~ oF ie ja t g et “This is true Liberty, when Freeborn Men, having to advis« Weekly Hournal of Politics, Literature, and Blews. ae = = = = — epee ena een > the Public, may speak free.”’’---Euripides. ; ' i‘ ‘ = : : —_ ——- ond annem eee ommpeaaneneameeenanaen Se . . ‘ ; TG ‘ “nye Fe Oy <6" Vol, VEE. Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Monday, September s, 1862. New Series.---No. 35. emer eres were : na vie - - Fenner are Ore nee orrsemroe ore The Lenden and Liverpool! L | T : R A T ij ° 7 make things generally pleasant, to be aj ject. I knew that you would meet me half- tram, 4 What would you have ?’ quoth be. | A MODEL BISEOP. | which is intended to receive the remains of FIRE AND LIFE |. — ey oo friend - every; | way. = - . She Sach tes alii nena ibaa | The warnings that the nineteenth century | sa armen Consort, is situated about : So | body, the deliverer of messages, the arrang: | : 4 | ae eo ton * Dothang, wmderc- | is sinking into its afternoon thicken about us. | 100 yards from that of the late Duchess of IN SURANCE COMPANY. MINISTERING SPIRITS, | er ol he comet smanitaan of social life— T'bad " along ros in aa ee = ps ried tell you what I would, my lord— I A prc, Aor sc destin’ Ye thes ede os once wae” « da liens ned ela i — }such was Miss Simuis’ missicn. | copying. knew that 1 was making the | strangers and foes do sunder, and not hiss. |faded away with the all but nonagevarian | have been selected, the site being surround- Capital, Two Millions Sterling. HE Subseriber having been appointed from England the Agent ef thie long estab fiehed and weil known Company, ranking amongst the first in Britain, is prepared to aceept proposals and take risks for imeurance on all descriptions of | | Why come not spirits from the realms of glory | Her age was certainly verging towards! most astounding blunders, but that was of |fifty. She was well-preserved ; had expres-/ little consequence, If I left this accompani- isive eyes, hair scrupulously neat, but very| ment I felt that my voice would break down is heaven more distant ? er has earth growncold? thin, white, angular hands, a sweet, faint too. property. - rh | Te Be thlebem’s aie was their last anthem given, smile, and a purring sort of voice, : My dear Miss Simms,’ I went on, ‘I Amrit Teh, 1862 W. A. JOHNSTONE, Agest. | ayhen other stars before the One grew dim? I re-pected Miss Simms immensely, I bad | know that your preseut hesitation proceeds mm i = Was their last presence known in Peter's prison, la great friendship for her. The ideastruck | from the best of motives. Do not think I H ts ac Or where exulting martyrs raised their hymn? j|me that [ would make her my confidant/am flattering you, when I say that to your 1a aD aps, | And are they afl within the vale departed? with regard to Lotty. She was the very influence [ attribute much of the exquisite = ion . at ee. = ae | There x) ame no wing slong the empy om now . | Person for a confidant. I could not, for the purity of your charming niece,’ Cloth. The best variety to be found in the | rs ™ , , a tot " "0 my: . . city BEER & SONS. | And many a tear from haman eyes has star ted, i life of me, have broken the subject to paps This was not quae tHe, but T saw that a Clarlotietown, June 9, 1862 ; Since angel touch has calmed a mortal brow. or amma. Lotty was a child to them stil), } compliment would be well-timed, f Ra : “Te a ‘snd I felt that it would searcely have seemed, ‘She is a good child,’ said Miss Simms. 1,500 } No: earth has angels, thongh their forms are more ridiculous to them for me to confess a! This sort of thing may be continued ad tender passion for the infant in long clothes | 2éditum, through as many pages as my} = s > . 2 ant : - i o ,? | Ans “aaa pees OES, te Ladies’, aie 2 baht pinions | tht? €¢ hint the state of my heart towards| reader pleases. In the heat of my oratory | aie hea bs ’ ’ BEEK & SONS. ough aed are Wanting, an right pinions | Lotty. I had determined to moke some | I flung aside my pen, and strode to the fire- | Chariouetewan, Jace 9, L862. 2 es : : ‘move, and the aunt appeared to me the very | place by whieh Miss Simms was sitting. | ihe sneineainane We know them by the love-light on their brow. ii h er sha weet : M ; natn hs ae Miss | MMOND JO : | medium t rough whom to makeit. The fa- my oratory must jave beca moving. Miss DR. HA HNSON I have seen angels by the sick one’s pillow! i miliar friend of Lotty, to whom that liztie | Simms was in tears when I next came to a Will VACCINATE at his Dispensary ‘Their's was the soft tone and the soundless tread; maiden confessed all ber innocent secrets-— | pause. | from U to 1 o'clock daily. Where smitten hearts were drooping like the willow, | the companion and fellow-counsellor of Lot-| She lifted her tearful eyes for a moment | _daly 14, 1862. ad “ They stood between the “weeping and the dead. | ty s parents—this aunt was just the con- to mine, as I stood upon the hearth-rug REFRESHMENT and OYSTER And if my sight, by earthly dimness hindered, fidaat I wanted, . close by her gaa. , : . Ss A LO Oo N | Behold no hovering cherubim in air | But, beyond this, I felt sure that the} ‘Oh Spare me. she said, This tumult | ia cane ee ace : | Yet I doubt not, for epirits know their kindred, | State of the case had not altogether escaped | of feelings—so painful aud yet 80 delicious ! | HE SU BSC RIBER begs to announce j ev voutl not, i pirits Know leir Kindred ; j ‘ & et a . i : * i h hi ’ she + | that be has now OPENED the above SA-| They smile upon the wingless watchers there | the sympathetic penetration of Miss Simms. | | am but a weak, girlish thing’ (she giggled | ce ‘ 9 “eet Be pOvVe & t - 5 ° * | ony =. 