Th a subjoined sweet fcpcy is from the
Dublin Unhertity Magaxint:
Forever and Forever.
A mnid reeling beside r stream
At fall of summer day;
And half awnke and half a dream,
She watched the tipples' play ;
She marked the water*' fall and heave,
I be doepemng shadows throng.
And hoard, as darkened down the eve,
The river's babbling song;
And thus it sung, with twinkling tongue,
That rippling shadowy river?
"Youth's brightest day will fade away,
Forever and forever!"
The twilight past, the moou at last
Rose broadly o'er the night,
Each ripple gleams beneath her beams
As wrought in silver bright,
The heaving waters glide along.
But mingling with their voice,
Tiro nightingale now pours his sonir.
_ _ o?
And makes the shades rejoice.
And thus he sung, with tuneful tongue,
That bird besido the liver?
"When youth is gone truo iovo shines on
Forever and forever",
A correspondent of the Waverly Magazine
writes the following on tho old proverb
:
Like ib but a Sfan.
Life is but n span?of horses ;
One is "Age," the other "Prime
l"p and down the hills our course is ;
"Go in," ponies?"make your lime."
lJoyhood plies the whip of pleasure;
Youthful Folly gives a stroke ;
.Manhood goads them at its leisure ;
" Let "em rip," " they're tough as oak."
' Hi, yn ! there;" the stakes we'll pocket ; J
To the winds let care he lent ;
Time, 2:40 ; "whip in socket
"Give 'era string ami let 'era went."
On tho tinny road to fifty,
"Prime" is drowned in Lethe's stream ;
"Age" i-? left, lame, old. unthrifty ;
Life then proves "a one horse team."
"Ago" jogs on, grows quite unsteady,
Keels and slackens in his pace ;
"Kicks the bucket," always ready.
"Gives it up"?death wins tho race. j
One Whiskey Cart and what it!
did*
On the first day of May, Robinson ;
and Eldred exhibited their Circus and
Menagerie at St. Lawrence, Chatham
County, at which time and j)iaco a serious
row occurred between the men of
the "show,' and certain citizens. If
wc haro bev n correctly informed it
happened in this way: the Proprietors
had rented a lot to exhibit upon, and
erected their canvass, when a liquor
seller drove his cart near the cnteraneo
of the cavass and commenced selling!
grog. Mr .Robinson, one of the Pro-1
prietors, requested the man to move j
from that place with his whiskey, as 1
ladies would be going in and would j
not like to pass through a crowd ofl
drunken men. lie refused. He was
ordered away, lie avowed his determination
to remain. Robinson commanded
6omc of his men to roll the
cart out of the lot. They did so. Then
certain citizens seemed to think that
the immaculate rights of whiskey were
being invaded and they interfered. A
general melee arose. A "showman
was knocked dowr. He arose and
made for the exhibition lot:?At the
gate he turned upon assailants and !
knocked down nijo citizens. One had i
his thigh broken, another his head, and j
other injuries "too tedious to mention." !
One of the citizens, Joseph F. Stone,'
has since died ! So much for circum-1
stances.
Wo do not pretend to say which of i
the two parties is most guilty ; but we
do say the third party, the whiskey
cart, is more guilty than either, llut
for it there would have been no disturbance?six
men would not have beeu
knocked down?no bones would have
l>eeu broken?poor Stone would not
have been in eternity ! But then the
O11 ** 4 Uiuoivuj txiiot UU | lO.H'i VCU
at the risk of life and limb?the purity
of the immaculate institution must bo
defended* even if the bodies of many
citizens are gashed and gored at its
bloody shrine. Tho right to sell whiskey
is more saerod than human life.?
The judge must sit on tho throno it!
chooseth thought a thousand bito the
dust!
Thus is seen what ono whiskey cart
is capable of performing in one day.?
Every day in evquy voar they are at
their deadly wor* all fover the land:
and there are men every whore ready
to 6tand by the whool and proclaim its
rights. The occurrence we havo alluded
to is a sad commentary upon tho
popular feeling in favor of whiskey.?
There are men who would tight for
wniskey with bloodier noses than they
would for wife or child. It is sad to
think that the arch enemy has such a
( Id uj>on the affections of tt fro? people.
lift. ? ...
