt id . ..,,.' ?. .. ,' Monthly Journal for G.rla and Boys, an advoriHo. hwllcUJ Wttro liko rim, wi), fll(tli. mem of which may bo lonnd in aim her column, ftm . cieul, vivi( aipri.cintion of the woes of h ach-dordo.n. is the way Grace Greenwood despatches business, nml j n'.ej, have observed .his ..aturab.es of expression it require, no prophet to predict lhat she .. de.ltned In (;ermtI1-. lt it ni)ip , ,n f((fn. ...c-eed , hrren.erpr.ao lo l,er heart a content. S ay iN f Tt , ' nilMni(ri hered.lor.al chair ever be .of ly cushioned ; may her . m W(mn n( , nf J f ... . ed.lor.,,1 schBor. always be rtr rie Irjt them l.ll alio Qh f , wania Ihen. agai-i may her brum always ho coming 0,Vecliun wJro llllt b!lirml by that everlasti g f ir- . i n h '.' i . i i , I mulisui, and cohltieafl, ami flellihhnesswhich haugover our hourh id; where love wns without dissimulation and, finally, m ry her circulation bo one hundred thousnud. She deserves It. Graco Greenwood has u heart Inrgo enough to bold all the " boys and girls" in the world, nnd her heart bus enabled tier to comprehend their ways, wants, dangers, and possibilities. Her writings will please children, and do ibem good. Many of our juvenile papers, in trying to be simple, have been siekeiiingly Billy. To edit such papers well requires uncommon talent nnd tact. Indeed, tu write so ua to interest children, it is uoeesaary In write four times as well as is required to p!easo tho mature. Boys and girls will rend Bnuyan, Shakspearo, Cervhutos, and Defoe, white they recoil instinctively from Ihe solemn trash which well-meaning people uf "woll regulated minds" are fund of recouimendmg to thorn. Child h "ml and Genius are akin, nnd Ihey love ono another. Wo believo, therefore, that Grace Greenwood's " Liltlo Pilgrim" will be a most welcome guest hi ovorj family ho visits, nnd wo urge parents to loso no time in Bending him nn invitation to come punctually on tho first ut next month. Home Journal. Tho Queen has terminated her visit to Ireland, and gone to ber residence st Balmoral, to Scotland. Mtstkrious. A smart looking, dandified ''young gentleman," rigged out in a suit of black broadcloth, and quite a tall shirt collar, strutted into the Washing-ton House, Covington, on Tuesday Inst, nnd in a round, neat hind, registered himself "0. Do Sncey." Liko an oi l traveler, ho then dinted ( IT his bonis, h.k d iu thegliss, nnd finally asked to ho shown to his moo., which be took good earn to keep for the balance ol iho day. But the good landlady had hr suspicions aroused, Tho mdd, bluo eye, and ihe soft, velvut-like chock, llcgrd wilh a rosy red, could not belong to iho sterner sex sho felt aure of that. So ahe ascended to the "young pfiitlamnn'a" room to reconnoiter. An dher ginnce aiiiaueu nor Blio was n:;m urn .iq'iiin.i) wrre turned to conviction, aud she nt once charged bur young guest with the crime and misdemeanor ul being n woman, and the youngs (tuest, with a great many blushes at d some tears, plead guilty tn the chnrge. The good landlady thou produced some female np parol, nnd, while delivering a short lecturo ou the re spectability of the sol, the young guest slipped out of mo " breeches " into a white skirt and canon wrapper. Tho next day the Marshal of the riiy felt it his duty to cnll on tho fair traveler and mnke further inquiry. Shu answered the summons, but so concealed hor face in tho fold of a sun bonnet that tho Marshal could not even catch glance of the blue eye. She refused to tell her num.), but with some reluctance, admitted that sho wns a citizen of Cincinnati; had learned the tailoring and cutting business, but being out of work, nnd disgusted witli female drudgery and inconvenience, had dunned the "breeches" and come over to Kentucky in anarch of a job. The Marshal did not consider it his duty to arrest her, and merely stipula ted thnt she should nut again take to the " broeehoe." She isalill al the Washington House. Cis). Con, neither worn for du'y, nor worn fir IT-mt ; where mu tual kindness nod aelf-snrrilico and alfection had so long been, that lio very nir aud npect seemed to wel come and sun I ho stranger." Let tho sicklo do its havoc nmong tho grain tot the fruit be gathered let fair (Sogers pull t io bursting bunches uf the grape. Thus shall good provision be made for iho wants which wait before us, nnd the and reflections uf tho season shall he modified by wine nnd assuaged by fatness. Aud sun tnero win no mourners, rural! aro not alike and tho life of the one may bo iho destruction ol ihe other. Buffalo Express. Aye, there will bo miiuriinr for tho dead Summer, gone. Tho dead leaves that shiver awhilo on the sapless trees, thou rustle down to th ir graves on tho around, are not more than tho beautiful hopes, now dead, but which had birth in tie swelling fullness nf the early Summer. Y011114 maidens huili castle in their glowing dreams, which they deemed would be realities win n tho harvest time of fruits had come: where is the realization now? Their alow step nnd pallid fiee fell a snd tale, and tho murmured prayers to Heaven to bear ihem nn is hut tlio voice of the dead Summer, gene, Y".u.g men started with the Spring to count 'ho hours to the harvest lime, whoa their hirvest of houors should come iu the plentitudo of riches ; but how many are weary nod worn with iho struggle, and wilh the Au'umn nro ready to sink into tho darkuem of an unpityiiiy Winter! Ah! Iho tnlo is nut hull' told Ituhel yet mourns f"r her children, and each year must add lo the sot row which is iu every earthly cup. Yet there is a beautiful lessoifbi ibis naMng season. Not forever hath the sap gone from tho trees, and tho color from tho leaves and (lowers. There is n springtime in the storehouse of God's bounty, and 1 1 is opoii band shall sow tho seeds ot new hopes aud new alleo-tuitis in tho days yet to emtio. Then shall the bitterness of Iho water. be turned to a southing sweet, nnd tho chalice of our dreams bn ngain welled up wilh bursting beauty of Ihe young lifo swelling into being around. Aud if, perchance the heart hntb drooned and died, and the dead leavea have fallen upon tho grave of the mourner, yet is there n still more glorious -pring-iimo in store, when the dead shall arise in tho glorious beauty of the Supornnl, Shall we, then, mourn for the deid euro me r, gone? SandHfkjf llrgixter. ScALT.oi'Kn ToMAToxa. Pool lino ripe tomntoi s, cut them up in small pieces, nnd put in a pun, a layer of bread crumbs, then a layer ol tomatoes, with pepper, salt and some pieces of butter then put another layer of brend crumbs aud tomatnee, and so on till tho dish la full. Spread lome beaten egg over the top, and set in tue oven and Dane it. BEAUTf. Beauty is inexplicable: It appears to ui a dieutn. wh-ii we conlomplalo tho works of great nrtisif-; it i a hovering, floating and s.litteriru shadow, whose outline eludes the grasp of definition. Mendelssohn, iho philosopher, grandfather of iho composer, and ot'ieiK, tried to ca'di Beauty, ns a butterfly, and pin it down for inspect! -n. They havo succeeded in lh" s mm way ns they nro likely to aucceed with abutt-illy the p i rauiinat trembles ami atror-glra, and Its hri-h'est colors aro gone; or, if you catch it without spoil me, iho colors, you have at boslustihT and awkward corpse. But a corpse is not an entire animal it wants what is essential in all things, namely, life-spirit, which sheds beauty nn everything. Oottho. Moni-sT Ct.Kiix. A young lady, with mind intent on sh-ippiug, entertd a store on n certain occasion, and atldie.s-ing n fresh looking, rosy cheeked youth, desirqd t know ii' he had nny nice silk hose, ' Certnhdv. Mi," replied he; immediately tho counter was strewn with tlio delicate articles. Alter selecting a pair, she lookd up very in-ieecn'ly anil enquired, " How high dn thevconie, sir?" Toe clerk blushed turned, in tact, all sens of colors, but spake not a word. She gave him a look of surprise, and repeated hor question. flga'H rue yoii'u siaritu stammered and saui, "Kenny. Miss, I that is to -ny. I think could not bo nosiiivH. but my inipn asioti is that ihey come just above the knee: They both fainted on tho spot. Tiif. Cbntrm. Ohio lUitttoAn. The 7.iiienvillo Courier has the following paragraph in relation to the i progrefs making in the cunstructi iu of this rond : Wo me gratified tu lesru that tho track of this road is n w laid some five miles east uf Zannsvillc, and that . the c unpany is laying about one half mile per day. We nro assured, fmm the best authority, that they ex j pect to reach Cambridge about the 1st of November, and tint iho whole lino will be completed to Wheeling! by tlm 1st of July, IW4, n d tho Directors think at nn eurlier dev. This is sooner than wo expec ed from ihe scnrriiy of hinds, and tho dilliculty of nhtainiiig them; but our authority is umpiestionabl 1. Franklin's Toist. Long after Washinjton'a vicio riesover tho French and KtHish had made his name1 fiimil'nr to all E -trope, Dr. Franklin had chanced tu! dine with Ibo English and French Amhaxsndnra, when,1 ns near ns wo can recollect, Ihe following toasts were drunk : By the F, ig!idi Arnhnssulort " Fisor.ANO. Th.S"M, whoso bright beam enlighten and fructify Ihe remotesi corners of tho earth." The French Ambassador, glowing with national prlil". but too polite to dispute the previous loasl drank : " Fkasck The Moon whoso mild, si-,vly, mid cheering rays are the delight of nil tn'i.uH, enns.iliug them in Iho dtrklicsn, and nu, U iu j tic ir d 1 tvn ineM beautiful." Dr. Franklin then arose, mnl wWi hii tiunii;ili--ity, sdd : "Grtonm-: WssiiisutON The J.-shta who romm iu ltd the Sun nnd Jrwi to stand s'ill, and Ihey obeyed him." CmasCTi:R. In common lile, don't you nl'ion judge am! uii-jmlgo a man's wliohi conduct, netting out with a wrong impressi ml The tone of voice, a word said in joke, or a Irdlo in beh.iviorilie cut of Ins hair, or the lie of bis neckcloth, may disfigure him in your eyes, or poison your good opinion- or, ai lire end of years of intimacy, it may bo your closest friend says sotneihing reveals aomotliing which had previously been u v t ret, which alters nil your views uh ut lion, nml Miow t that he ha been noting on quiiu ft diifereut motive to that which yon f meted yon knew. JVifirJvrfiy. Tiif. Bfst for Pustimi. A gentleman passing through n potnio pitch observed an hishman pointing somo potatoes. He inquir d of him what kind hr had thorn 1 " Iti vv ones, lo ho sure," replied ihe sou of Erin; " if ihey were boiled one, ihey wouldn't grow.' An Irishman bring asked, on a late tiial, h-r a certificate of hia marriage, band Ins Innd and exhibited a huge acar, which looked as though it might have been made with a lire shovel. We havo wnited patiently for one week to aee if any Locofoco editor would have the temerity to attack tho lands nor the proceeds thereof could bo dislributed character of Mr. Line h. or to doubt whether his letter among tho btntuB, under any circumstances, "uutalns! ; how did the fiiio gold change!" Seeing that the people were to bo no longer gulled with the Bpect ms arguments of their poliiicinns, (hoy submitted, nnd advocated a distribution of the public lands among the States fur purposes of internal improvements (a Whig measure) and for educational purposes. This was a measure which originated with the Whig party and wns stolen from I hum, as others have been, by the democracy. Tho groat Pacific Itiilrond only presents a portion of the ache rid which Mr. Cr.Ar and many other eminent Whigs wished to be canie l out. Yes, this great and important work, tu the immeusty and nd-vati'ago of which tho people aro just awnkoniug, would lung since have been determined on, not