I^ii^ i , ) #j? $nutjjtru Cubrjjrise, '* reflex of roi'ur.ak events. ^^.pbuer> .? . -.- ' ** .1^1 i */?iwi a^w ip. $?&$& ti?it0? w proprietor. ' ^ - gp'* ? . rpilll>n? '"feirf&JMV"^1? in 4r?,lco : *5 H dmrc of * lines, end sT tltfM*??P lent insertion. Co!\- : tract* for yearly advertising mode ri'iUKintUc. f AUKXTS. E.W.CARR, N. W. cor. of Walnut on J Third-at, | Itiiladclphin. In our authorised Agent. *4* WALKER, JR., Colombia. ft. C PETER 8TRA0LEY, ESQ., Plot Rock. N. C. A. M. FEOEN, Kairvicw P. O., Greenville Pi?t VVM. C. BAILEY, Pleasant Grove, Greenville. RAFT. JL Q. ANDER 80N, Cednr Kalla, Greenville r , Stltrtti) Ifortrtj. _ 1 Si) tjtO_ S?j. WY DAVID BATES. Tb?* ii ?u angel ever near, ? - ?. Wbei toil nml trouble vex and try, TbaLhVJs our fniuting hearts take cheer. Ana whispers.to ue?"By ami by." 90>lRt Veltw it at our mother's knee, With tender smile and love-lit eye, She grants some boon oir childish plea, In ibese sweet accents?1"By and by." What visions crowd the youthful breast? What holy aspirations high .K%rve the young heart to do its best, And wait the promise?"By and by !" The maiden, silting sud and loue? Her thoughts lmlf utter with a sigh, Ni.n.. .1- -i ?- ? - ?>. was * Jdhn"*??: honest gcn^^pir\Uv,*ncl of h lit til OdiNwwAfrO-iy.. l* ftwM( ^.fijpt.\Mft 111^ 1 V*, '. ' I _ .. \_ '' X J^. .Jlf- * _ I 7 * > - .~r, ? : itfhrji'-. i. GIIEENYILII i ih 'Mt* I jjtT ' p^Pr^rv-v^?r^rfpn^^ nndcr \\ hitakcr, a noble apostle of Christi- ? auity, who went to Viigiiua for the cure of J souls. Sir Thomas Dale, then Governor of I the colony, thus briefly tells his masters of i the Company iu London, the story of Pocn- ? honlas : "Pbwhntan's daughter I mused to * be carefully instructed in the Christian rem gion, who, after sbo had made a good prog- c ress threin, renounced publicly her country's f idolatry, openly confessed her Christian faith, I whs, as she desired, baptized, and is since li married to an English genjlctnan of goad < understanding (as by his letter unto me, C containing the reason of his marriage of iior, I: you may peiceire,) another knot to bind a this peace the stronger. Her father and M friend* gave approbation to it, and her un- c cle gavh her to hint in the church. She J lives civilly and lovingly with hiin, and, I g trust, will increase in goodness, as the know- li ledgoof God increased in her. Sho will go to .ll England , with me, and, were it but the gain e ing *f this one soul, 1 will think iny time, toil, and pi went *ta v, well snout." k ^ So discounted Sir Thomas Dale. Curios- p ity would know more of the Princes* mid lior li marriage and curiosity may here be grntifi- h ed to tue extent of the revolutions of recor- ? ded hutory. I The finger of n special Providence, point- a ing down the vista of ages, is seen in the r< character mid acts of Pocahontas. She I was the daughter of it |wgmr liiny \?1.a.W1 . s never heard of Josus of NaxarctTi, )'et her h heart was overflowing with the cardinal vir- a Lues of a Christian life. ci "She was a landscape of mild earth, Where all was harmony, nnd calm quiet, c' Luxuriant budding."?Byron. When Captain Smith, the boldest nnd the * beet of the early adventurers in Virginia, ^ penetrated the dense forest, ho wr.? made a prisoner, was conducted in triumph from vil- j j lage to village, until lie stood in the presence |' of Powhatau, the fupremc ruler, aud was J condemned to die! ; p Upon the barren snnxl I y A single captive stood ; 1 r. Around him came, with bow and brniid, i j. The red men of the wood. j v Like him of old his doom he hears, J j; !>--?? * * ivock-douiiu on ocean's run : The chieftain'* daughter knelt in tears, L And breathed a prayer for him. ^ Above his head in air ^ The savage war-club swung: The frantic girl, in wild despair, Her arms around him flung. Then shook the warriors of the shade, Like leaves on aspen-limb? Subdued by that heroic maid I Who breathed a prayer for hiin. I *i "Unbind him !" grasped the chief? I tl He kissed .away her. terns of grief, "I And set the captive free. j u 'Tie ever thus, when in life's storm, 'J Hope's Star to man grows dim, j1. An angels kneels in woman's form, .ai And breathes a prayer for him. cl Glorge I*. Morris. m - ?