MOORE’S RURAL NEW-YORKER: AN AGRICULTURAL. LITERARY AND FAMILY NEWSPAPER. 
* '^\ <W"f X ^ the Gospels. On his fleshless brow was the open at all times to strangers, without fee, 
f 3v* jjX A, U 11 U *. crown, the imperial mantle covered his should- merely upon the exhibition of their passport. 
__ ers, the sword Joyeuse was by his side, and the The collections are of a high order of merit, 
CONDUCTED BY AZILF.. pilgrim’s pouch, which he had borne always but since the spoils gathered by Napoleon 
. .a.,-,.., .,..,-,.* while living, was still fastened to his girdle, from all nations, have been restored to their 
^ ^ q All these venerable relics were removed, and original owners, they no longer occupy the 
used in the coronation ceremonies of succeed- rank they once did. Some are superior, oth- 
by Frances s. osgood. ing Emperors of Germany. The throne on ers not equal, to those we have seen elsewhere. 
- which the body of Charlemagne was seated, If our stay in Paris is prolonged, you will 
Call me pet munes, dearest I C ali me a bird, alone remains here. It is a simple arm-chair hear from me further touching this gay capital; 
That flies to thy breast at one cherished word, x ° n j t > 
That folds its wild wings there, ne’er dreaming of flight, made of slabs of white marble. I took the meanwhile accept the assurance of my affec- 
CONDUCTED BY AZILE. 
SONG. 
BY FRANCES S. OSGOOD. 
Call me pet names, dearest! Call me a bird, 
That flies to thy breast at one cherished word, 
That tenderly sings there in loving delight! liberty of seating myself in it for a moment, tionate regard. Minnie. 
Oh 1 my sad heart keeps pining for one fond word- } j that irre verence towards the shade -— -- 
Cali me pet namos, dearest! Call me thy bird! „ , . , , . unw Tfi uiddv 
of the mighty monarch, there might be in the HOW ill BE HArPi. 
Call me sweet names, darling! Call me a flower, ... , ,. , „ . - 
— ., „ f ,i,„ m ii„„, r hi,niip act, would be excused on the plea of my ha v- T . . . 
That lives in the light of thy smile each hour, . . , , . , U, , I will give you two or three good rules 
That droops when its heaven-thy heart-grows cold, ing a distinguished precedent, for Josephkne which hel y OU t0 become happier than 
That shrinks from the wicked, the false and bold yielded to the same impulse when she visited you would be without knowing them ; but as 
That blooms for thee only, through sunlight and shower; , , , v i . , , , , ,, ° ’ 
Call me pet names, darling ! Call me thy flower! tue P lace lu company with IS apoleon aud to being completely happy, that you can never 
_, .. Pol i^ nQCfOT . several other sovereigns. I do not know be till you get to Heaven. 
Gfl mn fnnd namA?i rlftarASt I Call me a star. O rill. . n 1 • 1 1 i j ^ .1 
HOW TO BE HAPPY. 
n VUIU WV VAVUOCU vu l/lic Mice* VI U1 r Uttt - T . - . . 
.... j . „ T I will give you two or three good rules 
ing a distinguished precedent, for Josephkne which ma J hel / you to become happier than 
yielded to the same impulse when she visited you would be without knowing them ; but as 
Call me pet names, darling ! Call me thy flower ! 
mo fond names, dearest I Call me a star, , ., t i f i i Tvatvv that in xuu ursi is, *■ try your oesi to matte Oiners lUH , wuiuoispny, 
Whoso smile’s beaming welcome thou feel’st from afar, Whether I have told you, KATET, that in , „ never waGiannv ” c-iidn certnin Till Earth and Sea shall pass away. 
Whose light is the clearest, the truest to thee Rome, a few days before Holy Week, while kiiU ^ “ till I began to take P pleasure in the PTOri ‘- N ' a. b. 
When the “ night time of sorrow” steals over life’s sea; wanderi through St . Peters , which was be- welfare of my So t ie but ever sTnce then in 7~--- --- 
Oh 1 trust thy rich bark, where its warm rays are, # ° & . wciuuc ui my peupie , uut ever smee uien, in (Written for Moore’s Rural New-Yorker.] 
