MOORE’S RURAL NEW-YORKER: AN AGRICULTURAL, LITERARY AND FAMILY NEWSPAPER, 
CONDUCTED BY AZILE. 
Written for Moore’s Kura! New-Yorker 
“OUR PET.” 
BY IDA FAIRFIELD* 
Wh have a little favorite, 
The fairest of ail things, 
Should you see her, you would call her, 
A cheruh without wings ; 
Or a fairy, bird or blossom— 
You may call her what you will, 
To each she bears resemblance, 
But herself is better still. 
Her hair is soft and golden 
As the petals of a flower ; 
Her eyes, the blue forget-me-not 
In summer’s softest hours ; 
Her voice is low and joyous 
As the warble of a bird ; 
Her step, like rustling blossoms, 
By evening zephyrs stirred. 
Her motions are tho fairy’s, 
So full of witching grace, 
And you read her guileless nature, 
In the sunshine of her face. 
A pretty April blossom, 
A bright bird of the wild, 
A fairy, or a cherub, 
She yet is but a child. 
You should see our little Alioe, 
In her robe of lily white, 
As she steals about on tip-toe 
To kiss us all “ good night.” 
Should see her clasp her dimpled hands, 
Beside her little chair, 
And with tongue that falters often, 
Lisp out her little prayer. 
You should see,—but I’d forgotten, 
It is only “ our sweet pet,” 
To others, but a common child 
To glance at, and forget. 
A child ! a free, glad-hearted child, 
Has Earth a thing more fair ? 
Holds Heaven a richer treasure, 
Than the bright ones gathered there ? 
Independence, N. Y., 1855. 
PLEASANT MEMORIES. 
bush!” He had witnessed the process of 
candle dipping, and fancied a resemblance 
between the icicles and the candles in the early 
stfge of their formation. 
Girlhood succeeded childhood. On a high 
bluff of the “ Silver Wave ” I stood. A hun¬ 
dred stone steps, and a long ascent beside, 
raised me high above the bottom laud that 
stretched along the river. A thick white fog 
totally obscured all below me, and I wonder¬ 
ed how any person could breathe beneath 
that thick pall. Behind me came up the suu 
to dispel every obscuring illusion. Then 
upon the surface of that fog there wa-3 pic¬ 
tured, as upon a dim mirror, everything on 
the hill tops 1 This while sheet spread itself 
along the tortuous course of the river, as iu 
and out it wound among the bluffs. Their 
summits high and clear showed many a shad¬ 
ow of forestland and bright spot of cultivated 
field and meadow. Soon this white pall be¬ 
gan to heave and swell and move like the 
wav es—then it broke and separated and rolled 
its misty scrolls up—up—all about me. I 
was now in a most unmistakable fog, through 
which the near fences even were scarcely dis¬ 
cernible. The sun was obscured. I kept my 
position on the “horse block ” where 1 sat, 
though drenched and risking an ague—await¬ 
ing the re illuminating of this fair scene.— 
Thinner and thinner grew the floating wreathes 
WAR STRIP! OP ITS IINSRLRY. [Co,tlm.eJ frompage 324, this number ]. 
_ “ No one would suspect, any Virginian of 
Wii at, speak Tig in quite unofficial language, that, ai d least of all M r. Willoughby Garter, 
is the net purport and upshot of war? To But 1. am real'y at loss to divine what it is 
my own knowledge, for example, there dwell you have to communicate. 
tTT , Q "^ f nrTHif Rn 7TTVr;WHEEL and toil in the British village of Dumdrudge “ My daughter sir-” 
HE SOUND OF THE LITTLE Vv IILEL. ^ a: , me fiye lumdred s;)uls . From the e, “ I an certainly not aware of anything,” 
rv WM e c knowi.fs by certain “ natural enemies” of the French, replied Herman, “ with which Mub Carter ib 
by wM. e. _* km>» S. t 4 re are successively selected during a French connected that can give me pam. _ 
,s i hear now the hum of a nttie wheel, war sa y th rty able-bodied men. Bum- “ I have then been .mistaken, exclaimed 
From*a wayside cottager’s door, drudge at her own expense, has sucked and Mr- Garter, suddenly rising, whilst hi3 lace 
am sure that a matron, with tireless zeal, nursed ’ them ; she has, no t without difficulty became flushed all over. “I have been un¬ 
is increasing her i : nen store : and sorrow fid them up to manhood, and even warranted in supposing that you feel att&ch- 
herc’s a table-spread meded, and tewd and sheet, . , tQ crafta g0 tbat one can wea y e , ment to my daughter ?” 