perhaps aa a special improvement, but as one of the many of lhat systom which would years ngo havo placed our country the foremost in iho world in the point of internal improvements as sho already is in intelligence nnd patriotism. Biit the movers of this scheme of internal improvements wero declared, by tho Democracy, a uutag-mis- tli to tho very be.t interests of thoir country, impure, coTtiptednnd villa'uous. And now tho Democratic party, with tho pr. as aud a portion i f 1)10 cabinet at their head, and not at alt an i nprobability wiih tho nisentnf tho President himolf, are advocating what thoy then lenouactd nnd declared as unconstitutional. Mr, PisncR, bo it remembered, is tho self same Mr. Picncs who, when ho was in Congress, voted against any measure intended to benefit Western mon, by ihe improvement of Western rivers or harbors. It may bo urged in his favor, that ho wns then a Senator from a Sta'e whose interests were tending in a di tie rent direction, and under the instructions of his constituents. he voted nnd look the position which he did. A great and enlarged mind would not havo been Ltimuhted by nny such I el nn.l solli-h influence, but would have risen above the narrow aud confined limits nf his own homestead and warred in behalf of n measure which won'd have been the me ins of making his country great, and not have impeded her march, which would have blessed his countryman and benefitted the world, ! and which if it had not made him a great man, would at least have stamped him au honest one. How ofte.i has ths question been asked derisively by tho Democratic press and party, if ihe Whig party is not dead? Now wo nsk them a question. If our measures aro taken from ns, and f umed upon the tenet table uf Ihe Democratic party it wo have our measures curried out by a L .cofoco ud:nini.lration, is there anything tube gained by tho adherence of the Whig party? The hut bloods nnd old Hunkers of that party would rendily answer us no. But Iheru is a work lor the Whig p irly. If our principles nre stolen from ua, nnd emhl-ind upon the banners of the opposition it tno pros m is darft, rite in turn is suspicious, and the great warfare for truth must not be abandoned. If there Is no work for us al present, we must superintend the movements of the Democratic party ; for a party composed of bo many incongruous m isges and materials cannot long remain in the right chmnel. They need a curb lor thoir follies and a spur for their corruptions. The Democratic party U progressive only since they have commenced the adoption of Whig principles, and if it Hill rcmnina in the same channel, the great na tional and material ddireucea between the two grout parties will eoon be eradicated, by ihe total abandonment of Locofoco measures. The parlies now occupy the same relative positions to each other aa mind does to matter. If the component parts of tho steam engine were left in ihetr origital and crude state, the purposes which thoy now serve would tS thwarted. But even after having been connected and j nnted until ibo locomotive is complete, there is still something "he neccioiry before the world can be astonished by ihe secrets of power nnd speed which lie hidden in its bo s un. The track must be laid to guide it, and the engineer must be at his post tn put it in mntim, or check ita reckless speed. So ia it wr;h the Loco loco Dei. oe nny of the present day. Give litem principles and u knowledge to carry Ihem out, and they can tear along nt n tremendous speed, and snort ns loud or make as much noiso as a young e.irihqnake; but they must be curbed and managed, or they viy soon run into the most egregious excesses. This, Ihen, ia ihe sum ami suluiiimo of their progression, We will notice this subject ngain. " At von like ir.'' Tiie sewer of the Sta'esman was yesterdiy op-'iit-d, nnd an enormous quantity of Incoherent maledictions and Billing. gate rhetoric belch, d I forth tip n us. It Is somewhat nxtoni.hing lo witness 1 the fn iiity wi h which Ihe jaded editors of thnt shoot ! make usk of such forcible arguments. They nro etei- J rmlly drawing ns before ihe public, simply because we eou'il n. t participate in and enjoy 'b"ir raptures at a 1 therein before mentioned "sin. si t Intighi d nt their description of the distortions of Bott b ibv. ihey nro furious, und nothing will suit save our t .t,,l Jesiiucin ti Be merciful upon us, You wish tu kuo.v how the ba'iy ia oil' for pip. Woll, I e i grow I i iu fit. A for ivij m.'ie pip, h- ua Im cutiidn't think of it nt present, Yoiirdefr-o-io ol tiie "Groat Old Sunset " h is Mifjilied him wilh a s:llii'i.'iicy for a long time to come. When In hoard of your solicitude nhout his health, be actually chuckled at )our munificence, la beard is growing veiy fust, nnd so tno sny that il looks veiily like unto Savisomj wo wo il f, therefore, advi-n you to ns your scissors more nml your pen less for 1 lift child evidently presents symptoms of approach lug dnnger, nnd your nether jaws, although in fancied security, may be wrested from you. " Cvin Titus." The following tont was given at a rail rond dinner at Detroit lately : Editors Ladders on which politicians climb It. power pioneers in all great enterprise - the only chi'S whose labor is Its own reward the hardest worked, poorest paid, m nt s .-ll-siierilleiog, and best nbnsed of ail the professions. Ths Seamstress Association, of Cincinnati, have became insolvent. Liabilities $300. Niit.EB Gray, of the Plain Dealer, though an otT hand clever chap iu many reipods, is notorious for his total disregard of truth in tho conduct of bis paper. During the Into contest in Kentucky and Tennessee it was assorted that Pierce bad Appointed lo the office of Postmaster nt Cleveland, a man who had kept ex tracts from his famous Now Host n speech, standing nt the head of his paper. This wns denied by the Loco focos, and oneofthem wrote to G rat, to know wheth er it wa true. Of course he denied it. Thereupon the Herald copies from the Plain Dealer, of Aug. 7th, 1852, iho entire head of tho editorial column, contain ing as regular standing matter, threo extracts from I'ikrce's speech, wherein he denounced ihe fugitive law, &.C. It is a clincher. It proves, beyond the pro babilily of doubt, that Gray has told a deli ierato false hood. We nre sorry that the Cleveland Postmaster was bo indiscreet aa to Answer the letter from the South, and thus expose himself lo tho terrible fire. He is nailed. The Eastkrn Qukbtion The Czar Refuses the Turkish Note The following di-pateh we clip from the London Times. The Times being iu the confidence of the English Government, and the dispatch having been published in that paper only, and that too jutt before the sailing of a mail steamer for America, aro items which should tend to lessen the confidence in jia veracity to sumo extent. Tho Emperor of France, it is also as serted, declines going Io war during tho present scarcity of bread st uIVs among bis people. ' Paris. --It wns positively slated today, Thursday, Mi, at ibo Russian Embassy nt Paris, that the Emperor of Russia h id refused to acrept the modifications. It wns added, that when the Kuiin ror was informed thnt thu Porte ha I modified the note of the Vienua Confe rence before accepting il, he observed, in a tone of much moderation, that he would willingly make concessions for iha jxpres purpose of meeting tho wishes of tho European powers; but he would not humiliate lumsell in the rye of the world by sutiniiutiig to pro- pitiiiona proceeding direct I rem iho Sultan. In many parts of tho country thero is a rumor of number probable war wiih Mexico. Tho supposition that nny immediate difficulty will take place between our country and the Mexican government is not warranted by our latest advices. There has beeu a large complement of arms, nmtinition nnd troops 1 brown forward to the Itio Grande, prepnr. d, in an emergency, to go into active service. This movement, is no doubt to protect ns from the numerous depredations which have beret. -fore been committed by the lawless hordes Infesting our frontier, nnd teach them a lesson, the moral of which in the future, they will respect. Santa Akna, it is generally understood and c mceded, does not entertain the most amicable relations in the world to us, and the time, perhaps, is not nl any very distant day when it will be nocesMiry to curb his temerity and put him in a position nntu, where he cm recognise his helplessness but. ns yet, nothing of any decided character has transpired to suhlaMiato tin- conviction that an immediate war is inevitable. Bolting seem to bo the or ier of the day np Northwest, Tho Lucofocos of ibo Defiance district have nominated ttenr- G1t.u1.ANn us their candidate for (he Senate. Th re wa n hard light between him and Judgo Tati.or, Iho old Senator. The Judge being floored iu the convention, now announces bimaelf ns an independent candidal". The Defiance Democrat is down upon him. Tho editor anys tho Democracy of Hint district will not tolerate a bolter, and gives the Judge fiir warning that ho will find hia lovel nt tho eltcti m. We xh.id Bee. VkiiMo, r. In the S-mato there are lfi Whigs, 12 I. icofoco a.:d 1 Fteenoih r. Iu iho H'mso thero are II" Whigs, 87 Locofoco ami Hi Freesoilurs. Tito Mont-pclier H'ttVArnan ssys: The Whig State ticket has suffered severely from the liquor question, and Ihe Loeofoco ticket has gained on account of that, nn well as. in some (itinrlnra 1ri. Then because we the Frees ulera, by tie return to the Loeofoco fold of persons who, sineo inr.i, have called themselves "Free Democrats." We question whether it would have be-11 better for tho Whig party to have shouldered the liquor law, a th Locos endeavored lo force tliftu to do. Hut specu'-i'ioti of ihis surl is now unavailing. Wo hoto thai question will bo Bellied ero another decdou : il nol, u will proiiy surely be aoitltd by it. The long-eared editor of the Dayton Qa-.ette turns his hep's towards us rather n ieingly, boemtso we had the audacity to say something comp!imeritay nf Lippard; and the literary sluhbenlegullion of lUvStafe Journal give premonitory symptoms ol'ndoiiw to join tiia Dayton brolber II nny doubt h-id pievioosly existed of Lippaid'a claim tn the high consideration i.f h;a rotintrymen, ihey would bo dissipated when such old fogies are seen arrayed Bgninai him. They ore being- utterly incapable of a aiqylo warm, noble, or itispiting sentiment, in d nre ao far behind Ihe spirit of the ago that no hopes ran bo indulged i,f thejr ever being able io catch up True Democrat. N .t too fast, young man, not too fast; if wo have erred, give ti lime for repentaiic. The nge la progressive and you're) a acrramer; but if the scythe of time was only half as dull, Peter I'arlki's loun-tniu of youth would cause no longings iu our breast. How is il, Dayton 1 Wonder what's became of Met J
Object Description
Title | Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1849 : Weekly), 1853-10-04 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Date of Original | 1853-10-04 |
Searchable Date | 1853-10-04 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Rights | Online access is provided for research purposes only. For rights and reproduction requests or more information, go to http://www.ohiohistory.org/images/information |
Type | Text |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn85025898 |
Reel Number | 00000000024 |
Description
Title | Ohio State journal (Columbus, Ohio : 1849 : Weekly), 1853-10-04 page 1 |
Place |
Columbus (Ohio) Franklin County (Ohio) |
Searchable Date | 1853-10-04 |
Submitting Institution | Ohio History Connection |
Type | Text |
File Size | 3869.41KB |
