r“"Ti 
_ 
r==> did partly oa thesyall, partly on the Glacis (space 
Yj-llfc \ ire 8 between the latter and the suburbs,) beautifully 
^ -YJ-v " * laid out with rows of trees and grass-plots, and in 
company with a friendly cicerone, who described 
to me the character of the numerous stately edi- 
flees and distant prospects which the eye here be- 
A rf—holds to the right and left. The best place to begin 
this circuitous walk is at the magnificent Burqthor 
___ (gate leading from the court to the suburbs,) built 
--- after the manner of the Propyleum of Athens with 
LETTERS FROM A HUNGARIAN. 12 massive pillars of the Doric order and five pas- 
- sages. Turning to the left, I arrived, in little over 
number nine. an bour) a t the Paradise Garden from which I 
~ " " passed to the Volksgarten, which is just to the 
risk* of the BurgtUr. Here you eould see the 
— The Belvedere Picture Gallery and Antiquities people of Vienna all alive, drinking beer or coffee, 
“1 listing to the baud of musiewhieh still more 
Vienna — Sckoribrunn— The Prater — Military Music enlivened the scene. Here you might also see 
LETTERS FROM A HUNGARIAN. 
NUMBER NINE. 
-Departure for Prague. 
specimens of the thirteen different nationalities 
Dear Friend Moore :—An entire week would composing the heterogeneous realm of Austria, 
hardy suffice for a survey of the most distinguish- with now and then a Turk in oriental costume, who 
ed sights and scenes in and about Vienna, and yet i 3 being educated in the various branches of art 
X managed to enjoy the most within the space of an( x science in the Polytechnic and other educa- 
half a week. On the day following my arrival I tional institutions of Vienna. Here I really enjoy- 
bent my way directly to the Imperial Palace, to see e y the cool, refreshing breeze of the evening, waft- 
its vast treasures and monuments—the seat of j ug harmonious music to my ear, as I too, partook 
Austrian Sovereignty since the 13th century. The 0 f a g i aS3 0 f beer (which is most excellent here,) 
THE FALLS OF REGLA. 
the field, and send one to the house for an hour or 
so; rainy days are frequent, though he is a poor 
farmer who cannot find work for his boys on such 
days. 
The second consideration I based somewhat upon 
the supposition that if during the muscular labor 
oue cannot think over or digest what he has been 
learning from his books, his studies would be less 
interesting than if the reverse were the truth; and 
such is the case, though it is dependent in a great 
measure upon what the studies are. This conside¬ 
ration, also, involves the one which Vinton illus¬ 
trates, though it would hardly seem to me that the 
instance he mentions afforded such “conclusive 
evidence” to the truth of it as he states.' On the 
contrary, he can go on a similar errand, think over 
his reading as before, and my word for it, he will 
not again fall into that predicament, unless inten¬ 
tionally. His experience will teach him better, and 
I believe that in some cases two employments can 
be pursued at one time with profit; to be sure, nei¬ 
ther will be done as well as when our whole atten¬ 
tion is directed to one alone, but the advantage 
derived from both would more than make up the 
deficiency. In planting or hoeing corn, for exam¬ 
ple, it is well nigh impossible to keep the mind 
Austrian Sovereignty since the 13th century. The 0 f a glass of beer (which is most excellent here,) w run- , , , , .. , , steadily fixed upon the work. One’s thoughts will 
. ,. ~ , ... , B y In describing the <SWrer Mines of Mexvco, Wilson, of basaltic columns—columns closely mined to- , . ... , , ,, , _ , 
palace, consisting of several somewhat irregular an d bread and cheese; and to crown the delights . ‘ * ° „ . ’. ’ ., , , , , , . , be running upon something, and better by far have 
l -l* i j-w t *■ uicau , h ip his History of the Conquest of Mexico, gives the gether and placed erect bv the hand of natures , ... , , , , . 
buildings built at different times, surrounds a large 0 f the dav, I took a view of the Temple of Theseus , f, . . „ * ... , , them engrossed with what we have read from some 
± j j • o • » •’ , _ 1 , accomnanvin" view and description of the Falls of Master-builder. Still, all would have been stiff and ....... ... . 
