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v purpls in the face, and grsplog e claims of his house ine stage whisper, What he wes to Hoouba T know uol. but Hee tainin ad village, ¥ 1w, ¥ i « e« ko sidow alk; like atistocratioconk < All (1o mon grests T modi—u hey wore bigt Then ception paelur, and thore you + goos to register your pames and e o Is gonc at L:ast oree misates, you bu (ha rooms on tuat floer ac don whils your oseo N o take an invoutors tents., Thero aro at Least ten pail o smollt of (hem as largo a3 Sellasw iy, and every onn bas a cheerful, light earpet ou tho floor, and one huudre | aud fifly cane seat rocking chaire, and & dozen cane-seat sofos, and they o1l Lk as ool nied charming as can be. Ar 20 ont at the back door of the pailor, and 1! ¢ wide, c1san, and 80 long that you aro sure tho placed for the peopls who 1ive at the othor end to rest in. The botel is built around » square, which is & (1, shaves, formal liwn, with gravil pathe, and fine oIl t end & fountaln. And it ds three stories and the reoms open on revied piswzas, and look ool lawe, while the sunlicht gliats through Yhe ri boughs, and ali the fashional io rebins come to tweep, and flirt, and pass 1 e Somwer, « all those parlors, aud bed reoms, ther Iadies, and bowlioe elieys s fur the opposing aexee, and two ¢ xout by an opora house, ull within thc ares of your ovn Lotel. Tieve there are obmrokes of evory demomin did ot see them. 1 know there is a diniogll hight of the senson, ¢ dine, nad after- ward dunes to the And flling * now your keys ¢ t on tho still are b 1t or gontlemen, houses, aud I be eloep with the sweot ec Stranss weltzes in their oars, they wake to the ¢ s and dress betimes in raiment moro gorgeons ¢ cen of Sheba's, and g forth to the famons Congr ik tho dread- €1 waters, and resmmo the 1 When yon thiuk of & sprice. you fauey tinogs, and quiet, and odor, Ling W *irobln, and s ft groen grac and swariog ano s, and tho cood tricklo of fulling water, But here is & P lon " paved ficor, aud the water is dipped foom a eybinder there to ¢ ol 11t mig dand with Yiko s poonding barrel wrd the augel who troulles st is o shock-beaded urehin of Cilcic Yueage. Poor Poacy hates the swell of roses. T dare say thie youth nover 4 water, and fiads no yleasure in the patlless wave grovnds of the Spring, through whieh, afier y¢ or piat, or gellin of manscou , You w ble, you march, with swift. firm, ©auso they avo green, aud cocl, and fi e yhsant, bo with the new- mowa by, but they are angalar, and formed and & 1200 Ay 8 oomete 7Len you come ont, have L'arned how sub tiwe n thing it is to suffer, ard be stroug. you ¢ ) at the Columbian, which is the greatest common il ifls of the Congreas and the Empire, and drink another gl 80 bomo to brenkf st 1n that great hall here made 1 see those to'l+ts whereon I have opin stretebes oat Lor hands © tyou. Not imjloringly. Will, yes—perhaps so. ' After breakfast, if you are @ woman, you sit un the long piaszn aud execate geometricad roses on a siik canvas back- groaud. sad then you play bil'iards a little whils, and Lowla littls w1, and then you £o 1o bed and Lave a 1ong *loep that woume osh for dinner. Ard if you are a man, you sit oo the Lng piazza and sm nd t1% races, and pretty wo- mer, and then bowl alitde, & at deol and then you dress for dinner, vl the first grand event of the dey. The womeu come in robes @ Litile brighter DroakLust ;1 umage, their wasculine apoartenau ary saits of sclomn Mlack; and as there are a more 1 dics than gentlsmea, each of the Lutter 1 dining-room, 1 ke a great hilticg man-of-war with protty |1 asare yachts with stroamers flying, crowded o1l u Rim for protection, s, und the mortal, Ao 1 a gastronomi to the like, s Dinner is very long end vers o patade, and after it everybody drive: momuty es 1igo o8 the Lusin of the with the disadvantage of swampy shoses, Dol whese the foclish mew of ( m go to & Burried are they by the ghost of dulluess. ter the drive it s time for tes, and thoa one wust deess agals for the Hop, and g0 one danoes into dreais. Lot me not forget to add, in the vame of oniraged pr oud tramyled taste, that most of those evening (ol ®8bad in their way as tho moraing costames. whim of Frerch fully and cxtraragance, thore is no device the dew' monde to startl; and compel, there is o dashion, goniine growth of @ spendth:ift and fautustic whieh ocs not find its ready imitators. 1 A Fronok horse won a nationel English recs, and velatile Waris dected itsclf i1 gelien horsestoes and Jes clod sadile, ridles and spurs. Parie, whove racing Is a Court pastime Fothat o reason why & Manbattan bells shoul ! drag Ler deli eate cars with such horrors and disfgure her fair wrists with them? Paris embroidered Gludiatenr on its han kerohiefs, Shonld, therefore, New-York obtrnde do, sud serponts, and flags, sud cherabs, on kerchiets, and coilars epdeufst Tt the whim of Paris to copy tho form of the Zmge buttons whick fhe Breton peasants weer, and cull them Olown buttons. Sbull then, these belles buy them in hideons sles. and at prepos’arons prices, and dream that it is tho ode, and therefore comcls 1 0. mesdemies, no untformity of worship can mako L thiat which 13 it 1 m:lwely. No costliness can coufer grac #0d, as peogls, wearo verging on evil times ludeed, wh expenditure and show are mado the criteria of taste o fasblon. And it s the misohlef of y¥ices Lke Saratogs that they tond o establish this standard. Women go there to dumle, and out-dress each other. Men go there to look at them, and by wuilles and conrtesies to excourage them. It is New-York gransrlanted and intensified, becanse the frivolity and sil- ‘mews that 11 & year of New York are erowded into two motus of Baratoga. Ihe lust of the eye and the pride of life o sutisfind. The perfect (lsanliness, the pertect oxder, the per- foot aystem tho perfoct conrtesy of this great hotel are de- Tghttul, The suave and kindly linclord e so solicitous of our comfurt, so entircly frieudly, and cheerful, and cordisl that gou are certain, in two misutes, that he was your eldor Drother’s bosora frisnd, and has known yoa from your cradle, and your heart goes ont to bim, + It ia most comfortable to have el your wants supplied while s yot thoy are not wants, but nelulous floating dosires, which would have died unbors but for the kindly encouragemes fthey met, But it Is most uncomfortable, or ought to be, vot to Bave any higher wasts than swift walters and skillfu! hosts can sapply, Bosldes. in Summer, if one leaves town at all, it shoold be only for the fresl, pure, odorous country, among hay- eocks and