Full Text | rmfmmm m , , , M ; . , . . " ' : -- IIIWl 't-f'Jf e30M''tf it-'! VOLUME XLIV. COLUMBUS, OHIO, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 4, 1853. NUMBER 6 lUccldn Oljia State Journal 8 PUBLISHED AT COUJMUUS EVERY TUIBDAY MORNIXO, IT 6C0TT ft BASCOM, JOURNAL itnLIHKO", OIUH UO niU .maW MT1UK0I OK Rlfll. TFllMSlHvarin'fyiit ii'tvine.: In Columbus, --J0O. Jarl by mall, SI CO ; club of fuur and upwanla, j of rn Rjid upward, SI 11. 'I'll 11 UA I I.Y JOURNAL Li furoMu-d to elty NulMeriben at 96.(1(1, tnd liv mail at a )f,ir. Tilt) T.tl ll'I.Kiil.V JOURNAL la 83 .00 ! HATES nFADrtillTlSlHO lim WREKLY JOURNAL i 1 a t'.l HI'I ia fioifto "o r H ISo! l.quiu, W, 7f.l 0U1 Kl 752 2S3 0)t CM) (V TOO MI.S W Siqiiam, 761 251 '53 KB 504 00 5 00 6 008 TO 13. 15. 8.,.i.r, il 001 -,hi A'u'1 H 50 6 (Kill 60S (1011. 117. ;Z1 Mflliutw, 1 'St'l 353 604 00 6 OOfJ 008 (1010. 11. ,23. S. n aquar., cl.anKvablo tliontlilv, S'JOft J'taTJ wwkly , column, clinnsFHlilH qimrtfrly Mi noltimu. ctin.iKealilt. iln.rtfrl. enluuin, I cliniHji-atl qinirtrjy 10 llnwt of Ihla .It1 (ypo I. rwknne.1 a a'jnara AdT.rttwnjant, nnbrwl on tbo In.W. f xrlu'tif ly, double til abn.a retafl. AU laadml nnLitya chawd double, and moaaurnd u If wild. . 20. .,35. .00. .lluO. illisccllcmr). Frtiin Unrpers' Marseille, AUTUMN LOVE. In an early season of lifo I saw Itnchnol: when my eyes iirst i -11 upon b r countenance, it-j beauty seemed a daylight dretiin. She was ns a Grace in her father's homo, In my memory alio is still pictured : slight, delicate, fair, but llur-ht-d witli timing tints of cnrm-tion. Her figure was moulded to realize t ho soft dignity of her demeanor; her bond, classical in diupe, won, wi lb its dawn-bright treafes iu Grecian brums, nn uir of gentle pride ; and in lior eyes mild hb iho eyes of a young saint wishing for heaven all lit r maidenly emotion worn expressed. I loved Hadiue! soon: it was to uie the best joy of life tti lio with her aweoler to hear lior vuieo ibuti to list-Mi to the saddest music, lor il came to my ear charged with holier melody. In bur tburu wm tint alono the beunly of ibo sculptured Kvo, 'I'Iid ninitct'H lory WdS truly on lior f-ice ibo i'liili 'if (iuidu'rt Mary, tu iticrukiitittA of tlalvi's nun. I would bavo Titiiin h gobloii iutiril tn tlx bcr fl:tiiug smilo, and Carlo Dolni lo imiJioriiliio her it irs. Um, miilimn mnl tboulii-fal, bo bud sotircln il llm wind. mi if niiitiy d,.yn: slio know bitoko, and y.itruT-il ilu'ir wojib m bi-r mind : bo win no liht, iisncitnl biuuty, blown liko a May blotaimi alonj tlio Innks of ttmo. but q pOBSL-Sf'-r ol timt around iiovt(Jtnco of ilnnihtf wliii;b in docib to iho erf'tiii-r orovidt-nco (if nature. H lien 1 know lli it 1 luvi'd ljclia'T, I wan c undid to myself, t Inti-d llir.u -Ji a long fuluro, ar.d tuiilidrd in my own fniili. Hope l;ttd muuy 'td- in t!io m-omul, and t cxporit'd the m all to .lower. But I lung bid ilit'xo tl)nilita. Alono I counted ovr my viionury joys. Without willing it, I was mum itpn-trunily inait frt-nt in Itulnel thiiii to most otlit r frit-ml. Is 'ldum epokp, rxci'iit on i:ointniii toptctt. to ber : slu', however, convrrBed tniicli with mo, and wo with oI'umi to fjoiiier. 1 know hlio wan Itindly di.p-ined toward tno, liT lior manners wiro I'rii'iidly, abd for n timo she rnUicr eoulit than a voided my society, (irndually, bowi'Vor. us 1 b.';; in lo litid oxprraei"n for my Direction, I i;iw ibtt tn liist it wast miiundorntood, ihcti it wnti doiiitcil. then it m ihotcht u illimioti, and ihcn it wti roppllod. Wh -ti bIio (Jistuvrttd my f-TidiK si, her fifht ftvlina; was ouo of utigi-r; lint an'or an I turn d into perplcxi d pity, and that i uddoticd inlu sorrow. What I nrvnr with pl dn wordti ilomrt-d, ttho t on Id not in woi'dx tli'i.v; but n mv lovn wun known without l)L'iity told, so hor r'j:r'i"ii ol i'. win kii;dl but uno ipiivocalty clnr. Still, buoy, nit as I was in bnart, fr o in spirit, with nil inngiiifltiori coloring all thin.rs hrtUijtitly , 1 wnt not bipnrt'd in hopo. 1 sorrowed', but drfpmidcd nvt-r. i vinnly, indeed ronitiod over the inst, but I v.tpnply otintrl nu Ibo future. At lt, without n Conf'ssi'-n in form, I osprecned tlio nmiimont which ruhd in p. ticbiiirl, whoso Ibouchta all moved on 1io hi"h Uv of vtrln-. desired to eparo nio nmro i f, but sratn !y knw bow. No ouo knew of uiy love lor Iter, 'flm interrjourso of our (amilh's wrta su eimilunt lh:it tb:y almost set'ini'd combiti'-d into one. Sn could Do' po from lint, and I could not stay lnm lnr. W hen sht ap'ik- i)l p'lriins n ih bt-'t, I boed Iit no snrrow-tutly t'i bt mo remain anion;; h:r commnn fi irndit. that sho ronssn'ed. Suo even boli'vd that thi would bo my cure; for nui-h a ynu hful fi rvi'y, so imp-ttioim nrid no HM'lilt'ti, Wuii 'd uiidouhT'lly wait.i iUt U a'.vny. Tiinf, vnrioty, Ibo iiitortits of tlio world, woufl, sii cnlid' titly Uiouu-h' as she sincerely drsirpd wear out an altoctioti which was never tomptnl by her, never beckont d to bo forbidden, but WHiidorrd over in n desert, flhelterlens, wiilmut a pl:ic lo iay its bond. Yi-t I loved her with an iucroniifi love. M tny I snw with beauty, and youth, and hrihiueMB of do-maaimr, and ma;iy with 'iiuocenre and g-nile wi-dom ; hut uouo like Hu hatd, who wai al"no in h r :irine and sncred still. I was unlnuuty. I aerlud- d myeHf in Iho darknoss of rny own tuonhis. I mmle nd-:so-lation, and dwelt in it. li.irraftonini; ami tnttt-r wt-ro the complaints of my despair, 'i ho tl wns ot m in summrTS, Iho plunder of in, my upriu',''. I;iy nl my f'-oi; but ono snowiinp, one violet, ouo valley lily, wis nil I wiuled, anil tbut one I could not bavo. What wat ths use of Inying nut p iideus of Imp, if Rich ml w,is not to bo iho ttweottst blo-iioiii ilierc? What was ido glory of n whole Coriulh of palaces, ii Hacliaol would not bo their quern t What was Iho delight of pnxpority, il it r.so lik" a h irvest in nn un pooplrd isloT Wlrit was Iho promu of fame, if ih prophociL-s so'.iudt d ImIIow lo u tlexidii'e h art T It i-r.htnd knew this now. With her kiml linens aiid pin-cious sistorly aUer.Uon, aweotly olu'iod, but rolusi l by my lanmhrd lovo, sho ng.nn oskod tne (nrnestly io leavo her. I winded, for a moment, that sho would thon peremptorily forbid ino to see h"r, but I would not, could not, pti itncoaipelb d. I miht t'nnn have bont my hnid noou my Innds, nn.l p oia blind frm ber siht. But hr entreuiy was not a column ml ; ami as it was, sho said, for my sake, not for hrr, that slio desired it, I felt no p iwer to nl oy. t-'rom tint time, aha was Btudiously guarded in her mtinivri. Shiuj-times an impulse uf grateful fondnexs rose in her h"arl but alio rhorked v, let sho niiht mistake mi evane-cent tond rnesi for tlio kmillmg of tlio Into limp, which alone, sho know, mi'i'u tn burn and mingle iin light with mine. Wiim upok" to Ii t in word b.di Uttered and enipmiilic pliini.s. rbo brsotifht mo ut to ttlduluo in bopr that would make ino wretched, ti'io aid 1 slio'dd thatie; but then replied lli it shoniht clvitiiff too, wlin h piieved her; for sho atw tliat 1 would fondltt my h c ireh s of ibo a rrw they mi--,'lit brint A in"rt.d m-'lancholy rn:noovor in",aiid I thought h.) would r- I'uoo mo all i'i jivn, Aud the days pvsed, and tlio tiinti'lH tmd year. And still I love:!, nod li ichael OAfuei) uo lovo lor me. When in society, ri was to mo, im tn oilers frank ud friendly; but wii-ui nlouo, she wai s-iioiis und cold Hut I saw dial fho w;,s not unmnved by toy do-Tout alb'cti 'n. I troidileil h- r rt p uo. I saw lior aomoiimes lonkinif nt mo with an earnest, wondrriti.' look, us Ibnupb tier own heart were q icsii.ining it si If, ml I frit, Willi oxnlMnz tloli 'lit, ih.it, alter Un-so mu tnenta, she w is mom freely nll'-cttonnto. Hrr nmnners nftoned; thnupli, whenever I rxpri'SHfd any thiriht of this change, tho t'rnvily I ber fnco rctuni 'd. ntid her beauty scorned to retire from my luvt;. Ktill I w is Doris reconciled in bop deferred, and Bi ll iho time went nn. At lust, sho was parted from lior homo for a while. Aba went to i ilis'anco. I yearned for h-r rotnrnt but as her absence was prolonged, it was 1 -is pain'ul. 1 j felt a more patient paiion. She camo ha k. Hy her first imputing look, I knew bho auht to discover what inllueiico our separation bud produced (in mo And when I looked back lovo into ber eyes, I saw she amtled Huon aficrwo frio.isly conversed. I wrote Iter n letter; she replifd, and once more bepged me. besought mo, once more to consider whether u would nut be better to leuvo bur, for my own sake nho did not say for hers. Had sho said for hers, I would have gone; but sho stid lor mine. I answered, hl'o milit be bappy or rniner.iMo, but nor presence was like t lint Arabian amulet, winch inadn all wounds hirmlen while it was worn. Onto taken nw:.y, the heart would bleed mortally, anil I should peritli. I waited n liti:o timo, nnd ihen went to seek her. I i " In r in Iter lather's p-mlen; sho aluie. A purple an ii'un evoning bn-h"d n'l llm wtirid. Il Whs i 'i,e I p etty, petloiiKd ldi ll.i' I,i i. nweets of tlio Hiwcrii.tT b'ihou, I. ng a'li ys and I'ali in slopes wero hhmled by In. quels and trove from the cherry red deepening Iijht which p .un d, warm utid mellow, from the wot. A soK wi.id, moist ivilh dew, wander d among the tnurmureus loaves, utill li.i;iatii with ibo farewell breath of tho summer, i met Ha- chael on a lwn, such as fancy minht picture, bri 'hi with llucracciii'a vieiU f virgins liir ns mii"nl'.':iit dancing amid iho lilies and Iho dew, ll aiiiir: their I'loini locks in the clear air, and wavering in a lutry line io the musio of golden llutes. lu It idiaol's soft smile thnro was a welcome. 81m gave mo bcr hind, but spoko nothing. I looked into her conscious face, i aid, "I bavo ciimo to you, Uichao!." "Then y ui wtil atay with me," alio replied, in n very low tone, I I answered. "I tnust st ,y with ymt, if 1 It a cbael, 1 will slay with you fi. rover." I pii7.ii! apiiti into ber countenance. A light deeper, richer, more rosy Ihuti a July sun-Bet glowed through delica'.o iltfhes on her clr-'-k ; it played in a gobl-m mi!o on h"r bp; it paused li'io an anullc ilream over her brow; it cime tike morning into tho bluo oms tb it now w re Ktill'ioi'd with no sorrowful tears. Her ftV, till then c d"iles as a snow drop, thinned ns a snowdrop might llush in iho rod evening, tiill pain, but will) paloness teen tlm'tih rosy air X saw tliat her bosom r"e nod fell, and I lonked once more into her eyes, and through their di ep violet bo renity. I taw the young love born lio a now atar just trembling into l.tvan t and she fall unon mv nock ; I embraced her to my bosom, and without a ipokeu word the bond of betrothal wna between us. Woj Intdwd toward tho western sky ; liltlo vermilion clouds ware atil! g. owing liko isluels in iho liquid blue, and tho sk'hing breath of the evoning passed over my heart, and all tho bloanoms of its hope expanded in a moment! into (lowers, I.iko morning melting into day liko two stars blending their liht liko iho Itboiie in I.e man Lake, wo iWd hive bton from the unspuken pledges of lhat hour. tor that was tlio hour to which my expectation nait been turned. Tears had watered my heart in desire for it ; sorrow hail Imrno modown iit despair of it ; all the pray era of my affection, all iny prophecies of hone, nil my fancy's pictures wero renli7.etl now, and Ha-chael, whom I so ireusured, was initio ; she was mine in undiminished beauty; she wan mine iti adrreiidered love. The increase ot her youtli s wisdf.in, anil knowledge, and virtue the gaincry of many years was the dowry of her ripened tenderness to mo. Sho gave ino all in placing hor band iu mine, As tho nightin gfilo. wounding its breast against a thorn, sorrow while it drinks sweetness from the (lower, to sing it forth ngain in tlio night, ho my heart, wounded by loving unloved, had pai ied itself by eternally repeating its musical mi'crcrc to Itichnot. As b ynunir, um lpened resn A roii unripeiied yet, but red, lllimlic from It ilnmftked lied, Anil Willi udomui potsl nlowi, ' hMe tho Hgbt, ri'll-rti-d through, I'uriile in lu piirpin huo, tin thy brisuty b!unhiJ to ran, Ami lay bosuiu h lowed to thco. S'rano wantoning of human nature! Surprise and fear siartcd in my feoliuga when I found that, claiping Ittcbiiel lo my breast, I was not stirred by llinse ot. rmy cmoiiona which moved iua when, iu days past, alio sal fur In on my Bide. I waa conscious of a cold mood ; I tried to think 1 wiib happy; I assured mytn-lf of my own delight. Hut, dnuhtai I might-wonder oh 1 might sorrow us I might I could not I j iit confess to myself that had won this maiden's lovo when my own had begun to wane. It was all gone all tho passionate affection which grow with each hour, nnd increased with every look; all tho abuutiiiisg and burning lovo which had been my movititr iimuilso for years wiib gone. It was gone tlio dovoti il faith which counted a day too long lo be absent from Uichrtel, and a life too abort to oiler its sacrifice of tender rniui.itries for her. tor dun tig uer uhseuco i imu, ut lust ns a mero refugo and ihen us u pleasure, Betight the society of ih g'.