■hough the custom of spinning is now oosoiete. m0{h » r bn i d, another hammer, and the weak- “ Indeed, sir, _ I do feel a very strong at- 
md the thread in the tube is the thread to wear, ^ can s ^ all d uuder thirty stone avoirdupois, tachment lor M’.ss Emily Carter.” 
For a nice, careful dame like her Neverthe'ess amid much weeping and swear- The old gentleman stared at him an instant,, 
louidn’t spin any other if she would bear they are’selected, all dressed in red, and and then re-seated himself very deliberately, 
Still her former good character : t 1)q p charge some two a3 if to gain time for consideration. 
... ror .Hon. .tat .l„ spin, K d Sf or Jv oriv to to South of “ Ah, wdl-that'a the point. I wish to 
ind you’ll find that no gloss on t e sur .co Spain • ami lt d there Till wanted. And now, prevent a disappointment. It is better for 
ts the wind sways the vines at the door way south, f , ’ ot iu tbe g outb 0 f Spain, are jou to learn from my lips than from Emily’s 
thirty similar French artisans, from a French that it is impossible that she can ever become 
Winding on to the burdened spool : Dumdrudge, iu like maimer wending; till at your .ie. , , ,, 
Jhe wheeled the flier revolve to the tread, length, after infinite effort, the two parties “I am grieved to the heart-but assuredly 
And the Angers are busy in shaping the thread. c0 ° e into actual juxtaposition ; and thirty I never knew of any prior attachment, or I 
j fwrvwtivno- thi.-tv paph with a <nm in his would by no means have suffered my thoughts 
Ml the day long T hear but that little vheel, stand froattag "‘“^,5“”'?™ to wander as far as they have.” ’ 
From the wayside cottager »door , it ■ • . , ^ la out of one another ; “ I have said nothing, sir, of an affection 
And am certain the matron, with tireless zeal, and they b.OW the SOU IS OUT, 01 one ano liter , , „ 
is increasing her linen store : and iu place of sixty brisk, useful craftsmen, the * , j , , 
And the sound sots mo thinking ofiahor and thrift, world has sixty dead carcasses, which it must Indeed, Mr. Carter, such seemed the na*- 
With a surplus of linen for many a gift. bury and are w shed tears for. Had these ural inference from your cec.aration. 
--~~* - — - *-r men any quarrel ? Busy us the devil is, not “ M r ^ v 8 °' sir • „ , 
DISCOURAGEMENTS. the smallest ! They lived far enough apart; 
_ were the entirest strangers. Nay, in so wide Herman, it amounted to tms, nrnt there is 
A man must be born to a lot above that of a universe, there was even, unconsciously, by 
mimon humanity, who goes through life thenT 'simplefo^Thei? gov- hie. I can very wellcomprehend that I may 
Written for Moore’e Rural New-Yorker. 
THE SOUND OF THE LITTLE WHEEL. 
BY WM. E. C. KNOWLES. 
As I hear now the hum of a little wheel, 
From "a wayside cottager’s door, 
I am sure that a matron, with tireless zeal, 
Is increasing her linen store : 
There’s a table-spread needed, and tewd and sheet, 
Though the custom of spinning is now obsolete. 
And the thread iu the tube is the thread to wear, 
For a nice, careful dame like her 
Couldn’t spin auy other if she would bear 
Still her former good character : 
It’s for service alone that sho spins and weaves, 
And you’ll And that no gloss on the surface deceives. 
As the wind sways the vines at the door way south, 
And tho list by the matron’s stool, 
Thei o’s a flexible tonguo from an iron mouth 
Winding on to the burdened spool: 
For the wheel and the flier revolve to the tread, 
And the flngors are busy in shaping the thread. 
All the day loDg I hear but that little wheel, 
From the wayside cottager’s door ; 
And am certain the matron, with tireless zeal, 
Is increasing her linen store : 
And the sound sots mo thinking of labor and thrift, 
With a surplus of linen for many a gift. 