pine-fringad ponds, and the flush of the fruit trees The ol! fatl: is the spcligue of time, When Aatacus touches -aotber Earth be is clothed avew with strength, Bat to insult #he bomeliaess of the conntry with the artifices of the tows, Is #orscloes, and silly, aod stupld. There are other hotels in Saratoga. Their name is legion, . Every houso Is a hostelry of some dogree, and at night e ©ounts himself 8 bappy wan who can expensively slumber on the idle priuting presses, or the signboards over the shop- doors, which are unfastesed at the top, and swung like cor- penter's stagings till jocund dag, ete. The Clarendon is as per- oot as tie Union, though it s smuller, and furnished with up- Dolstery lustead of cane, which is not half so nice. It has o Bpring of its own in the orthodox pavillion. Itls ealled the 'Wasblugton, and the owners say it is more palatable than the zest, but It connot tell & lie, and 1t says it fsu't, in every drop of its saline being. -+ Qougress Hall is burned, and ghosts of beantiful women and ‘brave men, who came there with the constant Summor, and | Svere, bat are not, 8it among the rains. 1 saw them under the ‘moft starlight. The Columbign looks old-fashioned and dismal. Mo Amorican looks new-fashioned and dismal. I suppose ~“Shey are both Gardens of Eden. If anybody wants to know ythe rest lot him take the guide-book, for the space of Tuk Tzie- _UNE is valuable. ' @here are otber springs, too, a scoro of them, but they are fashionable, and so nobody is benefited Ly them. Xigh g was Interesting, and we went to see it; but, alas, when _ wwe got there it had vanisted In air, and so tho poor tourists fyot nove. ‘The wise Saratogians have moved away nature's & wall to mprove it. Presently they will put it v ‘What they can have done to it exceps to fresco it I _oannot imagine. We planged joto three sand pits and charged " two stove redoabts to 854 the Empire and Saratoga 4 Sprivgs, Decause nobody had ever heard of themw, and we were obliged 1o make our way alone. But X will say for the latter crystl, as There is i . Keys. And | deoper womaehood, (han my superficid g@lanos @ fiad in Oienn twial g yon'ha and v idennt S LONME WOANGEN. ——— LARSPORDLIT TARUTIL U1 BANDAK J KTULES AMONG T JRRSBY COASTS, Wikl KO FEAR OF TiR QOPIBRIEAD OR d ¢ AND AMBOY RAILBOAD—IB PINDY ¥, AND MAKE) AN R ¥ KIRVATION ABOUT THE BBA-GIRT QUG #PBUIAY ADY ORIGINAL O HORK— i1 4 [N ONR TAVEUN-KBEPER A PHR- WIX, AND UIVES BOMR PRAOTIOAL BTATISTOS ABOUT BOARD, WiTH THAT MEMORADLYE QUOTA- TION FROM N. LoxG Braxcy, N.J., Fane 20, 1560, As Lsit dow o to write with the blue waves roliing | vefore me, T thel s cherishing the impression that Long DBraw clalag her obl prostige. Tho woers fact of tho biue waves rling Las rothing to do with Uhis impression any moro than the shiniuz of tho wnn or tho tanghng of the foam Into glittoring sikeivs. or the licklog of the shrivking esnds with opalescont surf lips hias to do with it. It is not pue, nor can T ay that it is 1l of those things put togother. Tho soeno is compa Juickas yot. My room opons on the first foor is6 o'clock in the aftornoon, but (he tramp of s subiued and the voicos of the ohildren are not oad, and fur arothe 4. tages, tho wheols of whiol T hoar. Yet thero is just sufficiont hubbub to intercopt wilh the ronr of the waves T blufis 81 ng which the nine or ton hotIs of ot abor Long Braneh ravge, and toward whick shut oat th wr come what but do notdntercopt the gliwp many a s & 1tis tho bubbab of the carponters’ nail aud Lammer waick is (he 8 of tho scone Tt proplocios it speaks o season; it peor ooms that now are (vao ndreds of wouths ol work in e soime; turangs the Lino along the biufts with e seuds shouts and Lwehter up from the waves which aro oager for unarrived mussta; fills the pleasure Louses with duos and trios whi flirtatio iammnas and cloerone bo v ressing rooms; makes tho ery for mintjuiep loud in vacant bar fons tie hearts of propriciors who have ex pended tieir () 3a, and now Lavo only fith to live upon; alth and 7igor into tho oars of tho debilitated . ad wakes ¢ho nib that is writing wish it wero g why Long Branch, oven st this in 14 and full of promisos of laasure. ° Branch disting fom every other watcring placs. Thoy can bo detected in a giamoo from the very window at whioh I am writing. ‘Iho blae, and the out they wake wilh the and_ woil defined. They aro studded i with salls from morn tll night, & featars which adds greatl, to th thoug) of the view, small s, ot first sight, it may bo Tae sands aro of a loose and marsh-lke uature, and This i+ the ene unploasant featore for Long a along the line 0n whi bt of (he surf dnd breakors s shut out wallis upon the very ridge of (heso th which tho breakers are embroidered den, and the vast rea apponrs indosd like Mil- whose serge sonnds likoghe voice of the These biats aro laid with & greon wu fufinite 14 award entizely fro0 vialations, forming pleasant gar- deus fronting 5o b 4 deoked with a guantity of Sam mer-houics, suggoative of the pleasuro-domo which Kubla Kliao erected for himasif in X se peoaliar ftier are seen in othier watoring w are aut, and only oie of thew is d mer recatis I Almost every Lo for the season that is fresh upon thom. The sound of ¢ i from one end of the soa-girt vo of 'O Loog i p other. One with regret the purplo sas beackes of I & Branch. lotor is busily engaged in prepering r w0 of thes pro #olid snd ¢ tablished i . uous cxo part for 27 season would acom to avgno in disparagemeat of the good senso of Liat portion of ¢ patronized them hith long sutisfied, it wouid be ronent (o pre be community which has Whea s publio has remained so ting from its judgment and ro 1t had discovered nothing de wmore £ to wish for. § ¢ proprietors weap themselres up i the prestige of past sucoess, and 1ok witk confidence toward the eigat or nloe weeks whioh are (0 send ther their old friends Lack agein. Bibl the great mujority of propristors ko . Tbe Continentl Hotel, far ir hal ost 7 ul 40 of the me v t Continental is & palairl i aslios of two ™ thor phorn forth, neit exists at 1 bat b Con Dot I of en aud covering the very cou iderable space It is the most impesing cdifice at Lot Tts 7 + sufticient to impost upou the cas The length of the Louse is 700 foot The purticoss or which the 1ed: o o, w Lenzzth is @ 500 foot room fa 900 feet 1 the parior 40 by 80 Tb sntains 600 raom s caiculsted to acoommodate 1,200 poople. A bill gns e iutroduced futo overy oo aud the furniturs & ee of newness which (1 grieve to aay it) oan be ¢ by o other term than “epick-asdspan.” Tie Goo opened on Satnrday. An