ajsf | \ ...... JL TltSl ,D _2> sO DIVOTBD TO LITERATURE, THB ARTS, SCIENCE, AGRICUI.TURB, NBWS, POLITICS, &C., &C. TERMS TWO DOLLARS PEE ANNUM,] "I*t It b. Instilled Into the Hearts of your Children that th. Liberty of the Prosa Is the Palladium of all your Rights."?Jul,tint. [PAYABLE IN ADYANOB BY W. A. LEE AND HUGH WILSON. ABBEVILLE C. II., SOUTH CAROLINA, FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL 8, 1859. VOLUME YI.-NO. 49. The Winds of March are Humming. n? FITZ ORKKNB IIAU.ECK. The 'winds of March are humming Their parting song, their parting song, And summer skies are comign. And days grow long, and days grow long. I Watch, but not in gladness, Ourearden tree, our garden tree ; It huds, in sober sadness. Too soon for me, too soon for me. My second winter's over, Alas! snd I alnsl nnd I *t ? - ? - - ajldtc iiu nwepteu lover ; Don't ask me wh}-, don't ask me why. 'Tia nut asleep or idle That love has been, that love has been ; For many a happy bridal The year baa seen, the year has seen ; I've done & bridemaid's duty. At three or four, at three or four; My best bouquet had beauty. Its donor more, its donor more. My second winter's over, Alas! and I, alns! and I Have no accepted lover: Don't ask me why, don't nik me why. His flowers my bosom shaded One sunn* day, one sunny day ; The next, they fled and faded, Beau and bouquette, beau and bouquette. In vain, at ball and parties, I've thrown my net, I've thrown my net; This waltzini?. watching heart is Uncho3en yet, unchosen yet. My second winter's over, Ales 1 and I alusl and I Have no accepted lover: Don't ask me why, don't ask me why. They tell me there's no hurry For Hymen's ring, for Hymen's ring ; And I'm too young to marry : 'Tis no such thing, 'tis no such thing. The next, spring tides will dash on My eighteenth year, my eighteenth year: It puts ine in a passion. Oh dear, oh dear, oh dear, oh dear I My second winter's over, Alas I and I alas 1 and I Have no accepted lover: Don't ask me why. don't ask me why. JU V JUU 1 1U u. In the summer evenings. When the wind blew low, And the skies were raditnt With the sunset glow? Thou and I were happy. Long, long years ago 1 Love, the young and hopeful, Hovered o'er us twain. Filled us with *ad pleasure And delicious pain? In the summer evenings, Wauderiug in the lane. In the winter evenings. When the wild winds roar Blustering at the chimney, Piping at the door? Thou and T are happy, As in days of yore. Lore atill hovers o'er us, Robed in white attire, L/rawiny neaveniv music From an earlhly lyre? In the winter evening*, Sitting by the fire. rFOR THE INDEPENDENT PRESS J INCIDENTS OF THE MEXICAN CAMPAIGN, BY A MEMBER OF THE PALMETTO REGIMENT March to Puebla Continued. As far a* the vision could scan the plain no object appeared in view to mark the locality of water or tliatof a settlement. All the green herb we have seen in the past two days march, is a species of cactus of the size of one's fist, and VMAmhlinfP m fnnn/1 rnnlr TKn A printed with their delicate blooms, and from their midst a lone bird flew up. which ^as probably the only inhabitant of the parched plain. At 2 o'clock p.m., we noted some strange objects looming in the distance, that excited good deal of speculation. Our teams were the first to divine their meaning nnd from their constant neighing and accelerated movements, I was led to coincide with their animal instincts. A nearer approach revealed a cluster of dirt hovels, that were occupied by as rascally lookiog and vagabond a aet as ever graced a prison walls. They did not appear to be beggars, and how they lived otherwise, is a mvstorv ma Th?n ... ?:?u - I? ^ ?tj-, a iivj |^? uroui/uu UD WHU I* WHO" ket of fine fruit for which we paid them liber, ally; we could not possibly drink the water contained in the shallow wells, it being so strongly impregnated with lime. The column halted here about two minutes which was all the relaxation we enjoyed today. The sun is melting hot and the plaie is now covered in many places with pure lime, that rendered walking still more disagreeable nd tiresome. To our left we observed many hills that wera evidently coated with the same material. This denouepent was a knockdown argucicutto a certain one of our men, who while at Jalapa had amused us with the theory,'tbat it was chalk or lime that bleached th* summit of Orizava. The volcano of Popo eatapetel rivaling in majestic splendor the heights of that mountain now arose to view, towering above the summit* of the Western mountains. 'Sole Monarch of the boundless plain, its summit is mantled with eternal snow, and presents a grand feature in the forngtftion of the country, and having such a marked influence upon the productions of this climate.