3 i - _ ° — i /That faint smile of bers, that wistful look hysterically). ‘ Leave me alone, now. Some | LOON, where he is prepured to furnish every : KEFRESHMENT of the season ‘in her tine eyes, a playful shake of the head other time —some other time. I have been | The Best of Liquors, Refreshments. and | To visit earth, as in the days of old— The times of sacred writ and ancient stery ? moulded, Bat of such clay as fashions all below ; | There have been angels in the gloomy prison, in crowded halls, by the lone widow's hearth ; ' sometimes, the pressure of a kind hand—|} expecting this. I snew it must come.’ Oysters. And where they passed the fallen bave uprisen, | these signs had not been lost upon me. Of. * You Aad discovered my secret, then,’ I served in all atyles, in te minutes, constantlyon, The giddy paused, the mourner'’s hope had birth. ten, when my eyes had been following against said. ‘I knew you had. Long ago, Miss ane | | . } . me : ¢ i 7 . The SALOON is furnished in a style of conven- | O! many a spirit walks the earth unheeded, | Shei will oor grevetat wanyent Ggure ae — eee ‘ Mai ience and comfort never before attempted in this} Thue when its veil of auduess is laid down Lotty, recalled, they would meet the eyes of | I could uot be blind,’ she said, Maiden | : Miss Simms; and as I smiled and half. | modesty is very innoceat; but could | help | Cuy, and the Proprietor trusts that bis assidvous Shall nate wethle shad led z ill : of public patronave | Shall soar aloft with pinions unimpeded, : : ‘th . attentien will warrant a suure of public patronage | ‘blushed at being thus caught. Miss Simms | setog ? } | would smile and half-blash likewise. Often, | im this enterprise. i And weur its glory like a starry crown. J. G. ECRSTADT Queen Street, Aug. 4, 1862. la sien 'when I had been Jeaning over Lotty at her | fer me ? ‘ i aa neem : MISS SIMMS | book, admiring the downward contour of the} ‘ What can I say? Do not press me,’ | . - J With. . } ’ ALBERTINE OIL. li | soft cheek, or the luxuriance of the glossy| ‘lL entreat you. Say, at least, there is | UE sudecriber has in store a Casks! The little girl was too charming to be re-/ hair, lifting my eyes, they would again meet | not despair.’ ; won Te ae ene anden er einen | sisted. In vain [ called to my aid all the Miss Simms’ eyes, and Miss Simms would! _‘ No. do not despair,’ she said. «I do not, aad BRIGHTER than any other Oil inthe market. gravity and soberness that beseemed my turn her head away with an expression cf| wish that.’ For sule very '. aati age. Iu vain I held up myself to myself as countenance which spoke volumes. Once, | We were silent for a minute or so. Miss} Gi rea ee Ne person already withia the verge of old| when | was shaking Miss Simms’ band on Simms spoke first. fogydom. In vain I propounded and solv. | departure, 1 could not restrain myself from) * You will speak to my brother !’ she | PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND led elaborate arithemetical problems as to whispering ‘ Qu’elle est charmante? Why | said, covering her face with her hand. CLOTH M ANUFACTORY |the variable proportions which sixteen would I spoke in French _Teannot tell, Miss} ‘ Certainly. That is my intention, if you | TRYON. | assume to forty advanc d stages of life. | Simms’ knowledge of that language was im- s me I may « wn — think I may e HE Subseriber, encouraged by the very know thes aan memes wat ecrvanty ex- pee, while Lotty 9 qxcondes my serait _— ane es oe the liberal support received in the Cloth drenging pressed, but let it pass. Thus stood the that it could not have beeu an aside frou ingers of the ban a covered het face. business, begs to inform the inhabitants of P. E. | case: Charlotte was sixteen and I forty, Lotty. But such French sentences are ge- | * Yes,” she said. { think you may. Isinnd that he has imported from the best makers | 45q J, more than double Lo:ty’s age—al- | nerally spoken without any satisfactory rea-| l deliberated. alee in the United States, : (most oid enough to be her respectable papa! son why they should not be uttered in Eng-| ‘ My dear Miss Simms,’ I said. ‘T cap Machinery for ee eeaeeien }—I found myself irretrievably euslaved by lish. However, to my exclamation, Miss | never sufficiently repay the kindness — the | and Weaving, tet young person, and trotting captive | Simms had rejoined, * Hush!" with an up-| sympathy, the great sympathy — you have i ! August il, ‘62. tl be and shortly (in addition to finishing Cloth} wil! : ee i ; : wae . : prepared to receive Wool for manufacturing into at her chariot-wheels,—or, more proper- raised bony finger, aud un arch smile |shown to me to-day. I am going to tuke the various descriptions of Cloth usuaiiy mad® in jy the wheels of ber infantine go-cert. In b euking the matter to Lotty’s aunt, | advantage of this sympathy—’ i “olonie he charge for Picking, Oiling , ; <4 - s . ihe hs Bes ib kB po gi Weavin , will ee ~ had nursed Lotty, she had ridden a cock-| then, I did not anticipate very much diffi- | Sir! cried Miss Simins. mK, ° =r os ; oe : piled ahead tlie ed | © Ves: gratitude consis oe atts One shilling and three pence per yard. | 22"S* upor my knee, [ had kissed her eulty. She certainty had observed my ad-) Yes; gratitude - ts mostly in taking Wool, | Moist-lips when kissing was a ceremony per-| miration of her niece ; and even had it been #dvantage of the people whe are kind to | Other branches in the same yee oer i : : : : ee . | A ogy oe which niust be washed and dried, may be left with | formed rather for the sake of politeness to! otherwise, the ready sympathy of this kind,; you. 4 am gong to ask a still greater fa- ¥. 