interesting serics of facts mig o 1o pass one week at eack of the b Long Dranch for example. To ono place Lo would give the palm of arlstooracy. * there I met 1y equal; 1 associated with pecple of my own ¢ o th toeracy consorted.” OFf another place, he would say, ** there I could take my family and live over agals tho pat 10 afraid; ther ¢ did the oay th aris- congrogated around shorry cobblers mingle w lnce be might say. n plend w and little soli ore T was charged five doi ¥; and then I exclaimed Low Little satistaction it is to ot for one’s money.” Ent of each & the ro would sag, that 1ts merits. Even tin dor Leloog to & & order of merit, They satisfy ud, answer to a particy. lar need wiich a port ferls, and are thel gore acoeplable even in the pure atwosphere of uuture a seaside batbing. Oaly, When one goes to & watering-place 1t 18 pleasant to know that the worll of socurity is all be Lim alono tojchoose; aud that even at Long Itranch Le will be at no lossto detect the presence of New-York Shodi ‘There aro at Long Branch a dozen hots 1 no doudt that each of them pretends tobe first-class. The order in which the principal ars visitible, as one drives along the. bluffs, is Howland's. Green's, Pavilion. United slon, Continental, Metropolitan aud Atlantic. Suck have beea made to the:s, tiat it is probable about can be accommodated seasou than havo hit accommodated here. From 15 to ©0 new cottages have like. wise been erected, beside & number of fi ud drug stores. These fancy stores are o very necessary feature in any com. munity, bke that of Long Branch, during the regular sesson. Their wares are always marketable, and they deal in much that the most elegant city stores provide, It will likewise be consolutory to the fearful to know that the drng stores are on hand. We never thiuk of doctors, except when we are sick, or they send in their bills, and sojourners at the watering places ought to feel thankful In anticipation that the druggists have thought for them and gone down to Long Branch in & bunch. Tt ain't pleasant to think of such an ugly thing as iliness when ono is beut on being well. But it s pleasant to make assurance doubly sure, to go to a certain plice for the purpose of keeping well, and to find, beforchand, with yon, the kind souls whose business it is to make a living out of the . m-?-.-un.unuuuwu. and 4 and if Baratoga weant drinkiog of it oxly the scason . Would be redeomed. . 3 And, on youder hill, of which also neither native Saratogian exotic stranger bas ever heard, a terriblo battle was —nl?-n.m-unl--nm fieroe on both sides, and on ourss ":lv of whom, in desper- wtely savodithe day, and therein saved the Causo. Let us speak o, -u:l:hhhhynumu- wd!flldtm.l wpeak of . aod the surrender of Burgoyne. m- ‘was fought 8o far North as Sare- B tonight, while the gay musle carcls and the ‘whirl, I wonder whetber, in that long dead past, ‘wes 0ot ln the young men who gathered here in the oung women who waiched mnd . v “ & “ vide g v cehances of our having the convulsions or the cramp! The average rato of permanent board is 83 per day, In not more than one in fifty cases does more than one person occupy & trout room, that is a room facing the ocean. Buch a thing would be an unheard of freak, yot one which, according to my notion, ought to happen much oftener than it does. What saith Byron: “There §s soclety whero rone intrude, by the deep ses, and music in its roar.” But how can you erjoy the noclety of the doep sea with a room-mate, or what is less tolerable, & bed-fellow snoring at your very elbow when he is asleep, and using your own peculisr pomsde, when bo s awake? Wherols the * music in its roar,” when he insists on telling you the listory of bis love-affairs while you are un- dressing (and Ae is ineapable of undressing) at 4} o. m., when the hop s just over? These double-bedded rooms wre fearful arrangements for certain clamses of people. If yon are all sound from top to toe, Why of course you have nothing to foar., But sappose, only sappose, that in the inevitable Juxtaposition of events you are 60 and your room-mate is 16; that Provi dence has aflicted you with a toupeé, or a pair of false NEW-YORK DAILY Howland'a being at the othor. At (1o United States, ras baa boew introduced tiis acason for the fizst time, A novet and viquant featare of 1) Lal will b tho wupyiy ot Con ress wator, on draughl, io the Bummer-hovse fmmediately in frout of the hotsl, the Cougross waicr tobo imported (rosd coch morging from Saraloge Toersis wometling poattively wub ime in taking Congreds weter sido Boamer houss intne open 0osan wir. Tt is usually taken under auch vastly duiont ciroumasances The nita and oud, the woral and conclusion of (his entice let (aric that every ono ought to go (o Long Brauck—that is, overy one who do n't go anywhere olse. L regret (hero are no drives (0 bo bhad mlong bor heaches. The plaasant drives in Ler interior 0o well anong, of couree, A drive along s dust. Joss road in plessant company is gonorally onduradle. Bat a Arive along the 583 boaok may be mado somotling Lo remen bor for o litetime, I tho cocl of tho evening, driviog slong over tho hard purple of tho rloping Bands, what vows may nct b wado, what #nita not pleadt Teil me not of lovors' walks. Lovers' walks, quotha | Lovers' drives aro quito aaboalthful, and much loas fatigaine, The vow yon brostae is loet omid the raodling of £be wheols to all oars aave thoss fur which it is moant. The driver hoars itnot. Besides ha s thinking of bia pay. U smong the co'tagas I'ghts are teginug o cleam. Among the waves phosphorescent sparka oo leapisg, liko tho fireflien of the sea. ‘The breakers buret upon the sanls aud ahout with the carth, Tha golden stars come oot aud wiih quict tongues whisk ther, M mory growa full of lependary Jare of the slory of how beantiful tho mermaids ravishied eway the roay, reslitiog Hylwa Dreams come of wndiscovcesd islands, in W distact deep, wiowe verdure bas nover yet loarned o bend ‘bencath the prossure of tho hu- man fot, and whose flowerorowned shores, wrapped in posce, hava ucver yet thrilied %ith the dark disploasuro of tho aea. Through the mist snd (he quictude, aud motwith- atanding e voioea of the goidon stars, the dash avd passion of tho waves go on. The s is lonely and pluivg for & ke And as you drive along, with all other sounas of natore #1o ing quict aronnd you, this voios uf the sen soems (o have meaning and & we for you Vour owp hoart iatorproiw (s apecoli of ooean. And svorstuing bai this wereno joy of Long Branch hea it in Ler power to drivo novgh, but sho has no Dl