DISCOURAGEMENTS. 
- - cornmuu liuuHum.;, *- 0 - • . „ airnnlptnn ' tlipir frnv- Die. i can very weu comprenena mat 1 may 
to tot cloud taL « U ’ helhrivere'< ia,ir « t0 . b “^ ernota bad fallen out, and instead of shooLg not jvove pleasing to Mifa Carter i yet enrely 
to their cloud hemes. “La belle nvere with discouragements aud misfortune ; and he ore mother' had the cunning to make these the time is too short for her already to have 
gleamed in beauty, washing the quay ot the obablylbe most fortunate, who meets and ‘ blockheads shoot.- Carlyle. come to so peremptory a conclusion. You, 
thriving village, and shining up and down her L / tb in the period 0 f early man- 1 --—- sir, have given me explicit assurances of your 
course like a thread of edver, between the ^ youog m;n without fortunes, THE DEAD. ^fh»tL*S£? 
dark green settiLg oe ei ci .a and thrown frequently upon their own re- . , . . , , on my part an abrupt termination of the 
Girlhood had opened into maidenhood when j in life as they see the avenues to The population of the globe is estimated tshi f „ 
a party of us after a weary night in the old- J Ued UT) ’ with 4 ose favored by ae- at 900 000,000 It is also estimated that a „ ^ , sir ; can there not be some other 
fashioiwd stage coach, paused upon one of AU “ "o? lonuectiou, but whofe in- , , , , 
legbany’s summits so see the sun rise. Menu- ^ merlte are really no better than their ^tSS Kcry century. As' the present 
tains were piled all about us till their tops ^ ar0) after many vain efforts and repulses, population of the earth has increased from a .. Yon mugt f/ ow that famil here 
amd the clouds seemed confusedly to mmgle. occagiona]] driyen to despair. This, how- single pair, created about sixty centuries ago, the o]d gent i eman straightened himself in his 
Some in bold sharply cut peaks others m thanks to the hopes and aspirations of cn e ball of the present popu a ion nng i e cba j r; « j 3 one no t undistinguished, and which 
more swelling roundness. Some standing ’ VO rnelnsTommon. Tebuffs and *** always been ^particular to make alliances 
7TT . * . more Bwemug . 7 ° youth, is by to means common. Kebuiis ana who have awav during each of the one 
There are some little bright spo.s in every loftily alone-others grouped in a jumbled J int ^ ents are speedily overcome, and h ' and I? a] a J d ei gbty periods, or thirds of cen- 
- 4h£XY7 GPPm Tint, to 1__ _r» rJ Cmmmito O '"'H hftrP I* _ . . . 1 _ 1_ 
wh’ch shall entail no deterioration of blood.” 
The suitor’s countenance at this word sud- 
one’s history, which though they seem not to heap . wooded sides and summits and bare put f ^ rth . WSSfSS, dearth may have beeu and hfbShS KTrt 
amount to much at the time—from being often peakg and acclivities-wild gorges ar.d unap- Thefe buffstiEg8 of an adverse fortune, are inhabited, which would give 8 100 000,000 n ® v ^ from s ^ me oppressive burden? ’ 
recalled and re-experienced, come to be treasur- proacba ble chasm?. f . fi ite £dvantsff e to the future man ; they for the whole number who have lived on the „ Jg that all> sir _ j real)y thought that in 
ed more and more, and are looked back upon The March winds howled through the bare n r nreliminarv training through eart R Allowing au average of three square this country all such distinctions had long 
as the gems that dot oar life’s experience. Do forest t0 „ gbs Dear vs, and soow lay „» fhe ^ to ‘wf'StaffK aSSy since been fLo^n away, but ifit be a taa.to? 