* Its elevation is 17,860 feet above the level of the sea, and 6,000 feet above the plains of Ptkbb. Oar ropti now made a gradual curve to tbo 1MB. hu we ware giaa even or Una change, end the mHh ofhilla, skirting the plafa oo either ejde, aeentydto approximate io front of us, And only leaving a narrow pass between tbe?v When we had reaohed this point, the piree of Gotbio eharoh t* O God, I shall be sitiafied !?Bteeher. . Sharp-pointed jests out keener than a knife. -- - * -? [for tije independent press.] ENERGY. "See the issue of your sloth : Of sloth comes pleasure, of pleasure comes riot. Of riotcornes disease, of disease comes spending. Of spending comes want, of want comes theft. And of theft come? hunting." Young man ! There lies hidden in many h noble heart, as dorman^and inflexible as the serpent in mid winter, this one thing, enfir(*V. Rnprnrc iq nnl*? <> ?? OJ- &/ ? ""-J "?D >"au success, ? it wields the muster pen ?it shows its bright luminaries in the college Hall?it chases the Comet in the heavens, amidst the dazzling stars, and watches the terrific thunder-bolt as it drives asunder the sturdy oak?it converses with nations and sways tho sceptre over empires ?it portrays man more beautiful than Nature and paint# a heaven on earth, and last not least, overcomes any obstacle that may chance to obstruct your way. * Why, then, young man, linger behind, and let the monsters, idleness, luxury and dissipation??nd then ruin supersede energy. Every man of ordinary talents, has a mind susceptible of achievements ; nature vuutjY?s uiiu wim mcse iscuiues nnn . * > T HE BALLET O I RL. , "Thank goodness tins is tbo last week of! the pantomime!" "You don't Ray bo ? Well that is a comfort, at any rate. We shall get rid of those odious stranger girls who are always hanging about the wings and thrusting their noses where they are not wanted." "That is something to rejoicc at, indeed. I don't object to our own ballet ladies; but to have these "extras" intruding into the crrckHTk rr\r\rr> ^.vvu ivuiiif pjrjMig nuuub ttllU liniCIIIll^ IU every word that is said, I declare it is quite insufferable! positively quite!" The scene where this colloquy was going on wr8 the green room of one of the leading metropolitan theatres. The interlocutois were principalis, as the term goes, and, by virtue of drawing from the treasury?the one, fifteen pounds per week fur enacting walking ladies ; and the other six, for delivering messages?they conceivcd themselves entitled to be as insolent as they pleased to the unhappy girls, many of whom possessed far superior talent but were obliged to be content to gain weekly as many shillings as those clever ladies took pounds. It is true both bad somewhat suddenly risen from the state they so much despised. per favor of a friend, to the proud position ! they nt present occupied, and though dramatic critics might demur to their claims, they certainly obtained the "reward o. merit." Time bad somewhat defaeed their charms and the remembrance of their early I struggles, yet it had left tliem the knowledge of the vulnerable points of which their young associates might be most easily wounded ; and never had the axiom that "knowledge is power" been more aptly illustrated, than in the dealing out of their envenomeJ darts. One of those pariahs of the dramatic tribe?a ballet girl?was at the same moment leaning her head upon her clasped hands, which rested on tlie mantlepiece. She had sought the apartment to be alone with her thoughts, and as sho forgot the scene around her, and saw, in her mental vision, the sad and desolate home, Where | she knew that the announcement of the withdrawal of the piece would bring tears and consternation, she knew that upon her rested a vast amount of responsibility, for I she liad at home parents sick and almost j destitute. She was a fragile girl, and she 1 hated the profession to which poverty, but | not lier will, consented. There was a look of deep anxiety in her eyes?and her face, but for tlio rouge she wore would have been pale as marble; even though that there was an expression of deep anxiety that suited ill with her girlish years. She started as the voices of the ladies aroused her from her reverie ; and she became aware of the nature of the conversation that was going on near her, a bright flush suffused her neck; and mouted even to her brow. "Do you hear yourself called to go on the stage, Miss Odell?" rudely inquired the prompter, shuffling past, his spectacles in one. li?nil- arifl Ilia linnL- in Ilin "I an. here, sir."' Here ! yea, I see you are here, and I shall fine you for talking at the wings. Here, indeed! How dare you answer me? I've taken caro you shan't be here much longer! Wc shall get rid of the whoie pack of you. Friday night will be your last night; and you'll find your treasury prettv small on Saturday. I have you all down for fine? your whole weeks salary?every one a set of ." What elegant appellation he was about to apply was suspended by the approach of an exquisite