The New York Herald Newspaper, July 16, 1854, Page 3

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@eciaion. Hamilr, wnte collectors falling to the of ber bands, ani the soft ‘From the ei3 storesand ‘we docks slowly erum- | is something more than srrere primrose tobim. | fancy, with conceivab'e state of place NBW FUBLICATIONS. the customs, wha ate to conven the information ‘ grey balreaserseame barriedly back of the ; touched, I know, not why or how, by the | ‘the following extract 19 abou: as fair ® specimen of | and groups of plants ever awaken kindred feelings the attorney © the district, to whom Randolph is to | ear op one side, where it had threatened to be in air of past 7A rambled out of the, | + :. sivie as we can select :— There is a mysterious affinity between human con+ Volume—The | Write to rec 4ve their information, and proceed by | the way. on those well afternoons, to the y the thea of schousness and outward nature, but still more i act AP ry be Indictment,” Hverything bangs upon. the of | You should have deen her in that large, aplint-bot: | Sélds thet lay upon bilbsiges Over the harbor, and) | Plante satiafy the common necessitics of man | verious is the varied manner in which this ‘third volume of the writings of Thomas Jefferson we a single: and thet the moat one! | tomed ‘chair, with @ wooden in her | there sat g out to aba, some distant | and » body » they | is moditied by individual feeling. The vaving corn are recefved from the publishers, Riker, Thome | ever B sa'vo ge'basiness with. He always. coutrives | copaciass, lait snd & hopping tae in npn reall paccereeny Wie goaseen uns 6 Che opsib. fo Naan eer ite varied Ges tha? delight his | 2cid,bae ite b alee, Ser neve a arene . 4 ype would eo sail stately D nf irs, with vines hanging festoons from 2 Co., of this city. This ia the edition of Jefferson's | %0,9-cree im principle with one, but in conclusion | right hend; with what a soft, easy motion the chop- | be mJ type ent image, wh ta of the fu- | eye, and the odors which refresh his senses; the to tree. Plains ocvered with orange groves ‘works poblisbed by-erder of the joint committee of | W'S the other. Anglophobia, sore antt galomany Ye pg pe em ay Ce tare, Going home, T returned the mars, wich of which his houses, his factories, bis shipa | and broken. in by fertile slopes and vineyards, Congress on the Library—edited x Lpesaneg cumstances not usual, have Secoed te complesion dered beef on The fiat of her"kaife and Sbserve, ea It nner er ean pep hin Chal afer el ine many benefits which the ore swarmin wa od te of Teles seee 4 Meigen Eswaran vs | Spay nin es yan eres | shower tein pn ge ean | em} Sten ke iy Seno | nen ur et ear een rode Sd | hiss a need and will form a moet valuable acquisition to Ameri- or which is enfutiabl x prac, inter iiroents, it | The, the neh the eet Took ofthe Irak Pema icaeet me. Hee a to tne cald of nintco, | Saections, which, like the lyre of Tinmotheus, they che ink ae ong bed A “ pod of = the Se thin “ Why, my. ton, (snnf, souff,) where have forests. . We would succumb to the cold of winter; | by turns excite and soothe. Each tree that we snr Sears gal macnn prc by Cox | Ei ep ute postr een | acento, | Sty Ate) fu ance uc tas | osu trl he for fee’ tid nol | Cr oo rt thet i from the heirs of Mr. Jefferson, and deposited | !# Sef way, and Stove All, the ardent epirit'ot Yep, you. should have seen Mrs. Gray at this very souff,) & beg of cinnamon.” . carry us from land to and over the broad | our eye, it seems to murmur responses, So gree our constituents, The line ie now drawn so clearly order to appreciate fully the perfections of | 2 (snutl y if no trees, The very destruction inthe Department of Btate, as we stated in out 20- | 49 to show on one side, First, the fashionable circles | Hime in order to ow Eagan bout. Tasy | - 2 Avg only been on tbe wl mother. pee, nities noi teme Shaner dots toa a a thee of the former volumes. . | Of Eetedeehie, Hew : oaks Destin, oni Chariegzen are departing from the land. | Railroads and stest | your ‘aowes penne pa eset are dirty | the wisdom and forethought of the Creator i in this | Frace and cheerfulness, there long sombre portiooes The volume before us contains a highly interest: pg aren greg ig soy a mits the cid | boats are sweeping them away. Ine litte time, | places, and dangerous, You must take cato of | aloo manifest, that, whllet plants invest and orna | of gnarled old stems, standing, as the cedare of ing portion of Mr. Jefferson's correspondence, | tortes are found in some of the three descriptions.) | Providing cur humble tale ie nos fires se agatiy of Yourself; my on. Really thie melt fe (enn, scl) | ee Te ei ciete na ne ta nnlateln tbe mhols Laban, tke mise pillar, stpporng, els po mensely, the lettsea written’ by kiss’ during the last | On Sheiothes site.nco—Wieet, Merohanis teedlion.0m | ‘gn antique'ou Women" who cook. their awn "Bul I departed from the maternal presence provd | system of creation in’ order and beauty. And yet | jived flowers and hidden but permanent thoras, re Sow monthe of his residence in Paris in 1769, and | thelr own capital; Siar, coe ctu aibae care of the work hands are getting | gn hap; y. Iwas aromatic. Ibore about with me | this is but the humblest purpose that plants serve | mind us of earthly pleasures—a forest, with ite silent wubsequently, after his return to the United States, seer actiecina Of Gur aitidene:, Genst (the | ‘© be legendary even now. ; | the true air, Whoever smelt me smelt dis | on earit-_ the burmblott because it only satiation ma- | temple of foliage, raised through centarles, on. gi @aring the same year, and while he acted as Secre- Freneb sinter) fanot yet arrived, though hourly | Porvax’s Morrauy Macasme—The July num: | sant countries. I had nutmeg, spices, clanamon, Sirtak Beizemants, however we suretives amanhare legge Spanbe, Bigs Shove: macs and fel ot aac tary of State under Washington's administration. | expected. ber of thia ably conducted periodical containa some and chives, Withee the jolly red A mined one vee ae ae ote 2 op me and A Ag with vipers awe, and nae Many subjecte of importance are discussed in these | ‘There ie evidence in the correspondence before | of the best papers that have as yet appeared init. | }'2nq in'grod’ clos chiveelf aed all the world, | obtain a higher valne. Kiureniad ie, Coatiecte ellis iatenmaniesenee ietters, showing Mr. Jefferson's views on measures | us, that Mr. Jefferson was not very strenuously