Call me pet names, darling! Cali me thy star I ihg fitted up for the ceremonies at which the the darkest day, I have had sunshine in my Rj^MBLIN Q3 ^ SPRING - TIYIF SKETCH 
Call'me dear names, darling! Call me thine own ! 1 ope was to assist, I took occasion to seat, heart. , - 
. . tpc • i i • ii ,1 flPPAun rnlo ic ko unf h lift In 11 _ 
I do not know be till you get to Heaven. 
Eatey that in The first is, “ try your best to make others 
df kfriri> notseen the ingeniously concealed destitution, 
VJyflfllXv and want, and suffering. It had not seen him 
.,.....feuding the fevered, throbbing brow, over the 
Written for the Kura,” New-Yorkei-.. task by the “midnight Oil,” rOUSing the ex- 
OUR HISTORY. hausted energies again and again, till nature 
sunk, the eyelids closed—aud morning found 
Wb’re tracing lines on earth and air; the student still over his unfinished task — 
irr,;:*,! 1 What aM ? a11 Wta ^glorification 
Of love, or joy, or misery. °f “ indomitable will,"’ “ independence,” “ self- 
What, though no pen our acts record? education,” &c., to the gifted Valedictorian 
Mhe ret “™ «n, worn down 
Are written on the scroll of years. with the fatigue of protracted over-exertion ? 
They flash upon the ocean spray. How many a slumberer’s repose will this 
That dances in the light of day. uight be blest with dreams of home and loving 
SKatt-rtor”*”' teyWreams needing no interpretation. How 
All bear the impress man has giv’n— quickly would all his glory go could it but buy 
His acts on earth—his hopes of Heav’n. a sister’s kiss ! or an hour’s repose of home! 
NO winds, no storms, nor heaving tide, What wonder, if when he takes his couch this 
They’ll stand secure, their truth display, Bight, and the future crowd fast and dark upon 
Till Earth and Sea shall pass away. the past years of his course ;— nay, while his 
p.oria , N, Y„ less, ^ ^_ a. b. spirit faints before the fierceness of life’s battle, 
(Written for Moore’s Rural New-Yorker.] from to-morrow onward—what wonder, while 
LMBLINGS. — A SPRING - TIME SKETCH. he gazes into heaven ’f bejeweled dome, and 
- sues for strength of Him who had “ not where 
The Frost King’s power is broken! Spring, to lay his head,” if he also plead that He would 
Written for the Rural New-Yorker. 
OUR HISTORY. 
Wr’rs tracing lines on earth and air ; 
The desert wild, the garden fair 
Shall treasure up our history, 
Of love, or joy, or misery. 
What, though no pen our acts record? 
Though none repeat a thought, a word ? 
Yet all our hopes, and joys, and fears, 
Are written on the scroll of years. 
They flash upon the ocean spray, 
That dances in the light of day. 
The floating clouds, the drifting snow, 
The placid river in its flow, 
All bear the impress man has giv’n— 
His acts on earth—his hopes of Heav’n. 
No winds, no storms, nor heaving tide, 
The living characters can hide : 
They’ll stand secure, their truth display, 
Till Earth and Sea shall pass away. 
Peoria, N. Y., 1855. 
Call me pet names, darling I Call me thy star I 
Call'me dear names, darling I Call me thine own I 
Speak to me always in Love’s low tone I 
Let not thy look nor thy voice grow cold : 
Let thy fond worship my being enfold ; 
Love mo for over, and love me alone I 
Call me pet names, darling I Call me thine own I 
[Written for Moore’s Rural New-Yorker.] 
TRANS-ATLANTIC EPISTLES, 
TO COUSIN KATEY. 
Communicated through Moore’s Rural New-Yorker. 
myself for an instant in the very throne des- 
My second rule is, “ Be content with little.” 
There are many good reasons for this rule.— 
(Written for Moore’s Rural New-Yorker.] 
x* i a ,, Tj- tt i • j, ri at x t aic iiia-uy icaouiio iui mi a iuiu. A - - 
tinea to His Holiness. So you see that I, We deserve but little, we require but little, and the ca P nciou s but charming Queen, has co- fit and take him home ? Not so; the will that 
simple Republican, have occupied, surrepti- “ better is little, with the fear of God, than quetted him out of throne and sceptre, and has so bravely stemmed the past, never will 
tiously I must confess, the throne of the great treasures and trouble therewith.” Two seems disposed to rule alone. As yet her recoil. 
mightiest monarch that Europe has ever known, men were determined to be rich, but they set sway is fitful and capricious often more storm - 
and the pontifical chair of the great head of about it in different ways; for the one strove to thau sunshi th h the / e are times when , “ Gome- come,- come.” And the last 
iho rwhol,V nwcu tWgvpv raise U P hls means t0 his desires, while the ’ *.. _ _ tolhn g call to worship, trembling, has died 
NEW SERIES—EPISTLE EIGHTH. terms of equality as formerly. 