of rank, who fancied himself desperately in love with the nbifP.t of tlllH linnrnvnlroil J r.V.V?WU ..VMtVa. The peer eyed him a moment, contemptuously through his glass. "What's that you are saying about a fine, sir?" The prompter muttered,and bowed. "Bah! Bah! What's the dAmnge?" Then without waiting for a reply, daintly drawings sovereign from his vest, "Will that pay it! If it will take yourself off, and don't annoy a lady with your impertinence." "Let me beg your lordship will put up your purse. I am not in the habit of receiving favors from strangers." "Strangers ??naw! naw ? naw, don't bo cwuel, my deawest c*$ature f?'Pon my life, it's enough to bweak a fellow's heart, when you know that I am waiting to throw my whole fbwtune at youw feet. I am weally suwpwised that you pwefer to wemain in this detestable position, when ewewy happiness that wealth and love can command wait youw accept a nee." "My lord," said the girl proudly, "there can be no happiness for me, except associaed with virtue!" "Now, my deaw cweataw," began the peer; but by thi* time Miss Odell was preparing to take her place in the ballet. The young roan still .kept hovering near her. "One word, Mis* Odefr." "Have the goodness to make way, rpy lord," Mid she. <<' . . r, "Tben bonaw roe by paying the fine out of this, tny deawest cweaiaaw t You don't too* bow h?ppy jrou will ank? o?4If ir# rsi > ... . .niti'ifi.o'miiiiHiMi n?ii I will pewmil to contwibute in tbe smallest way to youw eomfowt. Do?pray do!" and as ho spoke lie pressed into her hand a heavy purse. Why was it that for a moment she tightly clasped it, and a sparkle into hor eyes? The next, ihe light went out?hor lips turned white ; and, as a cold shudder passed through her frame, she pn!rlIv nnf it Ko/.lr ???a .1 1 1 vw.-i.j j?*-w ?v wuviv iiiiv* tuc uuuur ? uniiu, "Let mc pass, my lord, or?or I shr.ll think that you, too, combine with others to insult me?" Tlie young nobleman stepped promptly back. The path opened, and in a moment the ballet sprang upon the stage, and the young girl, with her companions, enwreathed in smiles, were dancing gayly before an applauding audience. ******* * On?on, through the wind and rain?on, through tlie sleet and mud tramped the fair and delicate girl. Alone?alone in the midnight walk through the dreary suburb, past the dangerous haunts of drunkenness and vice, shivering with cold, with terror, and with weakness, as every sound scared her, as every footstep approached her?now trembling at the loneliness of tlio long, dismal street, that seemed 60 interminable?now springing like a startled fawn from some intoxicated wretch reeling home?and more, ten thonsHnd times more aflfr by the approach of those bonnetones who roam shamelessly through jets, rendering night hideous by their profane and bacchanalian orgies. On, on ?now stealing softly, breathlessly?now, with a quick and hasty step, that gradually increases to a flight, the New Road is gain ed. Her home is still far distant. Now, in a solemn square, she returns the gruff "good night"of the policeman?now agilely eludes the rude grasp of a man, who unperceivedhad been for soma time ilndmna on bpr ,, -j, footsteps. At last in the dim distance, she describes a shadowy figure tottering towards her. It is her mother, worn with watching, coming to meet her; and, with a sigh of relief, the girl arouses all her remaining strength, and springs alertly forward; but^ as she gains her mother's side, fcll her newfound courage melts away, and she sinks, sobbing into the maternal arms. "MychilJ? my child?" exclaimed the affrighted parent; "what new trouble is there in store for us?" "This is the last week of the pantomime/' said Clara, "ano I fear it will be almost im possible for me, at present, to obtain another situation." ******** Morning broke, and found Clara kneeling by a dead father's side! The vow she registered there was heaid in Ileaven, and chronicled by angels iu the Book of Life. "Nothing can teinpt roe now," she exclaimed ; for the sacrifice that might have been an act of piety, would henceforth be a sin." "Think ever thus, my child," said the Wppnincr mnlllpr aa alia fnnfllo 1 q w..v iviiuij tuiumv/cu her, "and I shall bare no fear for the future." "Uave none mother ? We can work, can we not ?" "Hand in band, my child, to the death." "And win, mother?or die, and be like him, at peace." ******** There was a great attraction at Drury Lane; for a new tragedy had been announc ed?author's name unknown; but in the interest that had been evinced in high quarters, it was conjectured that it came from a noble source. There was to be a first appearance, also, in the lady who was to both her name and the piece, that neithcritics nor actors could solve. She came plainly dressed in deep mourning, closely veiled. She was ever accompanied by a widow lady, supposed to be her mother ; but as neither seemed to have any acquaint ... ? auto 111 iiik esiaunsn meni, ana never arrived until the last moment at tbe rehearsal*, departing the instant the business of tbe stage was over, it was not possible to glean any intelligence concerning them. All that was known of them was that they arrived in a plain brougham, that drove off the moment they alighted, and returned ms % .???i, ,1 , ?1 1 . ...