Op- | Ajthough the names of the authors are in accord-| We havo in the present. number, the commence- It is true, are there for man, for the count. | humblest of flowers bring with their sweet perfume ¢f public policy at the organization of the federal | posed to some of the early measures of Washing- | ance with an invariable rule of the publication with- | ment of a new story by Herman Melville, entitled = had. Fret oags i Rina ve, co Se ba Fe aha rad pe tiered og FS ayer ake gee erence Hamilton, | ton’s administration. He seems to have acquiesced | pela from ue, the well known peculiarities of their | J,ra¢ Potter, or Fifty Years of Exile. Sofaraathe | bas since been tuned into & eens, Ran above. | child-like eyes upon us, our passions fly like evil on,and others. The developement of politi- | in Hamilton’s great measure of funding the Btate | gifferent styles enables us at once to fix their pa opening chapters go, they give promise of a tale If'he does labor in the sweat of brow, ,and he who delights a the. 3 , humble. ‘cal parties at that time is aleo shown, aud the viewa | debte, passed by Congress in 1790. In a letter to | ternity. ‘Thus, for instance, in the-qnaint philo- J eat the herb of the field—~—how th of delicate piants, is not apt to harbor coarse ow equal in interest to any of the previous works of | ly iy he rewarded! Of mere thorn he has made, * Brongn or fieroe feelings. In the house around this charming writer. The description of the rug: | as if by enchantment, the beautiful and flagrant we see a tidy, well kept garden, order and ged and diversified: scenery which vonstitates the | Tose. Before he thus labored, the olive was dry | peace are apt to prevail, and where there is a flower and dfensive, the peach bitter, the pear had but a | stand outside there is almost always a book sbelf main characteristic of the extensive district com- hard, woody flesh, and the apple tree was full of | within. prised within the Eastern division of Berkshire, | thorna, Man lubored and the thorns fell, the rose The sketch from life, entitled “ Hurd Up,” has a Massachusetts, poaseezes a vividness and force that a and ee Steel feel econ good deal of dramatic force about it, and presents dencte an eye trained to a close and accurate ob- lost its Mtterness, and the wild graasea “were con- | ¥# With a laughaple exposé of the shifts to which servation of the phenomena of nature. verted into waving fields of life-sustaining grain. | men who live by their wits are occasionally driven. Travelling northward from the township of Otis, | The influence which the vegetable world thus exer- | The following is a picture of the hero in one of bis the road leads for twenty or thirty miles tosvards | cises on the civilization of man, is as yet but little di of embarras re Windsor, length#iee upon ‘that long broken spur of | noticed, oaly in the great outline bas it been ob- | “maxes of em gary lee heighta which the Green Mountains of Vermont served, that wherever the spontaneous productions of | | Mynus, poor fellow, after his final resolve to ent send into Massachusetts. For nearly the whole of | theearth supply him with food, heiscompletely sa | literature, entered his abode tn rather dull. spirits. the distance, you have the continual sensation of | vage—only a degree farther advanced where he | He stole up stairs, so that his landlord might not being upon some terrace in the moon. The feeling | plants the palm and the banana—but where grain is | hear him, and advert t» the unsettled account on of the plain or the valley is never yours; scarcely fie principal support, industry and intelligence are | the staircase, which event would be nats and cheese the feeling of the earch, Unless by a sudden pre- | most perfectly daveled, as in the temperate zone. | to his fellow lodgers, who would be sure to listen at tation of the read you find yourself plunging | It is thus shown us that the rich heir is not the | their door, Mynus was to acertuin extent careless sone gorge; you pass on, and on, upon the | happiest, but that the child of the poor man, gifted | sbout being dunned in private, but a public dan crest or slonen, of Aid poi Riile for with industry pnd indomitable will, has tar more ee eed than le was accustomed to bear with low, may 8 the valie wer over prosperity. a x minds'us of the quaint method of the older essayists, |. Housatonic lies endlessly aiong at} feet.” Often, eesodern sdient had taught us of lave a higher duty | He sat down at his table, and revolved his present. but its sentimentality ie rendered piquan’ by the |.aa your horse gaining some loft; evel track, flatas | and a nobler purpose for which the plant lives. | Sapp It was by no means brilliant. One shil- naturally canstic turn of the writer’s mind. The|| table, trots gaily over the aimoet 4 and | Workipg in masses they regulate the numerous and | ling and three-pence was not an immoderate capi- dded road, and your admiring eye swe ‘the comprehensive physical processes of the earth. | tal tocommence life over again with; and without pred oy ri @f Mr. Jefferson with regard to the leading charac. | Gouverneur Morrie, who wae then in Europe, Mr. ters of the federal party which sustained the ad. | Jefferson writes, under date of November 26, 1790, ministration of Gen, Washington, with most of page ars: ne sie I eo aos avbom Jefferson dissgrecd. has met your approbation in all ite parte, It haa « Returning from his missien to France near the | excited even here greot opposition, and more es- -@lose of the year 1789, Mr. Jefferson found that he that part of it which transferred the State ‘bad been nominated by Washington aa Secretary of he pe SS The veeaead ‘State. He preferred to return to France as Minister, | satisfied with this measure. I bel eal eee ‘te taking a seat in the Cabinet; but after remaining Sink ih a berped on by, meng vo. mesk Chet dea ‘three months in Virginia, he sacrificed his own in- e TAME! ciontens tothe wishes of Ihe Preah, und re | Hes eeigin an Implcaie ge, Haram paired to New York to enter on the duties of Secre- | The measures and tone of the government threaten tary of State, the national government then being | abortion to some of his specu’ 95 most particu- eatablished A larly to that of the Yazoo territory. But it is too lnithie elty, and Congress then being in well nerved to be overawed by izdtvidual opposi- cesaion bere, ‘ tion. Our prospect is really a bright one. ‘The following extract from aletter to hie son-in- | J+ ig