\ . HASZARITS GAZETTE. OCTOBER II. A single caae—a single sign of peril in any qusr ' I _. . -. ter. would have spared the poison . That evening, in the stillness of night a trem- . blinu hand siols forwards to that afilieied boy wiih a potion that knows no waking. la a few hours, all was over. CQVINT GAIDIN IAIIKIT AT DAY-BREAK. A writer in the Illustrated London Mags- sinc has given use very entertaining account of Coc¢sl- Garden Market, and dilates raphically on its aspect during the small ours of two or three o’clock in the morn-' in :— “‘ Two o'clock in the morning,” be ob- serves, "is the hour at which we should wish you to begin your observations. But the state of the market and the surrounding streets, at that hour, will have prepared .yoii for the announcement, that for some hours previously a steady stream, or set of streams, of heavily-laden waggons and carts, has been setting into this great heart of vege- table traffic from the outlying realms of I-lammersmith, Isleworth, Brentford, Houn- slow,Wandsworth, on one side,and of Essex way, on the other; to say nothing of the ‘ market-trains‘ from country places, of which one alone, from a village in Kent, about twenty-three miles from town, brings from twenty to thirty truck-loads of fruit and vegetables three times a week, or even oiteiier, during the season. These importa- tions choke up the market and ooze over into the bye-streets. Outside these are arranged scores on scores of lighter carts, belonging to the retailers, from every part of town and the suburbs; the outlying fringe of all being an innumerable multitude o costerrnongers’ barrows, whose owners are keenly on the look-out for the “ bought-in lots of the market. “ To get a choice you must be early," is the rule; and so, loii before the time I have mentioned, all active j-etailers are on the spot, eagerly inspecting cargoes and looking out for bargains. The scene about this time is truly wonderful. A bee-hive‘ engaged in dethroniug the legitimate Queen-bes and electing a con- stitutional monarch in her room, would be tranquillity compared to it. Huge wag- gons, like mountains ofturnips, cauliflowers, cabbages, carrots, onions, &c., c., are swiftly and steadily discharging their car- goes into the side-walks; groves of gera- niuins, carnellias, azaleas, carnntinn.-i, mignonettc, and all sorts of flowers, strcw the round at each end ofthe centre alley; “ sieves" (as they are technically termi-d\, and other baskets of potatoes and- fruit, stand piled in heaps at every corner ; " fancy" flowers and rare fruit-the peach- es at a guinea each, and the hot-house ' grapes at the same per pound-—are handed over, packed with every conceivable care, to sober-looking porters, with strict iri- junctions to be “ wery careful.” Business, meanwhile, is proceeding with a vigour only proportionate to the accompanying hubbiib; and from the highly-respectable tradesman of Belgrnvia or Westbournia. down to the straw-chewing “ costcr," or the clamorous fish-wife, every one seems driving desperate bargains, at the top of shrill and querulous voices, a_ deep base running accompaniment to which is supplied by the rumbling of weggon-wheels,>and the deep-toned execrations of excited drivers. Now there is a custom—wos, we wish we could truly write: it is, however, we understand, happily on the wane -— of “ clinching" every bargain “ with a glass.” For this praiseworthy object, as well as to supply the natural cravings of nature-— which after the night-journey, from perhaps many miles’ distance in a slow, jutting wag- gon, or on the road by its side, may be well supposed to be of a somewhat ferocious kind, there are thrown open about this hour (two o'clock) the “Market-houses, " as they are called; that is public-houses which keep a double set of servants--one for the day and one for the night-—send the first to bed at twclve.nnd rouse the second at one. At two o'clock, breakfast begins in most ofthess houses; and to see the burly market gardeners rolling in, ordering their coffee, buttered toast, and rasher; to see the huge biggins of coffee, the enormous toasting ma- chine, like a gigantic wire-guard stuck over with spikes; to listen to th€ constant hissing and crackling of rashers and chops, _and otb‘er savoury comeltibles; to _sce these things, and to hear these things is to