5. Coats, Stuns i no cneedashes mamma than for any pleasantness in ftself, | estimable woman would lave interpreted my | Your of you. Wiil you break this matter | ¥ h. @! e . ( t : . abe f ‘ 4 ¢ B ‘ : | pardeutars ee ae Ghee jt bad made Lotty il! with surreptitious | weaning from a word or took. to your brother? Wall you int my *feel- | CHARLES E. STANFIELD. jsogar-plums; [ had preseuted ber with} I chose my time. I was copying some! ings to Lotty @ ee Christmas boxes of the wost astonishiag toys,| musie for Lotry. Lotty and ber mamma! ‘I see no oceasion for that! Why to! | | bad assisted in the instilling of the alpha-| were going forth on the business of card- | Lotty ? | | jhet into her youthful mind by means of | leaving. |. * Well; I respect your prudence. No PRUCE DEALS and DEAL END3,|highly-coloured pictures, ic a painful state, As [took them down to the carriage, | doubt you are right. To your brother,then ? PINE BOARDS, of alliteration; 1 had begyed Lo:ty out of | Lotty said: | * Had not you better do that. It is so Pine Palings the corner, where she stood obstinate, finger ‘You will fnish my music?’ And she| very awkward.’ 1s: en ro lin mouth, and with a geveral humidity of; made the prettiest beseeching moue, and| ‘ My dear Miss Simms, obiige me in this. | Laths and Deal Edging for Sale _ feountenance: I had thought Lotty a dirty | lifted up her face, just as when a child she! [ shall be eternally indebted to you.’ Maida hile ene PURDIE. ehild whea I saw her paddling with her little had lifted it up to be kissed. ‘ We shall | Miss Simms gave me her angular white ee —-- ee —_———— | lat-hands ina pad lle, or with traces of lolli- | soon be back, aud you cau stay to dinner. | hand, She looked up into my face with an PASTURAGE! PASTURAGE! | Pops about her innocent mouth, I had | You saust stay to dinner. The evenings are | expression of wae intense sympathy. UOD well watered Pasturage, one jexecrated Lottv as a nuisance and a bore | +o duli aud stupid, and then you can sing wile from town. Apply to : 'whea she world poke her pug nose into my | that duet with me. Now, go back and fin- ) « | GEORGE COLES. | flirtation with Miss Mirables (who married! ish the music. You and Aunt Sarah can the fix I had got myself into. Will they) Charlottetown, May 26, 1362. afterwards Lord Methuselah), And at last. | talk poetry, you kuow, till I come back.’ | believe me when [ say that [ had no notion | So ! g yth y iS had come to this! We had changed | ythes cythes:: places. I was the child now, avd Miss’ tion of talking poetry with Aunt Sarah— | lates every word that is spoken to the sub- | ASH'S SUPERIOR SCYTHES, | 44, 46 aad 43 iuch. Also, SNEATHS, | She threw me a sugar-plum when she so| the theme. enters into tender confidences, he speaks in RAKES, YORES, &<. Kc. BEER & SONS | pleased ; she taught me a letter of some! Returned to Miss Simms and the music- ambiguous! y bashful hints, not in that pre- Charlottetown, Jaly 14, 1862. ey | sweet sibillating alphabet when she had copying, I made a crotchet—* Miss Simms,’ | cise language wherewith he would draw up ———— | nothing better to do ; she patronized me, and | [ said — then two semiquavers and a rest,| his will. Do you remember the scene be- NOTICE. undersigned bereby cautio i beyan to take an interest in my temper and thea three black bars— tween Belise and Clitandre in ‘ Les Feaimes mur é 5 persons from buving anything to do with a | amure pent, and when she was otherwise en- ns al] | morals ; she petted me when she lacked | ‘ Miss Simms,’ L said, ‘I hope you will | Savaates ? Note of Hund given by him to one Edward Carre: | goed gave me to understand in the plainest |to—to—to lay before you— not see anything absurd in what I am about| ‘ Souffrez,’ says Clitandre, ’ crescendo,| «Sonffrez, pour vos parler, madam qu’um am ant 4 , nds, payable on the Lat | > Pca J itm " :P Pp ’ q an tc Ted be bot having. soantoed value for the | Manner that I was a consummate bore, and | written in peat italics. me F | *My heart—’ Prenne loceasion de cet beureux moment, saine. HENRY C. YOUNG. | an unmitigated nuisance—that [ was. Seneee) See oe ¥ G2 } . . ° ° - . ° * Bonshaw, 14th August, 1562. __ | Miss Lotty knew all about it. In vain I} ‘ Dear me!’ cried Miss Simms. * Ah! tout beau ;’ cries Belise. ‘ Candied | tried to treat her as a child. She laughed ‘My heart, my dear Miss Simms, may be Fra: Spi Of course she applies the words of Cli- | Pees i ‘in my face at the transparent absurdity of of g soft and foolish texture—yes, texture,’| ndre to herself—what woman would not | . ‘ | . ° ° i } 2 the pretence. La vain I affected indiffereace. | ({ had screwed myself up to the mark, and| oom ft theh ‘th a feelj AISINS, Currants, eeedless Reisin, Can-| She exacted attention, and would not be! chose my language with deliberation.) «It eft the house with a feeling of the great-| died Citron, Orange