- w m How could that stern old king deny g The angel pleading in her eye? w How mock the sweet, imploring grace n That breathed in brenuty from her face, a And to her kneeling action gave ti A power to soothe and still subdbe, h Until, though humble aa a slave, c To more than queenly sway she grew, h William G. Simms. i The Emperor yielded to the maid, and the captive was set free. Two years after that, event, Pocahontas " again became an angel pf deliverance. She hastened to Jamestown during a dark and V stormy night, informed the English of a conspiracy to Exterminate them, and was back to her couclibefore^awn. Smith was grate- ^ ful, and the whole English colony regarded j her ae their deliverer: But grniiiude is of . ten a plant of feeble root, and the canker of ' selfishness will destroy it altogether. Smith ^ went to England; the morals of the colonist* , became depraved ; and Argall, a rough, half- j piratical navigator, unmindful of her char- *j acter, bribed a savage, by the promise of a a1 copper kettle, to betray Pocahontas into his T hands, to be kept as a hostage while coin- " pelliiig iS>wV*U? to make recti tutien for " Injuries inflicted. The Emperor loved his ' daughter tenderly, agreed to the terms of ransom gladly, and promised unbroken 11 e_l t. ii _ iv- - l ri rieiiuvmp lur mi iingiu>n. Pocahontas whs uow free to return to ber ] " forest hc*'w^ wmJ' ytT? .-: ??:? . .1 i > K, S. ft: THURSDAY iage altar in the now and pretty durx'j M fameatown, where, hot long before, the biido lad received Cliriatmn baptism, and was tamed the Lady Kebecca. The auti had nnrcbed half way up tpvrard the meridian, t hen a goodly company had assembled l?otenth the temple roof. The pleasant odor i the "pewa of cedar" commingled with the rag ranee of tfio wild flowers wliich decked he festoons of evergreens and sprays that i mug over tlio "fiiir^ broad windows," and lie conunandim-rit tables above the chancel. )vcr'lbe pulpit of black-walnut bung garltjds of white flowers, with-the waxen leaves nj scarlet beniea of holly. The coinmuion tablo was covcrod with fair white linn, and hore bread from the wheat liclda of nincstown, and wine from its luscious Tapes. The font, "hewn liollow between, ko a canoe," sparkled with water, as on lis morning when the gentle princess utterd her baptismal vows. C>f all that Company" assembled in llio roan spaco between the chancel and tin: ??s, the briJe and gioom wcf? th? ceh- I ?1 figures iti fact aiul significance. 'l*??ea- ' acc?.? ler arms were bare even to the shoulder*; nd, hanging loeaely toward# her feet. whs h obo of rich stutV. prrwerited by Sir Thomas Jalc, and fancifully embroidered by bet-self ndluir xiiauJeii-. A ?? >?.- ftpcirclfiti er head, and held the plumage of binUaiui veil of gauze, while her limbs were adornJ with the simple jewelry of the native I orkshops. liolf was alined iu the gay [ iothiug of an English cavalier of that j??-i i ! d, and U]k>ii his thigh he wore the short I word of a gentleman of distinction in soci- | ty. Ilo was the personification of manly ! eauty in form and cn/tingc ; she of woman- j ; modesty and lovely simplicity ; nutl as I [) ,*y eainu and stood before the man of j lod, history dipped her pen in the indes- j tillable fountain of truth, and recorded a ; M phecy of mighty empires in the New Vorld. U|m>ii the chancel steps, where no tiling interfered, the good Whitaker stood i his sacerdotal robes, and, with impressive ukv- pronounced the marriage ritual of the turgy of thr Anglican Church, then first Innu-d on the Western continent. On his ight, iu a richly carved chair of state, ronght from England, sat the Governor, itlt liis ever attendant halbertifrrOvithlwa rti hemlets, at his b:u-k. Thcro wcro yet but few women in the olotiv, and these, soon after this memorable rent returned to native England. The ninety young woman, puro and uuccrrup:d," whom the wise Sandys caused to be j ?nt to Virginia, as wives tor the planters, j id not arrive until seven years lutcr. All 