g the Beaois, and with this aiughs fauliGnding we Loaga her NEWPORT. - OUR KPROIAL CORRUSPOMDERT ATFEMPTL KEWPORT BUT OANNOT GET BEVOND BISHOP BERY SLEY— WAS BISHOP BERKELEY, THAT (1% KHOULD BV AKASON GOME TO DISTRESS US ==AND WHAT HAVE WK DONE THAT WE SHOULD AFFLIOTED WITH Wit TUPPERY k-1, Suns 18 i¥ Tho worthy Bish who aceord [ wail-worn b tgod anpuoily o com mit his * roady for fasiionabio ser 7ioe agaic saying thal tho season at Newpor( is abor born is full, and th foolson; 15 dsav in fo Dishop is abont 0 haag out on ang!s nea-side correspondents, who writo the Yettors in hot not by (he ses itoedl 1 & the thousan nd ons horn b tritons, Speaking bf Berkoloy recalls grave advioe should e administered (0 all yovag and wwbitions strang visiting this walering plaoe for (b t g1l When vou o down to Ne young nob as impa mon from Vale sho +from tue ¢ busio i~ the conrne of v Lin error of moresntile minds date from Hanging It by frequent referon Newport, of courn ilosophy of Barkeley who nover, in o N showod Niwsell & greator plalosophes th s for & water wral town, 50 U y f The poer, lia gain must romeber, v often, that Newport v tain morchantable arlicles w noas b cor rdam was dult Tt i3 not at all changed alnce sson'e Nowport; nothing lius beon addod, Lothing taken Only the ¢ oot o 8 notion § somowhat 1 about are s will be fun fn earnost, 1 » sccommodations ¢ O Botel progra i bo repeated in o weetial f v For the first mongh we ¥ not expect an o¥eIOw e avd thap willh The ¢ e yon bathlog o) T As it 1a, tho beastifu blooming array, and ev Thero in from s, urs. Touro Froey tho wihe or the quleter olais of TACAtivaMts W coms dow i (o | TRIBUNE, MONDAY, JUNE 25, garde breatts of welcome, The por i Balmont give oae Just now a1 wad | the beast wealthy owners in Nowport. by the way. y . and hear & g ), which onght ¢ of & mor rural style, wi chantic way be v you on Sunday | town has one or o instance, the vive.x which there s loar In short, there is no troes, parks, flower gar cottages fishlng bots poultry, salt water or autiquities. T venture to empha ean points for the delight and edification of all v nohs and nobbesses who Lave a liv th pletur on a ride to the sea ed the old # Indy drove so mer seasons, er, whos superbly aloug the avenue 1n the Digh There will be again o orowd of riders and dr boaches, to Fort Adams, aud whero nol—tbe Avenuo wil be bloeked up with vebicle nd for the b b tim n the y that it fs o The sea s in a perfect temper for bathing—calm, vol th & breezy swell that seems tosing through couchs and grottoos t 's and mer- Fiah are plonty this year, and the f made g nd menhiade hauls of black tish, scop, herring, 3 baden fishery alone over 100 boats are employed ja N 1 the men- sett bay. They catch abont 10,000 barrels daily, 100 bouy to was until lately nsed almost altogether in making a compost for manure; but, a uew nse for it has been discovered withio a fow years, and several fact the neighborhood are engaged in oxiracting its oll. Duviness pays & good profit. Waore the philosophic Bishop Berkeley alive at this day, Lo would be prepared to obscrve bow ** Enstword t pleasure tukes ita way.” The cottagers are arriving with every boat, and the Filnore House, tho Perry Hote), and ** Hodges's are gathering guests, albelt some of the fashionable hotels are not yot open. 'Thoro will be several plesant days for quiet sojourners before the crowd comes. Then the good Tishop mivht see how wonderfuliy his predietion aboat the course of eupire has become ealized and ideaiized i the wealth, boauty and fashion of Newport, lu which faith, 1 let the worthy Bishop rest. THE HUDNSON RIVER. g OUR BPECIAL CORRESPONDENT MAVING N0 FRAR OF THE GHOSTS OF ICHABOD CRANE OR RIP VAN WINKLE, ATTEMPTS A NEW DISCOVERY OF THE HMUDSON RIVER—NAVE YOU WEARD OP 1HR “‘ GRUNTING 1NDI OR THE STUPID DUTCH- MAN!—THE MISERIES OF TULBY MOOK, OR THE JOYS OF PISHKILL ! Arn ALoxe Snonre, June 20, 1506, Here T am, just steering [into port, after my fong, and delightfully perilous journey up one bauk of the Hudson, and down the other, As far ns Ibave yet ascertainod, I em quite whole; although I have been a great deal of the time on the Mudson River |Railrosd, whose employes, from incessant practice, bave acquired almost as mich expertneas in burying wen, assisted—always, by the adort and genisl coroners, who, really, are too hard worked in sumwer—as the ongineers have, inkilling them. Great, and perpetuslly imminent as this Aanger bas been, it is said to be a3 nothing, to getting insur- ed in the various sceident companies; in which Tadways invest all my Joose change before making a trip, As yet, howevesr, T have never succeeded in realizing & return formy lnvestment by meeting with any of those disasters which the sdvertize ‘ments of the compainies so picturesquely describe. Punctos)- ity was never my vice; and I am slways either 100 late or too early for these collisions and overturns, by which, if one may believe these cireulars, so many persans acquire such sudden and brilliant fortunes for themselves, or their beirs. Tompure, youdo got wasn to exact (B DO o Bigue The course of 1866. wcoouut of all ¢hat T hawe soen and heard in my late journey Yot (hak, in Bayard Taylor's, or Olmsts or any of onr glever travelors’ hands, euch an acosnnt mizht not he as onter (oining as if its suly of wore Iiayph; eitier Cueh 1 ypi that slumhors along €10 Nile, or sho south of Mason nad Dixon's whose Py sohe i 1t 90 Qiff ~alt to gt 0n with it Tt T ehorl | bo sure to fuil in suoli a fix! spare me the makivg & apeotacly of mysel”. Yor /11 that, 1 wi! you woul | put oo of your gontl:men on horset ack, and send him o the rivor, to beko vobey and priok 'om, for mo to roud. T am anre. if Lo were lyver, and shoul | use his oyes, ho might (ellusa groak many plaasat thiogs, sad ho might do 8 groat derl of good too, for, somo of (hess Litdy ylices neod Lo bs waked up and set to thinking, Tho reiload, howevor, and the olty, rud nowspapers, are interferiog & good desl with (ho resorved rights of the elsopiest, Moab consorvalivo and Dutobiest portion of the inhubitants. “Tho Datoa I thas must bo the koy-uato (o any menody th it may b chanted over the | @ging civ 1 2ation of the Huds Iiver V 1oyl Mappily, the Datoh, proper. aro d5ing out, aa (he [udians are, and she Soutbora gonthxman and 1.dy; vat, 1 anch riddances are i sw, and we must bo contont (o walt & geno-ation or two for & full dilverance, You, perhiaps will geo it, dear Tronune. Dot 1—ilw ! Not that § s of thoso who woil s | ke Lo zeb rid briefly, Cal- igidu-fashion, of ¢} memory of cor Dutoh ancestiy | Heasca and the Wistoric:1 ociety forbidd On the contrary, L think, from wli T oan leaen, that ono of ths points which Licws repy litde towns ought 1o be most Lboroughly shuken up to a tho Docosaity of piying oo dovent roapeet to hoir grand fathers! and grasdmotberwmomory, ‘T1s 0il7 yesorday that as I camo, i my walk. (0 the old Tieokman mi 1-pond, at Tarcytown, 1 sas, 1o my disway, & bugo and bideous wid, risiog at tho south end of the dam, oppasite the o1 bouss whoro Goruelia Beekman roluked tho Nritish officer for calling her husband a robiL “Doss that (1] rebil Beokman Lve hiera?