believed that Guovernenr Morris was partion -law, Mr. Randolph, shows the difficulty of a winter larly favorable to the fanding of the State debts, and joarney from Virginia to New York at that time, | the assumption of the same by-the general govern- ‘and the state of things in this city :— ment. Mr. Jefferson subsequently regretted that he New York, March 28, 1790, measure, icita- Dzar Sire :—I arrived here on the 21st inst., after sel agegg forsee des Detter cg sopby, pleasant irony, and exuberant imagery of the article entitled ‘Sea from Shore,’ we recog- nize the sharp, incisive pen of the author of the “ Potiphar Papers,” wreathed for the nonce with garlands of flowers, and dipped in honey instead of gall. There isa vein of kindly indalgence for the foibles of humanity, and of charity for its graver faults, pervading its whole tone, which presents the mind of the writer under another and more pleasing phase, and proves the justice of the observation that like the surgeon who steels his nervea against the agonies that he is compelled to cause, but whose eyes grow moist ata tale of misery—the satirist who lashes with the greatest severity the follies and vices of maskind, may yet be the most sensible himself to the spectacle of humansuffering. There isa good deal in the style of this article that re- following will sbow at once Mr. Curtis’ power of | £° as laborious a journey of # fortnight from Richmond, | tion of Hamilton. broad landscape beneath, youseem to be Theirs is the duty'to keep the atmosphere dry or | capital what was to become of his invention? as I ever ete foe tiberacde only one day x The correspondence of Mr: Jefferson should be | Mental analysis, and his force of description: ving to heaven. Save wea tield here and there, at | moist, as may ia Weta On them aspucda din “ A curse on all publishers and capitalists,” he In the month of June, Prue and L like to walk | Jong intervals, the whole country is either in wood | warmth or the coldness an - Alexandria, and another a+ Baltimore, I found i: earriage and horses.at Alexandria; bat a snow of haga by al Hor e.vien a re nah eighteen inches deep falling the same night, I saw any Ley aye A politi part es in nih the impossibility of getting on in my own carrlage— Btates, ani early measures of owr government. a0 left it there, to be sent to me by water, and had Fasxion anv Famine, by Mrs. Anne 8, Stevens: “gay horses led on to this place, taking my passage | Bunce and Brothers. Thia novel, the first sustained ree hg gd org Peer | effort, we believe, of the editresa of Peterson's fu'eb way were eaten that we. could ‘carr ed Ladies’ Magazine, and the authoress of many de- more then three miles an hour, sometimes not more | tached pieces that have appeared from time to time ‘than two, punriactatiteetaen My first object | in that periodical, ie ushered into the world with a ae being in the centre of my business. Finding nong | S2tt of spologetic preface, which, on a perusal of its there vacant for the prossas, Ihave taken a small | contents, we do not discover any necessity for. Mra, one in Maiden lane, which may give me time to look | Stephens to considerable Hterary cleverness unites about me. Much bu:ineas had been pat by for my ‘ arrival, 40 that I found mynolf ‘all at once involved | 2 fertile imagination, and with these qualities she wnder an accumulation of it. When this shall be | Could not fail to prodace an interesting and reada- * got through I will be able to judge whether the ordi- | ble tale. She seems to have in addition, an accu- a geemnsop enc de tebe leave me any | rate perception of character, and a keen sense of - Deieure. here wiil be little. + Congress is principally occupied by the treasury | ‘He ladicrous, so that the personages of her plot as- ‘wo ive! e firs ce, not ere, for instance, sketch that i ettain “it will hold its ground all. the inueee Petna Ses | ehanges of the bill when it shall be brought in. all the rs sehabel Ovéitan Mz. Jefferson, soon after his arrival in New York, Py ‘Biss, noel ‘Sacra eena = formed the opinion that a portion of the federalists | met with on Long, Inland, Giere yet may be found - whe were in power under General Washington, | some genuine old farms, 8 instead of car- (were -monarchiste in principle, and that all theie | ge oases, and cow shedu in the place of pony d the fertility of our soil; | muttered, jingling the one and threepence in his left upon the Battery towards sunset, and watch the;|!or pasture. Horses, cattle and aheoy ate the prin- | they-alter the climate, change the course of local | trousers pocket, the only one that had no holes in steamers, crowded with passengers, bound for the | cipal inhabitanta.,of these mouniaing. But all | winds, increase or diminish the quantity of rain, | it. ‘They might have made a fortune out of me pleasant places along the \voast where people pass!| through the pear lazy colimns of smoke rising from | and soften the Hgorol theseasona. Itis not merely | had they chosen. There were my collected tales the hot months, Seaside lodgings are not .very |" the depths of the forest, the presence of | that whole countries and regions look to certain | which I offered to Plebbins, the best things of the comfortable, I am told, but who would not be a lit-|| that half-outlaw, the charcoal burner; while in | plante for their eule support, or that the life of en: | kind ever published in this country, and he refused tle pinched in hie chamber, if his windows looked) early spring added curls of vapor show that the | tire nations is bound up with that of asingle tree, | them, forsooth, because ‘the subjects were revolt- upon the sea? In such praises of the oocan dot |‘maple sugarboiler is also at work. But as for | like the Mauritivua palm, but whole races of men, | lng.’ As ifa publisher could tell whether a thing edhles #8 such times, and so respectfully do I re-|| farming a9 a regular vocation, there isnot muob of | through numberless generations, can live only where | Was revolting or not! ‘Then there was my romance, gard the sailors who may chance t) pass, that Prue | it here. At any rate,no man by that means accn- | it pleases, under Providence, certain plants to grow | ‘The Infe Machine, or the Celestial Conjurer; often says, with her surowd smile, that my mind is | mulates a fortune from this thin and rocky soil; all | and to. prosper. that was unsuited to publication, too, because the a kind of Chelsea Hospital, full of abortive marine | ‘whose srable parte have long since been nearly ex-| By far the nobleet and most exalted purpose for | hero happened to be a cannibal, who eventually de- hopes and wishes, broken legged intentions, bliad |. hausted. which plants live is, however, to adorn the surface | vours the young lady to whom he is attached. An regrets, and desires, whowe hands have been shot Yet during the first settlement of the country, the | of our beautiful earth, and thus to make manifest to | idea in iteelf so original and striking that it would away in some hard battle of experience, so that | region was not unproductive. Here it was that the | us, in their very existence, and in all their thousand | be the making of any book. The fact of it is, an they cannot grasp the results towards which they | original settlera came, acting upon the: principle | wonders, the Almighty Creator of heaven and earth. | original man bas no chance in the world. ‘Tis only reach. She is right, as usual.’ Buch hopes and in- | well known to have regulated their choice of site, | Itis in this aspect only that plants, the types of na- | your common piece, seribblers who get on—fellows tentions do lie, rained and hopeless now, strewn | Damely, the high land {fn preference to the low, ay | ture, acquire their highest significance. They be- | who write wishy-washy domestic stories, with a about the placid contentment of my mental lite, as | lesa au to the unwholesome «missmas generated | come then, not our friends and supporters only, but | pretty girl and good old man ineach. These things the old pensioners sit about the grounds at Chelsea,'|.by breaking into the rich valleya god alluvial bot- | our kindly teachers also, Whether we look down | tell. These go down ; while the man who, like me, maimed and musing in the quiet morning suashine. | toms of primeval regions. By degree, however, | uponsoftmosses that creep over the rngeedrock,and | Jabors to produce an artistic and original work may Many acne among them thinks what a Nelson he | they quitted the safety of this sterile ‘elevation, to|) the humb‘e lichens weeping with slow oozing, or gaze | starve! Oh! curse on ull publishers. Tl never would have been if both his legs had not beem pre- | brave the dangers er though lower fields. So | up atthe giant tree of the forest, every where our | Write a line 5 ay as long as I live.’ “ - maturely carried away; or in what a Trafalgar of | that at the present day, some of those mountain | mind is lifted up, in awe and wonder, to that latel- | 80 eaying, Mr. Bebsarins seized a pen, dipped it triumph he would have ended, if, unfortanately, he | townships present’ an aspect of singular abandon- | ligence which watchca over the destinies of the | in bis ink-bottle, and commenced athree act comedy had not happened to be blown blind by the explo- |. ment. » Thuogh they have never known aught but | universe, and gives us here already a faint glimpse | on the spot. sion of that unlucky magazine. So I dream, some- and health, they, in one lesser aspect at least, | of the great plan of creation and its great author. | He had eke a very exciting situation in the firet times, of a straight scarlet: collar, stiff with gold|| look like countries depopulated by plague and wer.| Clearly, however, aswe all feel the impressions | act, when his hero, having disguised himself ina lace, around my neck, iustead of this limp white | Every. mile or two @ house i# untenanted. | which the vegetable world, and especially the con- | bear's skin in order to carry out an intrigne, was cravet; and 1 lave even brandished my qaill at the | The strength of the framework of these ancient | ecionsness of their still, unceasing life and labor | seized by the kecper of a menagerie and looked up office 80 cutiaes-wise, that Titbottom has pansed in | buildings enables them jong to resist the encroach- | produces upon our mind, it is extremely difficult to | with other wild avimals, he not daring to disolose ‘ To these old houses are atill attached gen- | his additious und looked at me aaif he doubted | ments of decay. Spotted groy and m with the | explain the caures, oreven to determine and ex- | his identity, for some.reason that Mynus was just Measures tended to eatablish a strong national | erous gardens, hedged in with picket fences, and | whether | should come out quite square in my petty |: weather-atain, Meir timbers teem ‘have lapsed press them in words, clearly and distinetly. The | thentrying to hit upon, when the door of hia room government, and to render tho State govern- | teeming with vegetables, and yards full of | cash. Yet he understands it. Titbottem Wastbor back into their woodland original, forming part now | mere farmer, it is truce, sees nothing but tons of | opened, and a deep bass voice cried, ments subordinate thereto. In the rank of | Old-fasbioned shrubbery, with thick grass half a | in Nantucket. of the gencral picturesque of the natural scene. | hay in a flowery meadow, and so many bushelsof | ‘* Mister Mynus!” , ' monharchists among the federalists, he clawol century old mossin; em over. These things, That is the secret of my fomdness for the sea:.1 They are of extraordinary size, compared qith | wheat in a glorions field of golden grain—the majestic “Well!” said Mynus, doggedly. ey “Joka Ada Fisher Ames, &i a ‘oils Nhe iarip Ag re Vaal os olden times, are not yet | wos born by it. Not more surely do Savoy ards pine | modern farm houses, One peculiar feature is the | foreatareprecent to him but 80 many cordsof wood, ‘Did Henry the Eighth wear shoe buekies i” mas, ad Moon e Ne bey: pe Ae t by sloping lawas, me for the mountains, or Cockucys for the sound of | {mdiense chimney, of Tight gray stone, perforating | and the broad-branched elm, in all its lovely beauty, | ‘No. Rosettecs.” Me England federalists, as well as Alexander Hamilton, | bs » and aoe, acclimated flowers; and if they yw bells, than those who wre bora within sight and the miudle of the roof like a tower. shades his land, and is a nuisance. On the other “« And the toes to his shoes 7 Joha Jay, Gouverneur Morris, and other federal lead- not go vividly appeal to the taste, those who | .ound ot the ocean, to return to it and renew their, | , 08 All sides are seem the tokeua of ancient indus. | hand we know that it is not the refined mind and « Broad and round. | have hearts sometimes find them softened vy these ere of the middle States. General Washington, | yelicts of the past to warmer ead weeter ‘ieatiogs Fhomas