court-yard called Francis Square, in the middle of (built here in Grecian style, by Nobile,) contain- t * u, -' um P au .> » c . ” . . , * „ . . ... ., e ., , , ... useful book, than with the interminable yarns of 
“ , \ , . . . c ., - iuuuiueie m uicuou Reala near which are extensive works for extract- formal, had the sides of the barranca been lined .’. ... , ... 
which stands an imposing monument of the Em- ; n2 a marble group (Theseus slaying the Centaur) » ’ , ,. , , ... , . some gossiping fellow who can readily be distm- 
” _ , .... . , , , „ mgttUHuu«igiuui)yn j » , j acr s ii ver f rom tL e ore: only with perpendicular columns; but broken and . . ® v ...... 
peror Francis I, (died 1835,) surrounded by alle- by Canova — one of the greatest master-pieces of s s,uvei ,loIU r ..f .. , . . ,. guished from the rest by his being furthest behind 
v 7 , _ ,t *• a vi td a ^ v ' Ar,UVA & L “ThePatio or open yard of the Regia, on which displaced pillars are piled in every conceivable ° , ,. -n L b , 
goncal figures of Justice and Valor, Peace and modern art. . cam, ; / & > . v . v . with his row. But, there are also other kinds of 
6 ... »t uv-ij- au- *u , j r the principal portion of the ores of the Real del position against the front, while a vine with bnl- .... . ’ , . ,, .... 
Religion. As I was beholding this group, a watch- Thus pleasantly passed the second dav of mv p .. . s , , ’ . work which require the head as well as the hands, 
Religion. As I was beholding this group, a watch- Thus 
man at the outer gate cried at the top of his voice so journ 
Thus pleasantly passed the second day of mv „ & , , . . , , 
v , . : V , ., , ; , Monte company are ‘ benefited, ’ or, as we should liant leaves had run to every fissure, and spread 
journ in the imperial residence, where 1 was to . . ... ’ , .. lf . , . a m, 
and on the whole, in view of these facts, and also 
. ,, /T -, & i • a? ^ n i J ,> , a., sdVi extracted is situated deep down in a bcLwanccij itself out to enjoy the sunshine. The little stream ,, 1 _ at •! a a 
“ Kaiser,” (Emperor,) and in a trice a guard of spend twice twenty-four hours more. But ot these ; v ’ e 1 < ‘ ciea , F . ., * .. , .. . ,, , a that we are most of us differently situated as 
. . .. .,. .. c p J . where both water-power and intense heat can be that had burst its way through the upright columns ... , „ .. 
soldiers stood in array awaiting the appearance of I intended to devote about one-fourth to the envi- er P« e J ° * 6 . regards the amount of time we can obtain for the 
. , , , . A .... , obtained to facilitate the process of separation, and flowed over the broken fragments, fell into a D . , , .... . , 
their sovereign. The people in the court stood in r 0 ns, for the beauty of which Vienna is justly cel- F i r . ... purpose of study, we should have to rely on our 
6 . , f. , ... 1 J ^ , The immense amount of mason-work here expended perfect basin of basalt, heightening immensely the . , , . 
mute silence, and dashing along came a stately ebrated. The most charming of these, and one to uouiuoi ui F u T 6 , own judgment, as no particular rule could be given. 
chariot drawn by four horses and containing wkw> lhe citil e„s of Vienna are continuall T re- “ li « “““on of massrve walls, would make an at ract.ons of the spot. I sat down upon a fallen ^ UJ by ^ ^ „ can „ „ 
Francis Joseph I, and one of his private counsel- sorting during the summer months, is Schcmbrunn, im P 0Sin S appearance if they had been bui t up in c ° an or a 0U S ime ° ou m ” e 0 C ° Q em ' can be done without affecting our health; but we 
lors. All took off their hats —except one; for the favorite summer residence of the Emperor.— the open plain ; but here they are so overs a owe pae e unexpec e scene, o w ic , a a ime ’ should seek to preserve that first, for of what ben- 
though I was in Rome I did not as the Romans An hour’s ride with the omnibus will bring you to by tue mason - work of nature, that t iev sin in o .u iea no mng. leie uas sue a ming mg of efit would be tbe best education if obtained at the 
do, but gazed with a feeling of awe mingled with a spo t, than which you can hardly imagine any- insignificance in comparison The bank, some the rich vegeta ion of the hot country with the dear cost of life or reason ? 