feel hungry at once from sympathy. _ The quantities consumed are almost in- credible. At one house alone the landlord informed us that his average "brew” ' the season was fourteen gallons of coffa every mornin . ' reakfast over, business is resumed with renewed vi our. Bytsven or eight o'clock all the best vegetables, fruit, \nd flowers have been bou ht. N ineteen-twentieths are on their res to the retailers’ shops. not a twentieth part remaining in the hands of the nbopmen of the market. ' ' " It has been well said, that one half of the world has no action how the other half lives; and we have met with very few ople, whom it has ever occurred to ta s an ob- “servation of this remarkable and unique feature in London life. an O letter from ' ' Tsaa'isi.s Occuansscs.—A Ill., dated Peeatosica, Winnebago county, set ll, says: ‘ " Iwitnssssd yesterday one of the most melancholy assess I ever beheld. In the town of Lyssnder, one mile south pr Pssetonica , there lay enshrined in ‘fin ooflns, e r, Merchant, two sons and 3.. daughters, all ofwbom were struck by Ighssio duringa thunder shower, about Ives’ , A. fl.—-leaving in the family eetyhtbowife, and one rotation! in ......~= 2:.-.r-~ -'-.-::.‘:'..'-i:.':.r' ii , , WQQI I'D I I ' yibsnesslsg the loss sszw itsiinuol: or ‘run vouuo runs. The marriage of Ghalib Pasha, non of Rescbid Pasha, with Fatima Sultana, eld- est daughter of the Sultan, takes place on l‘hursday next. In February last, the con- tract of marriage was signed, and the splen- did presents were sent by the bi-idegroom's father to the Imperial palace of Theheragan. It was then directed, that the marris and the accompanying festivities should be cele- brated in the suminer,‘but it appears that the necesstics of the state have produced an effect even on the exalted personages who have never before denied themselves any- thing. . It is resolved that the marriage shall be celebrated without the uspel profusion and extravagance. The vast cost of Eastern ceremonies would fri ljten the most magnificent moa- arclis of ‘ rope. The expense ofthe ap- proaching nuptials would amount to about three times the cost of her Britannic Ma- jesty's coronation, and in such a.cese the festivities, if indulged in, must be of the‘ grandest kind, for the young lady is the first daughter of the sovereign who has left her father's house, and the bridegroom’s fatlier is the most eminent, and in some uispccts the most meritorious, of the Turk- ish dignitaries. For a splendid display the money is not to be had, and it is therefore resolved to establish a new precedent, and celebrate the nuptials in the modest style of the western world. , But the young couple are well provided for. A alace of vast size and splendor was commenced by Reschid Pasha some years since. The expense was too great even for a wealthy man who was every day becoming-more wealthy. The honor of an imperial alliance had been promised him, and he took means to retain the palace in the hands of his family by a‘ transaction not uncommon in Turkey. The Sultan pur- chased the building at agreat price, and settled it on the daughter who was to mar- ry the youthful heir to the minister. It has now been finished, and will receive the couple immediately on their marriage. Par:AcHiNo.—0f all things the most pitiable is when it man preaches to himself, and when an audience listens to be pleased with the minister. And the most glorious thing below is when the minister's preaching -ind the people's hearing lead to this con- clusiou, iiol, “ How well the minister spoke to-day." and “ How comfor‘ably did we hearto-day!” but, “How glorious is that Saviour! how precious this soul! weighty our responsibilities in the prospect of eternity and a judgeinent-seat!” We may always judge of what has been the nature ofthe sermon, or what has been the mood in which it was listened to, by the first remarks we hear as we retire; when people go home criticising the words of the discourse, instead of dwelling on and speaking ofthe lines of the subject, there is something wrong in the people's hearing, or in the minister's preaching. May God grant that all that I preach, and all that my people hear, may lead them to lift their hearts far beyond the temple. and to leave them no where except where our heart and our treasure should be, beside the throne ofthe Lord Jesus.