™ said tho red coat. “ Antony Boekinan Lves liere,” said tho Lonost woman, “but, no man ever darcd osll him o robel to his face i Across Gie north of thie wream (hat feeds the mill pond - tho Pocantico *—is the famous bridge whers the | ickloss Tobia: bod Crano wan strock by the head of the heall and clwo by is the ol Duteh Churoh—next, porbaps, to Hing- am woetin g Lovas, the most venerally homae of woaship in (e dead of thrse genorations sloep in peo thow dust the Muds square faced, dow hipped ol (hid d on tho wonay wtones i n ooutury of 1lacid el s strawberries grow swoetost there, 8o we achocl the p:ling, wings The wil Yoy« used sheddoringdy 60 hink; and s mioway a4 the anotent stonca within, tlsep, in wnconseerated tho oll Boekman ilives, whose dus fit to wined s with tho proud Dutoh dust on the otiior bizds wore not too provd o sing € wong of tho Pocantico that ¢Lomed I bauk ard tho equireeLs wero not abore crackio; upon thess neplootod graves, and tho will strawber led fhere ware aa wweet juat onta dwroeay, Lt 0y onily-beaded, thiok durk ki tept an fuithfol watcl tho v 0 Lty Mvitch onos with wigs eod dewiaps on the b e Will; don't you foeh for o fcldw orcatore? Hers was this 1 hood, and by MOryee ! % Mitos, and 1 Bave hed {Basuro {hice, winde doutly dear by charm of lastory, and plorinage (o it int wd 19 rencw and lers was tids dam w I ¥ moan, (ke i L on the dam | (Thats the way Little Joe J1., you vewomber —quaint urchin—got out of Lis nasghty, in prompta breach of tha thist o ) Vo, ther no use oi Being a may vut, [ helies, X wept Thow oil vimity no antimentelict Gaora wust be mills, an? jen and whaify, and o of, whet i o Yaw ot fa favor of the Ubineso oustom cf carryiig my dead avces tors about with mo i o teunks when I move, s, boing » Now Yoiker, I do, of oourss, every B at trout has ma, sl oo the river (how cxproasive «f our i, is that definize artici i) fs tho resklies, basbaric way in which wo toar up and pull down, and raot ont everytbing con, Iy nectod with fts pasé bistory. Here, to take o partionl wacked oxn in (s tice at Tar where, 10 ever, body who knows anything of the intereatiug of the , there are gath Ny cf a venora 1y viver, or wit ol wmany intrios or sttprlis might bo held an ovil; vor atent Luke Maboy e, which this Sommer seems to Do the goct of & grest muny 1 asureoacckersy vor—imt, ovig will do for to day, Ons word, Bowever, Lf you want o s tho viver, don't fake be 1o Loadd It wili deafon you wikh ils torble revar peration, stifle you with its dust, and tantalze you with tour- ng yoo, madly, (Leg the bauks of a s of whioh ib (1lhwe you to 620 nothing, vilss. you ase ono of the teky, or 4 Licky, ones who sit by the rivor windaw. In whick case, ten 1o one, you bave to put tho Llind down for the sun, oF shut (he window for tho dust, and thea g0 into s tormonted sloop, with the heat, No; take tho boats; thakis your orly travel; (hey are cool, they aro safe (ab least, as eafs as tho care); you onn se oversthing; you can wrlk aboat; yon can rosd, 86w, draw, or, seca signum, writo a 1-tter | aibtorgior ik LAKSE ONANPLAIN, it soey OUB @PEOIAL CORRESPONDBHT TIRTLLS AND BLUPDERS, PAR 0P AMONG TITR ADIRONDAOK IIILLS—DOLS TR THINK OF TH¥ PRENOHMEN ANO THR ENOLISUIBN, WIIOBR DONPA ARN WIITR WITH A OLNTURY'S BLEAOHING, OR PRRWAPS OF BITAN ALLBN AXD THE CONTINENTAL CONGREIS—VFOR WIIO COULD BELP IT, BSPROIADLY WOEN [T COS™S BUT THIRTY-PIVE DOLLARS ! East ALBANY, Thursday, June 21, 1866, 1t is 3 o'clock in the carly morning, when you wake at Lake Qeorgs, and you creep to tho wizdow, aud wrap yourac? in abawls, and wait and watch, Thorois a Ll thell avd aludder ip tho air, & hush, that you know not on tue [nd, and you fecl that theso are prophetic momests, and that the wiracly of the Oroation is at hand, A pals gray light croeps over the water, tho timid shadew of tho dawn, and then a soddon ghory lights the Wast, Rowe and pearl and pure soft greon, flowt tho gently-coming clouds, and tho lake deepens (o Aarkest clie. Then, glirious comes tho a disk of flaming gold, and kindlws tho waters iuto light | ko bis ows. And tho sieen Lills sce the wonder and bow their heads, and you fe.d that ho evening end the morne ing of the Last Day wero not more boanbiful than ticse. When Lors fode and (1 tho gky is suppdiod with 8 ow and all the lukes iy ultramariue, one terus eway to dieas aud paok and take np bis Lurden of 1i% again, breaklast roow i almost ompty ot sevon o'clock, aad an hour Liter, whos you go oa b ehaha ther: are scarcely & duzon pussengors, Yor it is notyot “*the sozson * at Lake Georgo and Fashion does not como tiMl Jily nor atay longer than Augr hirty ix miles of ment stretoh beforo 300, The day is ovely, the ruins are beautiful. The sceuo has passed into hoars asd Drain, and if you o qui in not that you do not fok On the west azo greon moadows and litile faswiouses, and now and then @ an's Sun wottago, and suddenly & J1ifF whall, brokes, rough, and verdurelsss, On the right rises @ continuous range of wooded bills, whero the Mack ereen of the e grows (ho more delicats verdore of the deckiuous growl is tho p ot oraclo of a sace of aturdy dwarf trees, Thay are so lovly, and w0 8¢ 11, and 50 shellow ghat thoy look like floating tin the dim dawnof timo to find thely by the beauty of the 1k, yot elumber " Qvor tho hilla rest the de:ly noar that yon know uot where is'er, which ot parcat 6h " vrer youfloal, lotus eating, carelessof the 1agonds th ore hoantiful romancen of your own, Sabiath day Point, whore the eroat army waited for the Sab- Dbath sun to 5ot s they went their way to death, Lord Houe's sed for the g1t handsomo bogs. the pot, and dar- 1 troops, who wore k led in the battle that 1ell your fanoy, and you esunot eseape from most part, (1l the soft June motning 8 & 5 upon unnawed deeps, among ideal hils, droam o i, liiting fo And drifiings of pess! sud At ihe foot of the L ko ths stage waits to tako yon to Ticons deron and Luke Champluin. Five il of mgged bills and avady va bygs Le botween, but thoso are passed, aud then—and thei—green, and stil in the peaceful woods, is a mound of enrs that was the onter redoabt against whick Aber- Farther on, toward tho 00) mea in vain o Llae wa iing walls of tho of ors. Here, tun corner, i the wieck of a powder magasine. We ereep down, ofta dark hiding plices and sea tho swart, fierce 2 who pans th ond the men who train powd past Tiany re feained £or society, or hamanity, by seoer vy, . 