Pinckney, Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, | than mere fancy ever aroused. and other Southern federalists, he considered aa truy | , Ove of these old houses, a low roofed, unpre- “government, In a letter to Lafayette, dated in | its boards, and crowned by 4 huge #toue chim- 3993, he says :— new fo generou 9 throat seemed half choked up While you are estimating the moneter aristocracy, | uh Swallows! nesta, belonged pol endear ager and palling out the teeth and fangs of its associat | oot g the author's heart. sory in 7,8 may wenens in discovered = poe | Ie wae autamn—bat a generous, balmy antamn, shown among us who dn- sors they, hey rad our new conativution not as a that seamed so‘cajole ‘aad’ Batter: the 2a fato a P 7 its: |.t¢y. Aa stone abounds throughout these mountains, | the most fastidious taste that enjoys the beauties of “Mr. Mynus,” and here the door was ey bane ede Ee eat that material was, for fences,'as ready to the hand | the veg: table world most and best. ihe humble | wider, anda large, greasy faced man, with o certain tribes of Arabs have no name for the oceai,, | 2° Wood, besides keing much more durable. Qonse. | men of St. Kilda, we are told, who went to pay | days’ heard, entered. “ Mister Mynus. About that and that when they came to the shore for the first, | quently the landscape ia intersected io all direction: | their duty to their Jord in the ** far southern” island | little bill. If you cau settle it to-day I shall be ¢ a0, time, they asked with eager sadneus, as if penetra-| with walls of uncommon neatnéss and strength. of Skye, could hardly proceed on their jouraey, be- | fur Lamshotof money, and I must buy the stull ted by the conviction of @ superior beau’ “shat | ‘The number and leugth or these walls is not more | cause the “ trees—such beautifal things they had | for Cromwell’s breect cs.” is that desert of water more beautifal th ( ‘izing them the sizeof some of the bigcks com- | never ceen even in their dreams—the trees kept “Tkaven't got any money at all, Mr land?” And in the translations of German storiea | Pr'sing them. . The very Titansseemed to have been || pulling them back.” It is, moreover, evidently not | raid Mynus, turning round desperately, and s which Adonirum apd the other children read, and at work. That so smallian ‘army .asthe first settlers | the mere masa of foliage, nor the depth and variety | the dun. ‘It’s no use coming to me now, [in into which I occasionally lonk-in the ev when! | Must needs have been, should have taken such won. | of color that affects our senses, but the almost fn- | writing a P y for Mr. Tiddles of the Muloerry they are gone'to ked—for I like to know what in- derful pains to inclose so ungrateful a soil; that thoy | perceptible and unconscious effect of all these elu- | theatre, and he’s to give me five hundred dollars for terésts my children—I find that the Germans, who should have accomplished such hereulean andertak- | ments together onour soul. The rose does not please | it when it's finished. I'll pay you then.” do not live Lear the sea, love the fairy lore of water, ings with so elight prospect of reward; this isd con- | vs merely because of its tender glow and delicate A sortof keen light glittered in the J 's black ,» | keeping it company close up to Obristmas. True, . “ " @ sideration which gives us @ significant bint of the | hue, but because our imagination connecta with | eses. He knew pertectly well that Mynus was tell et netic canetitctita, the cake aie Gata | the gorgeous Tinta of a inte Indian summer lay Sait they had oy jeatit” Suaste Re Geta Poste temper of the men of the pon tee ore. it the idea of blooming South, aad a thoasand ing alle but he jave no indication what of any gafficient in itself, in their eye. It is happy for ua | richly among the trees, but some patches of bright their country is Latin’ ; " Nor could a fitter country be found for the birth- | other fnizges float around thie, The landscape, | consciourness about (ke matter beyond a thick, ofly that these are preachers withoat followers, ‘that } Coralie fash one Coenen coral pate enema A pe oe dire sNobafeietontinc Piece of the fares penn. saree Potter, “e with oh var hero poPcprest acts iste man, grunt, iepery ae be sacra any way. 1 ' A vei ‘ . 3 ‘o this day the stone-wall builders, ag the | upon his tone of mind,and thus imperceptibly u “We ister Mynus,” he said, “you know it’ Sas paenionns em oui. comtan.in shel repabienn about it, but our realities are romance, My earliest | best wood-choppers, come from those solitary moun. | his entire inward developement.. How difcent | bard for'a working man with a faniily to be kept | over eastward a * In frout of the old house stood two maplea-- king, lords, and commons, come. ak Se ome noble trees, such as have had no time to rege theta: d up by atribe of Agioteurs which have been selves around your modern cottages. ‘These maples, remembrances are of a tong range of old half dilapi- | tain towna; » tall, athletic, aul hardy race, uner- | must needs be the idea of the world to him whoo | out of his moncy, but still 'm unwilling to press So gone die aay craig steep wooden roo!s | ring with theaxeas the Indian Sich iia cieecbaseles tained his first impressions from the solemn, eve: } ou too bard. I'm sure you'd pay if ni could. faa eee b indow fraiaes and door es, which | at stone-rolling, patient as Sisyphus, powerful as gen pine woods of the North, overshadowing o: | Now you might do me a tervice, sir, and if yon upon docks built as if for immense trade with | Samson. orde rng upon deep blue Inkea and vast granite | would, why we could talk aboat the rent another 0 «You will wonder to be told that it is from | Which the frost was constantly endeavoring to cast chiefly that these champions for them, corray made ‘after symmetrical as a pair of hage pine cones, rose | al! quarters of the globe. Generally there were In fine clear June days, the bloom of these moun- | strewn plains, and to the happier man, whose early | time.” model pp bh a ys me eae phe thane the hoase a perfect cloud of gorgeous si nh iy. sloops moored to the tremendous posts, | thins is Ly re expression Celightful, Last visit- | days pened under the bright leat of the myrtle ‘and “Name it?’ cried Mynus, catching eagerly at this stack: ‘and king, Se Gane ince » One was red as blood, and witha dash of pinot rape goals easily hold fast a Spanish | ing these heighte ere she vanishes, Spring, like the | the fragrant lnorel, reflecting