--Dr. Cuminin . Gone Riairr OVER i'r.-—I have a friend, whose ready wit often enlivens the social circle, and sometimes also faithfully serves the cause oftruth. One Sabbath morning, as he ate ped from his house to goto church, he met a stranger driving a heavily loaded wagon through the town. He turned upon him, stopped, lifted both hands, and stood in a tragic attitude, gazing upon the ground beneath the vehicle, and exclaimed. “ There!—you are going’ right over it! You have guns right over it!" The traveller hastily gathered up his reins, drew in his horses, came to a dead stand, and began looking under his wheels to see what little innocent child, or dog, or pig, might have been ground to a jelly by their heavy weight. But seeing nothing, he looked anxiously up to the man who he so sin- gularly argested his pro ress, and said, "Over what?” “The ourth command- merit,” was the quick reply—" Remember the Sabbath day, to keep it holy." It was hard starting those wheels again, and hard hauling that load all the rest of the day.- Norwich Examiner. A SINOULAR Dianna ro CATTLI.-0lll' attention was yesterday called to one of the most remarkable dangers attending the pasturage of cattle, in the western country especially, of which we have ever heard The facts which we will state show the great necessity there is at all times for farmers and others to be most careful and prudent in providing clean pasturagc for their animals, and for resorting to all precautions for detecting in and excluding from fodder and provender generally, which is to be fed out to or come within the reach of stock, every possible foreign substance. The particular circumstance to which we now refer, as proving this, was the exhibition to us yesterday by John W. Weild, Esq., of two large and indigestible balls found in the stomach of a deceased cow. The halls are specimens of thirteen such, taken from the stomachs of two different cows that died near Louisville Ky,--four balls thorn one and nine from the other cow. The largest ofthese balls is almost rlbctly ulsr and nearly the sins of t a map glcbo ordinarily used in the schools, being about I6 to fit inches in circumference. The smallest is more of an egg from, and .is in tbi-eetlie~other. These bslls'appear to entirely composed of lloga.’ brist as or hair, and were ‘taken into Mo stippisollingvdith psmi ruin a grass w rs so from hogs killed ,,,.i,intiinent wen spread is the cow! in s’psrk-packing lsrly for crying , ltwss not until once hsddstfl-ssithlssssu. that the siren- diametsr about four inches one way and stance ofthoirswsllcwingtho bristles was known, or rather that the lodgnient in the stomach and gradual accumulation of so iadigsstible a substance was dreamed of. “Yoca Paras nio nor Coils, Bis." We recommend a careful perusal of the following plain statement, bath to postrassters. and to sub- scribsrs; ii is from a pa called Tits Advance, published at llernando, iss: “ The uncertain arrival, or uncertain delivery of papers at cnuntr t oflicrs. is often the around ofcomplaigt against publishers and editors. Many of the odious are poorly supplied with con- yenicnccs for taking care of psplprs, no matter with what certainty they strive. he papers are jumbled into s few pigeon holes or piled upon a desk, box, or barrel. to await the call of subscri- bers—in the midst of boots, hats, bridles, horse collars, and other coarse wares which may be called for during the day by customers. Country posiinssiers. in most cases, being engaged in some mercantile business, many nswspsporrfind their way into some obscure corner, where they are tiid in-a iaounisin cave. In comes a man for the paper,‘ and as it can't be found, of course it didn't come. The indignant subscriber consequently abuses the rascslly editor. and perhaps calls for pen. ink, and paper, to write a letter o complaint about not sending his paper punctuslly; when if the said paper were endowed with speech, it would cry out ‘ here I am, ‘ ' box or under this barrel. e must have seen just such things at many country post offices else- where as in this couniry.