-hleii-locked Lily, wIiofo curia bail lluttered against my check at a bill. ISho was no more liko Itachaol tliitn a Cu'elly is like a star whic'i melts its liquid silver hit i the night, throwing off tipples of hutro to glance and tUfeh along the mellow blue, film was only n prucciui, tairy-ieoiiM creature, innocent, tumpto, glad in her own trustl'uttiess, who mistook fancies for lln urhU, and would live on lovo liko a beo clinging to the honeyed bosom of a rose. Nn one had taught lor u.iy tin a mid it th-y hail it would bavo bxod in her mind only two idea- that the good were lovable. and the bail hatel'ul ; nod llt il juvipto ou;ht to be kind 1 1 ench otln i. and tiiin"; more or mornta than money Her trdk was tet-drr prattle; alio seldoni expressed even lhe, ;o lhoii"hts. but they were brrown.and when 1 Bomi'tirocB Fpoko with her, and met her in her own piiliotic mood, and chatted in a low tone about lb" stilVS'iin;s id' Hie heart, ami seemed passionately to urge thtvir'ii" and tho power of love, all those ex litt'it.ni.,8 whii ii then were meant tor my ntM-nt iia-niiael, sounded lo Lily as on interpretation of my fe I- ingilor her. W bile I Ihoti.lUof liachaet, Lily thought ot iip' gra;lually, however, Imr ontirn reliance on my , wordt, le-r frank utter. -nco of ber gladness in seeing, me, her eoft, wiiisomo way, her sweet voice, her ex j quid e Bp.nYtiveuem, her purity of sentiment, nnd Uie child-like h tu'y if her aspirations, iitl'iencrd me; all tliat was dear in ber was higher and dearer iu lEuhv-l, yet wuen I pressed II ichael to my heart my thoii'jliia wandered hack to Lily. I was startled by iho c onscioiiHtiess, I refused to Indiovo it. Surely I was unchanged ; I would not admit tho thought ; yet my enio'ieiiN would move in their own sphere; I ilciseil myif lf with Iho memory of Iho gnldeii-h'cked on-., wiiilo I lorhado myself to dwell on tho idea of her. I rfsclenl to bo l.iiilil'ul lo Ruhael, but I knew rny h 'art was already f-tlse becauBo it needed a resolve.This lor awhile went on. I saw Rachael often: knnw more of her ;:o"dfiPfB; I meuaured more proudly the worth of bur imblu mind ; I saw moio than ever that fhn wiib ci'cat'-d to be loveil, nnd yet 1 loved her h-Hi. I s d.l, in h", d, not a word of my change, and I wasincero in my ib't'-nni'mion not to change, I voulti l.ivo liichel. Hot I Uol.ghted lo meet Lily, persaud-ir'tr my elf, by tho eaMii-urv of s-lf-justilii'.ation, that .hIio u;h no more tloin a I'latonic frienl most fatal term, v hit !) overs a in il'ieide of sins ! I dared In lie l itis of hi;:-. I claimed ptivih g s with her; and MH. MAC ATIL AY ON "JUNIUS." Tho following letter written by Mr. Macaulay, is just published for the first lime in a new editiou ol Lord Ma hoh's History of England: At.nifr, January 3, 1C52. j Suit lam obliged to you for the now number of the Quarterly Hoviow; I cannot Buy that it has shaken my opinion. I wonder, iudoed, that so iugeniuua a pariou as the Reviewer faliould think that his objections have made any impression on tho vast mass of circumstantial evidence which proves Francis to have been "Junius " That evidoixe, I think, ditl'ers not only in degree, but in kind, from any evidence which can be adduced lor any other claimant. It seems to me, ton, mat oue-nou ot ino argument of tho It'iviower i" answered by tho oilier half. First, we are told that Francis did not write the letters, be cause it would have been singularly infamous un him to writ" thorn. Then we are told that he did not write them, because lie did not owu I hem. Surely this reasoning does not hang well togutli-T. Is it atrange that a very pr-nid man should not confess what would disgrace him 1 I have always believed that Francis kept hileiice because he was well known to have received great benefits from persona whom he had, as " JuniuB," or as " Veteran," abused with great malignity. It is odd that tho Reviewer should infer from the mistake about the Draper's half tny that "Junius" could not have bee n in tho war office. 1 talked that matter over more than ten years ago. when I wasSe-cretary-at-war, wilh two of the ablest and best informed geitllomou in the departmoul ; and wo all three camo to a conclusion the vury opposite of that ut which the ltviewer has arrived. Francis was chief clerk in the English war offices. Everybody who drew half pay through that otlice made the declaration which 'Junius" mentions. But Draper's half pay waa on tho Irish establishment; and of him tho declaration was nol required. Now, to in .5 and th so whom 1 consulted, it Bcemed the most natural thing in the world that Francis, relying un his official knowledgo, and not considering that there might be a dillerence between the practice at Dublin and tho practice at Westminster, should put lhat unlujky question which gave Draper so great an advantage, 1 have repuutedly pniuted out tho circumstance tu men who are excellent judges of ovidence, utid I never found one who did not agree with mo. Il is not necessary for mo to sny any thing about the new theory which the roviewer has constructed. L'jrd Lyttleton's cluima aro better than those of Burk-- or Barre, and quite Hi good hb those of Lord George tSuckvilte or Singlespoecb Hamilton. But the case against Francis, or, if you please, in favor of Francis, rests on ground of a very ditli:uli kind, and coincidences such aa would bo sufficient In convict a murderer.There is, bowover, one si rung objection to iho iheo ry of the reviewer which strikes me at tin first glance, "Junius," whoevor ho wits, wrote a long let ter tn G our go (Ircnville, which was preserved ai Stovvo many yours, and of which I have seen a copy in Lord Mahon's ponsesidon. The letter contains no decisive indications of the writer's ittmliuu. But, on tho whole, it seems to bo written by a man not very high in ranks or fortune. The tone, thouLdi not by any means ubject, is that of nn inferior. Tho author doclurei himself to be the writer of a squib, thon famous, culled "The Grand Cuiir cil." Ho says that (jreiivdlo must soon bo rrimo Minister. " till Ihen, I wish to he concealed even from you ; then I will make myself known, anil explain what I wish you to do for me." 1 quote from memory; but this is the itiuManco. 1 lie original 1 have not seen ; out I n told that it is the handwriiing of " Juuius's" letters. Now, this circumstance seems lo be decisive naiust L'ird Lyttleton. He was George Grenvillo'a cousin. The connection between tho fcjiowe family and the Hagly family had, during two generations, been ex tromely close. Is it probable lhat George Greiivillo would not have known Lyttleton's band 7 Is It possible that a letter written by Lyttleton should have lam ai S'owe eighty years, and that none of the cousinhoot! should have been struck by the writing T But, iu truth, tho airongeat arguments against the reviewer's theory nro the argument which in my opinion prove lhat Francis wns iho author of the letters. I have the honor to be, sir, your faithful servant, T. B. Macaui.av. L;t.'ii!mil!y all her iieipniot,ini conceded them to me, And yet, even lo mytvll, I pretended not to know that I was doing wrong. Lily beloticed to entirely another crcln to that which I! icha"! formed the grace; and ihust:iy f"lly was favored. 1 was loving Luy without intending win her, I had won Uai h od without ciMitimiHig to lovo her. Wlii-pen, h 'Wevi r, c nn to tho Gnhlen-Licked line, at I called her; iimi in h-r simplicity sho asked mo, without reserve, whether I win alii meed. Sad Lily! Her namesake. Iliwor, bruised and trodden, never Initio on iis stem and wept nway its beauty iu peatls of i!ew more mournfully than he b owed her Invid and let l",,ll her humblo Ichm. Iler countenance, whii li h'ul r!i uie m the young moon, now paled as tho moon pal' N when 1 1 iuTii;hutit sunlii ht fl tilled the sky ntl anenid. But that light wai datkne.ss ti Iter; I h r.v Ida'. I had injured a g 1 heart. I h id dotio n double wrong ; f"rl had loved her. and, loving her, w. u'd n t aee pt tho lovo she giv-j to me. It ji hael I It ul uouid win!" I loved iK-r.aud won when I loved her no mom. A i the solo atonement I cail.t make, I told this to R ich ie). She listened, qk I I know from hor face at firt siirprifleil into ttugni-ti, tint then sha-led by a proud, iiidignoil c tl'ti that a siokne.s had fallen on lior he irt. i'h p il-'n-m spread even into h-r eyes ; tej- ct iui dro.' e 1 in her la-hes. quivering with t- ars too piier.in to f ill. N' reproach passed through ber co'd lips ; bd' iu th -ir pallet iu one upward look-in her countenance, in her form what n winter of re- proarhen r mie rigorous nnd chill about me! The whole current of my form-r lovo poured out uf.esh. 1 im- nli red, nml snared no plea, ttiat Hacliaol would lerBft me, nnd forget ill- nat. Sho owed it to me, alio said, to pardon me, but f-lie. owed it to me also, as to herself, to remember ny broken faith. win Vrbiddett to thin of her more. iNovt-r, she vowed, uould h he irt desert ill own; never should another hand clasp her s ns mine had done, hut trom tiie unerring testi mony df actions by which I had deceived her and duped niyui If, I could not tmw trust myself any more 'b in "ho could trust mo. Il was better, then, tliat wo should ti Tl So we parted. Itachol had f-w words to say, for she could not fonllin, anil xronld not unorani mo. It ici"l. anil did not gain Lily THE TBUB BEAUTY OF HOME. Tho country is a true home of beauty, nnd horticulture is die free school ot ins'e, in which all our renders may become apt pupila if they choose, and gratified and useful professors it they will it, and fielp to cr ate us much beauty in their spare hours ns the wealthy citizen can purchase with th" gains of years to decorate his brick and mortar place in tho metropolis. There is no mere orn unent, iu the house or out of it, so cheap and so tasteful as healthy plants and (lowers, and you will hear ten persons o boiiso Lilmiiiug your geraniums or fuchsias, where one will notice your rich curtains and tall mirrors. And out doors, the eye that would never bo attracted by glaring paint, cornice or column, will be instantly arrested by the living ara besqne of a native creeper, or tho umbrageous outlino of an Ameticuu tree. Do you