disgust on him whose despotic sway I had but re- thing more charming and striking. The eye is tvv0 buu< ^ re d feet °f a ® 1 roc '’ as 1 a P' roc J ornamen s o n» pie y wa er a , a Vinton seems to make a distinction between 
cently observed with my own eyes heavily press- here abundantly satisfied for that which it so much P roaches the waterfall on either side, has the cou never grow weary of admiring t e combine s t u dyingandreading,asfarasacquiringknowl- 
ing upon my noble countryman — the Magyars.— lacks in the city. At first view Schcenbrunm (“ fair a PP earanc e Q i bem g su PP 0 rtedb y naturalbuttreS5CS g rant -cmran beau y of e p ace._ edge is concerned. It seems to me that no such 
ing upon my-noble countryman — the Magyars.— lacks in the city. At first view Schcenbrunm (“ fair a PP earanc e Qt being supported py natural ouuressts | a _ ^ F _ edge is concerned. It seems to me that no such 
The sight of that young but imperial brow re- fountain”— so-called, from the cool, beautiful well--- distinction exists, or rather as much advantage is 
called to my memory volumes of wrongs heaped w R ere the mighty hunter Emperor Matthias, re- will say,— enough about Vienna, too. I will not, sand three hundred miles. Lieut. Habersham esti- obtained from the one as from the other, where 
upon the devoted land of the Huns, and I, could freshed himself in 1619, and first conceived the idea therefore, trouble you with a description of what mates that the waters of the Yangtese-Kiang carry the reading is pursued as it should be; and for 
not conscientiously join the crowd in presenting 0 f building a hunting palace here,) appears like a other things I saw in and about the Austrian cap- along in suspension the remarkable quantity of directions how to read correctly, I would refer 
him a token of respect. After the Emperor was fl ower of a hundred beauties, spreading before you ital. But before quitting it, let me speak of but thirty-three per cent, of sedimentary matter. Ac- Vinton and others to the article in the Rural of 
out of sight, the soldiers retired to their barracks, a slanting valley of parks and gardens, woods and one spot more which is the pride of Vienna — the cording to this estimate, 1,985,330,000 cubic feet of April 16th, second column. These rules I have 
and I, with several others about me, entered the Redoes, with here and there a stately edifice or Prater, in the suburb Leopoldstadt. This is the mud is hourly transported to the sea by this river, practiced, and can testify to their value, as I have 
Museum connected with the court. Here, within marb fo monument_the whole presenting a pano- promenade of the aristocracy as well as of the peo- It seems quite incredible, but as the earthy matter found them a great improvement over the invete- 
the space of three hours, my eyes glanced rapidly rama 0 f the most graceful combination of Nature pie. I don’t know howl can better describe it, dischargedby the Yangtese-Kiang colors the waters rate old habits of skimming over, which, like all 
over the vast zoological, mineralogical and astro- and Art. But let us draw nearer and examine than by comparing it to an immense outspread at its mouth, giving to them the name of the Yel- such old habits, it is extremely difficult to over- 
nomical cabinets. The zoological specimens are cac h beauty more closely. Taking our position in fan, the alleys running north, east and south far low Sea, besides forming immense flats, the amount come. 