Journey from Berlin to Paris-Aix-la-Chapelle -Town The Cathedral conta ins an immense assort- ° f thlngS T ‘ 
House—Cathedral—Tomb of Charlemagne—Throne— 
Relics—Needle Factory—Brussels—French cars—Paris ment 01 rellCS, the largest probably Out of 
—First impressions. Italy. The most important of them called the 
Dear Katey :—It was a mild, spring-like “ Grandes Reliques,” are shown only once in 
day in which we left Berlin, and commenced seven years, from the 15th to the 2 Yth of July. 
o---- .... . „ ' . m.iui «uu uiuuuuus, uucu mure siorrn « „ . , 
and tile pontifical chair of the great head of about it indifferent ways; for the one strove to thau sunshi tho h tlerc ar , ; times when Come-come,-come. And the last 
the Catholic Church. However, I cannot say I 5f e «P m<ans to h B desires, while the nature ; 3 w f tt m Mte beaul tolling: call to worship, trembling, has died 
x T n t a , J other did his best to bring down his desires to , , B mv ^ lAiU W1U1 an cxquisiiL Dtauiy— unon the auiet Sabbalh pvpnino- 
that I feel ^ery much elevated by either of his means. The result was, the one who cov- a holy loveliness. The last smurster Boa 7, ?. 
these dignities, and think on the whole, I shall eted much was always repining, while he who Sit with me on this hill-side. A flood of , " .F . 1 s W0(,< an< Borne, 
associate with you, cousin Katey, on the same desired but little was always contented. warm sunlight pours down from the azure g ail J-colored leaves, one by one, are 
terms of equality as formerly. My third rule is, “ Look on the sunny side depths of heaven and the soffc south wind 8 ®“^ falhng the i earth ‘. 
----■■ — j --- ouuucuu UVUIO W\J W II 11UU1 LI1C UZfUIC n n* x n , , 
ft? third rule is, “ Look on the sunny side depths of heaveDj aud the soffc south wind gently falling to the earth. 
I>ook up with hopeful eyes 
Though all things seem forlorn ; xias vuuioucu uum uie vines—tue earm IS Dare i-a,,, 
The »„ that «, ,0 nig tit win r,.! a ud brown and scar. The distant, measured , g ’ c " rt * m falls 
Again to-morrow morn. Stroke of the woodman's ave, and the wood. “ Father mother ■ i ,,t 
The skrpprng lamb, the singing lark and the pecter - s rattli reveill ringiQg witt thcir 
leaping fish tell ns that happiness is not con- ..„. 
illiu lUC SUll bOUUl W1UU , i , . . ,, , 
v i xi xl rv„ , btranger, take no lamp into the chamber of 
sweeps lightly over the hills. The last snow 4U i • n ■ , , , uer OI 
, • T .I , x, x 7 • , the d y in g youth, but seek to get a foretaste of 
has vanished from the vales—the earth is bare j- ’ . , . 7 , UI 
And say 
“Father, mother, sister, brother, 
They are not all here.” 
our journey to Paris. AYe accordingly found The next exhibition will take place in 1860. fined to one place. God in his goodness has deep forest echoes ’ are tlie on] y sounds that when you see the passing spirit linger on those 
ourselves very comfortably situated in the So sacred is this ceremony held, and so highly spread it abroad on the earth, in the air and in break the solemn stillness. How pensive and lips to whisper— “Home.” 