not admire that simple little cottage, with its graceful trees from our ua'ivo woods f Tho vines making beautiful while they conceal tho rough out Irjilding; ibo liltlo "front yard," or muro fitting lawn, mined witli shrubbery ami sparkling with I lowers; tho neat walks with a tinge of velvety turf, or natural ones over it, all in koeping, and all suited to tho moans et me tastetui owner, it you nave tieen nolo io nu the veil that hides tho lifo wnhin, have you nut found real comfort and true buttiuneas th-T, and uro not tito in there, and aro not iho inmates really deserving; of wnat if my enjoy t And how m odi in time and money has nil this cost? Perhaps ls than a lithe of what your rich neighbor mis expended to rear thai great puo m tioiriis ami sbingVs, fir more ambitious mountuin of brick nu I mortar, with a countenance as blank as an overgrowing idioi's, nml as barren of beauty aa a lumber yard or a brick kiln, nnd not a thing except weeds iu tho ground or paints on tho walls eiilnr greener or brighter than the man who can deem his huge abortion ihe ne flm ultra of architectural taste. Tt u to one he why built ih i. dwelling, if a farmer, is ouo of those who " would r ither have a bill of potatoes ilian a rosebush," and would sooner raise a snarling cur tin ti plant a beautiful treo Prairie Farmer. GRACE GREENWOOD. flection, wns the cousei"tiMtiess that I had invoked llus tre!ie voi'iow int.) tho world. A virlii 'tls will has almost iho power cf a fate; but 1 bey who would be happy in the enjoy menl of au in'rne, exalted, supremo dei.o, most iiewr f r a moment fail in truth. One falo net made a desert forme, end I am condemned to live in it alone. I hear that Ilieh"! in still llmotiu whom I loved; ael it my m-mory ii ever revived to tier, kindly I know will she think of mo. Lily i- blith" again; lor h'T heart, free from i!a regrets, wakes a!-wayu with tho fprim:, and all lb" It-awn of autumn are swept nwuy when Juno 11 iweis bloom in tho valleys. But I sit iu tho shade of a A il! w aud perhaps it is not only in drc. tins that I imagine mysill onctt m're res'nred to happiness in Ino t "termed love ol Kacliel. uuinmn she gave it to me: m notiimu i lost it for- hips on s'uno coming autumn evo it may b restored tu me. The vigor which marks the wri'itigs of Grace Greenwood, evidently belongs to her chiracter also. After eighteen months fore-'-u trnv d, during winch she In bored nsddiMusly at hor two-fold vocation of writer nnd sight seer, sho comes homo and sets tu work funh witit. Iler first business waa to revise tho series of letters written on her Kuroiieati tour, with a view t And 1 lost their immediate publication tu a Volume a volume Vore than nil other which, our readers know, will be very full of interest, REMOVING A RING FK0H A Y0TTNG LADY'S FINGKH. Dr. Castle, of Chariest m, communicate! lo the Boston Medical and S irgical Journal, tho following ingeni ous method, devised by him, lor extracting a young Inily'n flag r from a ring which was too small fur her. Wo give his hi lory iu bis owu language: " An iuteresliui young lady, about seventeen yenrs of are, had presented to her a g.'ld ring, which she f irceil over the j unls ol her middle finger. After a few minutes tho linger commenced swelling, nnd the ring could not be removed. Thu family physician, Dr. , waa Bent lor, but could do nothing. Tho familv, aud Ihe young lady especially, were now in 'hegrent-nt consternation. A mweler wm nt for. After many tu'd attemri'i to cut the riii" with culling nic puis, nnd to saw it apart with n line saw, ami alter bruism? ied hi-ernttng tho flesh, warm loin-uitatiniis and I elicit were npnli. d, but nil wiln ui alli.rilinj; the alinh'e-t bonetit. Dr. request" d tny pr' ence, wilh tho loinplimeni that " p-uiiups my iicm b ir.i.-al itv LMMiuiiv ion-lit siiLjest something. 1 ul hiru procotibd to tlio house of tho patient, and found Iho voting lady it. n nunt deuIortttlotateol men tal noiiy, iho doctor mbarrai.ii d, nnd the family Iti a tiigh slate el excitement. I i,incore(l sutue prepared chalk, and iiooiied it hotwnen tho ridge ot swollen ll"hh, and all a nm ml the finger, nnd succeeded in drying iheeoing and nbraib d tleh J then with a narrow pit co td soft linen I succeeded in polishing the ring, by ilr iwing it gently round tho ring bdlwen ihn swol len parts. I then epphed quicksilver to mo wmuo surface of the ring. I'i lea., than three minutes the ring wiih broken (by pressing it together) in four pieces, to the great relief of all p al lies. " In a similar manner (without the chalk) I some limn since extructcd a aniall bra-s ring from tho ear of a child, who. child like, had innerti d it into Its ear. The opcrn'iou vvasnmre painful anil tedious, but wns equ dly successful. The modus operandi : Thoqut'-kailver ntotiee per- in-tales tiie metals, if clean, (wi'h tho exception id iron, sieul. D'atmu. and one or two others ) ami amal ganiaies with Ibeui. It rrystalizes and lenders tho metal as hard and ns brittle as glass. Hence the ouro with which metals amalgamated with quicksilver enn be brokcu. WASHINGTON NATIONAL KONUSIENT, Wo h ive roctived tho circular of tlio Washii'p''' ' National Monument Aiociaiion. The momim-nt ;a Qowottu hundred ami forty-two feet high, au l ci rtainlj if any object deserves thcattenMon of Amevicau citizens, it is its completion. Now, if each man in tho Union wonld give but the small sum of live cents, this monument would be carried forward and co'ii''i d without any further difficulty; and it does seem to ut that every mail should contribute something to tho erection of fi meinoriul which is intended tocommemora'e the virtues aud transmit to future genoratioits ihe heroic achievements of tho great Wasiiisotun. Tho ( Ian proposed by tho committee is that, at every elect'iou, either of a local or general nature, a " Washington monument box" bo placed at the polls to receive the contributions of voters nnd oilnrs choosing to contribute. We submit the circular without further comment: As Elections fur Members of Congress, &c, will be held djripg tho ensuing months iu several States id the Union, iho Hoard of Managers have deemed it their duly to request the Judges or Conarniitiuners who may ho appointed to take th ballots of tho voiers, to put up boxes at iho ditl'i-rentlocalities whore elections will bo held, for tho purposeof receiving such contributions as the admirers of the Illustrious Father of his Country may think proper to deposit in aid of the great Monti moot, now in oourso of en-ctiou in this city to bis memory. Thoy feel assured that when this noble nnd patriotic purpose is presented to iho peoplo, thoy will not howi late to give ihur raite for such aa object; and it now becomes mtr 'crssnry, as Ihe funds of tho society . uto rapidly liiniiitisiiing ami may not soon be adequate j to csrry on the work. A Bmall contribution from each I citizeu or voter throughout tlm United Stales, would be ttlbcietit to complete the Monument, a work intended to add to their glory as well as to honor the memory of the illustrious deud. A half dime is but no ' inconsiderable, sum, nnd yet a half dime contributed by every inhabitant of our country, would rear tho grand structure, now in progress, to its destined completion. It will be pilitiil, wondrous pitiful, if nut of twenty-five millions of souls who inhabit this great country, rendered independent, prosperous and happy inaiuiy uy iim uxerii.ms hiiu uovoiiuo io ill cause, I lie sum necessiry to erect a Monument worthy of such a man could not bo completed for the want of the small pecuniary aid which every American should ft el it his pride, as well ns bin duty to afford. At tho luBt Presidential election, the plan of obtaining contriimtions nt the polls (thus testing the patriotism and lib.-rality of thu voters and others) was attempted, though tho previous arrangements weio not such ns to insure a very full collection, the result was as satisfactory nn could, under tho circumstances, have been expected. It is therefore desirable that this system should be continued in tho dill -rent States at nil futuro elections of a local or general nolurn; nnd the Board of gera indulge the hope that on t occasion at the elections to bo held in tho respective States of Maine, Vermont, fljassn'-tiuinlts, is.-w iorlt, New Jersey Pennsylvania, Delaware, Maryland, Soii'h Carolina Georgia, MUtdiMppi, Ohio, Micltigin, Wisconsin, llli uois. Louisiana and Florida, coiitribuuona will hi undo in nid of tin Monument worthy of the Country men ot ineir iihibimoui neneiaeior. GEO. WA TTRItSTON, Secretory of the W. N. M. Society NEW GRENADA. The first of this month commenced a now era in the history of this tioblu country. Tint day the cut in severance of Church and State became the law of ihe land. Amid the booming of cannon, tho strain ot martial rnusio, and the glad hurrah ol Ihe peoplo, the reign ol political priesicralt came to an end. Theop-iio-ilion of the priesthood, the treason of the Aiclt- Itishon, and the Allocution of iho I'ope, has nroved ot no nvail to stop, or even to postpone tho triumph of truth, and this, too, among a people almost exclusively Kouian oaiuouu. ho aoiiugo irom I lie Now York Post, this memorablo decree: 1, All inierforenco of Government in filling ecelesi' asiicnl benefices, fir in regard to ihe wnrehip of Ca'bo-lie or any other Churches has ceased. . roreed ontritmtious lor iho support of religion is abolished, and all liabilities, to bo treated as other nidi v'nlu'il liahiliiies. II. Clergymen and laymen nro placed on nn equality brl'ire iho law. 4. Churches nod church property to belong to the inhabi'ants of pariiln s, except wlr.'ro ipteial bequesfi have been iiiimIc. 5. N official diameter to religious corporations, (i. Nocoen im in religious m titers allowed. 7. No spiritual envoy from the pope will bo received by the gov"rnm!i,t. fi. The Jesu ts ate excluded from Ibo country. !t. Tho protection of CithoMo worship exieuded t all other denominations. 10. Provinces exempted from t io compulsory support of religion in tho diocesea to which ihey b dong 11. Catholic churches turn cathedrals belong to Hie Catholic inhabitnntsj Vi. Tho State is absolved f-"!rii nil cuuuexion wilh the Cliurch, and the Church u no longer lo interfer-matters of State. I f, 1 tio hiinisiied prelates may return, the pnni-cu- iion agamsi inein oeing oroppeu. with the exception ot mo s:tt article ot tho (focn o. which letuns to exhibit a needless alarm at the old JoMiit bugbear, these enactments exhibit ajudicium-ne-s, wisdom and familiar trquaiutriico with the pi in-plea of a free government, which civ us now hopes for Ibo ultimate em-rgeiice of the It -publics of South America trom the cut no ot lieiug cmlrolteit ,y n Ingot o.f priestcraft. Cm. Gazette- ! OERMAN LOVEftS. "The universal prudery," says Mr. Brace, in b8 Home Life in Germany, ' which so lumpers n, man in America, nnd makes him ignore hall llcit.ictsot lite, for fear of treading on some unknown tielim'o sen sibility, U never seen in European circles. '. is hoi iy assumed, what every ono knows to be the fact, that both sexes aro equally aware of a great variety of things; aim wnero mo nututon is liatuiut, no one troubles himself about it. There were in our company, this evening, two who wote invited ns betrothed, and I was very much struck with iheir maimer" towarda one anoihor. I think in an An;loS.