not these little incidents even at the time of poufld . But below us smtled fair verdant ^ f / r all the ^ies of life. Thetodi- ^ 0 “ °24 300 000 000 sq.ie feet & ™ 
their transpiring leave their influence on the valleys with their green trees and shrubs- ^ 7 ^ ftU his earlier years sails earth. Dividing this by 27,878 400, the man- ^ D e Witt who, as Gmnd Pensionary 
heart and understanding ? Do they not wake and low floating clouds hung on the mountain & M gea wboge bark m€ ets with no ber of square feet in a square mile, gives less Qf IIollan(l ba8 securcd our name a place in 
up hidden recesses of thought and feeling . sides below us. There was an added fascina- , , ,-j tbe VO y a p e of life is well e ’»^, hundred and seventy two square b j g ^ ory> Though he was torn in pieces by 
and develop something within us we knew tion in the thought that we were there alone, " H ;+n • iji p w ;]i be au ite , mi e3 ’ Y] n< ? b would afford su lcicn room to tbe people over whom he ruled, and his flesh 
_ i r 1 • O _ _ - _ . l) U LI cl UiftGlU v» tivov ~ --- • tiiJJ J , . l Al.i7llttUUj u«o oovuieu vui uuuio c* l uvv 
up hidden recesses of thought and feeling . sides below us. There was an added fascina- , i„ s UD |ji | be vovaae of life is well hundred and seventy two squar b j s t ory . Though he was torn in pieces by 
and develop something within us we knew tion in the thought that we were there alone, " . " j m ; dd i e nas^aae will be quite mile3, which would alford su mien room o t he people over whom he ruled, and his flesh 
not even JS a germ .bevel I wonder if tae Mated from J reef of.be world Toosoon ^ SS ^ S* 
treasuring of these little memories is a hobby the impatient driver, thinking of the ham and win / and tempeat finally come. This is one auffic3 to cover the little State of Rhode lf Iad cS- ab ! But however tht rnay be 
of mine? Somehow I seem to have collected eggs and co&ee in the valley beyond^ obliged reason wby s0 many 0 f those born to wealth, Island. _ as you yourself have just observed, it is usual 
a quantity of them. As I look into the past QS t0 cu t short our cloud and mountain gaz- ^ wbo bave never ; u ear i y Hf e learned to outp tj nn<avu& nrTiTTiYV in th5s couutr Y to P a Y more res P €ct to present 
they come up thick and fast to delight me.— i ng . Elsie. coalend w i t h discouragements and to overcome 1HL IlUl tbL b lLIillUxN. distinctions than to ancestral honors.” 
But ata 1 iu this all pracUcal pr^eut of mine w„. _ _them, sink at Inst under an accumulated load tle a of John , KiD g of Abruazo, ^^Vow'eufXtg SLf’a^ riS/t 
I scarce have t.me to gl:ance: at ‘icm-and but ^ iKscnimox.-In Trinity of poverty aud misfortune. It is vastly p'eas- ttee WM a bc ll put up, which any one that aS yeuu | \ think I possess- 
few moments to spare 1 " . " c church-yard, there is an inscription on a tomb ant and comfortable to have a paternal roo., had received any injury went and rang, and w jth such a prize in view I know it—industry 
Could I but make these treasured things shine singularly aud affectirgly beautiful,_ we UI der whose sacred shade no hardship or evil the king assembled the wise men chosen for and energy. No very long period may—” 
for others pleasure—might I not thus excuse cannot forbear to record it, and the emotions ; n fl uence ; s ever permitted to enter; but it is the purpose, that justice might be done. It « Excuse me, Mr. Be Witt. Since you 
ffice to cover the little ^iiite ol itliode «Indeed—ah! But however this may be, 
an “- __ a g you yourself have just observed, it is usual 
tot pnnoif’i* PFTmnv in th5s COUQtr y to P a y more ^P 6 ^ to P r ese nt 
iHL liUlloli 0 1 LliiiUiN. distinctions than to ancestral honors.” 