1 len at Jamestown were at the marriage.? j lie letters of the time have transmitted to * the names of some of them. Mistress ohn Itolf, with her child, (doubtless of the .?nily of the bride{ vom ;) Mistress Easton nd child, and Mi' .ress Morion and grandbild, with her mnid-servaut, Elizabetti Par?ns, wbo on a Christmas eve before, bad : inrrieil Them as Powelit wero yet in Vir- \ iuia. Among the noted men then present, | as Sir Thomas (into#, n bravo soldier ill ' i.iny Willi, and as brave an adventurer i niong the Atlantic perils of any who ever 1 rusttal to the ribs ot the ships of Old Eng md. And Master Sparkos, who had bvon ^-ambassador with ltolfto the count of Powat an, stood neat1 Bic*>ld inlilinr, wiibj:oao0. lenry Spilman at his side. " l IlcTe,' foo, as the young George Percy, brother of io powerful Duke of Northumberland, hose conduct was always as noble as his lood; and near him, an enrnest spectator F the scene, was the elder brother of Pocaontasj butnot tho destined successor to re tli rotio of his father. There, too, was a outiger brother of the biide, and m*Jy out lis and maidens from the forest shades; ut one noble figure?the pride of the Powatau confederacy?the father of the bride its absent, lie bad consented to the mar age with willing voice, bt?i wo?M not trust iinself within the power of the English at aiiiestown. lie remained 111 nta habitation , t Weroworomooo, while the Kos* und ToUM were being wedded, but cheerfully com- j rissioned his brother, Opachisoo, to give ] way his daughter. That priuc* performed ! is duty wtM, ami then, iu careless gravity,, e sftt and listened to tlie voice of tho Aposie, and the sweet chanting of the Httle cho Islei*. The tnueic censed, the benediction >11, tho solemn * Aided" echoed from the udo vaulted roof, and the joyous company pft the chapel for the festal hall of the Govt. Tbtts "the peace" was made stronger, nd the Rons ' of England lay undisturbed ipon the Hatcur* of the Powhauns, while he father of Pocahontas lived. Months glided away. Tho brido and rroom "lived civilly and lovingly, together," intjl Sir Thomas bale departed to England, n 1616, when they with many settlers, noompanied him. ., Tomoeouio, one of the hrewdest of Powhatan's councillors, wont dao, that lie might report all the wondew >f England to his master. The Lady Reacc'a received great attention from the ooert unl all belnw it.* *sjhe accustomedherself Lo civility, and carried herself as daughter of s king." !>? King* the Lord Bishop of London, euteHmned eer "with fc timl'ttate and pempsT V*J*nd: itfmt hd bad -atf *ife? *4 4rnf ' it * WBt ft Hi [ y HI Ul fertl'IIL ihillu'll'll : i i i iii i ii? i i^iii n m bi.i?i i * mm ? ' MORNING, .UXt'AI U) other ladies ; and nt court tdio wa? received with ilio conrlesy duo to bcr rank as a princess. lint tfio silly t>igot on the throne was highly Incensed, tMk'xwe one of his tvhjcctx had dared to marry a lady of royal Ifbod, and, in the midst of hi* dreams of prerogatives, ho absurdly apprehended tliat Uolf might lay claim "to the crown of Virginia !" Afraid of the royttl displeasure. Captain Smith, who was then in England, would not allow her to call him father, as alto dcriicd to do. She could not comprehend the cause ; a;ul her tendct, simple heart was sorely grieVed l?v what seemed to lie his want of affection fi?r her. She rej tnained in England wbonf a year; and, when ready to embark for America with her husband. alto sickened, and died, at Oraxewcnd, in the flowery month of June, 1017, when not quite twenty-two Years of age. She left one son, Thomas ltolf, who afterwards became quite a distinguished man in Virginia He had hut one child, a daughter. From her, some of the leading families in Virginia trace their lineage. ^Vmong these nra the Boilings, Murrays Guvs, Khlridges, and Randolphs. But iVienhontas needed tlil rULgtmitr In noer^l.iuta l?"- 1 -* ? i' j*v.? I'uiMtuw aiv4 usual' u imperishable preserved in the amber of history. f' - JL. lii-"!11 ~n . ii'n jmjjuiew? J#batj) JUoiiiiig. 1 j] fffTn c I of f r q ij c I-. l'KAxru the natural act of a dependent being. It is the voice of nature shaking to (jod. ^e observe something like prayer ev?