—'l’hese remarks have no reference to any particular once, but meant for all where they will apply. GEIEBAI. IRTIILIGEIOR. “ LA 'l‘iiiiiunr.” The New York Comrnercial Advertiser, after referring to the fact, that a « Diving Company” are now operating on the wreck of this vessel, furnishes the following par- ticulars toucliiug the circumstances attending her loss: . Ln Tribune, at the time she was lost, was con- sidered as fine a vessel as then belonaed to the British navy. She was captured by the British during the war with France. The place where she was lost is “ Herring Cove Hen ," about ten miles to the Westward of Halifax and but a few miles from where the remains of the ill-fated steamship Humboldt now lie. ' he csso Tribune was a melancholy one. When coming from see, it being hast‘ at the time, she struck on Tbrumpcsp Shoals, to the Esstwaad of Halifax. where sbcunshipped her rudder: the wind then began to blow from the Southeast, and during the day increased to a gale. After a while, the ship came oil‘ the rocks, but having lost her rudder she was unmanageable, and drifted toward the West- ern shore, opposite an immense bluff of rocks and one of the'most dangerous spots along that iron-bound coast. During ihe afternoon, the fishermen, from the surrounding villages as- how sembled in large numbers, willing to render anr assistance in their power to the uiifortunats crew of the ship. which was than within speaking dis- tance of the shore, but her commander and his officers, with drawn swords, forbade the men to leave her, expecting that assistance would be sent from Halifax by the Government, which was done. but too late. n the meantime. the gale in- creased arid night coming on, the Government vessels could not reach them, and the people on the shore could do nothing. Thus the ship was lost and lieroflicsrs and crew. consisting of our ilirce hundred souls. all perished, except seven, who were saved by a young fisherman in a small flat, he t9|ibig.onl_v.oiie person at s time in it and hnding than behind a cluster of rocks. In the last attempt his frail bark was dashed to pieces. but he succeeded in gaining the shore, and next morning he and his companions were rescued by the people when the gals subsided. The dead bodies and the fragments of the vessel were found strewn along the shore The British Government acted handsomely to- ward the young fisherman whoao nobly risked his life to save others, wliegi it was thought im- possible f'or any human being ‘to aid them. Hr was appointed a midsbipmsn in the British navy and received a pension for life. The materials saved from La Ti-ibiuie, are said to be almost as soft as cheese. 'l'his vessel had a large amount of specie on board. She was s double-banked frigate, and rated 44 guns. ENGLAND -ro Cnuos.--The London Times devotes one of its stately leaders to “ the Crisis in Canads," Th0 tenor, not the language of the article is given thus: " Come, darling, get on ymitliiile footico and see if on can't begin to ioddle alone—i'nother can't a ways be with you to hold you up. Go now and play with your brother Jonathan. See what a strapping big fol- low he is, ind he and yim were iwins! He, the wilful young scapegrscc, weaned himself a long time ago, and here you are, wiIlI‘a mouthful of teeth, still hanging to the papilla and drawing sustenance from the mamillsry fountain, which is drained nearly to the last drop.” Free as Qcaesc.—We learn from the Quebec Observer extra of last Thursday, that on the night previous a fi_re broke out in the oficer’s quarters of‘ the Royal Artillery. above the mess room, it is believed from a defect in the chim- ney, and had been lon smouldering. The military and firemen ma incredible exertions to save the building, and finally succeeded, sl- thopgji the two upper stories were completely at . Sir Allan McNsb, the new premier, in one of his msnifesioss, thus drlnss his position on the clergy reserves question :- “ My opinion on the subject of the clergy rc- es has novel been coiicss toss in favor of holding the [im rial statute as a final settle- ment; (i. e. prov‘ ing or an arbitrary division of the proceeds of the reserved lands among two or three denominations) and l have in Parliament voted against the abrogation of that settlement. 0 ‘' i has been ascertalnod, however, that at least tlircs-fourths of the members of Assembly are in favor of sscularissiion, and it only .i'sina_ins or me to bow to their decision, and submit to their deliberate judgment.” The Quebec papers state that Lord gin i' new in possession of his oleial appointment a' Governor-General of India. - -t Fnoii Ksirscssras.