and eed ‘snubbed. She flirted with small boys for | may be soft, { say, but, upon my soul, : ae re ; he ee on been | Ne ae Beta ws Fst Se tars Ze and knew aot think it is. I thivk no man, the most | 011° A enki eae, : i AB Sa ’) that 1 Was vexed, an kuew tbat she knew | j sensate, could bave seen daily, as I have| °°” : ss, ; ds; India Uurrie Powder ; | « | Insensate, Cc ave & y: Rave! ont Gams oe te Hl iseen, this sweet girl’ (con molto spirito) | success equal to my highest hopes, This Olives, Capers, Baking Powder; Sago; | ee il : : good, kind aunt of Lotty’s, [ was deeply Tapiocs, Corn Starch; Rice; Ground and | In whet manner, or at what precise time ‘and have resisted her attractions. It does|°°°"" ys by) Whole Barley, Pearl and Patent ; Maccar-| she left off being a child, and began to be 4 | not lie within the power of buman nature to | roe to her, ri coeumines that T yn | ai, Vermicelli, Farina, Scinala, Salad Oil, | woman | do not know. She passed out Of | resist them.’ -~ os era handsome preseat on my wed-| White Wine «nd Cider Vinegar; Bromo,’ the nursery by no sensible transition and | . . -,_ {Ging day. Chocolate and Prepared Cocoa, ail of best took to her Missdom quite naturally. Jaliet | I was silent for a few minutes,and steadily | Everything went well. «LUMBER. Fresh quality and low prices, jast received and for of the house of Capulet, brought out by her | continued rd copying. a beng tan 0 The next morning [ received a letter from | ssle at | provident mother at the age of fourteen, did | ‘° cao oe See ee ee ot ee ee APOTHECARIES’ HALL. Real iesreuns her imac with . ieoah most reasonable manner. I confessthe dots) «jf pay have no objection, if you have Charlottetown, December 23, 1861. Ce |were scarcely circular, and the strokes! one’ he wrote. ‘I consent gladly to re- perfect coulness. unety aibnit. “bart leted 41 OOP FON. ‘at giediy 0 Te-) . . ; . y straignt, Dut £ completed & mos! | ceive your visits at my house on the footing | Grain, Grain. fete te sy - state-of = eet | prodigious series of running notes ad libitum | you ate Come and dioe with us at six, | VHE highest price given for BARLEY raga ay prided Las ype being oe before I recommenced. I dared not look at 544 we will talk it over.’ and OATS at henceforth from the sabtiest fascinations of| ‘lie Simms Miss Simms, how could I feel sufficiently les’s B d Distillery. | the femaie sex, fel! into captivity at the|. Piatto indiagh dng Gs egy Beene grateful to you! very difficuity was Coles’s Brewery an ory. | are ee hon wayne jdeny. Some people would eall it a great) cjoured at once from my path. I saw now Constantly on hand at prices cheaper hands of a Hiathe girl just out of the ae | disparity — pomagrab-y yee: lap sel deguenltlers the can be purchased in the Market, the | Haviog struggied in vain, [ succumbed, 4 ‘Sir! cried Miss Simms, with some | qoubts on the subject of age. My budding | Dest of Bum, Brandy, Gin, Whiskey, and a | began to think seriously whether sixteen and) | beni i sy inne. Did | auperiorartigle of old Malt Whiskey. Also | forty were after all such incompatible ages. ‘Yes, my dear madam, I am not surprised | Ophelia find Slomsled the less attractive for | —X, XX, apd XXX Ale. Lt was not quite & case of January and | at that toue. But I feel that 1 must bring pix fatness ¢ Charlottetown, November 14, 1861. May. If I bad been sixty, and a lord, there | this into prominence, and consider it judi-| And [Lotty—what did Lotty think of all ss meee ite ee eins serene the’ cially. Tam nota young maa. | cannot | this ? How would she meet me under these | ARCHIBALD WHITE, ae : — sn ee ee ws “sa bide to foamy eapenll, oven. if..1, wealder’ atehalis tiniae"1 ssisied Toc agent te : j i j | SORGOS GE & COUGNIET & FITS Crete ene eee | mo.) oung. Perhaps I have an ap-| oct delichtfal nieture set bas Biacksmith & Carriage Fitter, | ii ican feo, have been perfectly en regie. | no onger ? ung ul o - nos rm peat | most delightful picture. The sweet bashful- | ETURNS thanks to the inhabitants of |... : a | pearance of age, a gravity, Dey ¥ 2crua'! ness, the maiden coyness, the blushes of the! . The difference was on the right side. It) I sat t to forget that point | : ; Cuantotretows, and the Island generally, | ‘ ah wavaad first | 9°2°S: eptreat you not to forget that p jcharming face, the beatings of the pure| for the liberal custom he has received for the last | Was not as bad as if I had married my firs |v ts tee point that we aust fully ereep— |e. he ka, oe . 4 begs to sequaint them that he is |} ho was forty when I was sixteen 1% 18 & point : J sfasp— | jittle heart, the downcast eyes, the trembling | t years, an as : GS ove, WhO Was iorty woen . land I wish to impress if on your mind that | lips. Ah, me !