arranged according to the various continents of the center we behold the royal palace (which owes into the country and concentrating at the so-called must be very large. The Yangtese-Kiang, how- One more remark upon Vinton’s article. If my 
the world, whose animals they represent. The its present form to Maria Theresa,) three stories Prater stem" (star) at the end of the Jagerzeite ever, bears no better comparison to the Amazon, inferences are correct, there appears to be some 
mineralogical cabinet, contained in three large b j gb and near three thousand feet in length. The the most fashionable street of Vienna. The prin- than, according to Lieut. Habersham, the Missis- inconsistency in the course he is pursuing, as his 
halls, is one of the greatest collections in the ma j es tfo court-yard, filled with rattling carriages cipal alley is near a league in length, and is studded sippi does to the Chinese river. The Amazon, studies hardly seem to accord with his intended 
world, numbering over 100,000 specimens, among and burr yi ng pedestrians, wending their way to with several places of refreshment. The several which is the largest river in the world, is one occupation. Ancient history, I believe, is included 
which I noticed two meteoric stones found near tbe r j gb t a nd left, would of itself produce a much alleys, of which there are five, are separated by thousand seven hundred and sixtv-nine miles in in the classical course of study, as well as the dead 
Agram in 1751, and weighing, respectively, 70 and grea t er charm, did we not, through the open-arched green meadows, groups of trees, and in the more length, in a direct line, or, including its windings, languages; and if these are the studies he wishes 
100 pounds. Formerly the botanical collection, ga te heneath the principal balcony, see a most al- remote portions by little woods frequented by wild nearly four thousand miles, while four hundred to pursue or is pursuing in the place of those which 
which is said to be equal to any in the world, was ; ur ; D g perspective _ the park with its fragrance game. Here, then, I strolled abou,'. one Sunday af- miles from the Atlantic it is more than a mile in are far more applicable to his profession, then, I 
in the court-buildings also, but was removed some and sun shine its fountains and monuments_and ternoon, at which time the vehicles of the rich, and width, and has a velocity of three and a half miles must say, he is taking an improper course. One 
years ago to the garden of the University in one j n j be rea r, on the top of a sloping hill, the the more natural vehicles (legs,) of the poorer per hour, and in mid-currents no bottom is found of the ancients, when asked what things boys 
of the suburbs. The library, containing over 300,- « Qi or i e tte,” seeming like a key-stone to this varie- classes roamed about in vast numbers; though, as within twenty fathoms, or one hundred and twenty should learn, replied, “ those which they will prac- 
000 books and 20,000 MSS., and over 12,000 works ga t ed scene. The Gloriette is a long, airy and my companion told me, by no means to be com- foet. This noble river, with its tributaries, is esti- tice when they become men.” Now, if Vinton is 
printed in the early part of the 16th century, the f a ; r y.iike portico, from whose pillared platform pared with what it formerly was, when the numer- mated to afford fifty thousand miles of inland navi- calculating to become a lawyer or a minister, he is 
immense collection of steel and wood engravings, tbe great Empress, Maria Theresa, is said to have ous railroads traversing in various directions, had gation.” on the right track; but he is to be a farmer—and 
coins, medals and antiquities generally, I passed gent evei y morning a greeting signal to a favorite not as yet offered such cheap facilities for making _ _ __ one who intends to make that his calling, should 
without notice, as I wished to spend the remain- daug hter in Presshurg (the castle now in ruins,) excursions into the country. Happening to be in pursue those studies which really are applicable to 
ing hour (from 11—12) in the Imperial Treasury. and °received a similar one in return. Let us tarry Vienna on the anniversary of the birth-day of the A A, T our P rofession — viz -> Agricultural Chemistry, Bot- 
ing hour (from 11—12) in the Imperial Treasury. and rece ived a similar one in return. Let us tarry Vienna on the anniversary of the birth-day of the j 
To obtain admission to this I was obliged to pro- bere a little, and while we enjoy the fine prospect present Emperor, I witnessed a grtmd pyrotechnic | 
cure a card (gratis,) the day before, otherwise you 0 f tbe ocea n of houses in the distance (Vienna,) display given to the public on one of the alleys of 
cannot enter without giving the porter a florin and tbe st jn more distant hills of Hungary, think this Prater, accompanied by music from one of the 
(about 50 cents.) Here the eye is dazzled by the a momen t of the great, cheering, and mournful numerous military bands of the capital. Speak- 
numerous resplendent jewels, diamonds, gold and sceues that have taken place on the very spot and ing of music, I cannot help remarking that the 
silver works. Here I saw, among other precious pa i ace before us. Here the threads of the Seven military music of the Austrians is the most de¬ 
works of art, a large badge of the Theresian Order Years’ War were spun; here Joseph II, celebrated lightful I ever heard — far surpassing that of any 
containing near 600 brilliants; the great diamond his hymeneal festivities; here Arch-Duke Charles other German city. And no wonder, for the mili- 
of Charles the Bold, of Burgundy, found after the mus t’ e red the brave troops (1801,) who were to tary bands here are composed of regular Ilunga- 
the battle of Grandson by a Swiss, who, not know- meet tbe a n. C onquering forces of Bonaparte, and rian and Italian virtuosi ; who, besides being ex¬ 
on the right track; but he is to be a farmer—and 
one who intends to make that his calling, should 
pursue those studies which really are applicable to 
our profession—viz., Agricultural Chemistry, Bot¬ 
any, Meteorology, &c. This would do away with 
the objection raised by V inton, of the impossibility 
of doing two things at a time with profit; for in 
this case the two employments would in fact be but 
two branches of the one. From the books we learn 
the science of what we are daily practicing and 
experiencing. c. 