,777 rr- r ., “Is it a distinction of property, sir, that 
In the days of John, l\ 1D g ;>ruz 7 0 / you are now enforcing ?|1 am not rich, in- 
« Vvr>11 -rxiif nr* xirhmh onY7 nnp t hn t *L ° m- . ^ . * -r 
, . « , Ti • Al - - . 1 • 1 ,, ; yuu UlC HUYY cuiuium:: lavaw nv/u, au- 
A Beautiful Inscription. —In Trinity of poverty and misfortune. It is vastly p there was a bell put up, which anyone that deed . i a m young. % think I possess— 
rch-yard, there is an inscription on a tomb an t and comfortable to have a paternal roof, had received any injury went and rang, ar-d w ^ b gucb a pr i ze } n view I know it—industry 
singularly aud affectirgly beautiful, we ULder w hose sacred shade no hardship or evil the king assembled the wise men chosen lor ener g y _ very i on g period may—” 
not forbear to record it, and the emotions inflaeccais ever permitted to enter; but it is £ e If t“ “Excuse me Mr De VVitt Since yon 
A 1-f+in ,r,;iA nf civ vpars—I stole softly a slab stone, on wmen are aeepiy cut me ml- iutu lc ^ -- ^ A . r V ‘Y, ty 1 do not impsacn, dui wmen are yet very 
A little child of six years 1 stole so y words . world after bis moral principles are well es- there was a knight of Atri who had a nob e d -j fferent from tbose to which genteel—to 
from my bed while others were s.eepmg. Prom “ my mother. tablished, to build up for himself his own for- charger, which was become unserviceable wb j cb —to which, in fact, Emily has beeu ac- 
between the rose-encircled pillars of a high soun(i ^ ^ imi ahM ^ Now acd then, indeed, we see instances W. s “ ttat -^° ^“to^'np^the c ” 8 ff 1 If' eir ’ for me tD say 
portico I saw the glorious sun arise for the first n , c „ of ia herU«3 wealth or ancestral talents and ttis is a deeolv hter . 
time that I can now call to remembrance. There are no other letters or characters to bonor8 handed down and preserved in undi- £(1 bis moutb to the vine to munch it, by p^fn^p^biecV'aD^^no particularity can^be 
Yery still I sat, curled up on a seat, with my be f oun d on the slab or pile. If there is one m j Q ^ bed i us tre; but where one such instance which the bell was sounded. The judges as- exceS g- ve » ’ 1 
head leaning against the balustrade, gaziDgin inscription in the thousand language that ^ ^ out tundreds 0 f others are sembled to consider the petition of the horse, <( We] , will not deny that you are a 
childish wonder and admiration at the bnl- are, or have een, o ear ^ period 0 f seen where the founder of the fortune or the whueh appeared tio demand justice. ^iey work i ng m an—a working man, sir ?” 
, . . t LapV in the veran- sublime meaning tcrougn every penoa oi -eea vi decreed that the knight whom he had served « Varv im« • »nd T am desc“nded and you 
hant orient. 1 wandered back to the veran ^ up f() ^ resurre ction morning, it is th s. win rer of the honors has arisen from the vale . Q ljig youth sbould fee d him in his old age; a believe are^descended from one to 
dah and looked out from among the jess Tbe wrber g ee med aware that names wou'd of low obscurity. sentence which the king confirmed under a , ’ A ordained as a necessity that by 
mines and passion vines—then irom every be f or g 0 tten, and titles lade from the memory j t ■ a trait of natural affection in the par- heavy penalty. tbe awe at of his brow be should support his 
open window to see the sky, and the different of the world. He, therefore engraved the &Qd orc fouD(Jfcd upon tbe purest and -1-—-- . exLtence ” 
lights which the North and South, East and ““e by fl bj “J J ^ ? holiest attributes of the human soul, to remove Greatest Thing in a City.—I t is plain «p s haw! pshaw! I shall not engage in 
West presented. I. seem now to catch the ^ p b . ir J b ’{ 0 f 'mother shall sound a thrill all evils and hardships from the path of the off- truth, and yet how little understood, that the any discussion of this sort. A regard—a need- 
fragmnee of Bweet yinc th= ^ heart of ey ’ one who may «er spring; butlhatcontae isnot the tat to render ^"‘“locT; b nt the ■SK^tohiT in'" S 'aWmrnne 0 , 
melody of birds. I delight anew in the ]ean over this fonumental pne. If any shall tbe latter self-reliant, and ensure their future mecbanic w h 0 builds them is greater than pal- wbat i should have said explicitly - my 
brightness and beauty of dewy flower garden wish to know further of her, wno had a c prosperity. Many a father’s heart has been aces _ Human nature, in its lowest form, in daU{ rhter can only marry a person of her own 
