aL mcapeR Ome inaencrtinisilliNscneenenecaitllt Le ee a THE EX ARIN GS a. ah V4 3 Ye\" Ll i 3 ga A AY ul if 2 TO KATE. I’m thinking of the time, Kate, When sitting by thy side, And picking beans | gazed on thee, And felt a peacock’s pride— In silence feaned we o’er the pan, And neither spoke a word: But the rattling of the beans, Kate, Was all the sound we heard. an ~ . x SSE Ter Thy auburn curls hung down, Kate, And kissed thy lily cheek ; Thy azure eyes, half filled with tears, Bespoke a spirit meek— To be socharined as { wag then, Had ne’er before occurred When the rattling of the veans, Kate, Was all the sound we heard. I thought it was no wrong, Kate, So leaning o’er the dish, As you snatched up a lot of beans, 1 snatched a nectar’d kiss— A sudden shower made blind my eyea i neither saw nor stirred, But the rattling of the beans, Kate, Was all tha sound f heard. THE BRIGHT SIDE OF HUMANITY em wn a: SCR Ee en = Pew mae © Paes , ; we jedan —_ < eee ere : cee jconcern. Will it be credited, that inthe midst of the}soothing is a word dictated by a good disposition! It is ' : , i . . , , r ’ * »} > . ne 5 \ : » f ; f jintidelity of the revolution, whispers went ef miracies| sunshine falling on his heart. He happy, and the ‘| performed by the corpse of James Il. Robespierre order-|cares of life are forgotten. ied the body to be buried, which was not done, but it was! Lonerviry or Women.—A me icarefulfuly and reverently preserved. When the al-| cantly remarked, that one case of the superior Limatewit jlies came to Paris, ir [813, the body of the unfortunate! 9f woman may be, that they talk more; talking, aed ‘James II. still remained above grdund, end the strange! oreising the lungs, being exceedingly beneficial 1 icircumstance peing mentioned to George LV., he gene-|jeaith. ie " : ” | rously ordered the bones of his kinsman to be interred im} dical writer hag plea - i funeral procession from Paris to St. Germains, and there interred inthe church. ‘Che long delayed funeral of James If. then took place with royal grandeur. No mourners of his lineage attended his coflin on its return to St. Germains, for bis race had passed away; yet his people followed him to his grave; for most of the Enulish Jall; every one feels burt by his conduct, because jt A Sociak Pest.—An ungrateful man je detested by ope - rates to throw a daimp upon generosity, and he is re- {garded as the common tnjurer of all those who stand * ‘need of assistance, ' How notorious jis the fact, that those children, who in Paris, setting aside all religious and political differ-| have had the most done for them by circumstances. fre- ences, attended the cortege, in the deepest mouruing.| quently turn out the least serviceable members of socie- The indications of respect were extraordinary. Hvery|ty! Pamper your offspring by circumstances, protect Soglish person behaved as if following the coffin of} them and smother them with kinduess, and you cannot a heloved! sovereign, who had died only the previous!take a more direct means ofenfeebling their characters; week. George [Y. ordered a monument to be raised injand of robbing them ofall genuine principles, On the the church of St. Germain’s to the memory of his unfor|other hand, who have always been the really inffuential itunate predecesser.— Miss Strickland’s Lives of thé\and strong men of the day ? Who are the men who have | Queens of England. “learned to endure hardness,” who can buffet most successfully against the frowns of fortune? Are they not generally those who are self formed, who have done every thing for themselves, who have nothing to trust to but their own inward energies ? . | Frenca Evecroran Sratistics.—The number of | French citizens having a right to inscription on the elec- toral lists is not known, but statistics enable us to arrive at amapproximative computation. It is known that of every hundred persons rather more than forty nine} Anima [nstincr.—The Rev. Caesar Ottaway, in ‘die before attaining the age of twenty-one years. Welhis recently published naperon “the Intellectuality | may therefore calculate that out of a little less thanjof Domestic Animals,” gives the following anecdote, ‘eighteen millions of French belonging to the male sex] which is by far too good not to receive the benefit of a there are nine millions having the age required for| wider circulation; There are good men everywhere. There are me0/electors. If we deduct from this number about 300,-| “At the flour mills of Tabberakcenr, near Clonme!, who are good for goodness’ sake. In obscurity, in re- urement, beneath the shadow of ten thousand dwellings,/and excluded, there will remain 8,700,000 electors. acarcely known to the world, never asked to be known, there are yood men; in advérsity, in poverty and temp- iztions, amid all severity of earthly trials, there are cued men, whose lives shed brightness upon the dark «!ouds that surroundthem. Be ittrue, if we must admit the sad truth, that many are wrong, and persist in being wrong; that many are false in every holy trust, and faithless towards every holy affection; that many are coldly selfish, and meanly sensual; yes, cold and dead so everything that is not wrapped up in their own little earthly interest, or more darkly wrapped up in the veil of deshy appetites. Be it so: but [thank God that this 13 not all that we are obliged