8 860n 84 & Wo wander through the brokoen wills of the inner wosldgive the alvelsmiosaetEtice, 14 whors men Ly dying in the diteh, ead Dt whes 8 there 13 nothiog ‘o be gai 3, will roses cover the green o and \ two brown squirrele frisk. Theso Eaglish sclliers ng for boundaries which were w0 nosmen oxled from thoir sunny U thoir Wnd the far-away rooky hill Frauee viikht root in the ankindly soil much des, thiat £ lilies of Drstehmon,” aye memery is wrg e ever th - t they were, L nt, kow enduring! And o wips it out, nor wish o, Wo don't OF e ] lined, balf ue- by teying 1t anz were than we shovld w ary ] ad their futh in climhing up to the rescrding avgel's book, and dra her ahsal red thess walls in their brawny bands pen turough the fong oatsdo; o pocoadillies and end would not lot them gu—wast shall be said of the coursye, Thees's " Tubby H s thinks tbatitis co souch and the steadfastuoss and the stera self denisl thet were v vo b " Inw o reslly waa teasing Pa to | thoinst iy alioe L it wes 50 di s to tell ailey wo are sbown Mount Dafiance, where peophe you liv 7 Hookt' " and th f ¢ wiod (he oanmon which distodged the hardy [ 1 aud ohignonod teibe oked ¢ Jusi & £ Btian Allea had dis- | minate anshe tcLlme that, i Eeeuld bl eve it, they acta: iy he nemo of the Great Jehovab o pot ! Tull on the tiokets Gay Burgoyue, who took te h this is chang s 50 fine is Fisvill Tarding 3. ol1 Dutel Dorp—now it is * Fish up from ¢ aid a Roworing bush on the willon-Hadson!" aud * Dearmon's” Is * Irsington, " asd * Bug. | broken powder m o, shikes n shower of fragratce from ter B s ¢ Storm King,” sud M ¢ 12 sad becauss its whito bods The groen grass s ener on (this hill of somebody won't 6.1l * Breakne-k ot Willissy and | 0roadfil memory. ke will strawborry viuos (uen thels red, [retty: and, as we Lave asid, " Tubby 1ook” fs " Inwood-on. | 1°d berries fotho sun. Andif itis wad to remembor whas 1iadson,” aliboug the brate of & Lrakoman m 1oacking boues Lo hora, it is sweet to beliove that the men wll 1 the horror of the sonsitive s refined inhabitants, | Who ooull give theie Zires for & causo, wout parified by sacri- Tubby-Hook on-Hudsos Dot that beakoman w.li do thag | B thruugh the storm-gate of Heaven. g once 100 often Afloat Bain ou tho quiet waters of Lake Champliiv, Two 1 havo kept ty temper pretty well, so far, but X sbailfose | bundred aud fity yoars ago Samuel Champlain. o gellint gen- 1, i e ollow myscif to speak of th odiciu terian of Prauce, sallsd up these waters with Lis Indian allies and the way thay have ted the rocks ¢ to defeat bls Todiau focs, The shores bave rung with the n the woods with the nates of thei are quiot na fn that Yo Summer bas come, 1f il be added them to Frawco. 1 ho okildren In every t0wn 10 form el Mo acd ks to the southward wo eail for (hree delicious spond o day or two, now and taen. in & rrand eor ugh the ¢l cl f nd 1ko sentinels to let us plonlo] T scrape oll tils v o zh ficlls of grass on elther side; through woull bo peal fun to do it and o Lubor, and peibups the Lisades; thr losg resches of shellow water, cateh the yer s, no d where you can al.uos! tonch the rushes a9 you' lwan over the King him L the 1f this aport could bo ad o seraplag, wha day they would pass! 1 o ull thin b do 20 in solemn procassion and rebaptize ll tho 1 pambied. and wake * oy might vatains thot torm King honest 17 they like it L “ Roter borg.” howes at evening, with the conscionsanss of a duy well apo As for whera to go on the river, to spond the Summer, Low ©can you ask me such o questiont In the first flace, 1 live thare, and own land there; and do you suppose I am goiug to praise any otber tlace but the one TLive in? Not if 1 know my own interest ! Stillthere are other jlaces; and, if Ilived i them, oz owned land in them, Tsbould think them passally protty. What could be jloasanter than Irviogton, for instance, where the very air Is honey-sweet with the flavor of aristooracy! ‘Where every vista is closed by a villat (and somo villinously ugly ones, too ) and whers Broadway fashes oll tuo long af tornoons with the chariot wheels of wealth and fashiou! and where Irving lived, in modest sweetness, in a 1it(1» house that, as the country peopls vulgarly say, * takes the shine out” of all the pomposity round about! Not that ‘tis cIl pomposity, by any means, Thore is financier Williama's pretty cottgo, with ts Lilkside laws, s domestic, friencly unpretension, whieh we dare say is as pretty inside as out; and Jaflray's, where taste and wenlth bave dons what wealth alone can never do, and made the results of much money sponding look like tho spontaneous outcome of a genuine love of flowoers and trees; wnd the Hamilton place, park-like and farm1ike, with its grand pines, and anclent orchard, and flclds of grain; and “Nuits where the fairy carpet of the Arablan tals seems to have brought over a Freach chatean, in its stately elogance, oking ont over the lordly river, from its lawns, and roses, and en- circling troes. Or West Point. if yon are girls anddhink cadets g0 swoet,” or boys, and wish to be cadets, or lovers who want a fit ylace for romantic welks and meorlight strells and sails, West Polnt, though over-werm when we bave a real New-York Summer—which this fan't—is delightful when it fs cool, and 1s, consequontly, delightful now. Itused to be the paradise of the young, and we aro told that there isno 1ull in the en. thaslasm, Wo beliove peoplo don't stay there Jong, but whils they do stay the mirth goes on with spirit, and Joy is uncon- fined. ‘We bad a good time at Cornwall. which secms as erowded usever, There is nothing chere (o bo seen, but those are the very phices where ove can stay bongest, Thero are drives, and walks—if Americansf ever welked }—and boating, and thero is the never-wearying “golog down to the hnding” when the steamboat comes SP in the evening, and the fashion and beauty of Cornwall mingle with the fashion and beanty of New-York, and admire and wonder at the crowd of new M-Mvmmnam.hnh-m endivg stream, between two walls of greeting and eritiolsm, Buk, as the French say, **he knows not how to write who doesn't know how to shat up,” Foan't