(Xon company, the faci would h rvo been dropped out of view as much ns possible, nnd --erlainly the slightest cxpri'f-sioii of their feeling would have been dreaded by the pirtiei. Uuttieru lliernwas, tint whole evening, an tltico.,ici"U beautiful expression of ath'ctton and confidence, which really, I think, gladdened the whole company. You never th -light ol wai--hmg them I r it, but you never thought of anything else with them. L vo (teemed to speak out ns liiihnalU hem their tones, nml glance, nod manner, ns friend y leeling did with im. Nothing else C'orrrspimdunce ol the Torcit ("My. THE NEW SCHOOL COMMISSIONER-8HORTE8T CATHOHlSil. 1st. Qnrs'ion. Why did H. H. Barney leave his schotil in Cincinnati aim visit Uievel and i Anticcr, To viiit the Cleveland schools, of course. But they don't " keep Saturday's." Cd, Q Did any d tho Cleveland teachers conclude to vote lor him? A.-. Wo ,'nc, not. 3d. Q. How did tiis Wiu result wilh Oviait, I. is brother democrat ? A. Ak poor deluded Oriatt, who dares to think ami act for himself. 4th. Q. Did the Plain Dealer lie in slating tint Barney took no part in common with othr teachers In recommending Lot in Andrews for the i ilico id' 3iate Commissioner ot Common Schools? A. Barney acknowledges that he did co operate wiih the teachers, at Dayton, in tho above recommen dation, the Plain Deabr and A.D. Wright to iho contra- ry, notwithstanding. 5th, Q. Wi)t3 re tcfra this informant of Ihe Plain-Dealer and Democratic Stale Convention, a'- the lime of the Dayton Association? A. Don't know. Wright was not "Air." (iih. Q. Why did not H. II. Barney himself offer the resolutions recommending Audrows for ihe above uilhe? A. Ho would have done It. but lianlly suggested that being himself a democrat he could da more to teenre tkc election of Andrcwi tcitk kit party by not praenling the TCtvlution. bnl would cordially support them. 7Ui. Q, Whu pledged Hamilton county tor An drews? A. Echo nnsw-rf, H. II. Barney. (A lino demo crat.) 8 'Ii. (. What pro t have we ol iho above r A. Any number of reliable witnesses, and Baiiiskt into tke Bargain. .Jin. ( Who tietrnyed liiB masier witli a risst A. Judas Israriot. 10th. Q, What ia Barney's excuse for this das tardly betrayal? A. lie bw mat his acar uomocratic nreuiren were going to nurninatu n very inferior man, by tho namo of (iilson, a man totally unlit for th ollice, utid Im stoop, ed to the betrayal from pure pitrinlitm. llth. (, Will Ihe Plata U-mier support a man who was engaged with those infamom teachers at th IMyMi Association, in 'FOltESf ALLfNG The PeopleV Will it support a leading man iu the Mutual Admiration Society? A. iho nam uealer does unit very thing. Heii-io. Tnc Recest South Carolina Dckl We tmblishcd a telegraphic despatch some daya since, announcing a tatal duel at Utiarleston, ihe papers ol which city have been silent as to the nature of th dilliculty, The Washington Star of Saturday, however, gives the following particulars. Baltimore paper. Mr. L"garo was engaged to a young lady iu Colum-bi i. Her fiteiidn inquired of ) itiovint what was the churae'er nnd hihi's of L. This coining to his ears, he inquired of I), whit lio had answered, nnd found tint h i h .d spoken favorably of him. But not satii-lieii wilh a vetlml statement, hodenanded t' in wri-titig, which was relusi d. Leg.ire ch illongt d on this pfu"d Tlio dUtoieo wm twelve paces. Legare fired ni tll" word " one," nnd mi-iied. Dunovant fired at tho word t-vo," ami it i I It Tt his antagonist. Th't survivor wns vvlmlly ui..i!tilhd in Ihe uo of I lie pistol, having ii'jver before hud anything to do wiih a duel. Legate, on the contrary, was notoriously n cr.n k shot. having, a lew (lays before the (itl'i' VsW'', in practising, placed lortw ig'm out of WlMfrflffn a card, at the word. Ho beeame very reTran on starting for tho groii'iU, nun remuiu-a niiiiis leita iiri'smitin (hut lie w uld fall, notwiihstaiidiiig Ins skill with the pistol tie was formerly in iho navy as n midship man, trom wntcn no was doiuiisseu, H tn anal, tor run ning a sword through a marine. political TRUTH CRUSHED TO EARTH WILL RISE AGAIN." ' Not one not a single one of the leading thoughts which now sway the mind of the country, is of ' Whig ' origin." Wathington Union. This is a position which is to be deeply deprecated, if it bo true. The Editor of the Union has certainly won for hitneir a very unenviable position. It reminds us of nu anecdote which we recollect to have rend of Mr. Wehstek, as amung his earliest e Hurts at the bar. It seem that Mr. WKiisrKK bad a pretty knotiy case, nnd one which he wascertiin la lose, unless he could do away with the testimony of ouo wit ness, wh i was a m m that seldom paid any attention to what was pasting around him. To accomplish this end be spent days utid nights iu scheming and devising somo nioatin to a iswer his purpose. He had almost given up the chase when an idea struck him, and he procured the services of a fellow who was on the most intimate terms with tho witness, and instructed him aa to the modus operandi of his proceedings. Hii agent went to tho old gentleman, and saluting him iu u fa miliar arid confidential manner, told him he had been to such and audi a place and had aucn audi and such things, (all, as a nutter of course, relative to the cate of Mr. WxusTKit) and give a version of tho case ns Mr. Weutkh would have wuhed it lo bo. Tho old getnh-nmn listened attentively until the agent closed his communication and then went on his way. Iu a few days lie saw tho old man again aud told him the same la'e, apparently aa if he had never mentioned it before. In a few days afterwards he saw him again, and ngniu went over the rigmarote aa innocently as before. Well, the consequence was that the trial camo un and iho old mau was subpoenaed, and al though ho knew the circumstances originating the litigation, his mind took coloring from the tale of the agent, and he swore through thick and thin against his own knowledge of the affair. Now, whether the editor of tho Union bo actually so ignorant, or resorts to such means wi'h dishonest motives, one fact ib solf- evideut, aud that is lhat he has wittingly or nuwit-tiugly endorsed the old man's example, aud litid against Ids better judgmeut. Tho Whig party, long ago, contended that it was ono, and tho moat essential duty of the general gov enimeul, to divide the proceeds of the public lands, ( r the lands thms-ilves, among the Slates. Tiie nu terrified democracy then war red against the measure, and branded tho movers of it, as corrupted aa so many thieves and robbers, and with a vigilance altogether unprecedented in tho history of any party, guarded sacredly tho packet of Uncle Sam from thu encroach ments of his legal and hatural heirs. Tuey declared th i measure unconstitutional, and that ueither the TO THE RESCUE. The a-ithor of " That OrZt OldS'tmet," has had the honor of being laughed at more heartily than any other man of bis size and age in Ohio. Ho woke, one morning, and fuuud himself famous. He had perpetrated one of the most pompously Billy, and aurperla-tively ridiculous articlea that ever appeared in tho anna! of Western literature. It was a moat rich and rare specimen of rhetoric. It incontinently took lhat one atop which is said to exist between ihe sublime and the ridiculous. The thing was received by one loud gulfaw from the lakes to the Ohio river. Cox at ouce became Sun Set Cox, an nppollallnn ho will weur as Ion? as he resides in the Buckeye S'a'e. At first he waa disposed to be pouty about It thought ho was not well used, &c. But, finding thnt every body else was laughing at him, he finally concluded the best way to get out of tho acrape waa to luugh wilh the reat. This was the most sensible step in the case, and he contrived tn get a little legitimate fun out of his own folly. Tho turn he gave it was clever, and aome felt disposed to forgive aud forget. But that oilier goniua,(?) who goes by the universal name of Smith. has come to the rescuo! Taking advantage of Cox'a nbseuco, he hii entered the field, thrown down the gauntlet, declared that tho Cheat Old Sunset" articlo was a marvelously proper attain in short, thnt it wu a "dem Joint " specimen of composition, a groat many times liner than any of ihe men can write who havo made n much fun about it. Smith don't believe these laughing critics could write any thiug " half aa good." He sort of hints that these men are vampirea that suck the brains of other men, and tome of them evon suck the Statesman! Heaven preserve all inch calves ! Ho thinks the mon who laugh at tho Sunset nre " flat aort of fellowa.who havo not capacity or genius enough to appreciato, much lei to write audi sublime articles aa the Sunset aforesaid ! " This Smith is wit'y wiihil; f ir Im sayo that if tho author of the Sunset was mm), then lime who laugh nt it are foots. Wo should feel disposed to laugh at this tremendous sally, it' wo were not suddenly checked and made sad by tho n .lection thnt if this Baying is true, the fools have such nn overwhelming majority, that we fear there is uo hope for tho rest of mankind for at least three generations to come. Can't the rest dent editor of the Statesman fix up this matter so that thore is ajimo chance for poor human nature? It wonld be kind in him to do no. If the author of Ibo Sunset does not exclaim in tho hitterness of his vexation, " Save me from my fi ienda !' then lie don't understand how n semiblw man would act in such an emergency, A Lim-i: Ivcmr.sT. A Imchrli r friend of ours was riding, a day or two ago, through Alhol, in this Stale, when he overio.-lt a little girl and boy, apparently on their way to school, The liitlo girl appeared to bo five or six years out, mm was as heauHiul as a lairy. Her eyes wero lit up with a glomi of intense hat-:uet, and hr r cheeks glowed wilh the hues of health. Our bachelor looked at her Cora moment, admiringly. 8h met hi glance wiih n smile, and with nn eager voice saluted him wiih, " Have you got a bjby ?" Ho wns, struck all i -k by the question, and something like a regret stole over his mind, ns ho looked upon tho nniina-' ted nnd beautiful futlo face before hint. "Nvi," ho answer"!. " Wt II," replied she, drnwiug her liny form proudly up, " are Afire,'' mid pass' d on, mill smiling, to tell iho joyous news to tiie next one she might meet. What a world of hnppim- to her wss concentrated in that ono idea a baby ! Aud in her j y alio Cult as i1" nil must have the satno delight n herself; nnd it wis a matter of ntl .ctioiiato pride to her, that lifted hnr Hi (lit heart above th" re tch of ordinary envy, lor in tho luby was itT w.,r!d, ami what else hud sho to crave? Such was Iho rell cti'n of our friend, and ho remembered it long I'no'mh to tell it to us yesterday, in State street. ftos'on Pott. fixes tho brand of duplicity and bad faith upon Mr. Barret. Wo have seen nothing of either. The conviction was npou the minds of all who knew tho course of the Locofoco candidate before, but this direct and poailivo evidence was perfectly crushing and conclu sive. Mr. Ha r.v it will never dare deny a word ol it. The main facts aro known tu ao many other prominent teachers, that there is not a particlo of doubt about them. Mr. Barnrt did favor the nomination of Ak- tirkwb, and ho has atutiqicd a stigma upon his own character by a denial of it that ho can never deface. Ho has mined himself in the estimation of the teach ers and friends of education in the Stato by bis double dealing, and no worse fate could befall the Common School interests than to entrust them to the hands of a man s'anding ns he does before them. Let the friends of our School systom remember this when they aro asked to vote for Mr. Barsjkt. AnisroTi.v. .ti Ar.KXANiiF.n CoMrAiun. flow different nre our eonqut ts from his! how ddV-ront our Inemh! not united for rob b ry and revelry, but joyous in discovery, calm in meditation, nnd intrepid iu research. How often, nnd throughout how many