io believe. No: there ace true hearts amid the throng of the false and faithless. ‘There are warm and generous hearts, which the celd at- mosphere of surrounding selfistiness never clills ; and 000 absent from France, travellers, infirm, prisoners,} while in possession of the late Mr. Hewbold, there was a goose, which, by some accident, was left Solitary, Now it is known by tne returns made to the commission} without a mate or offspring, gander or gosling. that nearly 7,500,000 electors have voted. If we add to} * Now it happened, as is common, that the miller’: this number the electors of the colonies who were not|wife had set a number of duck’s egos undera hen, required to vote, and those of Algeria, whose votes are| which in due time were incubated, and, of course the not known, it may be inferred that the number of French| ducklings, as soon as they came forth, ran with natural citizens who have not exercised their right of voting is|instinet to the water, and the hen was ina sad pucker about one million. We question ifever universal suffrage] —her maternity urging her to follow the brood, and her ms has been more generally taken advantage of in any|selfishness disposing her to keep on dry Jand. In the country. [n addition to this, it may be stated that, out of|meantime, up sailed the Goose with a noisy gabble, upwards of seven millions of votes delivered, only 12,-) which certainly (on being interpreted) meant, leave 000 were annulled from illegality or imformality, being|them to my eare; she swam up and down with the in the proportion of about 1 in 600. ducklings; and when they were tired with their aqua- Tne Dirrerence.—Stealing a loaf of bread or a/tic excursion, she consivned them to the care of the hen, string ofontons is called petit larceny ; but the defaulter The next mormag down came again the ducklings to or fraudulent oficial, in starched collar and broad-|the pond, and there was goosey waiting for them,—and ; ' | { 4 i — \ f " ee Bane tae ha ae e & ; . is ; ~ 2", cloth coat, who makes away with fitty, severity five, there stood the hen }: . On this eyes unused to weep for personal sorrow, which of-| a r 1,t dicom ies vr a lie te 1 overflow w ith inathy f t| f ot] ior a hundred thonsand dolliues of other peap:e’s hard; occasion we “cose invited Let fer ry with syinpata yr the sorrows of others.) : : . : » hon hone . ee Y tae hie HTS.) oartiings and hard dollars, is politely adjudged to be;the fen, t itis a fact Yes, there are good men and true men: i thank them: : bless them for what they are. God from on igh doth bless therm, and giveth his angels charge to veep thei; and nowhere in the holy record are these words more precious or strong, than those in which ii is written that tod loveth the rivhteous ones. Such men are there. | © Let not their precious virtues be distrusted. As surely and as evidently as some men have obeyed the calls of! ambition and pleasure, so surely and so evidently have other men obeyed the voice of conscicuce, and * chosen rather to suffer with the people of God, than to enjoy the pleasure of sin fora season.” Why, every meek raan suffers in conflict keener far than the contest for honor and applause. And there are such men, who, amid injury and insult, and misconstruction, and the; pointed finger, and the scornful lip of pride, stand firm ya their integrity and allegiance to a loftier principle, and still their throbbing hearts in prayer, and hush them to the gentle motion of kindness and pity. Such wit- nesses there are even in this bad world; signs that a re- deeming world is going forward amid its derelictions;| proofs that it is not a world forsaken of heaven ; pledges wat it will not be forsaken; tokens that cheer and touch simply guilty of a peceadillo! She former is loct-jthat she boing nes lad ! ‘d upon her j ~ "es i ‘ ‘ j vege ied up in jail, while the latter is adinitted to free and} Sack ai ‘a, and the ‘feasy bail. ‘The one is hustled out of the way as aj 2eose and hen os , ond. And graceless thief, but the other escipes punishment, gene- this was nota he hen was rally by a liberal use of the money he has filehed from|seen on rd tin eklings up those who put their trast in him. The ragged sand and down in pe: od humour ; penniless wretch who steals a shilline’s worth of food,| numbers ‘Ircumstan- stands no chance at all of escape ; bit your well-dressed |ces, Which con : coming to ‘and respectably-connected scamp, whose purse is as/days of discretion, 3 joint guar- heavy os his Conscience is elastic, has nine chances out dianship of the hen ar ‘of everv ten in his favour. and seldom fails, even when ’ ae : The funniest artic! ron shirt with closely pressed and warmly hueved, to wire out some percussion collars. ‘Mhis s! nover wears out, and by } ' } where, escape conviction a nad tastice, and rin his fice touchine asprin’ 2a new spciINOS UD until a halfea , vende dwenvaietae tin this on : ; : 2 ei m oe ' gs Uj . J for such sympathy asthe world may have atits disposal | dozen are exhausied. A patent sheet-iron neck-cloth for such as are deserving only of condemnation for gross “f accompanies It | | dishonesty. : 1 ie . ope: Newspapers in New Yors.