the serene eky of the | straw. mace phere and King jonbars hare. many of our the Most vivid green still keeping its hold ¢own | Arma: nas a tropical hurricane. But sometimes | sunset, flings her sweetest charms upon them. | South! Even in the same find, how difisrently is | “ Why, cir, you see I’m not much givea to walk- le {co bastunenibele = the centre of each leaf; the other golden ali over, fers P moa st indiaman, care oe the | Each tuft of upland is musked like a bouquet | the mind affected by the dark shade of a beechwood, | ing of late. I'm getting into flesh, sir, and it tires , Lng 4 ge pelle ree er ae des, and ding: us, with an air of indolent self- | like a censer. On one side the eye foliows'for the | ly hil, sighing sudly in the fitful gusts of wind, or of | theatre to theatre, aud to carry a heay; with pa dor etd ant d contclousness of superiority, which | space of an eagle’s flight, the serpentine mountain frond? Teen p Biomits lands, where the breeze ruatles | me to hold the dresses in. Now, ait, an A that ins p ts mys pro! found respect, if the ship had | chains, sovthwards from the great purple dome of | gently through the trembling foliage of birches! Our | you're a young, strong gentieman, and if you'd help ever ¢l ma 9 run down a rowboat or a sloop, or | Taconic—the St. Peter’s of these northwards | hearts beat gladly and fyously when fields of flow- | me to carry the bag—” papier mbes smaller craft, I should only have | to the twin summits of Saddleback, which is the | ers are lighted up in bright sunshine ; our spirits “Whar,” suid Mynus, getting very red in the wondered at ape, recital any floating thing in | two-steepled uataral catbedral of Berkshire ; while | droop when wo see them look sad and forlorn on a | face, and starting from his chuir at this indignity, Sopeing, the path of such supreme majesty. The | low down to the west the Housatonic winds on in | rain , Melancholy day. Peace and quiet happiness | ‘I carry your bog!” Aad chained and cabled to the old dock, and | her watery labyrinth, through charming meadows | teach’ theix gentle lessons to him who dwelis in fer- “Well, no ofience, sir,” interposed Mr. Teaaea, then came the disemboweiling. barking in ‘the reflected rays from the hillsides. | tile valleys, with velvet lawns on their bottom, and | with « horrible Jewish leer on his tallowy face. However, the voice ie people is begin. | * if its roots were nourished In the metallic soll of istered | with perfume. The balmy breeze swings to and fro | the strange sight of a few scattered pines onalone- | me. Still I have to run about great deal from blen wove their ripe lea ‘The most intimate friend and confidential corres- together, now throwing ont a wave of red. now a pondent of Mr. Jeffereon was James Madison, who Hise of gold, sad here & tinge of green, ims epten-; ‘im Congress became. the leader of the republican confusion. , All around, under these maples, the grass was Party opposed to Washington and Hamilton. Im iittered with 's fantastic carpet of leaves, showered the summer of 2791, Jefferson and Madison made a: down from their branches, hang around the y tour to the Lakes, through Vermont. In a letter | old lilac bushes; Chey Suttered down to the rose |. How the stately monster had been fattened upon | At this season the beauty of every thing around | the sides tufted with the ach, the cheerful heech or | “No offence. 1-would’nt bave asked you, sir, only I from Bennington, June 5, 1791, Mr. J \ kets, and lay in pat of torn crimson and | forcign spoils! How it bad gorzed itself (such | you popnlstes the loneliness of your + You | the feathery juniper, shaded, it may be, hy the soft | thought you'd like the exercise. I’m goiog down mya— be oo een | crumpled old among the house-leeks and mosses —_ over sem io me of ihe feminine ha Would not have tre country more nettled. if yon | dark verdure of sncient yew trees, pA ot, Sénecible to ece Mr. Tiddles, the gentleman wot ne proimisod IF, could. Content to drink in such loveliness at 23! | tronks were slender saplings in the when Druids ou five hundred dollars for the play you're writing, +had loin its lazy length along the shores of Chink your senees, the heart desires no company but na- | worshipped there. oon live not Pees the bound- Ga Vve nodoubt, he'll fectenarend ‘me some ene ‘and sucked in whole flowery harvests of tea. The | ture. less prairie, where the wolf chases the swift crane, | who will carry the bog for me.” equatorial sun fleshed through the strong wicker | With what rapture you behold, hovering over | where the clond races after cloud, and the whiteman | Mynus biushed ecarlet. If Isnacs went to Tidal pieces, bursting with bangnas and nectarean fruits | some vast hollow of tha hills, or slowly drifting at | wages war against the red man. Free and bold, be- | he’d ask him about the play, and Tiddles would, o| at eachew the temperate zone. Steams of cam- | an immense nea over the far sunken Housatonic Bs allothers, breathes the mountaineer, bred inthe | course, aay that be never heard of such a man as ponte eurennaeeey arose from the hold. Sailors | valley, some lordly eagle, who in unahared exalta- ce, incessant worda:e with the rigor of Alpine win- | Mynus in his life. It was very awkward. qd ge cabalistic strains, that had to my ear a | ‘tion looks down equally upon plain and mountain. | ters and the dangers of the chamois hunt; defying “Stay—stay—don't be #o hasty, Mr, Isaacs,” shrill and monotonous pathoa, like the uniform | Or you behold a hawk —— vome orag, like | all earthly power, he looks down from his lofty | stammered Belisarius. “I didn’t refuse altogether. Mr. Madison and myeelf are 50 far on the tour wa | had projected. We have visited, in the course of it, _ fluttered the swallows ; the pritcipal scenes of General Burgoyne’s miafor- heavy branches, darted a pair of red squirrels, who tunes, viz., the grounds at Stillwater, the encamp- | owned a nest in one of the oldest and most stately ment at Saratoga, and the where the British , trees; in and out, th the long, low kitchen, piled their arma, and the field of the battle of Ben- | the parlor, the pantries, and the ‘mlik-room, went nington. We have also visited Forts William, smd came our old friend, Mrs. Gray, the comely — and George, Ticoaderaga, Crown Point, &>., | huckster-woman of Fulton market. t house was which have of blood from : deen scenes a early square at the back door | rising and falling of an sutnmn wind, torned | g