Livonia, N. Y., June, 1859. 
STUDY AND LABOR. The following is the article referred to by our 
- correspondent, and which he has so long remem- 
Messrs. Eds.:—Vinton, in a late Rural, (14th bered with profit: 
in substance the following question :- 
How to Read. —Think as well as read, and when 
and wagons of the King of Rome; the imperial success f u l marshals paraded their veteran army in ing private concerts in the evening at the various “Can a young man study his books while working y 0 u read. Yield not your minds to the passive 
dress of Charlemagne ; the sword of Timour ; the ^ be gbs tening sun. Here, too, the exile of St. resorts of pleasure. It is thus that the people are on the farm?” Now, there are two things to be impressions which others may please to make upon 
horoscope of Wallenstein; the full dress of Na- g e i eua decreed that there is no more a papal so fond of viewing military parades, where the considered in this question. 1st, Can one find the them. Hear what they have to say; but examine 
poleon when crowned King of Italy, and many Dome, and enriched Europe with another kingdom, glittering array of helmets and weapons, the pre- requisite time ? and 2 d, W ould not his dailj labor weigh it, and judge for yourselves. This will 
other precious reliques of times long since past.— and bere; w here his mighty father issued these de- cision and order of the movements, and, above all, detract from the interest in his studies? I should ena ble you to make a right use of books—to use 
Crowds of events recorded on the page of history, creeS) ii ved an d died the son, the “ King of Rome,” the enlivening music, inspire the masses with love say, to come to the point at once, that there was at them as helpers, not as guides to your understand- 
cluster about almost every treasure preserved, and witbou t Rome or any other kingdom. 
toward those very bodies which, at the bidding of least no regular time for study during summer on j ng . a3 counselors, not dictators of what you are 
To the right, in one of the labyrinthine gardens, 
to think and believe. 
ADVICE TO THE BOYS. 