-n in inarticulate nature in "The whole creation groanelh and travnilcth in pain."? 'Hie em tii, onlivartJ, and lacerated hy earthquakes and volcanoes, seem as if struggling to give utterance to aom i mighty sense of woe. The deep, ulway* re#llest and moaning, seems h? if a vaugo sentiment of terror was p;issiug over its breast. The cries of animals, the bleating of sheep, the lowing of flocks ami herds, may easily be interpreted as the dim conciotiMicas of want and weakness, seeking expression. Mut it is in the breast of humility that this divino instinct becomes audible. Man nloue knows bow helpless he is, ami is capable of turning consciously to a higher Power. Ilis life from infancy to age teaches but one lesson?that of ignorance, of weakness, and of dependence upon God. The wisest 4,-cla that he is ignorant, and that he needs a liviun illuminntiiiii II > ImiMlt tiirtli vvilli the dying Goethe, "Light, Lord, more light." The strongest feels that ho is weak. Ilis pulse bents faintly, lie feels-that his existence is a detached fragment, a frail and fragile thing, and that he needs to join himself to the center of all life. II j is miserable, and he would como to the Fountain of Happiness. lie is guilty, and he would go whero M?rcy can be fotiud. The natural expression of his painful con sciousitcs* is to pray, l'rayer is the voice of man crying to God out of the abyss of misery and giult into which he is plunged.? Left to hunself; he is like a traveller lo>t in one of the awful gorges cf the Hiintnalehs. From the mountain's base ho looks aloft to the strip of blue sky which is alone visitblo through the parted summits, and cries to Him who is enthroned above the hills to bring him m> frum-tU y*ni' qMe?I?i. Oppressor with such uueerLainty und fear, there is hardly n man who does not at all times give utterance to a bitter sense of his weakness, and cry to Ood to help him. It is then natural for man to pray. lVidc may stifle the expression of distress. Shame may bury its head in its bosom to hide its secret woe. lint the soul, feeling the breath of hearen upon it, longs to o|>eu itself to God h* flower* open themselves to tlio sun. There is not a warm, gushing emotion of our nature which does not naturally breathe out in prayer. The heart demands nn object to love, and God is presented to its affection as the best friend and confidant. Innocence draws toward** God as her natural protector; and gratitude chants to the Deity an eternal hymn. Sqtl) of jt)e IU # 1 ?i i 3 flqOiTub path of the sun is a radiant path.? It is not only glorions. That exprosses but half the truth. It is glorious because it is radiant. The sun is not like the moon?a mtra mfteetor, trhuerintr with borrowed light. God low given it light in itself; and therefore it shine*, end cannot but shine.? If the mountain* could be lifted up until they should enclose it like a wall, and the clouds, ascending from the mountains, should concentrate their maasoa, and overarch it, lifce.a roof, it would shine still. Nay, uimlc the more intense by the confinement, it would turn the mountains into diamonds, and the Clouds into crystals, and flash through them eK, and All the Work) with new splendor*. (So with the path of the just, llis glorj is from within.^ It is a radiation. Put him where y?U will, he shines, mid cannot bui shinC. God made him to shine, for?esUnc? ?imprison Joseph, and ho wilt shine out on all Egypt,cloudless as tbo sky wbore the rain ISf / Vr:%? jylll Ij) P.T jft tlj ' WW A3 IY 31, 1856. never fall#. Imprison Daniel, and the daz< zled lions will retire to their inirv, and the King comes fo'rth to worship at his rising, ami all Habyfon bless the beauty of the brighter and better daj\ Imprison Peter, and, with an ntigel for a harbinger star, ho will swell his aurora from the fountains of \ Jordan to the well of Deershcbn, and break like the morning over mountain atid sen. Imprison Pual?and there will be high ni?on over the Rasmn. Empire. Imprison John?