Rhenish baron of old from his pinnacled castle, | heme, proud. that liberty dwells on mountain: | I think I should like @ little—oxercive well. part of our history. We were more pleaned, how- | and harvest-like it lay, | cranks that lifted the bales, and boxes, and crates, and darting down towards the river for hia pre, ‘ heighte, nd that tne foul breath of the grave does | Sedentary habite--my chest; yea! my chest wants ever, with the botanical Shhects which continually down toward the south, divided into sec: | 90d awung them ashore. But to my mind the spell | Or perhaps, lazily Cer about in the zenith, this not reach up into the clear blue ether around him | expansion,” and here he threw back Kis shoulders, yng themselves, ose either unknown or ips, bects, onions, pote- | 0 their singing raised the fragrant freight, and not | ruffian fowl is ead nly Senet by. a crow, who with | The efivct is varied when we take not the whole. | asif he was trying to hit some one behind him Pe Ay il id ay in sae Ta Co aghag 2 oy oy pe bay oy 4 ther ot eee la roe =“ scubbora Andgeity pecks at ‘hima, and spite o ofall his vast scenery oy lantaoape, bat - seer inolated with iis shore. rire no ot, 2a sarrag dance, q 0 g 0 g sgl very, fins! Teecutes to stron, 8. Few will look upon in le beauty av your wou ye most cial to moa. it, an arales very different from the madldors, with the year. shine of the docks was perfumed with India. The | hold. “Phe otherwise dauntless bandit, soaring st | Fweetiess of flowers, that rich Jewelry with whieh envy large clusters of flowers, more thickly set on | The season was late: the frost been there | universal calm of southern seas poured from the | his to H ack p pmost height, must needs succumb to this | heaven has adorned the bosom of our’ mother-earth, “Lord bless yon, no, sir. A mere feather to « ‘the mor vig Foca’ wed, ine high fra- Lom Aa meg up the noble grow:h | bosom of the ship, over the quiet, half socaying old | sable image of ‘ieath. Nor are there wanting many | without feelinge of elevating and reflning delizht. | gentleman Tike: yon. Quite an amusement, I may [oe raf mage have seen. The et cae Seaniet aan ply Mrs. Gray's stall rae port, Long after the confusion of unload- | smaller and lesa famous fowl, who without contri- | To him who observes, not with hiseyss ouly, but | kay. I'm going to the Bowery to-night with some _ os ae gardens | growing wild | ~ nid great white onions ke over, and the ship lay as if all voyages we > | puting to the grandeur, yet gr add to the | with bis mind intent, his heart alive, there is no re- | armor for Rickard the Third, and if ft's wot incon- § ban! luke » gooseberry, the ar ties grea , With their silvery costa exposed; ended, I dared to creep timorously along the ed.2 | beauty of the scene. The yellow bird flits like a | sisting their unconscious unfulding, their peaceful, | venient, why, you can come. There's ¢ fun ‘wid cherry with single frait, and straw in | the beet were of a deep blackish 3 | of the dock, and at great risk of falling in the blac | wi jo ; \ opeful somet: abundance. From the Highlands to the lakes it is | ard the cucumber vines had Fielded up their Inst water of its huge shadow, Iplaced may and pon the ibe rey bas pak ‘a Nantes tao ry Mey Recta. "Witerhas int bie teal Sate of Seriuten toot te oi Lah RN ly Py banger ecw The Hille Palls and pace gherkins. All her bors had red | hot oe oge 40 established & mystic and oxqaisite | while hurrying from the to the grove, the y and supny spring, when be loved to look u; “111 go,” said Minus, faint yielding to the re- Wings _ bcs stn cataracta of the robe os days ago, bat the good old lady only Saat ao a Pacific islands, with paim groves | red robin seems an incendiary putting térch to the flowers aa dear to him, full of hope aud love, when | morseless destiny that seemed to pursae him. “T'li Hodson, of about < ve or forty feet each, be- meee obuctled over the example thus offered | 8» ; Be Lenn beanties they em! with | trees, Meanwhile the air is vocal with their hymns, | he felt for them snd with them, as they would ever | go, isaac; but-—but—you needn’t say who I am.’ ‘tween Fort ph glnA are of tne. poet Bing on ~ ‘eget Bech pc Ba se these ey Pepper, and ppg ne! and yom soul in the gensral Joy. ae a ea id upward to the clear, oe heavens The poetry in this number has more of the ster- stene. Those Cohoes, west sharp winds 0 cared | of fairies. touched Asia, ger in an oF J i Mvdeon, and of seventy feet height, we thought aot | nothing for the petty froste that only made the | Good Hope, and the Happy Islands. I wou.d not | sourceif when all around yon race ash Wedesenae” | Roky Trem ecesnts pol gece Fup thoge | lng ring about it than usual. “The Jewish Cemetery 2 gay 3 have ial ok gi arent Sew leaves of her beet i paranip, beds gorgeous, while Lagat that the ae ole "Tod of ome Borihern oan Bat in autumn those gay northerners, the birds ber ¥ swert fragrance rave to i ft forth at Newport” bears the impress of Longfeliow’s our tour, about fonr | their precious balba ely inthe soil. | to my finer sympathy i burned with equatorial | return to their Southern plantations. ‘The moun’ | ogait ld once more brightly rise. Oh, | renius, and “the Hymn to Air,” attributed to aan teel sad fife; rng crise Fasten here | pied oe bbc ae shar she never gathered her | fervore. K tains ere left bleak and Mate, Solitude settles down well hasit Teen sald hat each pom pri flower is eyerd Ta lor, ma be cheeed sacnges the nos tion Stee sgind Se laws of the State not | garden crop tf Than! ing. That wae her har-| | The freight was piled in the old stores. I betieve | upon them in drizsling mists, The traveller is be- | a pulpit, and each leaf a book from which we may | poetical efforts of that writer. ieee rag given me ie time, o Legh ar season whon | that many of them remain, but they have lost their | set, at perilous turns, by dense massen of fog. He | learn the wisdom, goodness, and power of Him who be ipbia by the from — expect to be ouh-aen were reckoned up—when her barns | character. When I knew them, uot only was I | emerges for a moment into more penetrable and | has so lavishly scattered his handiwork over the face Sinau.aR MrxtaL Pxexouenon—We have been Philade ry the 20th or 2lat inst. pe fore were running over with the wealth o. | younger, but partial decay had ove: m the | paesing some gray, abandoned house, sees the lofty of the exrth. Few, also, can look up to a stately | informed of a very