Now, boys—farmers’ boys I mean—clear your 
the student may here revive his historic lore with To the right, in one of the labyrinthine gardens, a single man, did once ruthlessly turn their deadly the farm—that being, I suppose, the season to to think and believe, 
ease and delight, though not without a tear of mel- ^ ba rotunda with the menagerie containing living arms against them for endeavoring to shake off the which Vinton reters, as he probably attends school • 
aheholy for those so-called great actors, of whom spec im en s of all possible monsters of Asia, Africa yoke that weighed upon them too heavily. Beg- during the winter. Where one labors steadily from ADVICE TO THE BOYS, 
these reliques are almost the only things they have and America, and the everlasting, deafening ging pardon for this digression, I will now take you the sun’s rise to its disappearance, it is evident that ^ — - 
left to record their former existence on earth. screeching of parrots in the central pavilion. Here along to the capital of Bohemia, Prague, whither evenings would be the only opportunities obtaina- Now, boys—farmers’ boys I mean—clear your 
It was just noon when I finished my survey of lounge about nurses with innumerable children; the railroad hurries us through Moravia, in one of ble for this purpose; but these in summer are quite upper stories, as soon as may be, from thoughts of 
these rich collections; and hastily partaking of a here you may see the comic peasant with staring whose cities (Olmutz,) the noble Lafayette once j short, and furthermore, if I can be allowed to judge a “ good time coming, break yoursehes of the 
dinner at a neighboring restaurant, I entered one eye s, apprentices and soldiers of all possible mT- experienced the sufferings of an Austrian dungeon, of others by myself, one wants three of these even- habit of day-dreaming, of forever picturing to 
of the omnibuses standing around St. Stephen’s tionalities — and such faces as they make! The from which the magnanimous appeal of the “Fath- ings at least, out of each week, to devote to our yourselves a “rose-tinted existence m the future, 
square,(in Vienna, as in most European cities, the photographer might here make “ a good catch”— er of our Republican Country” alone was able to weekly visitors, the Rural, Tribune, Ac., as a These vague, pictures of future success h the 
omnibus takes passengers at certain starting places L infront of the monkey-cage-worthy of being free him. good stock of general information is more of a mind with vvved pictures of present ills Dream- 
only,) and in about 15 minutes alighted at the cel- displayed in any picture-gallery. The‘elephant is And now, dear reader, I will weary you with but present necessity, to the youth, than a knowledge ing of purple and fine linen makes blue jean 
ebrated Belvedere in the suburb Wieden. This continually busy with devouring the rich cakes be- one more epistle about the wonders of another of the languages and sciences. This last assertion, and cotton altogether intolerable. Don t imagine 
was once the summer residence of Prince Eugene stowedby the gratified spectators. Natural history great city— the extreme western seat of the Sla- however, might be a matter of opinion, and some that happiness is a tenan o anjo ese air 
(who died in 1736,) and consists of two palaces j 3 b ere enriched with sayings and opinions at vonic race — Prague. Simon Tuska. ambitious youth would raise the inquiry, Why not castles,” but exact y tie reverse. e rea ing o 
separated by a large garden a la Irancaise. The which a Buffon, a Cuvier, or an Agassiz would — 
upper Belvedere (the palace most distant from the shudder, and which “ philosophers certainly never THE 
city wall,) contains a picture gallery of over 3,000 dreamed of.” Near the menagerie is the botanical , , . , . , 
paintings of the several schools, among which the garden of European celebrity, with a great many Lieut. Habersham, in writing to the Philadelphia | other a labor; the one requires no eflort or exer- trash, an c ear vour ea s rom a esire o rea 
“ Madonnas” play a conspicuous part, a Madonna hot-beds concealing a luxuriant display of the Ledger, says: ^ on wbde Mie other does; and Nature would argue it. W hat is it to you i a 1 orseman teas 
of some one painter or another being found in al- vegetable kingdom of all zones and climes. “ The Mississippi, opposite New Orleans, is not strongly against the practice of studying evenings seen wending is wavaon 0 es ir 3 0 a ores , 
most every one of the twenty rooms of this picture T o the left of the palace is another forest of trees quite six hundred yards wide, with a mean depth after a steady day’s work. She designed the night Ac., or if Miss Juyenelia * andango, ^ wearied 
gallery. The lower Belvedere contains the cab- w ;t b meandering paths and an artificial Roman of one hundred feet; and a velocity of one and a as a period of sleep and rest from labor, mental as with the estivities o t e evening, ( u re ire 
inet of Egyptian antiquities (mummies, coffins, x-uin; which is, however, so skillfully built, that half miles per hour. Thus, a body of water one web aa muscular, and an observance of this law a shady recess. t wi no ac one cu l o your 
sphinxes, papyrus-rolls, &c.,) and the Ambraser many a stranger has been led to regard it as a real and a half miles long, six hundred yards wide, and of Nature is rendered imperative in the case stated, intellectual stature to iea o a un re sue 
collection, so-called, from its having been origin- ru j n 0 f SO me Roman edifice. From this ruin, one hundred feet thick, is driven into the Gulf of It cannot always be disobeyed with impunity, and i lcmarkable events. ... . 
ally in the possession of the Arch-Duke Ferdinand which reminds us of Rome, the imagination is car- Mexico every hour. A little more than one hundred to persist in disregarding it would soon begin to The habit o roving is a angeious one, oo. 