second class cars, which we patronized on this is the privilege esteemed of obtaining a glimpse the waters. Two aged women lived in tne how sweet? It is a holy quiet! Nature lis- . - 
occasion. We had some agreeable German of them, that no fewer than 180.000 pilgrims same cottage; one was always fearing a storm, tening audient to her God! Man may not - ly grandfather met me at the garden gate, 
company, who manifested much interest in all resorted to the spot from all parts, in 1846 • ij d l ! 10 ot Be f was always looking for sunshine SCO rn such converse. lheie von t be irost enough to-night to kill 
that concerned the “ New World ” from which and in 1853 the number was stated to exceed Sg J? 0 wn, or whteh'it was" who* fncTwaj , Ah - are ™ions-real youth- ? m '' Kh ‘ 
thatconcerned the “ New World ” from which and in 1853 the number was stated to exceed d j ng fr 0wn , or'wliici 
we came, but who betrayed the same ignorance that. These relics were presented to Char- lighted up with joy. 
of its history, and its institutions, which we lemagne by the Patriarch of Jerusalem, and -— 
have already so often had occasion to remark, by Haronnal Raschid. They consist of the THE FE 
For instance, they were quite surprised to robe worn by the Virgin at the Nativity ; it - —“it cannot be! Life’s way is not so SUPERSTITIONS OF C I!F AT MUY 
learn that the majority of the inhabitants of is of cotton, five feet long; the swaddling The influence of the female mind over the thorny nor so dark! Where is the gloom or ' 1 " MEN. 
our cities were white persons of intelligence, clothes in which Jesus was wrapped, they are stronger mind of man, is greater, perhaps, sting? It is spring. The blade will start Most s-reat men lm-n h«»n c 
and evidently belonging to the better classes of of cloth, coarse as sacking, of a yellow color; oMretiom the bud wiU burst Again wiI! the summer The courier bringing a letter from England, in 
society. the cloth on which the head of John the Bap- fearfully to disengage’ themselves from it.— sunli g ht , streaming through upon the emerald wll ich the death of his old physician, Polidori, 
The first day brought us to Hanover, where tist was laid ; the scarf worn by our Saviour But this we believe, that more or less, all men car tB, flit with the full foliage, dancing to the was /^ted, Lord Byron remarked, “ I was 
we spent the night; the next to Aix-la- at the crucifixion, bearing stains of blood.— have felt its power ; and those perhaps have breeze. Then with the autumn, will the sear co,mnced ’‘‘at something unpleasant hung 
Chapelle, whose curiosities proved attractive So much for the traditional curiosities of this experienced it to the greatest extent who leaf fall, and the ripe fruit be gathered home, somebody know on ( b ° ar 
enough to detain us most of the following day. famous city, the description of which I have I^omaiTlo^man^/S cSrmf andTom ° h ! What a - ioy ifc is to live! Why need— Who can help being superstitious ?”™ Scott 
The most prominent of these are the Town borrowed freely from Murray’s guide-book. sequently, much of her power in the opinion of how can the spirit wrap 011 the wintry mantle believed in second sight. Rousseau tried 
House and the Cathedral; the former a large Aix-la-Chapelle is further famous for its min- many, when she ranges herself on the side of of deca Y> and suffer au untimely blight ? No, whether Be would be damned or not by aiming 
buildincr ereeted on the site of the mlace of the wal cnrlnm KmiwnnJ alum fU that, which iswromr: while it is itnnnssihle no: they do, who will—I cannot! T mn.v he a . a Ueewith a stone. Goethe trusted to the 
THE FEMALE MIND. infuses every nerve. I break into a soliloquy : 
- — “ It cannot be ! Life’s way is not so 
The influence of the female mind over the thorny nor so dark! Where is the gloom or 
Ah, those are gorgeous visions—real youth- ni,v v *°^ s ’ there,grandpa? ’ I might have 
dreams! The gushing life within me overflows. s P°B en impatiently, -‘All frost docs not come 
My heart is big with hope, and a fresh vigor ^”^ 55 ^ ’’ ’ °' M ‘ H ‘ 
fearfully to disengage 
AxuugicssTO ui iito Ituu low. wains ana anves. me town possesses several bad woman may be sudden and violent and J A ^“4““ every uusiacie. ui a. iruui ne naa noonea outot the water.— 
I In the grand saloon called the Hall of the manufactories of cloth and needles. AYe vis- compared to the bursting of a volcano, or the ^ yYH merit the esteem of the wise and the no- Byron on another occasion observed, “ Several 
Emperors, where the conferences were held, ited one of the latter, and were quite interested overflowings of the ocean ; but the influence of ble,and on my head shall descend the benedic- ^xtraorclinary things have happened on my 
are a series of modern frescoes, illustrating the in the multiplied processes by which this little a virtuous woman are like the gentle dew and tions of the lowly. Love, also, shall sweeten W?° leo °’ aud . ° 10re 
most important events in tire life of Char- instrument is brought to perfection. The ma- -"oraing showers which descend silently and every cup of life, and flowers shall strew my wedding soSngwS^rfTm?Ihat l wi 
lemagne, not yet entirely completed, and the jority of the persons employed in this manu- [ he Lffl^lspect"of anUthe l’ athwa 5'' Beann « balm t0 tb e broken-heart- signing my death warrant. At the last mo- 
whole apartment is being restored and filled factory were children, and it was painful to weight of the autumnal branches/ I ed ’ f soot Be the sufferer, and - ment J would have retreated if I could have 
up with a great deal of taste and judgment.— see their little forms bent over in such close __ Chilled by the damp earth, I started done so - I am a great believer in presentments. 