nges, shall you bo n r. fugn from such men aa ho nnd his ac complices: how olt. ti will th" s'lidious, tho neglected, the deserted, fly toward you lor compensation in the wrongs of toriutio. mid f.r r-loco in tho rigor of ! tiny ! His judgment Beat is covered by his sepulchre; nhi.ut, ono year hence no appeals are made to him : of- ier ten iiioiiHami inero win lie momentous questions, not of avai ice or litigation, not id" violence or fraud. but of reason nnd of science, brought behwo your ptdgmrnt-e:tt, and settled by your decree. Dyers nnd tailors, carver and gilders, grooms and trumpeters. m il;o greater men th in G d makes; but God's Inst long r, throw them whero yuu will. Landor. Her next all'jir wai to prepare to issue, on the lirt id . ..,,.' ?. .. ,' Monthly Journal for G.rla and Boys, an advoriHo. hwllcUJ Wttro liko rim, wi), fll(tli. mem of which may bo lonnd in aim her column, ftm . cieul, vivi( aipri.cintion of the woes of h ach-dordo.n. is the way Grace Greenwood despatches business, nml j n'.ej, have observed .his ..aturab.es of expression it require, no prophet to predict lhat she .. de.ltned In (;ermtI1-. lt it ni)ip , ,n f((fn. ...c-eed , hrren.erpr.ao lo l,er heart a content. S ay iN f Tt , ' nilMni(ri hered.lor.al chair ever be .of ly cushioned ; may her . m W(mn n( , nf J f ... . ed.lor.,,1 schBor. always be rtr rie Irjt them l.ll alio Qh f , wania Ihen. agai-i may her brum always ho coming 0,Vecliun wJro llllt b!lirml by that everlasti g f ir- . i n h '.' i . i i , I mulisui, and cohltieafl, ami flellihhnesswhich haugover our hourh id; where love wns without dissimulation and, finally, m ry her circulation bo one hundred thousnud. She deserves It. Graco Greenwood has u heart Inrgo enough to bold all the " boys and girls" in the world, nnd her heart bus enabled tier to comprehend their ways, wants, dangers, and possibilities. Her writings will please children, and do ibem good. Many of our juvenile papers, in trying to be simple, have been siekeiiingly Billy. To edit such papers well requires uncommon talent nnd tact. Indeed, tu write so ua to interest children, it is uoeesaary In write four times as well as is required to p!easo tho mature. Boys and girls will rend Bnuyan, Shakspearo, Cervhutos, and Defoe, white they recoil instinctively from Ihe solemn trash which well-meaning people uf "woll regulated minds" are fund of recouimendmg to thorn. Child h "ml and Genius are akin, nnd Ihey love ono another. Wo believo, therefore, that Grace Greenwood's " Liltlo Pilgrim" will be a most welcome guest hi ovorj family ho visits, nnd wo urge parents to loso no time in Bending him nn invitation to come punctually on tho first ut next month. Home Journal. Tho Queen has terminated her visit to Ireland, and gone to ber residence st Balmoral, to Scotland. Mtstkrious. A smart looking, dandified ''young gentleman," rigged out in a suit of black broadcloth, and quite a tall shirt collar, strutted into the Washing-ton House, Covington, on Tuesday Inst, nnd in a round, neat hind, registered himself "0. Do Sncey." Liko an oi l traveler, ho then dinted ( IT his bonis, h.k d iu thegliss, nnd finally asked to ho shown to his moo., which be took good earn to keep for the balance ol iho day. But the good landlady had hr suspicions aroused, Tho mdd, bluo eye, and ihe soft, velvut-like chock, llcgrd wilh a rosy red, could not belong to iho sterner sex sho felt aure of that. So ahe ascended to the "young pfiitlamnn'a" room to reconnoiter. An dher ginnce aiiiaueu nor Blio was n:;m urn .iq'iiin.i) wrre turned to conviction, aud she nt once charged bur young guest with the crime and misdemeanor ul being n woman, and the youngs (tuest, with a great many blushes at d some tears, plead guilty tn the chnrge. The good landlady thou produced some female np parol, nnd, while delivering a short lecturo ou the re spectability of the sol, the young guest slipped out of mo " breeches " into a white skirt and canon wrapper. Tho next day the Marshal of the riiy felt it his duty to cnll on tho fair traveler and mnke further inquiry. Shu answered the summons, but so concealed hor face in tho fold of a sun bonnet that tho Marshal could not even catch glance of the blue eye. She refused to tell her num.), but with some reluctance, admitted that sho wns a citizen of Cincinnati; had learned the tailoring and cutting business, but being out of work, nnd disgusted witli female drudgery and inconvenience, had dunned the "breeches" and come over to Kentucky in anarch of a job. The Marshal did not consider it his duty to arrest her, and merely stipula ted thnt she should nut again take to the " broeehoe." She isalill al the Washington House. Cis). Con, neither worn for du'y, nor worn fir IT-mt ; where mu tual kindness nod aelf-snrrilico and alfection had so long been, that lio very nir aud npect seemed to wel come and sun I ho stranger." Let tho sicklo do its havoc nmong tho grain tot the fruit be gathered let fair (Sogers pull t io bursting bunches uf the grape. Thus shall good provision be made for iho wants which wait before us, nnd the and reflections uf tho season shall he modified by wine nnd assuaged by fatness. Aud sun tnero win no mourners, rural! aro not alike and tho life of the one may bo iho destruction ol ihe other. Buffalo Express. Aye, there will bo miiuriinr for tho dead Summer, gone. Tho dead leaves that shiver awhilo on the sapless trees, thou rustle down to th ir graves on tho around, are not more than tho beautiful hopes, now dead, but which had birth in tie swelling fullness nf the early Summer. Y011114 maidens huili castle in their glowing dreams, which they deemed would be realities win n tho harvest time of fruits had come: where is the realization now? Their alow step nnd pallid fiee fell a snd tale, and tho murmured prayers to Heaven to bear ihem nn is hut tlio voice of the dead Summer, gene, Y".u.g men started with the Spring to count 'ho hours to the harvest lime, whoa their hirvest of houors should come iu the plentitudo of riches ; but how many are weary nod worn with iho struggle, and wilh the Au'umn nro ready to sink into tho darkuem of an unpityiiiy Winter! Ah! Iho tnlo is nut hull' told Ituhel yet mourns f"r her children, and each year must add lo the sot row which is iu every earthly cup. Yet there is a beautiful lessoifbi ibis naMng season. Not forever hath the sap gone from tho trees, and tho color from tho leaves and (lowers. There is n springtime in the storehouse of God's bounty, and 1 1 is opoii band shall sow tho seeds ot new hopes aud new alleo-tuitis in tho days yet to emtio. Then shall the bitterness of Iho water. be turned to a southing sweet, nnd tho chalice of our dreams bn ngain welled up wilh bursting beauty of Ihe young lifo swelling into being around. Aud if, perchance the heart hntb drooned and died, and the dead leavea have fallen upon tho grave of the mourner, yet is there n still more glorious -pring-iimo in store, when the dead shall arise in tho glorious beauty of the Supornnl, Shall we, then, mourn for the deid euro me r, gone? SandHfkjf llrgixter. ScALT.oi'Kn ToMAToxa. Pool lino ripe tomntoi s, cut them up in small pieces, nnd put in a pun, a layer of bread crumbs, then a layer ol tomatoes, with pepper, salt and some pieces of butter then put another layer of brend crumbs aud tomatnee, and so on till tho dish la full. Spread lome beaten egg over the top, and set in tue oven and Dane it. BEAUTf. Beauty is inexplicable: It appears to ui a dieutn. wh-ii we conlomplalo tho works of great nrtisif-; it i a hovering, floating and s.litteriru shadow, whose outline eludes the grasp of definition. Mendelssohn, iho philosopher, grandfather of iho composer, and ot'ieiK, tried to ca'di Beauty, ns a butterfly, and pin it down for inspect! -n. They havo succeeded in lh" s mm way ns they nro likely to aucceed with abutt-illy the p i rauiinat trembles ami atror-glra, and Its hri-h'est colors aro gone; or, if you catch it without spoil me, iho colors, you have at boslustihT and awkward corpse. But a corpse is not an entire animal it wants what is essential in all things, namely, life-spirit, which sheds beauty nn everything. Oottho. Moni-sT Ct.Kiix. A young lady, with mind intent on sh-ippiug, entertd a store on n certain occasion, and atldie.s-ing n fresh looking, rosy cheeked youth, desirqd t know ii' he had nny nice silk hose, ' Certnhdv. Mi," replied he; immediately tho counter was strewn with tlio delicate articles. Alter selecting a pair, she lookd up very in-ieecn'ly anil enquired, " How high dn thevconie, sir?" Toe clerk blushed turned, in tact, all sens of colors, but spake not a word. She gave him a look of surprise, and repeated hor question. flga'H rue yoii'u siaritu stammered and saui, "Kenny. Miss, I that is to -ny. I think could not bo nosiiivH. but my inipn asioti is that ihey come just above the knee: They both fainted on tho spot. Tiif. Cbntrm. Ohio lUitttoAn. The 7.iiienvillo Courier has the following paragraph in relation to the i progrefs making in the cunstructi iu of this rond : Wo me gratified tu lesru that tho track of this road is n w laid some five miles east uf Zannsvillc, and that . the c unpany is laying about one half mile per day. We nro assured, fmm the best authority, that they ex j pect to reach Cambridge about the 1st of November, and tint iho whole lino will be completed to Wheeling! by tlm 1st of July, IW4, n d tho Directors think at nn eurlier dev. This is sooner than wo expec ed from ihe scnrriiy of hinds, and tho dilliculty of nhtainiiig them; but our authority is umpiestionabl 1. Franklin's Toist. Long after Washinjton'a vicio riesover tho French and KtHish had made his name1 fiimil'nr to all E -trope, Dr. Franklin had chanced tu! dine with Ibo English and French Amhaxsndnra, when,1 ns near ns wo can recollect, Ihe following toasts were drunk : By the F, ig!idi Arnhnssulort " Fisor.ANO. Th.S"M, whoso bright beam enlighten and fructify Ihe remotesi corners of tho earth." The French Ambassador, glowing with national prlil". but too polite to dispute the previous loasl drank : " Fkasck The Moon whoso mild, si-,vly, mid cheering rays are the delight of nil tn'i.uH, enns.iliug them in Iho dtrklicsn, and nu, U iu j tic ir d 1 tvn ineM beautiful." Dr. Franklin then arose, mnl wWi hii tiunii;ili--ity, sdd : "Grtonm-: WssiiisutON The J.