(16th century,) at the castle of Ambras, near Inn- r i e d to the banks of the Nile by the projecting miles from the mouth of Yangtese-Kiang, (the Son tell on the health and weight of the individual. I To the unsettled there is ever a good t ing a ite 
spruck. Here the eye is fatigued by over 1,000 obe i isk supported by four huge gilded tortoises; of the Sea,) is located the city of Kiang Yuu. The should advise Vinton, therefore, not to study even- ways ahead The rover will travel one weary 
portraits of distinguished men of the middle ages, and half-way between the ruins and the obelisk is river here is one thousand nine hundred yards i n S s > during the seasons of the hardest labor, at round, and o tenma'e is spr ing poin^ is na 
over a hundred complete armaments as originally the beautiful fountain (from which the name of this wide, has an average depth of ninety-nine feet, and least. resting place. r^memberin ^ If vour father 
worn by Princes and Generals of those times, and spot is derived,) with the marble figure of a female a mean velocity of two miles per hour. Thus, we But “circumstances alter cases,” and perhaps ing somet agricultural" a er ^ake one 
numerous bronze and marble statutes. Ispentthe so beautiful — even more so than the most beauti- have, he remarks, a body of water two miles long, Vinton is so situated as to have some portion of does not ta-e a n o° a ® ric 'J, ura P a P et > a 'eone 
THE THREE GREAT RIVERS. 
ambitious youth would raise the inquiry, Why not castles,” but exactly the reverse. The reading of 
study and let the papers go ? If one can forego the greater part of the fiction of the present day 
the pleasure of reading, why not substitute study in has a tendency to fill the mind with visions of 
its stead ? Because one is a recreation and the coming good. Clear your libraries of all such 
“ remarkable events.” 
The habit of roving is a dangerous one, too. 
To the unsettled there is ever a good thing a little 
j ea3 t resting place. Spend your “ rainy days” in read- 
But “circumstances alter cases,” and pcrh.ps ing somethiug «erlir,mmh<ring If your father 
Truro* is so situated as to have some portion of *f'■=“ paper take one 
whole afternoon iu visiting these collections, and Vekus — that Pygmalion might have been jus- nineteen hundred yards wide, and ninety-nine feet the day itself for study, in which case what has your-'—f I ou cannot be a farmer without. Com 
-ixx umnuj, --- f - HU YJSDiua- lUiU i jguiaiiuu uut^uu uucujub" utuutLCU uuiiuitu jama »» tucj auu urucij-uiug cue uay uocu iui oiuuj y xxx »»xiii/u oaou umo - j ractice Of corres Olldintr with. 
in the evening, before returning to town, refreshed tified had he stolen heavenly fire to animate this thick, hourly urged into the bosom of the Yellow been said would, of course, not apply. But, altho’ mence ^ a ^^ _ this is ^f mud/Tm^ ortance ^It 
myself by breathing the pure and balmy atmos- marble woman. This reposing, reclining form is Sea. Compare this volume with the first, and it there may be obstacles in the way of our having reg- - TOlir mn b[) ’ w to g ed to write and more'than 
phere of the large and charming garden connected worth a pilgrimage! And if any one is willing to will be found to be almost double. Were the ular hours for study, there are sundry other odd ou t 0 think ' h r 
with the Belvedere. make a fool of himself and sink down upon the length of the great Chinese water course only moments ofleisure, which, if one bears in mind that a castil^Centre Y 1859 
Before retiring to rest after a day of so much bosom of a white marble nymph, let him come known, the comparison might be completed, but “where there is a will there is a way,” can be im- " ’ —”-J- 
sight-seeing, I still ventured to spend the twilight hither — here he may succeed. that cannot be until the interior of China is open proved to thedecidedadvantageofone’sknowledge. Never open the door for a little vice, lest a great 
in making a circuit round the city-wall. This I But enough about Schcenbrunn and—the reader to the world. Its estimated length is three thou- A sudden shower may come up while at work in one should enter. 