—away with such remem- | Lai th stand, SOUTH AIDE of KING : | still at the same stan Let still the woman take I have thoroughly weighed this, and throwa | prances! Shean 1 angel oe es An elder than herself ; so wears she to him fyl icits a continuance | n elder than herself ; 80 wears , N eae ; ; > anata thats 4 | we where ke mapentielly ot * | So sways abe level in ber husband’s beart. every Peer Tosah etas _e the seale that) | gonfess I was slightly nervous as I ‘his is but just. . J of their PATRONAGE. , | ! ie é | , - : a i He is prepared to execute on Jiberal terms and) = 9) 7 aoaced to compare myself with the opposes ey | knocked at the Simmses door, There was | ‘I think enough has been said on that a smile on the flunkey’s face and an alaeriiy | a blind eye on the budding obesity of my part of the subject,’ Miss Simms interrupted | in his manner as be Jet me in. 1 saw that} "Foaee tah Dein for maehjnery of all des- small boys with whom Lotty flirted, L turned | eriptions, ; Cast Steel Axes, warranted of the best quality. \figure, and began to consider the matter as, me. ‘ You lay too much stresson this point, he knew all about it. What can wo hide, Sp peanaten Saguaianed Suir wous always | accomplished os ‘and must be labouring, I think, under some | from these omniscient flunkeys ? - , ——-08 $4 2—— Miss Lo‘ty had an aunt—a very respect- strange misconception, After all, whatdoes| Miss Simms happened to be upon the stairs, A few agate tenes wy cheap, if 88°! able person—of mature age. Miss Simms age matter—a few months more or less. It} * How can [ thank you?’ I said, grasping | Ch. Town, El, June 16, 1862" 3m was the name of this lady, and Miss Simms is the heart, my dear sir, the heart ; the ber hand with the warmth of friendship. | and | bad always been great friends. She sympathy of affections, the reciprocity of |The flunkey had disappeared. Notice of Administration. was a gushing pergon, strongly sympathetic, ideas, the congeniality of sentiments—’ ‘Qh, Heary !’ Miss Simms gasped. LL PERSONS having any Demands and given to the study of the minor poets of! ‘It is like you to say so,’ I exclaimed.| Her feelings were too much for her. What A jnat the ESTATE of the late JAMES W. lthe last generation. We had often ex- ‘I appreciate your kindness. We are old /a good heart this woman bad to be so moved | Seated tah ata Ne ‘changed sympathies, had often discoursed friends, Miss Simms—’ by the happiness of others. She elung to hes the ) , "| together op the affections after a diluted| + Friends of long standing,’ Miss Simms} my hand, to my arm, to my shoulder, for Pigst pay of Ocrower next. “a . And all persons indebted to said Estate are re-| Distonic manner, avd she was accustomed to agreed, correctively. support. She raised her eyes to mine, her uired forward and settle the ; ae, | : , "2 ; . le . ee from varias crewraicen, la peccelings tanet \apply to me forexplanationsof namby-pamby |‘ Kriends of long standing. I knew that face to mive—her lips; by Jove, I thought ea of her favourite poets. |te immediately for collection, without | Miss Simms occupied that place in the were the best person, the only person, to ; “MARY CAIRNS, Administratrix. Charlottetown, May ii, 1802, tf [May 19./ family which maiden aunts so oftep fill. To! whom I could first break this delicate sub-' tyde of Heleva lifting beseecbing lips to Ber-' from my native land, ‘Ab!’ Texclaimed. * And there is hope |' and [ were, toall intents and purposes, alone /nightmare upon me. Yes, Miss Lotty, I bad that very inten. | of it myself! A pre-oecupied man assimi- alone on the other side. Lot'y was mistress over me,and she knew it. i the sweetest poetry in the world—yourself ject of his own pre-occupation. When he shadow of the truth—not as yet the terrible But I did geutly sunder myseif from the} Primate of All Ireland. The influence and | ed by many different species of flowering weight of Miss Simms without any oseula- | popularity of Primate Beresford, viewed in| shrubs and trees of @ jar , while tion. , ten welt ., | connexion with the dignity which he filled close by is a beaatiful specimen of the deci- bist And how is—is—is she ?’ I said. ‘ She for forty eventful years, testify to qualities duous cypress, the dark shades of which will is not unfavourable, I hope, towards ™Y which wou'd probabiy be little understood | contrast well with the stones of the tomb. suit ¢ : dd _by the Englishmen who is unversed in the The building is being erected from the de- ‘She is only too much blessed!’ Miss Simms | difficulties of such a position, A member of| signs and uuder the superintendence of Mr. replied, with a smile, in which archness | family inured to rule at the cost of fierce A. J. Humbert, the architect, and coasists blended with sympathy. ‘Can you doubt it | opposition, and the chief dignitary of a re- of a central cell with four transepts branch- for a moment ? . _ ligious establishment representing the minori- iag north, south, east, and west, with a At last I managed to reach the drawing- ‘ty of the population, who bad occupied his perch adjoining the western transept. The room door. Miss Simms would have We | post during the days of ep-ancipation and | whole floor is supported by brick vaults of enter without her, for what reason [ could reform, of Ribbonism and of famine, war | massive work, while at the same time form not understand, but she professed to be too | just the man, had he been unwise or un- chambers, with loopholes for the purpose of bashful, and said : worthy, to have concentrated on himself the | ventilation and the prevention of dump ris- Lt would look so odd for us to enter to- hatred of a nation. Yet the late Primate, | ing from the supersiructure, ‘They are en- gether. : | who never Compromised a conviction and) tered by a small flight of stone steps. The I was certainly very nervous. It cannot who never forgot the responsibilities of his | ceutral cell will be lighted by three light be expected that I should now relate accu- | position, had achieved the respect of men of | semi-circular-headed windows in the clere- rately all that was said to me, and all that | a) opinions in a bitterly distracted country | story, which will be externally decorated L said in return, when at the time itself 1! whije holding captive the affections of all, with Aberdeen granite shafts and heads. had no very clear notion of that same. {who had to do with him. He owed his; The copper root of the central cell (which I stammered some oe of vague thanks singular popularity to ayare combination of | is octagonal on plan) rises from the wall and gratitude to Lotty’s papa ; and he satd | ail those qualities which conciliate jarring | 2eads to the apex with a flat pitch in the sometaing about congratulating me in return, | interests, accompanied by the absence of manner of an Italian campanile, and will be and then by mutuai consent we suffered the | those characteristics which, while they spark- ‘surmounted with a gilt cross. Under this conversation to tura on different subjects. | te, often repel. The Primate will not bave | roof will be the sarcophagus for the remains Lotty s mamma helped me out of the auth. ‘left his mark upon theological literature—|of the Prince Consort. The reclining sta- ealties of conversation as only @ woman’s| therefore he has not earued the vengeance | tue of the Prince will be executed eae fluent tongue can. lof any discomfi ed controversialist. He ne-| Marochetti. The four transepts are Lotty was not in the room. : ‘oree convacti ic: i aninduheities cM ae 8 |ver strove to force conviction by oratorical |on plan, are lighted by windows similar to Soon Miss Simms entered ; and afterwards | power—so his tongue never made scars in! those in the clerestory of the central cell, Lott y. ._,/any man’s self-opinion. He was sitple in | and will have pedimented copper roofs. The The expression of Lotty s face surprised | his tastes, self-denying in his habits, and af-| poreh, which will be entered by a handsome me —and her manner still more. There! fubie to every one; yet there was about him | flight of stone steps, will be lighted with .was an angry flush upon her cheeks,a flash- |i, aj] bis movements that indescribable air circular-headed three-light windows, with ng fire in her eyes, an obstinate firmness | of the grand scigneur which never can be} shafts and heads of Guernsey granite, and about her red lips—very different from the |jmitated where it does pot exist by nature. | the frout will be supported by monolithic signs i had expected to read upon that fair | fis singularly handsome persou was no doubt | granite columns, similar to those already face. When I shook hands with her, she | of great advantage to him, symbolising, as finished in the mausoleum of the Duchess of jnst gave me the tips of her fingers for the | it should, the man and the office. It was a | Kent. The whole of the exterior will be de- fraction of a moment, and pulled them away | sual remark in London, whenever in his|corated with Aberdeen and Guernsey gra- with a jerk. 4 | stronger days he appeared in public, thatthe | nite, and with red Mansfield and. various &§ hope, Lotty, I whispered, * that you Archbishop of Armagh, with his thin erect other stones. The interior will be in differ- have ‘to Chjention to receive me in the new | figure, his pale fively chiselled face, and his|ent coloured marbles and stone, ‘The build- character which I take upon me bere for the | jear blue eyo, ewbodied as no other man/ ing is in the Italian style, reminding one of first time ¢ j a the ideal bishop—Christian priest, ruler, the campanili at Pisa, As the erection ‘Me? Lotty said. * Why, on earth,}sod geutleman. He ruled by his majestic | stands upon a base of concrete, 6 fect i should I have any objection? I wish you),,.. earth dhi spotted character, by his | thickne ° here i ; on eo fon Pea bare® | presence and his unspo as aracter, by his thickness, there is very litile probability that Sctaraeatok hak eames ta ae tolerant wisdom and by the exhibition of a) the symetry of the mausoleum will be marred me sel!-mastery which bad moulded a character by settlements. The erection which is 70 } air, she tossed her head, she gave utterance naturally impulsive into au equal teuor of! feet in length and the same in height, will toa short, sharp Jangh, and looked very 6 : +a: ae te * eh Ler erg hi ee We. unruliled kinduess, by the stately hospitality | be adorned by several statues. ‘The founda- = - Bo oe W1 Jy **°r sith which be adorned his prince-like posi- | tion stone, which was laid by her Majesty in: 1x Was st perplexing. ‘ has : e Kh d es an Widen gor ne rate a nt ‘tion, and by the breadth of bis munificenee. | the Queen, bears the following inseription : i Eigen wi a ‘ve . _| His Cathedral Church of Armagh, restored | -—" The foundation stone of this building, ae Asi pri ne oe wit act under by his bounteous and watchful care, and at| erected by Queen Victoria, in pious remen- 7 Cee eee ‘ ‘an expense of more than £30,000, from a! brance of her great and good husband, w ‘Henry,’ said a mild, purring, sugary te! ’ ' : trl tet — visti: whe nSemen) Midiauiien weet eres of squalor next door to ruin, will] laid by heron the 14th day of March, A.D. sh nts ere —e 5 your | be a monument of bis vigilant stewardship-— | L862. * Blessed are they that sleep in the Pay haut cyte to" Mitthal Steal aa iat i the more remarkable because previously to. Lord.’” The builder is Mr, George Dines ; toned mys ei ‘ ites b. ‘de b the Cathedral restoration movement in Kn-) the erection being under the supervision of tioue Le ake P Cive esice Der. . r antia datixhe + sin uy . ios Aeiah- Leake aren ai ata ‘gland. Nor was ‘he satisfied with having Mr. Thomas, the clerk of the works. ' ora - ot ieee | ’ re-established the external fabric, for, witi} as nen depen — Ses ae mee idle Min mea | the aid of a zealous precentor, he boldly in-: Tus Hanpnook or Soverxiens.