—Ws copy the following vagrapha at‘ late Kssnsshstks news from the an Fransisco pepsin tty its arrival of (Ispt. Ilcdprs, we have advises fiovn Psi iii a llsssisn t as the peninsula of am- schsikn, up to Jii y I0. eorveiie Ilesiss of IO goes. from I Isis, with s Baltic sssw. s the lies. sisa .'s old be. armed nigh visit IIII. II! I wi swsw,,ot.west ‘Oil. ewsofihs war is reps bsdfissnzrfl. Pstispsslstl tygtbs Ansvtvss target 3: American brig Boston, am ring, and the lliissisiis were niakiiia iirsst preps- rations to resist an anticipated siisck by the allied fleet. The port is defended by several for- tifications, and new ones are being erected, con- or four mortars. The tlovsrsor has under his command a full regiment of soldiers. thoroughly equipped, and is confident he can stand a pretty long siege. Peiropaulski contains between 3400 and 4000 inhabitants, including a few Americans and En- glishmen, and one American store. Everybody is obliged to he a soldier or a sailor, and to res- pond ts the Governor's call at s raoment’s notice. The town is situated on an inland bay, the en- irsncs to which. from ihe ocean, is through a narrow inlet. three miles in length, studded with islands, and commanded by several batteries.- -A vssssl may enter without danger, although there are many difficulties to encounter. Ca.pt. Hedges, with the lloston, best in and out in a og. The Governor thinks, and our informant also, that it would be impossible to take the post with anything short of a fleet of steamers, as new bat- ierics are being built to cover every approach.- The Russians were daily looking for the arrival at Petropanlslti of an English frigate and cor- vctte on their we to Amour river, at the mouth of which they (the Russians) have built several strong forts. -Nearly the whole population of Augusta, Ga., have quitted the city, and the country for miles around is covered with tents. The fever was in- creasing. isi-ofice was closed and ilic mails delayed, there being no one to distribute hem. The price of door is rapidly declining. Tax Disxurrrox or Pom-rcir. Pun-ins is run Uirrrxo S-ru-as.—Tbe recent organisation of a secret political part in the Unitedststes under the name oi'“Know- othings." and the extraor- dinary success which has over where attended them at the ill, have stertl the Government and produ a profound sensation throughout the old Democratic ranks. It appears that large numbers of the new or nization are Democrats, who have thrown of their ‘old leaders on account of their leaning so much u a what is called forei influence. The big ranks will also be thinned by the deser- tion of the native-born population, who will unite with the new order, and thus the old political part distinctions will be abolished. Nobody is, tter a uaintcd with this fact than the President oft e United States, and be has consequently set himself vigorously to work to root out this ‘Know-Nothing-ism. Accord- ingly all ublic oficers wlio she_w snv leaning towards t is part are summarily dismissed ; but even this big -handed course has not had the elect intended, and more decided steps are being taken to give elect to the President's feelings. For this purposc,a public meeting was held at Washington last week, to attempt to re-organise the Democratic party on the basis of opposition to the Know-Nothings, at which the following resolution was put an declared to be adopted, although it is said the Na s were in the ssceiidant : , That the Democratic party will unoeesing war ii in the secret organiza- tions known asKnow- othings, aud,for that and we invite the Whigs and all others to join us in our efi'orts ; that we have confidence in the integrity and wisdom of President Pierce’s administration, and that all Know-Nothings will be removed from place under the adminis- tration, kc. ,-_ Some idea may be formed of the dread in resolution like the above would be entertained by the Democrats—when they would forget all political antecedents, and cordially unite with the Wlii ! ' After considerable sha booting, the meet- ing was adjourned to last ridsy, and we learn from a tale ph despntch to the Boston papers that about 000 persons attended. Considera- ble fselin was manifested, and the Whigs and Know-Not ings were denounced by