< ?.< well the style of her face and flgute She appeared in the pure classic drapery, bearing n basket of freshly gathered flowers; these, it was easily seen, were choice and costly, and as she moved through her part, her action was graceful and dignified, and her voice soft and pleasing. By the end of I he third act she had secured the attention of the audience', as she went on, her i powers became gradually developed, and at I the end of the fifth ant. nnt. nnlv wn? tl?o I success of tho tragedy complete, but the new actress, being loudly called for, a shower of bouquets fell at her feet, which she | did not leave fur a servant to collect, but herself bore off, amid smiles and courtesies, while the tragedy was announced for repetition, until further notice, and a storm of applause. As she left the stage, she heard a voice close beside her exclaim, "Why, good gwacious? Is it possible? Do my eyes deceive me? ow do I weally see again my adowable heart enslaved?the chawming Miss ? ''Lovelace is my name, Lord Rivers. And I trust you will have the goodness to rei member it?" "A webiike, by all that is unccoqwewabel! I'm in despaiw!" At that moment a distinguished looking and very handsome man who had sat in the stage-box, an attentive spectator, arrived with a lady in deep mourning, lenning upon his arm, and, after a few whispered words, carefully arranging the folds of an ample cloak around Miss Lovelace, lie held her respectfully from the crowds who everywhere greeted her. The ballet-room, the next evening, was in a state of great excitement. '"Who, exclaimed a dozen voices, "is this Miss Lovelace?" I" VJI utoo i "I am sure her face is familiar to me!" said one. "And to me?and to me! but it's no use guessing?tell us!" "Do you remember tliat proud, silent girl, who used to look so melancholy when bhe was with us, hut whom all the young men were wild about 1" "Mis Odell, to be sure." "Yes. And she has a brother?he was in the army?went out to India, and was thought to be dead. He's come home rich, and she's,going to be married." "But what brings her on the stage?" "Oh ! that's another part of the story.?It seems that her father fell into poverty through some bank breaking, or something ; and (linn Itio fuinilt? Koliownri ua*"** ill ?and then ho changed his name?and then lie died?no, he wrote a play, and couldn't get it acted, and then he died !" Well?and so the tragedy i9 her father's I suppose?1' "Yes, it is?you've hit it! And bo it appears that this Miss Lovelace is her real name,it seems; the other was an assumed one?took it into her head that it wa6 a respect to her dead father to produce the play that he, poor mun, had so much set his heart on?for it seems he wrote the character for her when she was quite a little child?and so she determinted to act the part before ever she got married, be cause, t suppose, Bhe dul not imagine her husband would let her do so afterward ; for a grandmother, or an aunt, or an uncle, or some one, has died, and left them some money; and so, you see, she sports hei brougham." ****** The morning was clear and bright, nn " mi, nuu iiiviieu nit) inimser 10 nave laraily worship everv evening. While he was I visiting there, Judge Cono and his wifo from Nashville, and Mr. Bolton, being a ' little embarrassed, said to the old minister, as he brought out the bible, that he harl better be short, as the Judge was not nccus ) thmed to such things, "Very well, very well," said ho, nnn or? to supply all our wauls, but Cousin William says that Judge Cone and bis wife from Nashville are here', and aro not used to family worship, and however needy wo are, there is no time to sparo iR telling thee our wants. Amen." The Judge was taken all aback, and bo was cousin Willam. Tbev both pressed the old gentleman to conduct the service* in his own way, which he did, to their great edification. Flace a glass of liquor on the table, pal a hat over it, and say, 'I will engage to. drink every drop of that lin?nr unit vat T'll . 1?? J ? not touch tha hat.' You then get ander the table, and after giving three knock*, you make a noise with your mouth, as if you wore swallowing the liquor. Then getting from under the table, you say, 'Now, gentlemen, be pleased to look* Some ooe eager to see if you bare dwjnk the liquor, will raise the bat, when you itttaolly take the claM and awallnw ih? w\n?a?i?? ???"? Gentlemen, -1 have fulfUIed^mj p*omi*e. You are all vita?aw*ib?t 1 dil hoi teach tl)? hat.* 1 " ] x> ' ' >