—The Al- Q en gross ODVersa ° i . & § | : . . : ¥ : g ae /novated upon Trish prejudices, and organized | manach de Gotha presents this year some | the daily choral service on a footing of effi- [Cevceus discrepancies worthy of uote, It jcieucy which might put many English dig- | Preserves 18 tbeir places the States of Italy ‘nitaries to the blush, very institution in which have been annexed to the Picdmon- together. Dinuer was announced. Evea while I was lookiug round for Lotty, his Cathedral city—the King’s School, the | tese Monarchy, and yet admits the kingdom Miss Simms had seized my arm. errr tie YN ar Do: , an ae . I went down the stairs in a hideous dream | tine = Mpeeehs 5 FN) Mero. of Italy,eaying, he ictor Kmmanuel takes,by satiebaitetiinisdiniiaiiimea ae 4) owed its existence to him, or was largely the law of the 17th of March, 1862, the ti- lig: MOY dg as 2 speci! | benefited out of his ever open purse. When-/| tle of King of Italy.” In addition, fall de- : a bseription fi i- | tails of the new provi i i ’ c ; |ever a subscription for any eburch or ebari BO! provinces are given ia the fy place at the dinner-table was changed. | tsht¢ of patriotic object was started in Ire-| statistical pert. But, on the other hand, it | From the time when Lotty used to appear at i >t : . ; % * ED oit e se : ; » laud, the Primate’s name stood always fore- | admits some new States not before M eet deck ead oem ee i a ay aug frock aud blue ‘most. Thenew public school of St. Columbia | ed by the Admanach, such as the Republic y readers, | have no doubt, see clearly sash, her place had always been by me. | near Dublin received its thousands at his|of Hayti, the Kiogdom of the Sandwich Lo. Now, I and Miss Simms were placed toge- Raa ae ee =: mpi we ; pavile of Trinity College, | landsand the Empires of Japan and China. ther on one side of the table, and Lotty } Dublin, is his gift. When any Cae In the Sandwhich Islands, the King named ‘ | for some good object was made in England.) Alexander Gibolibo Kamehameha IV.. i I was perplexed and miserable. Some) ven to England a streams of his snail declared to be 26 years old, aud married to cence largely flowed. an American lady, Miss Roker. His son has But his bounty was not confined to larges- | the title of Prince of Hawai, his brother is ses in which his name appeared. It was a| generalissimo, and hie sister Prime Minis- ‘common and a dearer pleasure to him tomi-|ter! He has a Council of State, three mi: ‘nister lu Secret to the necessities of the pen-/nisters, and a marshal, a receiver-general, niless and the destitute, and to eke out the/and a supreme court. The majority of the doll which I bad presented to Lotty had ‘subsistence of the hard-worked curate. European States have representatives there. becn taken away from her in punishment of' How many the clergy are whom his band | The kingdom forms four insular proviuces, some childish peccadillo. | has fed and clothed—how thoughtfully, how peopled by seventy thousand inhabitants, 1 remember that we had champagne as | Uelicately, and yet how wisely he adminis: | Phe oldest sovereign in Kurope is still the apos’ somelaials odesion. © Lott mi a i tered his relief—never will be known till the King of Wurtembarg, 80 years of age, and P ; YS Papa | foal day of reckoning. The last thought of the youngest Prince of Reusee-Greiz, 15 ank Miss Simaie’ healt) C " : > au - oor ae es. eee my health | business which occupied his mind on the day | years old. The Sovereign who has reigu g } . the longest is the Duke of Saxe-Meiningen, : (of his death was to make provision that the I was in a ghastly dream. Wh : Pa Pn a 'y : : ether Ts eurates whom he had aided should not be! who came to the throne 59 years ago, while knew the truth or did not know it I cannot | . aa ag i : ce : me 5%, tell. ‘The dinner was over at length—the | deprived of their year’s stipend owing to|the most recent is the Sultan. The work wine Was put oa, The ladies drauk their hits loss. When he had done this, he only j also gives a list of the different Orders—184 seni clea and:inhs on: thought of bis soul. Ofa very Apecnnte Tee num der—of which six are for women. Ast opened the door for them Miss Simms jnature, aud greatly enjoying cheerful society, The State possessing most is Bavaria, whispered: ‘ Do not be long.’ he yet was never married, and so the means | which has 11 ; then Spain and Austria, We filled our glasses aiiaieeais |of doing publie good were never wanting. | Which have 10, Russia eight, and Portugal ‘ My dear fellow,’ said my host, ‘ this ee oe ne tae oiet ee — "Onde The lialian Tievolution little affair bas given me the most entire sa- it ro . rn - P ki ef rt re — hie" vines a a P pane te Naples, one in Mo- tisfaction. I had not a suspicion of it. My | eee eee ee nae Pte fete ~—" arma; and five in ‘Tuscany. . SntninAtedinn” imine , tious, while the strength of his clan feeling | ot ; _ aoa ecLee a, ee