-shta who romm iu ltd the Sun nnd Jrwi to stand s'ill, and Ihey obeyed him." CmasCTi:R. In common lile, don't you nl'ion judge am! uii-jmlgo a man's wliohi conduct, netting out with a wrong impressi ml The tone of voice, a word said in joke, or a Irdlo in beh.iviorilie cut of Ins hair, or the lie of bis neckcloth, may disfigure him in your eyes, or poison your good opinion- or, ai lire end of years of intimacy, it may bo your closest friend says sotneihing reveals aomotliing which had previously been u v t ret, which alters nil your views uh ut lion, nml Miow t that he ha been noting on quiiu ft diifereut motive to that which yon f meted yon knew. JVifirJvrfiy. Tiif. Bfst for Pustimi. A gentleman passing through n potnio pitch observed an hishman pointing somo potatoes. He inquir d of him what kind hr had thorn 1 " Iti vv ones, lo ho sure," replied ihe sou of Erin; " if ihey were boiled one, ihey wouldn't grow.' An Irishman bring asked, on a late tiial, h-r a certificate of hia marriage, band Ins Innd and exhibited a huge acar, which looked as though it might have been made with a lire shovel. We havo wnited patiently for one week to aee if any Locofoco editor would have the temerity to attack tho lands nor the proceeds thereof could bo dislributed character of Mr. Line h. or to doubt whether his letter among tho btntuB, under any circumstances, "uutalns! ; how did the fiiio gold change!" Seeing that the people were to bo no longer gulled with the Bpect ms arguments of their poliiicinns, (hoy submitted, nnd advocated a distribution of the public lands among the States fur purposes of internal improvements (a Whig measure) and for educational purposes. This was a measure which originated with the Whig party and wns stolen from I hum, as others have been, by the democracy. Tho groat Pacific Itiilrond only presents a portion of the ache rid which Mr. Cr.Ar and many other eminent Whigs wished to be canie l out. Yes, this great and important work, tu the immeusty and nd-vati'ago of which tho people aro just awnkoniug, would lung since have been determined on, not perhaps aa a special improvement, but as one of the many of lhat systom which would years ngo havo placed our country the foremost in iho world in the point of internal improvements as sho already is in intelligence nnd patriotism. Biit the movers of this scheme of internal improvements wero declared, by tho Democracy, a uutag-mis- tli to tho very be.t interests of thoir country, impure, coTtiptednnd villa'uous. And now tho Democratic party, with tho pr. as aud a portion i f 1)10 cabinet at their head, and not at alt an i nprobability wiih tho nisentnf tho President himolf, are advocating what thoy then lenouactd nnd declared as unconstitutional. Mr, PisncR, bo it remembered, is tho self same Mr. Picncs who, when ho was in Congress, voted against any measure intended to benefit Western mon, by ihe improvement of Western rivers or harbors. It may bo urged in his favor, that ho wns then a Senator from a Sta'e whose interests were tending in a di tie rent direction, and under the instructions of his constituents. he voted nnd look the position which he did. A great and enlarged mind would not havo been Ltimuhted by nny such I el nn.l solli-h influence, but would have risen above the narrow aud confined limits nf his own homestead and warred in behalf of n measure which won'd have been the me ins of making his country great, and not have impeded her march, which would have blessed his countryman and benefitted the world, ! and which if it had not made him a great man, would at least have stamped him au honest one. How ofte.i has ths question been asked derisively by tho Democratic press and party, if ihe Whig party is not dead? Now wo nsk them a question. If our measures aro taken from ns, and f umed upon the tenet table uf Ihe Democratic party it wo have our measures curried out by a L .cofoco ud:nini.lration, is there anything tube gained by tho adherence of the Whig party? The hut bloods nnd old Hunkers of that party would rendily answer us no. But Iheru is a work lor the Whig p irly. If our principles nre stolen from ua, nnd emhl-ind upon the banners of the opposition it tno pros m is darft, rite in turn is suspicious, and the great warfare for truth must not be abandoned. If there Is no work for us al present, we must superintend the movements of the Democratic party ; for a party composed of bo many incongruous m isges and materials cannot long remain in the right chmnel. They need a curb lor thoir follies and a spur for their corruptions. The Democratic party U progressive only since they have commenced the adoption of Whig principles, and if it Hill rcmnina in the same channel, the great na tional and material ddireucea between the two grout parties will eoon be eradicated, by ihe total abandonment of Locofoco measures. The parlies now occupy the same relative positions to each other aa mind does to matter. If the component parts of tho steam engine were left in ihetr origital and crude state, the purposes which thoy now serve would tS thwarted. But even after having been connected and j nnted until ibo locomotive is complete, there is still something "he neccioiry before the world can be astonished by ihe secrets of power nnd speed which lie hidden in its bo s un. The track must be laid to guide it, and the engineer must be at his post tn put it in mntim, or check ita reckless speed. So ia it wr;h the Loco loco Dei. oe nny of the present day. Give litem principles and u knowledge to carry Ihem out, and they can tear along nt n tremendous speed, and snort ns loud or make as much noiso as a young e.irihqnake; but they must be curbed and managed, or they viy soon run into the most egregious excesses. This, Ihen, ia ihe sum ami suluiiimo of their progression, We will notice this subject ngain. " At von like ir.'' Tiie sewer of the Sta'esman was yesterdiy op-'iit-d, nnd an enormous quantity of Incoherent maledictions and Billing. gate rhetoric belch, d I forth tip n us. It Is somewhat nxtoni.hing lo witness 1 the fn iiity wi h which Ihe jaded editors of thnt shoot ! make usk of such forcible arguments. They nro etei- J rmlly drawing ns before ihe public, simply because we eou'il n. t participate in and enjoy 'b"ir raptures at a 1 therein before mentioned "sin. si t Intighi d nt their description of the distortions of Bott b ibv. ihey nro furious, und nothing will suit save our t .t,,l Jesiiucin ti Be merciful upon us, You wish tu kuo.v how the ba'iy ia oil' for pip. Woll, I e i grow I i iu fit. A for ivij m.'ie pip, h- ua Im cutiidn't think of it nt present, Yoiirdefr-o-io ol tiie "Groat Old Sunset " h is Mifjilied him wilh a s:llii'i.'iicy for a long time to come. When In hoard of your solicitude nhout his health, be actually chuckled at )our munificence, la beard is growing veiy fust, nnd so tno sny that il looks veiily like unto Savisomj wo wo il f, therefore, advi-n you to ns your scissors more nml your pen less for 1 lift child evidently presents symptoms of approach lug dnnger, nnd your nether jaws, although in fancied security, may be wrested from you. " Cvin Titus." The following tont was given at a rail rond dinner at Detroit lately : Editors Ladders on which politicians climb It. power pioneers in all great enterprise - the only chi'S whose labor is Its own reward the hardest worked, poorest paid, m nt s .-ll-siierilleiog, and best nbnsed of ail the professions. Ths Seamstress Association, of Cincinnati, have became insolvent. Liabilities $300. Niit.EB Gray, of the Plain Dealer, though an otT hand clever chap iu many reipods, is notorious for his total disregard of truth in tho conduct of bis paper. During the Into contest in Kentucky and Tennessee it was assorted that Pierce bad Appointed lo the office of Postmaster nt Cleveland, a man who had kept ex tracts from his famous Now Host n speech, standing nt the head of his paper. This wns denied by the Loco focos, and oneofthem wrote to G rat, to know wheth er it wa true. Of course he denied it. Thereupon the Herald copies from the Plain Dealer, of Aug. 7th, 1852, iho entire head of tho editorial column, contain ing as regular standing matter, threo extracts from I'ikrce's speech, wherein he denounced ihe fugitive law, &.C. It is a clincher. It proves, beyond the pro babilily of doubt, that Gray has told a deli ierato false hood. We nre sorry that the Cleveland Postmaster was bo indiscreet aa to Answer the letter from the South, and thus expose himself lo tho terrible fire. He is nailed. The Eastkrn Qukbtion The Czar Refuses the Turkish Note The following di-pateh we clip from the London Times. The Times being iu the confidence of the English Government, and the dispatch having been published in that paper only, and that too jutt before the sailing of a mail steamer for America, aro items which should tend to lessen the confidence in jia veracity to sumo extent. Tho Emperor of France, it is also as serted, declines going Io war during tho present scarcity of bread st uIVs among bis people. ' Paris. --It wns positively slated today, Thursday, Mi, at ibo Russian Embassy nt Paris, that the Emperor of Russia h id refused to acrept the modifications. It wns added, that when the Kuiin ror was informed thnt thu Porte ha I modified the note of the Vienua Confe rence before accepting il, he observed, in a tone of much moderation, that he would willingly make concessions for iha jxpres purpose of meeting tho wishes of tho European powers; but he would not humiliate lumsell in the rye of the world by sutiniiutiig to pro- pitiiiona proceeding direct I rem iho Sultan. In many parts of tho country thero is a rumor of number probable war wiih Mexico. Tho supposition that nny immediate difficulty will take place between our country and the Mexican government is not warranted by our latest advices. There has beeu a large complement of arms, nmtinition nnd troops 1 brown forward to the Itio Grande, prepnr. d, in an emergency, to go into active service. This movement, is no doubt to protect ns from the numerous depredations which have beret. -fore been committed by the lawless hordes Infesting our frontier, nnd teach them a lesson, the moral of which in the future, they will respect. Santa Akna, it is generally understood and c mceded, does not entertain the most amicable relations in the world to us, and the time, perhaps, is not nl any very distant day when it will be nocesMiry to curb his temerity and put him in a position nntu, where he cm recognise his helplessness but. ns yet, nothing of any decided character has transpired to suhlaMiato tin- conviction that an immediate war is inevitable. Bolting seem to bo the or ier of the day np Northwest, Tho Lucofocos of ibo Defiance district have nominated ttenr- G1t.u1.ANn us their candidate for (he Senate. Th re wa n hard light between him and Judgo Tati.or, Iho old Senator. The Judge being floored iu the convention, now announces bimaelf ns an independent candidal". The Defiance Democrat is down upon him. Tho editor anys tho Democracy of Hint district will not tolerate a bolter, and gives the Judge fiir warning that ho will find hia lovel nt tho eltcti m. We xh.id Bee. VkiiMo, r. In the S-mato there are lfi Whigs, 12 I. icofoco a.:d 1 Fteenoih r. Iu iho H'mso thero are II" Whigs, 87 Locofoco ami Hi Freesoilurs. Tito Mont-pclier H'ttVArnan ssys: The Whig State ticket has suffered severely from the liquor question, and Ihe Loeofoco ticket has gained on account of that, nn well as. in some (itinrlnra 1ri. Then because we the Frees ulera, by tie return to the Loeofoco fold of persons who, sineo inr.i, have called themselves "Free Democrats." We question whether it would have be-11 better for tho Whig party to have shouldered the liquor law, a th Locos endeavored lo force tliftu to do. Hut specu'-i'ioti of ihis surl is now unavailing. Wo hoto thai question will bo Bellied ero another decdou : il nol, u will proiiy surely be aoitltd by it. The long-eared editor of the Dayton Qa-.ette turns his hep's towards us rather n ieingly, boemtso we had the audacity to say something comp!imeritay nf Lippard; and the literary sluhbenlegullion of lUvStafe Journal give premonitory symptoms ol'ndoiiw to join tiia Dayton brolber II nny doubt h-id pievioosly existed of Lippaid'a claim tn the high consideration i.f h;a rotintrymen, ihey would bo dissipated when such old fogies are seen arrayed Bgninai him. They ore being- utterly incapable of a aiqylo warm, noble, or itispiting sentiment, in d nre ao far behind Ihe spirit of the ago that no hopes ran bo indulged i,f thejr ever being able io catch up True Democrat. N .t too fast, young man, not too fast; if wo have erred, give ti lime for repentaiic. The nge la progressive and you're) a acrramer; but if the scythe of time was only half as dull, Peter I'arlki's loun-tniu of youth would cause no longings iu our breast. How is il, Dayton 1 Wonder what's became of Met J |
Format | newspapers |
LCCN | sn85025898 |
Reel Number | 00000000024 |
File Name | 0650 |