<*nnd the isles of the ./Kgcan and all the coast around, will kindle with sunset visions, too gorgeous to be described, but nevIci to be forgotten?a boundless panorama of prophecy, gliding from-sky to sky and en' ehimling the nations with openings of Henv en, transit of saints and angels, and the ul- < liimtle glory, of the city ruul Kingdom of (?od. Not only so : tor modern times have similar examples : examples in the Church, II and example* in the State. For instance, bury Luther in the depths of Black Forest? and "the angel that dwell iti the bush" will ' honor liini there: lite trees around him will i : turn like shrifts of ruby, and his glowing orbs i htf?ni up ngain, round and clear as the light j of all Europe. Thrust Bunyan into the gloom of Bedford jail?-and at Ite leans his head on his hands, the murky horizon of lhjj>;te kept, or yielded altogether. ! Northern and English philanthropists and I fanatics who are so eager to reform the South, , act ii|K>n the assumption that the negro is a | black white man, and qnaliiied to live in . perfect social and political equality with the white or Caucassiau races?a fallacy that we may . expect to be established when the leopard changes his spots, and the sooty Etheopian is washed white in the fountains of the Nile. Meantime the moral justification of the South lies in facts against which fana. 1 k..i. ? ti? ? ; iivi?iu .iiiu uiiii i%* w uuu 1 it-^, All ry uio j those, to wit, thiil the nogro is interior to the , white man by nature nij't by destiny ; that, lie ' never can be hU equal until the law efflod are abrogated ; and that wherever and whenever i the two come in juxtaposition, dominion on , one aide and servitude on tho other?are the , legitimate relations between them. As a polilicid institution, we find black slavery a blessing in the fact, that it prevents tho enslavement of any class of the whites, and obviates an evil which has been the fruitful source of nearly all the agrarian movements and sanguinary revolutions which have reiit and convulsed society?thai j of wnut and Cimine in tho poor class. In free society, or where there is no slave pepu, lation, a content is always wnging between capital and labor?betweon tho rich and poor classes?the tendency of which is to make the rich riehor and the poor poorer, until extremity drives the latter to satiate at once their vengeance and their want by slaughter and repine. Free society, no mat tcr under what form of government, has not been able to find a remedy for this evil, and Its continually recurring catastrophe. The , MMf* 1 H Y TS^PB^Ma - ft | ' vNVH ' ":' ' -'%: n;, '. ' If Hi Tj. ' ^ ?jj? ?? 5 > v . i ,? I i i .1 1MI - ? -rl^? I ' ^fcLT-Vi r * SO. 38. gnatu spcctrM of famloo is ever haunting, the nominally fried aociety of Western Europe, and there it not ohe of its thrones that is able to rtmid before the mail cry for bread. But under tl?o system of well regulated black slavery there can be no scanty, no faminn and consequently no wild cry for bread, agrarian outbreak* and carnage. In an economical view, black slavery is a blessing?imleeJ, an institution indispensable to Uie agriculture of tho South at least. In the free State*, men are inclined to shun agriculture, the simplest but the rudest, most repulsive and least remunerated of all labors, r.ftd crowd into the professions, trades, arts f its soil, so we say that tiik People a ty. Will any sane man pretend that the ?ell'styled "Democratic party" ?* a party :omposed of Tiid people of the United States! Is it not notorious that that party has mainlined itself by the fact that it is largely join posed of toreiguers 1 The People, then, >f the United States do not rule themselves.. jut ure controlled by the natives of other counties, \vlu> have come to litis country to retide. We repeat, that it is a gross misnoner to call tiic party of oflice holder*, uiauv >f whom the Priests direct, the Democratic iarty. The truth is, it a party of politicians who euro chiefly, for the spoils of otlice, harng held and hunted oftlec so long thoy Jo not care to bo outed Yttul will support any party which seems to promise the host pay. Having had coutrol <