aera shown in the peculiarity, that, while | 7 x Keep ‘ru Awake. — Near Ne. witty“ eidael taal ue oo ta pit she have |Cou/orming in all other things to the strictest oa : om Jersey, lived a very pious family » 6 PaFO , ‘episeopal regime, he never would abandon | °° had taken an orphan boy to raise, who, iby the way, was rather underwitted, He ol waya got. 08 very ell: logether- iq: your ‘his family livery for the regulation parple tastes for poetry and so forth. Ages not | : y g Sete | imbibed very strict views on religious matters, however, and once asked his adopt- unsuitable. You are no longer a chicken, [aa spe, however, of what gight\pbem' my dear fellow, and if she bas a year on | SPFAtH prostiny, ome oF wae igre eed) 4 mother if she dida’t think i two the advantage of you, why that is your \of position, he made it the rule of his life dic Ok tener a t - it Wrong for sitdicoubtiaaans! Gantpadmiredaaa Tee that beseiting temptation of all, aa eae a toc _ and fall Of course you know that ber little property and especially af Arion pretatearmncpeia. | vice Pr She : lied ae ee co amounts to a meré nothing. She has lived | -0¢ Plodding eurate without counexione was), - to church the : ere; 6 aie es Me eed oe years, and, {28 sure of something more substantial than 6). ie vacua -taet 7 ae ree d be upon my soul, i shall be sorry to lose her. pees eyempattiy . wile Cie Sige tyre sae. | headed old man,who in viebly pe But we must not be selfish in this world. |%°* had no complaints to make of the Pris) @arin the sermo anid ta age hres Yes, { am convinced that Sarah will make ipate,s Soprteg, although be found thas bis} his shdptind Sees bien ya _—— you an excellent wife.’ | confidence varied according to the recipient’s | ae ma “oe ¥ t nodding, ‘Sir! I gasped, ‘ there is some terrible | 4°e"ts- His prime bad been passed during |... 04 of Seabien ” he healed “dane . and fatal mistake!” ithe rough tierce times which preceded Ca- Lsenntindedl didn ; ott “ ; the ‘ Mistake, sir,’ cried my host fiercely ; tholie Emaneipation, when the country WAS top of his bela on “sue eanieors ~ ‘ what do you mean @’ torn to pieces by the tremendous faction baste oongre ae ol eief mer and ‘ Your sister is a very respectable person,’ fights of Whig and Pory, Catholic and Pro-; sat gazed i biel "ae an bo a [ stammered ; ‘ but I never had the remotest stant. Yet the Archbishop lived on terms | rely said to the a aoe idea of-—of—’ | not merely of official comsiunication, but of oiktadanala tatiie er ak mena ane © Of what, sir 2?’ eee peewee eee ocoupants aaa of naan ‘ You preash ‘Th st i sking o of the Roman Jatholic See of Armagh.! put... > . ;: “ Ty idea of asking her to be |For Dr. Choly ta peitiballit he entertained L'il keep ’em awake.”—Balt. American. ‘Jones!’ he said, solemnly, ‘I always | * “cere regard. It was po common acto!) A clever Yankee alluding to the well- took you to bea man of honour. The feel- moral courage on his part which made him | known line, * the glass of fashion and the How I got through that dinner TI cannot tell. The chief remembrance I have of it, is of the expression of Lotty’s face, It was precisely the same look that I had seen on it half-a-dozen years before, when a new truth itself—began to fall upon me, | —- Bsa vk ™ a suphes 7, ‘ i ‘ings and affections of a woman are not to) ** past eighty years of age come forward to! mould of form, makes a * pues’ that the : css ; ; actif’ in Cerca nkthe ‘ . . 7 be played with in thig atrocious manner.’ | testify to ae tee logic of facts by | Glass in question must have the lady Kverything swam betore my eyes, the | #eepung , en ations or of education who wrote a celebrated cookery-book under room turned round—the world was resolving | #8 inevitable for Ireland. We donot choose | the name. The‘ mould’ he explaiss by say- i : in i ‘to recall the unmanly attacks which bivgots os: . : -v itself again into chaos—the final collapse | a J ‘gots ing it must mean an ice, or jel!y,or pudding of all things was at hand. j did not blush to make upon that venerable | o¢ blancmange,or any other kind of * mould’ Like Shylock, flung from the height of | 2 The storm recoiled upon the heads | you like—all of which goes far in his opinion my certain hopes to ruin irretrievable and | Of the zealots who could not or would not! to prove what a very clever fellow Shake. blank despair, I turned sick and faint, see thinge . they are; and in the mean- | peare war, Not only did he know every- PT peed you Mew dat Shave tage Gin tenes,’ -| while, the Primate by this act of Christian thing thas went before him, and a great deal I am not well.’ | patriotism had made a long ouward step to! more, but he could also anticipate coming I rushed from the room—from the house, | *2é pacifisstion of hie country.—Sat. Rev. » ents, 7 e © bp a gcaga : venansneseceitipeliiatianaintmaniinaag DO a - That same night 1 took my passage on A Wino Lvacinarioy.—« I do not soy," | you would understand me. 1 felt that you for a momect the good Creature was going board an Ostend steamboat, and floayed in| Tue New Royat Mavsoneum at Wrxp-! s a : * to kiss me. Her attitude was the very atti- the darkness down the Thawes, an exile! son.—The mausoleum now in course of erce. erie aed Teertinne = 7 tign in the Roval grounds, Frormore, and would not try to keen sheen”? Uf a ia i als Sig i, peg - rt US ame v3 1. lsisidemnalineimmenrhese. ln cee : i 2 y am