and lawn, and overhanging boughs—glisten- to engrave R^r most end S ad ; pa } ned ar .d many a mother’s affections tor- the most abject child of want, is of more s t a tion, a gentleman. 1 use tbe word iu its 
ingin those early glancing rays. I feel my- rock, he the risimr of the d-ad tured with apprehension, when their young worth than all outward improvements. You 0 ld and proper signification. You, sir, pro- 
^ BonsUe comjwHed to b id adieu^to the pater- 
and heart expande I - “**"*’*, ■ U , nal roof, and seek employment and a home but be j 8 s till great. You may shut him out “ Greater explicitness is indeed unnecessa- 
strange thoughts that awoke wUun me. — Mras Nightingale. —This lady is about urder that of strangers, and they feel full 0 f your houses; but God^pens to him heav- ry » rep iied Herman, rising and making a 
On a bright December morning while still thirty years of age ; her manner and counte- po jg nan t] y t be words of the poet: enly mansions. He make3 no show, indeed, bo ’j? as he put his hand on the door knob, 
a child I stood on the banks of the Chata- nance are prepossessing, and this without tbe „ M the unwelcome hour has come, in the streets of a splendid city ; but a clear « stop ! Listen to me a moment. I have 
hoodie and beheld for the first time, a river, possession of positive beauty fete has tram- th0 ’ tran3plante a from thy gonial home, thought, a pure affection, a resolute act of a made known to you an impossibility. It is 
hooche and omeia jor wji , ^ hergelf t command and learned the value Must flnd a ’ colder soil) a bl0 aker air, virtuous will, have a dignity of quite another only because it is an impossibility that I have 
None can again so imp. e. of conciliation toward others and restraint And trust for safety to a stranger’s care.” kind, and far lrgher than accumulations of dec i are d it. I wish still to possess your 
ness of width and depth—though others far oyer berge if. Her nerve is wonderful ; I have ^ often h&g ^ - ef> botb to br } c k, and granite, and plaster, and stucco, friendship.” 
outvieing it in these respects as well as beau- bee n with her at very severe operations ; sue , ,, _ rnvpd i ike cbar it v however cunningly put together, as though Herman answered in a very calm tone, “ I 
in the streets of a splendid city ; but a clear « gtop! Listen to me a moment. I have 
thought, a pure affection, a resolute act of a made known to you an impossibility. It is 
virtuous will, have a dignity of quite another on ] y i) CCail/Se it is an impossibility that I have 
kind, and far lrgher than accumulations of dec i are d it. I wish still to possess your 
Hark M , do“l " fJZZTZi Z the parents and the child proved, like charity, 
-hear the breakin, o f Lv. the soiemn ^ SZZgL. 
roll of deep waters as these sounds for thejirst ^ feyer _ T he more awful, to every sense, f sd^iauce and an energy of pur- 
stretching far beyond our sight.— Clumnin<. 
Herman answered in a very calm tone, “ I 
thought that friendship connected equals, and 
could not possibly exist between a gentleman 
6 v. her to spend hours over men dying oi cnoiera ships .discouragements, are overcome at msi, -y- m, . n ct n nH a vacant However sir as the distinc- 
roll of deep waters as these sounds for thejirst a M awful to ever, = a of seiWiance and an energy of pur- jKv«7inSi w.Ta dale aip^ed ta ESSSSL * me, I 
tme so strangely met my ears . Mists we y particular case espe^any if it wm th are ac ired> wbicb) in t he end, lift the 1455 j ust lbur centuries ago this wry year, can continue to feel the same esteem as here- 
creeping up the steep on the opposite side 0 f a dyinp; man ^£ you „ g man up to eminence and prosperity Nine years after, the Koran began to be More for Mr. Carter and-his family.” 
chased by the early sunlight. The winter seen bending over JLJL ? nrri " urate even to his own sanguine hopes ; publicly read at Constantinople, and at the [Concluded next week.] 
never saw a mountain or scarceever an icicle. rp UE bread 0 f life is love ; the salt of lifeis oiseveiar.ee t 
No wonder that a little brother exclaimed, work; the sweetness of life, poesy; the water oveicome ien 
“ look! look 1 what dat ? dat candles on dat of life, faith.— Mrs. Jameson. mate triumph. 
w,—^ — -r- rr to his young man up to eminence anu prosper!iy j\ ine years alter, me ivorau uegau iu oe toioic iu.. -. j- 
chased by the early sunlight. The winter Ken beo^K seldom commensurate even to his own sanguine hopes ; publicly read at Constantinople and at the [Concluded next we*.] 