In another smaller room are the portraits of application, debarred from the pure air and A Fragment.-F or months she had journey- away ‘ Thc SUU had crept over the BiU, and monHo^rnd 00 !^^^^°I? k 
many of the distinguished men who assisted at varied exercise so essential to the healthful ed 011 the hills - and ever an ^ anon' caught the lengthening shadow of the forest lay, like warnings” Bvron had also 
these conferene^, and fail length pictures of development of childhood. thC g ?'Iv/‘ d er iffLT ^ , • ?T\ He »'>.«= refused to be. introduce,! tot 
N apoleon and J osephine, the former present, In the aftern00n we took the cars again, tion of a sun in mid-heaven-the sun of righ- . ° nder . 1 fr0st WOuld miss the s P riI 1 g- lad ^ v b f ause . jt was on Friday. On this ill- 
ed by himself, to the town. It represents him and a few fi ourg br0U(r ] lt us to Tirlemont. the teousness ! and she said , “ the passage must in £ violets—wish I could protect them all; starred day he would never pay visits. 
in his coronation robes, the imperial mantle W 1 - n +p r om - n , irn n WQ r o,n vr^ be safe where so many of the ransomed have these will I shield, and then how shall I look, -- » - - 
studded with the bees, which he chose for his ^ 0 ° pped for tte j ght , wSS ^ b !?“” ^ a “ Moonu-AUudiug to Tom 
device. Our guide, a loquacious old man, gave o]d friends> The nest morning we proceeded dark ’ and thc ford must Be near, for she hears are blasted - i3ut why bloom there in mockery1 Moore, Mr. Irving said that he took extraor- 
us a new version of the motives which led to -R r , 100 „i a to l- 7 tttoo f the surge of waters and listens to the roar of ^ a y, why not desolate that spot? Withered, (linai 7 pains with all he wrote. He used to 
this choice. He affirmed that it was because breakers that she cannot see! Weary and would they be less beautiful ? Earth bears no his poetry walking up and down a 
quite heavily, not pioving suthcient to coun- fearful she presses onward, for in the way she f Q ;_ 00 ]tn ,, .. gravel walk in his garden, and when he had a 
Napoleon, like the bees, had built his own teract the attractions of the Brussels lace, I cannot tarry, and from it she may not turn ' Ac beneath them restmg.— ii ne> a couplet, or a stanza polished to suit his 
house. Murray, an authority perhaps more t the a f tern00 n in shopping AYe took an aside! Down ’ down in the darkneKS . old J °r- l here came no guardian hand to him; yet the mind he would go to a little summer-house 
worthy of credit, explains it by the fact of express train for Paris the following morning, light b?eal/^ a f formoJ J ast ^ ave ” n g dickei ; Bis life-lamp was love- near by, and write it down He used to think 
bees being found as decorations of the imperial wh ; ch conducted us at the alarming speed of 25 radiance and a tone of music-’ ‘ I come,” said her thaa lts fullest ’ br,ghtest blaze ‘” ^ ^ fofwiks ° ’r T° Uld 
robes m the tomb of Clovis, the founder of miles hour We were in first class cars he, with the immortal vesture, “ for thy spirit c<n ‘—~ ^ Y ting f ?l;. a sin ?l® 
the French monarchy. However this may be, d , n f - f , , , ,, ’ to put on;” and the angel of the covenant One half of the world knows not how the „ L . ‘ . a 1( t was riding with 
it is certain that the bees are ao-ain in the d bad a good °PP°rtumty to contrast the furled his stainless wing and walked with her other half lives.” Then life has hidden cur- Mi. Moore m a cab, m Pans, and the driver 
0 comforts and accommodations upon German into the flood, while the gates on the other rents 9 carelessly drove into a hole in the pavement, 
