DIFFERENT YET THE SAME. 43 



spring time, and it is curious to see what an object of 

 interest the river becomes. Its rise and fall are the 

 chief topics of conversation. So goes the world — New 

 York has its objects of interest — ^the country village its 

 — and the settler on the frontier his — each one is filled 

 with the same anxieties, hopes, fears and wishes — 

 overcome by the same discouragements and misfor- 

 tunes, and working out the same fate ; man still with 

 that mysterious soul and restless heart of his, greater 

 than a king, and immortal as an angel, yet absorbed 

 with straws and maddened or thrown into raptures by 

 a little glittering dust. 