flulsh the river in one Jetter, and ‘tis unreasonable in you to sk it. Ihaven't saida word about dear, delightful Fishkill ('t lan't there, however, that my Jand lies 1), nor about the sweet simplicity, tho lamb- like innocence, of Milton, where mothers, who wish to keep their children from all the evil that is in thy world, will socom- oligh that o% aAY ate-—ualens an ontire absghos of sll laiorep) » boat, and down the wi tolave the green bills busiaess of triflic, fonday after our happy and swoetnese—and then one takes the cors he rosd is o powdersd gravel; tho engine d of bitazin al, aud rants aod roors about it and bel tiea forth einders and smoke tili we ingocents, who had nothing to do with its dixt, are nearly choked. Ob, Mastodon! if they would bus satisfy your encrmous appetite with peat, how muck it would ba for you and Low much better for us o, aud o 1dag of res! gain for Troy kes w0 utter my privats woe and wrong, D, ympany said in thelr Kailway Guide that the in for Montreal, wherein I facocen 1y took pas- d at Troy with the down expross to New-York, it does wot. It doesu't pratond to. If the Trojan spiders uy chance entioe au unwary fly oo thelr parlors they ot 1st bim go again while their toils can hell him, We yin the guise of Ethiops, Weo were dinueil'ss d supperl sy, and perlsbing for tes. Ard in & moment of weakness we yiclled (o the honoyed persuasions of oo of the potanicsl wonders of whom I bave discoursed aforetime, avd entered his carrlage, and were driven tolis botel. It is about three rods from the depot, but cunning ereatare drove around foar squares that ho might loso us, forever, in the pusliens of the town. When wo reached the Lotel wo bad s dreadful pre- vision of the fate that awaited us, but we had Just laft Ticonderogs, sad we flt that 1t woull bo unmanly to retreat. So we washed faces and hands, and had our clothes brashed, £.¥ which we paid extra, aud went to the supper-room. It was an illsmelling basoment, and the tablo-cloth was sollsd, and to ask for napkios was a madness, end the steak was tough and fried in lird, and the tea was berbs, S0 wo ate nothing, but rasbed swifly back to the station to catch tbe first traln to East Alvany, thinking it better to sit on the pLutform at that vernal spot than to dwill in tho basemonts of Levy, For washing our hands they charged us the sam of 82, and we had a dreadful forsbodi. ¢ that if we stayed an bour longer shoud not have » enough to get home. all that, whoever L a week to spare during this torrid Summer that is coming, lot him make the trip that I bave eclebrated, takiog caro to como back an the Albany side, Ho can have seven charming days, and see Saratogn, Lake George and €tamplaio, and it wil cost him but $15, or thereabouts, unless he retarns through ncome woold suftice him, There is heolth, and ;‘f:un: nmnfl. n this Summer Jonrney, and each weary man and woma will brin back coursge, aud patience, aud saaburn, which are all excellent possessions, iy LAKE GEORGE. e oy OUR SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT BECOMES PIOUS AND SENTIMENTAL, AND MAKES A RESPECTFUL ALLU- $I0N TO MONTCALM, AND TALES ABOUT THR @GOLDEN SUNSET SKY, AND CONFESSES TO LONG- INGS FOR TROUT. Hzap oF LAKR GEoRor, Tuesday, Joue 20, 1866 Caldwell, which comprises Fort William Henry Hotel, the Lake Honse and two wharves, is but 30 miles from Baratoga, whiob, uplorely 1a el i the gateway of & byaptt will ing ckapal which turis | ST ——— S S SRR - felland, At Moroan stabton you 1save the {rain, yorx soul fo Loaven and your body to the upper ssat of avery e of e stazeodach, frim which you have peveg mwounto ! one bef r —your | r ale man in the skieg obsenr s your view of tio b 1y 4z 4o imodiabe £ 1o connd, Tiers vra twdve passenger: ned six with 2 d“‘:ll!h-hlmlllu a8 sray Laaders consider noe abused, and rofuse to Ceaw up the stoep LNl 4y, obatiuale heads aud eympatulving bodios towssd u.';.':': the midst of evory ewoont, Ouo patient passesger down and Lads thom whoney:r thoy Buls; abi so, (1.0l bay i, yuu k0t 04, bub sour heart s ko your mocth sl the thno, and yon think uscbarit:Ule tuoughts of the stags-own- v Tt isan odd faot that whether you po full of Lops aed eageraces from Moreau to Lako Greorse, or rotara from Lake Gerge G0 Morsan husked in tho sense of & b henuty nob of eart, you s always climbisg ™ Pl A fisk tiey aro siupie. Oly o lide red pimrle of & formbouse Lroaks thc'r dull, zreew faces, end the farm yards are ustidy, snd the wezabond, tatterod olildren look a3 if thayneeded misionarics. But gy you wind up the heavy sandy roads you look back into & vall g Reod ieos, where aiiutug rivermannders wuong hay s fielly, and oIl aroand you stand the Delwotalls 2untaiie, My ay (o the right a Liog pur. of tho Greon Mountalns leoks apurls shadow against the clyndy sk, And on tho othee side you see the Bontind paaka of tho Adironiscks, rreen, wooded and somber. T it a hit of th Catsk Il that the ove catches, fiir in the sofs sonthera haze? Now, «1l the hills wra Wik, sud g1 omy, and forcboding, and next momont the #ad (1 uls open, and & Bcll of gapobire shines, and the moua. 1aia sides ure tender green, or soft, woft puryl, v Then tho road winds away, and you lo the granlour sad glory of tae hights, and it is monotenous and Lresome onge raore, until suddenly, ma the hiorses trot dowr a long v ilge street, you utter & Little cry of 3 light for the wonde: you dave fourd, Before you, e lng wooden bridgo, At your 17, e plittering waterf 11 at one end & sheet of oryetsl pourd Tl welly at the other a mad, tarbid, vmber toreent tlunging from rook 1o rock, and tearing onward with o wild vosh ssd roar, A% your right, bilow the bridge, & otannet will'd with perpen. Qieulr 1 s gmooth as the Palisades, and turbul ot with the noise of tho fmprisonsd river. 