ascendancy, and have entirely supplanted the an d French railways. AVe were supplied with side were open, for “ they are not shut at all u ' oc , • ,, which gave the vehicle a tremendous jolt.— 
time honored “fleur-de-lis,” which has so long f f t t 1 h , by day, and there is no night there!” 1 was stdl ia old college halls. The Moore was tossed aloft, and on regaining his 
decorated the escutcheon of French monarchs. “wT *7----wonted laugh and merry shout was hushed, seat, exclaimed, “ By Jove I’ve gotit.” “Got 
The Cathedral was originally a Chapel, These were exceedingly co^ffortablf for ^ Tea^ op To-day.-T here are tears of joy and The time had come, and all were gathered there 
, , n , , e 6 , • , xi .. ^ eeumgi} comJorTaDJe Ior tne tears of grief. The tear of to-day may not be in pride and loy—a final gathering. The hour j •‘ffY w ? rd ; " as the reply. “I have been 
built by Charlemagne, from which the city feet, and also answered every purpose for forced by the same cause which overflowed thee passed swiftly and now thev wait to Lmu U tr 7 n £ fo r it these six weeks, and now that 
derives its name. He designed it to be a warming the cars, as the latter are arranged yesterday. A tear may be sent up from the x- 7 , 1 ® rascal has jolted it out of me,” On reaching 
burial place for himself, and caused it to be upon a different plan from ours, not in W bear . fc b / W by sorrow. It is the same P^ang words. All strife has ceased and all his room, Moore inserted the word, andimme- 
i j • + 1 . r e rr i 0 i i , I ’ liquid diamond in either case. A little tear- rejoice that he who has so nobly earned should diately dispatched the finished sotid- tn flip 
constructed m the torn, of thc Holy Sepulchre saloons, but m small transverse seetions, each drip on the cheek has a language of its own. bir the laurel. How grace aud spirit blend publiAer £ Codon? “ 0 “ ^ Mr 
at Jerusalem. It was consecrated by Pope seating eight persons. Reached Paris in time D speaks to all nations. It is interpreted • l- „,pw a t 1TAl , r , • j , Irving “ was a most cantivatino- 
Leo 3d, with a ceremony worthy of its splen- to get comfortably settled before night, upon i . 1 J per80ns of a11 countr j p e f- The tear ^ • J 1 ™ ™ innin |’ and how <( ^ rn ’ and the sweetest ballad singer l fver heard.-7 
dor; ^three hundred and sixty-five Arch-bishops the Boulevards, where we see the world of which a well” comL, it seems as if the tremblfo- spirit No one could for g et him that heard him sing.” 
and Bishops were to be present at the solemni- fashion and business passing before our eyes, the fountain of joy or grief. A tear draws was inst about'to tnk-P if«ten -paAp ti b ai i —- 
ty, but unluckily two were missing, and there as in a moving panoramma. ' forth deep sympathy beease it is tlie emblem of . .{ . s ea >e 01 eartn. uii. Close of a Statesman’s Career.—A 
is no knowing what might have resulted if w e have bccn in ParIs uow a wppk hllt .. Love - f 1 ?°P, e ’ f or , of G . ricf - When it is grief ^ the cold world what that victory cost! and French paper states that Lord Brougham has 
, ,, 6 , , err -XT we nave been in J aris now a week, but if our pulse beats faster, for our heart is agitated bid it hush its lavish praises ! It had seen the placed the following iiwcrintion over the on 
two venerable prelates of I ongres, quietly re- you expect any detailed description of the and touched deeply The true feeling of the student at menial toil by the daylight hours trance door of his chateau at Cannes: 
posing in their graves at Maastricht, had not ctelifa W p In vp sppu in this fomerl 777 pfrAr.nl io heart is seen m a tear which lingers in the ,, A J _ .. . 