the speak- ers; but the best of the joke was, that after the regular meeting adjourned, the now- Nothings organised a counter meeting, and there np red to be little diminution in the numbers. The despatch says :— As a demonstration, the efibrts of the admin- istration Democracy against the Know-Nothings in this quarter must be set down as a coin fete failure, notwithstanding the distinguishe tal- ent ezgaged and the favorable auspices which seeia to smile upon it. The great number of government crnplo is present and appointed as oficers, gave it t e appearance of being an administration movement, and contributed much to its defeat. A Mormon train. consisting of nine wagons and some fifiv persons, crossed the Missouri at Belle- vus, Nebraska, on the Mill August. on their return from a six years’ residence at S‘alt Lake. They left on account of the immorslities and and oppression of the Mormon Church. The New York hotel and boarding house keepers are reducing the price of their ard. House rents in that city are also being considerably lowered. Puauc IIPIOVIIINT iir llosi-oii.—'l‘he Andi- tor, in his annual report, speaks as follows of the public improvements in Boston, consummst under the supcrintendencn of the Joint Special Committees on Public Lands. _roin the year I830 to IBM, abuutl.fi00,000 square feet of land, exclusive of streets, have been reclaimed from a very unhealthy and worse than useless condition. and rendered eligible and desirable for private dwellings and business puvposes.- Nearly five miles of streets have been filled up and graded; common sewers laid therein. sidewalks e and ‘due slobnres put down tnbaularge portion of them. ivs pu ie , ‘ n ' n ‘ ' ‘ with iron fences, and in other respects rsriilernd pleasant and attractive places of resort. Seven stone fountains have been completed : about l,000 tress not out, and feet of res wali constructs sd. These extensive and iportani improvements were made It as expenditure of Q50(,9W. _..____..___.__. Steamer Argo, with a cargo of silk.nltpstrs, linseed and indigo. arrived at Plymouth, leg- snd.entbs4 ,from tbscspssfflocdfls , Jul 3. The Cholera had swept cl two I:- hsb tests from Port Louis and the adjacent dis- tricts; negross scfired more than Indians and pesns. The copper districts of llniasqas- lsnd probiiss to usl the icons mines of South Austr_slls.- wbols dlllrlct e rs to be one mass of cop . War was lnev tnh's between the o r the Orange river and s Letsea, and it would be a dmdly stra 's. Lleut. Bartlett, wrltia S the ow York ilsrsld eonesrnlii the A tle‘s recent peso agslrsm ,sayaoffis gslswhlsh she sistliigof one or two masked batteries. wi_ih ih_ree. which the Know-Nothings are held, when a. of tar as rit , ad in kIl0‘::IllQ wiiied tii bl.ow a hii.r.riii:.nte‘:.Ishfi)'r..g lllldlily consecutive hours. For the 12 houses pre- ce n th fth 12th th A ' but ft. -.IV|:°oIllIII'Iel :0 the. wise ‘hmlo and. single sails, although her engines worked beau. Ifully six turns r minute, all that could be permitted in sue a see. From noon of 13: to midnight,_ only sixty inlles—ths cg gin gradually easing up the engines as the win and sea fell. This severe ordeiil adds a new wreath to the laurels of the Atlantic, under the gnid. nnce of her skilful commander. May ch. number of such‘ships be increased." Orders have been issued for the construction or two llrst-rate ships of war of the following dim. ensious:-—'l'he first will have a measurement of tllo tons, and be 960 feet long siidoo feet hm“ . the second will measure 3959 tons, be 945 fssi lung, and ill feet broad. a A warrant has been issued which confersa great benefit on the Royal Marine Corps, who” services have been of great importance recently. It has hitherto been the practice to deduct s cm. tsin sum from their pay for the rations supplied to them when serving afloat, and this deduction ihe_wsrrant now issued abolishes. which will be equivalent to an addition of about lid. per day to each private We perceive that Professor Holloway, of 944, Strand, London, has established a House in New -York for the sale of his popular Pills and Oint- merit, which have enjoyed such reputation fora number of years in every other part ofthe world ; particulars of some of the curse they hsvé effected have long since reached this counir , and there is no question but that