sin and unaccountable, ‘Mr. Jefferson seems to have been carly impreasod farm. flown; at least the bulk of its India trade | vapors plainly eddy by ite desolate door, just as | tree, reared in its colossal grandeur, its head | though not unparalleled occurrence, which took with the iden that it was for the mterest of the peo. | gn urbimas, New Your, the Fourth of July, in | had shifted to-New York. and Boston. “Pt | from the plain you see it eddy plona- | in the clouds, ite roots in the firm earth, 40 full of | place in the family of a gentleman connected with ple of the United 8 ‘e in the Spanish ter. | fon aie one othe hae toe Sasaptionses temained. There was no throng of | cles of t dnd lonely heights. Or, inting | life and vigor, without feeling himself lifted up the Jegal profeesion in this city. Early in the morn- , settle with Mrs, g y treme butisfter~-school, in the a‘ternvon, | from bis frightened horse, he leads-him down some | with itsgigantic branches to higher thonghts and | ing, a day or two #go, before tl had risen, pspeiny pag a ieiee hen been done | coger tiny ne a ay. EA rahe Fs gazed into sw Bone ee scowing ain, wetre the 7008 cared dips among ee feelings. We all can feel with the exiled om. of the children, a little boy, up, began our time cane xXAd, tter to | v lence, dimness, an rocks, lv as abru, ; an jan, * iv Seen rt min whee es | Roath Samt Wan peated | eaten ttc are ae | et Hee eae aera | Sect cnet ge dot | Sebago | rc n ge asthe scal te ul ¥ ‘member of his cabinet, in April, 1791, Mr. Jefforson | benno a oped York. No f Gray scorned | stomechs, and heavy watch seal n through the mist at the roadside, oad wenatng te cheek, he was tase more ry intend ithe desert, fl yes ames ena? The py nation * vers 0 at imitation, made her denblo who ont of toward the | wardeit beholds a rude white stone, unconthly in-| and once more he breathed, across the ing intelligence reached the of the death of Quemnte, beet he tg | a contempt crept thone benevolent eyes, it was jorigaintn ms ifn tel ep. Ting ve) cinbes r bes Sr ye oe een erpoobalsk pordezin nee spromed and sone be hee ‘Obarade wise dohany ho. on of the settle iorida. | wh ts on hep i ye hed 6 on hia pi i aw Charadon, and was s playmate ond meant for our people. Debtors take adi of bball vir Whopussnot any ‘brown sugar und oozing slow as if pe beneath the load, off the palm tree, cresting over the lonely, still wa | boy who had heen so m Impressed with bie oop ore bell lew entor into the | nothing tropical could be kept within bounds, but | In winter this region ia blocked snow. heard ‘the pleanan stant | deseate. thenticated cases of this kind ESE Oe eis i ces ram ce Be fp | mec es at cing | Ran me ote? eS Gn ber trpraerened eee | Sram, elaninlricome on ¢ Siar eric feeome twat eer cee eke |e ya seyret | Uk gem remnant of ole | eel Tent ceca seca | earpiceces lowe ey wee our ir a ‘ye @n Ocean its of favitation. It will be the mses of delivering tous eed had things Mrs. Gray could not force | store seemed cyclopean columns i . | rolled between man and maa, intercommunicatios leawat p. baboon went ~~ we oe Re ‘peaceably what may otherwise cost us a war. | _ You should bave seen the old lady ae * pan yeah ying AAT of to ive epseeed ty vetnn ad weeks, with thelr leafy lungs? Do they not at sunrise, | Gory mm Onio—It is claimed that gold has bee A coeldersble tine Previous to reigning ls ing week drew near—not ihe, Now York one, but su, wa rs in winter, asofed at cold, and Phare mene Morr fag nner mpi Shenson pay enon munle” Wh has ever board fort trom the gold dlatriet sbswed the oolisr of the os i soleranly Governor of Maine. | shamed aadacious asmamption of eternal sun, , to whieh siren | the soft w r of leaves in spring, ou ® | Sandusky Re some of the shining fice on Secretary of State in Washington’ Mrs. G dat wok ceeat, "ark she woman | litle specimen boxes of precions dyes, that aven | the singular, and, as ft appears to us, not very morning, that 2id mo 4 er cichee ear Bellevilie pee was coe hap nee ee of neighboring all wok charge of Mrs. Gray'e | now shine throng m memory, like whole Venetian propriate title of keteepahes*lecaaiiand oe ferryiretunalig tareepe Gi het? and | which hove every oppearanss of being Pure G03, Emin Katt ado Minis naire rahe ceca ena | fn: Therm ego tue | he enksani, The tr, web Hn | HSE Thy ree Qatargas | kee tlh eee he to Mr. Madison, dated in 1798, he remarks:— was scores of mingled odors. I our hy the moss roses’ their crimson small-— taken Anelpbobin aw sit a8, at Perham phd I en eT Se look ia from the glace of hs ont and elegance that might well be envied by many with nectar that fell from beaven, who 20 not blesa fn one day” which ta 1 fer; the best ny iis ony, This’ sia akmock every doy | the fanhion ‘Kicooore | ape Pte fend native born Hterateurs. His is evidensly © mind | hie Maker ?-—and when autamm comes, the season of | said wew placers are being Uo = f 4 Ton Seat boles tne thee | palpable off island groves ; and if which, to arious | he sere and leaf, when wheat is in ite who knows but Belleville is the Et The pa theo ng Hatton ea Lae | should : Baye - ed only nome Frenne within, woald lene A coe remy i dd petame, and corn waves it silken taesele in the cae ta mixed with iss bank. sends an sa the cobectery of the enctoms, then im charge to | ples, agar boxer, and’plater of golden tater, har team, With listening a : sea “ isi and toe ib eantioomnt peevds ie, all the > , ue a chance sunbeam, call in atady, conjoins & power of generalization and a death 7” California, Mah excitement Kid ja the atch over a rote Sa Ae oe | pleney Koad, pear, wie Aur dest, the wacle | hie are ri eigen an if thrusting sharp, #oands | try of expreasion that lend an indes:rihahle tieem | AMETerY season haa its ov tone and leavan, an | nelehherherd of the “Meeinee’.-there below mint i. to for several renaone, P>ndsiph fo:nd out a You chouk! have ren bor grating veauge pict and them the carhaptwent ‘ona crmmplets and ‘visioat to the rhinplest topics. Unlike the Poter Bel! of | jn" e beart of tran. Havmonisteg, ike raushe, carticiea, while etter aro." proapasting : ‘ chap t 5 . 2 4 y are c Y alr Wo epbit, which, ag alwoys beppaps, beggme the butmegs, the border of per aww white cap sisi g — moving, I was circamaavigating the globe. Grdeworth, © primrose growing ome river's bau with ali the vasicus traivs of thought apd images tie Lite aud streanan.— Cincinnaté Columbia

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