—The Independent, the There is something singularly touching in the charac-| new religious paper started in New York, in ita first teristics of woman, while she remains woman, and does! number publishes a table from it appears that the not invade the province of the other sex. An old maid jotal number of papers publisicd in the city is 458; ‘named Vaughn, a miser lately, died in England. Al-/the agoregate regular issue, 3,210,714; the aggregate ‘though desperately fone of money, and the owner of| weekly issue, 1,196,550 ;a rly is: , nd the aggregate yearly issue imany tenants, she never raised her rents when the pro-|69.247.865. The nomber of reams of paper consumed every zood and thoughtful mind, beyond a!! power of|perty became doubly valuable, and has been known tojis 147,095. The weight of all this paper isabout 5,600- earth to penetrate and enkindie it. An exTraorpinarr Factr.—Although Queen Anne was, before she departed this life, on friendly terms with the King of France. she made no effort to afford se- vulture to the uninterred bones of her father, and that duty finally devolved ona kinsman. In fact, the body of James If. remained unburied for a century after his daughter's death ; and the circumstances regarding it turm the last extraordinary incidents in the history of the regal personares of the house of Stuart. Liglits were | kept burning round the hearse of James Uf. until the! French revolution. How strange that the bones of the! stranger and the exile in the land should be reverenced when those of the royal personages of France were dis-| interred and profaned! ‘The church of the Benedictines! 12 the Maubourg St. Jacques was desecrated, and turned) into # cotton-spinning factory ; but when the revolu-! tiomsis opened the coffin of James I]. they found the! corpse entire, and in an extraordinary state of preserva: | tun. James had always been greatly beloved and re-! vered in France,and at the sight of his remains, the crowd! were seized with superstitious awe, aud they defended! thea framthose who would have destroyed them. The| municipal authorities tuok possession of the hearse and | beady, but the people crowded to see them from all parts Paris, and being willing to pay for the sight, tae func- tonaries charged fram a sous toa franc for admission, tC like the flowers that spring up in our | and cheering U3, Let aman £0 home at night wea-} want of space, recornmends that ei! ’ “3 te d . - » tha t ‘ nt reise i rosy sina : 2 Sn a is ; : wud qade the show of our Sing’s corpse a profitsblelried end worn out with the toils ofthe day, and how that olen: should be thurough'y Qy s at's oo Ville * mw as wi eis a young carne a pone posnee = re pounds, and its cest alone is about S600,000. fonly chance of her getting it depended upon his ulti-} AN a, Ue. Ecessary oF Lire.—Ritcher having affirmed ‘inate snecess. . So true it is that the devil can never |i, a ‘get such full possession of a woman’s heart, but that in! at no man can either live or die weil withont a wife, a ioe 5 7h ui ‘ ses i . 2e . iwi re . * ire éW fp 1 } . : ] ‘some corner of it the flowers of Paradise will spring up) i ye Soenanicinenaartes, _ Rortasery ey ee c © “P suffering purify the the heart. ‘and bear witness to her celestial origin. : Puitosopuy or Farwinc.—tiere is the secret of Inwanp InfuuENce or Outrwarp Brauty.—Be-| enod farming. You cannot take from the land more ‘leive me, there is many a rond into our hearts besides than you restore to it, in some shape or other, without our ears and brains, many a sight, and sound, and scent,'ruining it, and so destroying your capital. Different even of which we have never thought at all, sinks into/soils may require different modes of treatavent and erop- our memory, and helps to show onr characters; and ping, but in every variety of soil these are the golden thus children bronght ap among beantiful sichts and! rules to attend to; Drain until you find that the wete: sweet sounds will most likely show the fruits of their/that falls from heaven does not stacnate in the soi) bat nursing of thoughtfullness, and affection, and nobleness.| rung through it and off it freely. Tiirn up and til! the Those who five in towns should carefully remember) land until your foot g8inke Into an loose, powdery loam, this, for their own sakes, for their wives’ sakes, for their!that the sun and sir read ‘ children’s sakes. Never Jose an. opportanity of seeing | occupy the place where a usefitl plant could possibly anything beautiful. Beauty is God’s handwriting—a!} grow. Collect every particle of mantvre that you can, way-side sacrament; welcome it in every fair face. whether liquid or solid. Let fiothing onthe farm go to every fair sky, every fair flower, and thank for it Him,! waste. Put in your crops in that course which exper: the fountain of all loveliness, and drink it in simply and! enee has shown to lead to success in their growth and earnestly with all pure eyes; it is acharmed drati¢ht, ajte an enrichment and not inpoverishment of the land. cup of blessing. ily passthrongh. Let no weed 'Give every plant reom to spread its roots in the soil, Fematy Tempra.-—No trait of character is more ya-jand its leaves in the air. loable in a female, than the possession of a sweet fear. | Cuttivation or Poratoss.—Mr. John W. Bailey, per. Home can never be made happy without it, it is jof Plattsburgh, N. Y., in am interesting article on the satuway, reviving }culture of the potato, which we regret to condense, for ea yrned for . 22 . * ’ tae Water *Cygade