wind sighed among, the pmes-not very coldly bi „ side till death released him.- aud he, who went forth amid doubt aud dark- same time the Bible was sent forth on the — - . 
it is true—in that pleasant clime—but enough q n 3, wv B^iTur from a wings of the press, to the four quarters of the Moral Fragrance.— “ What a pity,” said 
to7 adde „ a Dartinn scene wilt some betwwn Osbornes S Maru __ hke • 'enlurons bark emerging irem a wQr fc d (o cou J tcract its banefu | in |l uence ._ a , mte boy his ralber , a , , b ey walked 
, , -P JL , d Hvpr lias since > v a- T* r To win srfl friendly port to encounter adverse winds and ^ nd f rom that day to this the civilized world through the garden, “that the rose, after 
whom and I ma y a b o The approbation of our familie., ho tempests, returns again in maturer years to be 0 f Plarope and America is indebted for that blooming, does not produce fruit, aud thus 
rolle(i - with us in our secret hours, hear our pnva ^ Bt and golace 0 f b j s aged parents- superiority which no second night of igno- re turn a’ thank offering in summer, for the 
Again in that same month on the Cumber- converse, know habits o our lives ana difficult period in a man ’ g career is ranee can darken, no new incursion of Van- lovely season of its spring life. Now, it is 
career is ranee can darken, no new incursion of Van- lovely season of its spring life. Now, it is 
i i. l\ _ X ___1* ~ i* n • __J *__ Ihnn 
—- -—* . 7 i ... • 0 i 1An ij M r iHip mnqt flitiim tnenod in a man s career is rnuuc uau uameu, uu iuvumiou v * » iuyuiy hcusuu ui no ** — 
land and Blue Ridge Mountains, I distinctly the bent of our dispositions, is, or s , . • 1 removes from dalism cau overthrow, to an enlightened, con- called the flower of innocence and joy ; then 
recall many a stran-e scene. There were to us, far morepleasing and t™mph«at hw probably that at which he first removes Iran fc . cieutiou3) iudependent press. Those four it would be also the emblem of gratitude.” 
• J : ° v aT , d fi01pbre w ith the shouts of the multitude, or the worsh p the sustaining hands of his parents, and staits bundred yeara have changed the face of the The father answered, “ Does it not offer all its 
mormn B s dawning grey - som 1 the world. . off in a manly and self-supporting career.— wor ld .—Philadelphia Sun. loveliness to beautify the spring; and, for the 
masses of heavy leaden clouds hanging about - ^ fidenc J of the b]ic must be WO n; --- *hnv«. 
the piled up peaks on every side. Tree and The consciousnesslof good mtentions, how- ^ &nd bis wim 
mornings aawnmg grey , , . the world. . off in a manly and self-supporting career.— wor ld .—Philadelphia Sun. loveliness to beautify the spring; and, for the 
masses of heavy leaden c.ouds Ranging a om ; h The confidence of the public must be won;---- dew aud light which it receives from above, 
the piled up peaks on every side Tree and The conscionsneBS of good ^ntions, how- ^ & t() form bis part and bis williEg . The Btudy of literature nourishes youth, does it not fill the air with its delicate fra- 
leaf and twig sheathed in icy sleet and ice ever Jo patur J e 7 tban aU the ness to do so must be established, and a thou- entertains old age adorns prosperity, solace grance? Thus, like gratitude 
drops pendant wherever they could s^mo ^ c&1) be furDis hed, either for sand other obstacles and discouragements to deh « htful a t Rome and unobtru- charm Tdies wifo 
obtaiDic ^ ° ne ’ B d23ire ° r (1U1GtiEg tLe miDd - be overcome that his after life knows not of. 81ve ab !!^___ fhe spring but Tte lithS feaves retain a 
mei y upon e memory ... " " l. 1 T 77” f • Perseverance and an integrity of purpose will An hour of honest labor will give any man portion of its sweet fragrance so iu the heart 
them all, and leud Lim on loan ulU- a better appetite tla„ all tbe root* betweeo of innoeeace, do M _ if r»tituto a ..de after to 
here and Egypt. 
kind deBd which called it forth is forgotten.’ 