they are cxscify the kind of medicines wanted here. e would strongly advise our friends to give them a trial, and there is no fear, but that iliey would continue to use iliem whenever sny.medicinc would be requisite. Hoofisnd‘s Gsiuun Birrnus. prepared and sold by Dr. Jackson, at the German Medical Store, I20, Archsirset, Philadelphia, daily increase in their well deserved celebrity, for the cure of all diseases arising from derangement of the liver. ‘hose Bitters have, indeed, proved a blessing to the afflicted, who show their gratitude by the most flattering testimonials. This medicine has established for itself a name that compeiiiors, iiowr-_ver wily their schemes, or seductive their promises. cannot ‘reach. It gained the public confidence by the immense benefits that have been derived from it, and will ever maintain its position. From the New-York Observer. THE BROKEN THREAD. I love to look upon the movements of well- devised machinery: there is music in its whirr, and buzz. and clatter. lily theory ofthe beuutifiil takes in the steady motion of the polished shafl, and the grand har- mony oi design you can see in the thousand diverse forms of motion it imparts. The factory has more of the ifc of human thought than the picture or the bust, and well nig as much as the sweet harmonics of music. In it, too, you can adore the Great Universal Creator, and can find in- striictivc analogies for his providential doings. When, from the secret chamber of the inventor’s soul, a mighty engine leaps, complete in all its complicated parts, or a mechanism so delicate,that it can beat to the pulse of thought a thousand miles away, why should we lose admire what God hath wrought, than when we see the acorn push from out its little shell the giant oak? I lately visited a New England cotton mill, and saw there one very simple opera- tion which interested rnemuch. It was the reeling off, from the spools to the beam, of the threads which were to constitute the warp of the fabric. I watched the process for some time, admiring the steadiness of the pull upon the threads, their airy appear- ance, and the regular wedge-like shape they took in coming from the square spool rame. But suddenly there was a halt. Can it be, that these little threads have overstrained the gearing? Oh, no! sharp, and you see that one of those tlireeds is broken; it is but one of some hundreds, yet it is missed, and the machine refuses to 0 on without it. I withdrew thoughtfully: there was a les- son here, I knew, but to was it? I was but partially satisfied with the lyrical solu- tion so readily suggested: 0 P " Our life contains a thousand springs, And dies if one be none; Strange that a harp of thousand strings Should keep in tune so long i" A week or two afterwards I was in one of the cities of Connecticut, and, in driving with s sight-seer’s indefiniteness of purpose, through its pleasant streets and suburban avenues, we came upon the city burying ground. We alighted, entered the Egyptian gate- way, and were at once secluded from the world of_' life, treading the quiet walks which many a sorrowing parent, child, and friend had trodden before us. And yet we saun- tered hcedlessly along, choosing rather to enjoy, in our inmost npirits, the tonic air of ‘a beautiful mornin , than to conjure up some bilious conceits, t at might to some seem more appropriate to the place. There is a time to weep at the grave ard, and that time occurs ollen enough or us all; why then waste our tears in sickly sentimen- tslism? So reasoned we at any rate, if at all, and little did we regard the "Sists inter " demands for refiection that came upon us, highwayinan like, at every turn. We had too keen ah appetite for the beauti- ful in nature and art to care for these obtru- sive warnings: it was but death speaking from strangers‘ raves. ‘ But it toucheth Mes,-sad thou art trou- bled. A tremor aciaes ate; the lfainiliar form of one whose place in my heart is a hallowed one, leaps from its dark-draped shrine. In an instant it has flitted through a thousand scenes ofjoyous college life, and left me a mournsr snow at the are of early frie ' The Insrbls utterance that little isswuinsot. so chaste, so simple, so pure, liadcliillsd the warm sunset of hell- '*--‘'.ii~~:~-°'~~i::~.*-4;i; ‘" I seen .l.vsaelbshe’ s M ‘I. "Iv--C : 1-.‘h‘—c:.‘.n. ‘M. -