1t oolls you to fllow it, bk your ways sroths ways of oivil #ation, 80 you clng o your weut, and are borae inte ¢he busy and preity villigs wbove, which tho natives ocll Glonws Falls. VWhy the possessive, 9, rustics? Glen Ruils is & bundred times pre When tie horses are watered, in which intervsl y6u havs shiken your oramped Liwba, you wiiil away agais, a0d shis tme on a [1ink road, which continues to the Lake. It windw throngh woocl inds, ravines, and shavp Lills on your righty precipitous liffs, and Ladges, aud somstisies a clbating on youe 11t and ol vaye the beautiful, misty mountain iaditoward thy Lorizon, Here, €5 you aacend a slope, a hittio white guide-hoard pointe tie western bl o Willisma's monvment —FEphraim W illams, wodest, eweetsouly), brave gentlemns Who bad fought el 81y iv Mossachusetts, and waa sammoned by bivkieg to th0 defonce of this passsgs 1o the Canadas With some pre. mouiiion of i fate ho etopped at Alsang, fo makc thot disge. #ition of hia property which fonnded W.itiamy' Cllegs, aad on with that good deed in Lia bands. How goll nily he 1ed bis men, bow pitifilly be was entrapped ines e smbuseade, how ourty (ll—iolld by an Indian bulld, el a youos man provd, avd glad of kife, the historics tIL ek vou vever cared about him ¢l you stood here, and the vage. pliantons of tradition put on fosh. azd touctiad ¥oe with handy i%e your owm. A Vittle further Is Biondy Tond; to-day o quiet poci, hald 1i2den amonz low-bending trees end tangled vines but e 1.t yed September, & bundred years ago, the dreadful ceme- tory tf Fronch and Eaglish soldiers And now, on the right throngh the closs trens, & plisipss of sliuing water, and & mooent later aks Georgo lisa at yooe feot. 0, husht Tetnoonespesk. Tt is 2aif you saw Pison and Gilon in Paradise, Lako St, Sacramont It is tha parfect and fiiting name. Some ove Lunghs insio the 0oash, acd, on the wingaof a sigh, you come hack to this earthl 10 from the sopernal regions whersin you wors, And yot you are ghad b feel that you are a little Lees worldly taas you were at Sazatoge, for Jsi betore youentersd tho Vanity Fair your soul was vexed within you to find that there wore cindors on your face, and sour bait was disordored, snd the bow of your bonned And now your face ts burncd to 8 cinde withiout your va'l you don't cezs—and your haie Looks 1ko Moz Merrilie: 17 superior to ity . the hovetstrings aro * wapssd” begond Lope, and yeu ean afford to deepisn tham, even thonzh you koow that ol the loarders of Fort Will.am Hozry will watch your clunbering down from your coign of vantaga, Iobserved tiat tho dwalle ere by the way shut out the Lvelizess of this nppes world with gouly piper-shades, ba ot aford to loge an inchof B thongh E el not Lieach this Somme [ " weat ap to Tie paletd, weodes sts, you akiilfully corkeerew yourself dows, and you are bapyy wheo you fisd window of your room opons npop the lake skors, sod vor will be ready in an Losr. Por though yon have sings for the trus and tho transeendentl, vor elso havd sgings for tront, ‘The window is olf that you had dured to w, The dinuer is o dresdfol dissppoistment, Not éhat T cannot be eont: C riolness; but there many od. The butler was seft, was an unplsasant conacio coursos, and they wore not the czs were stale, and I griove to ssy that et ten-time some- hody’s ‘1-e napkin was offered me, AN this Sur: il i beautifsl fa memory, and Lam not captions. I speak ol s hotel becauss it 8 o type of husdreds, It will bs so muck heter when thoso Summer inns discover that serupuloas laailiness and elmple food, which is the vory best of ws kind, are to bo dosiced above winejclly ok dinner, and eake with cochineal frosting, ard the tea sapkint r dinner I wander out of ¢ o billoc’ east of the I, where stood Fort W, 17, lost and won—lo.t aod and fallen into tuins, The bolsmic oder of tho pines #ills thio air, and the soft sway of the boughs bustes you, Bo shed they their fragraves, so lallad they the eager souls who peoglod the fort when Montosla came sweeping np aguinat in the name of France, and took it from tho gsllint English- wen who sc1d citadcl and lifs so deas), in this verene besuty--tho horrible storr of the massac: parrison is hard to beliove, Still to the east lio the few gtones that mark the site of Fo:t George, where wo cnrioudy traced the va diteh, Just dear as ery wooded bights, aud you 1! thoosand bateaux and mderoga, brave in gcll one, and provd in confidence, sil sen, brillint as Cleepatra’s legions, to e wreeked, deolmated & oz, So, £t with tho elippery needls o, mast faint f:11 of the water, hidden from the modern bostelrs 15 f.shious of to-day, Fou ik dark, wheee all the gro peogh:d with the lives of (Ling ago, and thcie hops eod dreams and @sappointments eell to you tll you are of them. 0. wondrous eircly of human existence, when each hand clsps every other 80 chsely, that we oannot Lst it slip i wo would. Tt is wise to held ft, then, 5o gently and truly, thatit will never turn agaiust us, And when we have learned that, thers ill bo no more specters of fair young lives which red War wgled out, When ol the gollen sunset sky is taraal to zray or the fair stars come out and Light the water, each Wi swering star in the bluo depths, you know it fs wise to gole doors and sbnt out the palace of crystel with your claesh Llind beoause you must see the stn rise to-mOTTOW, down te Like and up Chamylais, slt of which you cannot de uless you fall wleep to B cluatant feot ture homeward and bedward, but yor have moved your Lol to she window, and lug, loog you after »il, looking ot the 1ovely Lako, and boaring in the sob of the Loughs are quiem for the dead, scelog fa tho chaageless glory of the stars a promiso for the Livisg. [ fare of soraps of coll meat, asd pre-em A on this low bsak, 1 with the with t e CAPE MAX. ——— OUR SPECIAL OOBRESPONDENT ONCE FINDS HIMSELP 0N THE LONELY JERSEY SHORE—AGAIN THE 83A 18 DLUE AND ROLLING,—DBUT THIS TIME A SEA OF RAZORS—ULTRAMARINE RAZORS 1P YOU KNOW WHAT THEY ARE—MORAL REFLECTIONS UPOX CAPE MAY AND MB. CURTIS, AND MUCH USSFUL INFORMATION ABOUT BOARD. Carx May, N, J., June 19, 1866 11 thero can be imagized & humaa creature belonging 1o the watering-goiog places of the Unitod States, who, posseasing suficient means, has not visited Cape May, that Luman cres- ture {s to bo compassioned acd comlssorated. I kuow that it 1+ the custom to pralse Cape May, T know that her reputation §s world-wide, and that she is wont to lis unon the ouss of pas™ success, But this does not binder the fact {hat she is 03¢ of thie most beautiful and satisiactory watering places that ean bovisited. Inthe busy preinde to the regular season, sho in not, of course, 8o ateractive as sbe will by furiher 08 Everything is very quiet there Jjust ab present, The fancy shops are uot much visited; the botels are not full. That is, they are empty. The namber of guests at Congress Hall has bitherto bees limited to nod more than 40, and the Colambis and othe: Loasss hare been Qoing a correspondingly diminisbed business. Indced, most of {he prineipal watering.plices seem to be behindhand. Tbe m-mndyflmumfih-uuyflmh to @l them is not fortheoming. Yet Cape May cannot fail tobe & not Wn-nn-nm—nl-l ploasure-seekers, in the very commencoment of (.3 season. A Jttle inquiry aad & good deal of manouvor oun gt up & sl @lont quag gty of sonndal f9 maky oac's bie, for wast ofa beb