been so kind as to walk out and sunnlv the ’ we have seen m this lamed metropolis, that little bright window of the soul!- and haxl remarked his ever-cheerful mien, and ’i T ’ 
been so kind as to walk out and supply the you wdlbe disappointed. I can only say that The tears of to-day, if they do spring from deigned, perhaps, a flattering word, or an an- mu ? f, ?? ; /T 
vacant seats at the ceicmony so says the tra- j n some re spects it surpasses my expectations, grief, may to-morrow be wiped away by the nrovins- smite Tt find kporH Llm eel- That is, 1 have reached my haven ; hope 
vacant seats at the ceremony—so says the tra¬ 
dition of the place. 
disappointed. I can only say that The tears of to-day, if they do spring from deigned, perhaps, a flattering word, or an ap- 
in some respects it surpasses my expectations, grief, may to-morrow be wiped away by the proving smile. It had heard him ask the 
in others it falls beneath them. The magnifi- rainbow lmcs of peace, happiness and prosper- vice which it deemed too menn for nm, k„f 
ser- and fortune, farewell; ye have sported with 
The 1 Jbtenof‘the tomb in which once re- Z Tff wk ^ vice which 5t deemed -ean for any but the me enough, now find ’another du^- 7 Lord 
The position of the tomb in which once re- cence of the shops, and the amount of display J e JournaL 1 serf or slave ; and shrinking from the cheapen- Brougham’s French neighbors construe this as 
posed the mortal remains of Charlemagne, is m dress and equipage, are the things which -_ ing of such flesh and blood, had refused • but it “ an announcement of his intention to retire 
marked by a large slab of marble under the impress the stranger most, and in these Paris No Mother.— ” She has no mother!” What had .not seen the struggles with that pride f )’° m public life ’ and to pass the reraa >nder of 
centre of the dome, inscribed with the words, cannot be equalled. The churches, palaces, a volume of sorrowful truth is comprised in w liich armied—“ sHbt-va iw „ 0 i 1 da .Y s am ong them m the genial climate of the 
“CaroloMagno.” The vault below was opened and other public buildings, might dazzle a JBat single utterance—no mother! Deal gent- b d „ . ,.7 •, A ‘ v , ai1 ^ ar> However that may be, the adoption of 
• got Hr- „„„ o 7 > xi iv • .. „ ly with the child. Let not the cup of her sor- be denied. And then it had not seen the sink- such a motto, at the end of the career of such 
in the yea . 9 1 , y 0 ' d > after Pope person fresh from the republican simplicity of rows be overflowed by the harshness of your ing of that heart when thus repulsed, and turn- a brilliant statesman, is a very instructive fact. 
1 aschal 3d had made Charlemagne a Saint, our own land, but on one who has already bearing, or your unsympathizing coldness. Is ing, he knew not whither. It had not seen the s t ands forth, like Solomon at the end of 
He found the body of Charlemagne, not re- gazed upon the exceeding splendors of Italian she Beedless of her doings?—forgetful of duty ? « widow’s nmn ond nvUte” ctetetex, c,. ^ life, writing “vanities of vanities” on all. 
clining in his coffin, as is theusual fashion of the architecture,,Ley produce much lesseffee,.- „ 7-1-- 
dead, but seated on his throne as one alive, The Museums are remarkable for the perfect __ a ( m _love—had not seen those stifled siuhs ui -e 1 Ge s1ow to choose a friend and slower to 
clothed in the imperial robes, bearing the neatness and order in which they are kept, and 1 Fi , V ’ *,T 7 ~. , tn hifter fA,. iLa *1 *i glv p acc change him, courteous to all, intimate with 
x • i j i , 6 „ P xi 7-7 vx . x, , J 111 ° 'u-pi,, aou God hears the heart without words—but he 10 outer tears for the loss of that loved obstacle few : scorn no man for his nnvertv bonnr nn 
sceptre in his hand, and on his knees a copy of for the liberality with which they are thrown never hears words without the heart. -the last of earthly kindred. The world had man for his wealth. 17 ’ ° U ° 
Y . - * , uu am-muer, sue nas no rnotner i 
dead, but seated on his throne as one alive, The Museums are remarkable for the perfect . __ 
clothed in the imperial robes, bearing the neatness and order in which they are kept,and .i i x -xv. x j 
sceptre in his hand, and on his knees a copy of for the liberality with which they are thrown never hears words without the Heart 
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