We cannot close this article withou
* word in-relftflori to the victim of this
unfortunate affair. ,POor Stone! we
knew him well^-We onee thonght he
was free from the ruinous effects of
whiskey. He was once a worthy Son
of Temperance ?sealona in the cause
and liberal in its promotion. But ah
w 1 the tempter overcame him and he
fell. We record it in sorrow, not as a
reproach npon the dead, (far from it;
our me.uory lingers with pleasure
ovor the scenes i?u><ior1 witli Mm <n
the Division room,) but as ft warning
to others: let hiui that thinketh he
stands take heed lc9t he fall."
Spirit of the Age.
Mysteries of the Post Office Department*
John C. "Rives is respousibio for the
following: He said that when Amoi
Kenidall was Postmaster General, he
took a tour to the South and West,
partly or. private business, and partly
to get the film oft'of his official optics,
aria sec how postal matters wore conJ
A. _ Ai? * ?
uucteu. vi course lie did not make
himself known on every occasion, but
ho always looked on at every, turn in
his post route, and sometimes he learned
somthing. At one place in Missisippi
he Stopped, while traveling in
the stage coach at a rather insignificant
village, but where there was a
"distnrbbting office" of some importance.
No one knew tlu.t he was the Post
master General. The Postmaster of
the place was away from home, as ho
had been for some months, and the business
of overhauling, sorting and distributing
Uncle Sam's mails was in the
| hands of a "sub," in tho shape of an
old negro woman. Tho post office was
kept in a pretty good sized room, and
on one side of it there was a hetcrogcn
eons mass that appeared some thing
like a huge pile of mail matters ; and
it looked, too, somewhat like a small
tea garden. There were papers,
lottors, largo and small packages of
hooks, &c., "in huge confusion piled around."
The old blnck woman very
deliberately unlocked the bags and
emptied their contents out on the tloor.
Amos looked on, mid Satan marshaling
his legions in Pandcmnoninm he
"admired." The darkey, after emptying
the contents, of the bags in the
"pile,"commenced putting back, and in
every pouch replaced a miscellaneous
assortment." The Postmaster'General
had his eyes opened and it occurred
to him to ask 'Aw'dy it she
could read.' Oh ! no,' said she; but I
puts jest ahout as much a> master lu
cd to." As the cirticsaid of Macready,
whon he asked the Danish courtier to
play on the pipe, and the courtier took I
him at his word, f.nd played Yankee
Doodle! "Pliancy Iiaiulick's fcolinks!"
Fancy old Amos! But his
observations wcro not completed.?'
Tliere was an enormous pile of mail i
matter that had been accumulating for 1
months under ihc postal supervision of I
the able 'sub.' It was after 'M. C.\> I
had learned the art of franking, and j
whet: their 'beloved' constituents* were
in the habit of applying for seeds and
other products at the agricultural
bureau of the Patent Otfieo. Tlio cucumber
seeds of those days wero not
all (bass wood,' as Kendall can testify.
The seeds in tho moist, warm climate
of Mississippi had germinated extensively,
throughout this immense mass of
'mail matter;' cabbages, beets carrots,
cauliflowers were there; potatoes
had sprouted, while cucumber, punkin,
and &< piash vines had extended out of
tho heap, and run nearly across the
room ! It is supposed that the warmth
of the political documents, stimulated
by tlio fiery nature of Southern politicians,
had added to, rather than subtracted
from, the fertile nature i f the
postal composit 1"
The Ago of a Man.
But fow men die of age. Almost all
die of disappointment passional, men
tal, or bodily toil or accident. The
passions kill men somtimcs, even sudTl..
- '
item v. xuo common expression cnntced
with passion, has litilc exaggeration
in it; for even though not suddenly
fatal, strong passions shorten life.?
Strong bodied men often die young?
weak men live longer than tho strong,
for the strong uso their strength ami
the work have none to use. I he latter
take care of themselves; tho former do
not. As it is with the body, so it is
with the mind and temper. The
strong are apt to break or like the
candle, run; tho weak burn out. The
inferior animals which live, in general,
temperate lives, have generally their
i perscribed term of years. The horse
I lives twenty five years; the ox fiftoen
| or twenty ; the lion about twenty ; the
/4am ##% ? -^1 . ? sl?? ' ?l-A -
ui'^ ivu ui mvivu j uiu rauiML Clglll^
guinea pig six to seven. These numbers
all Lear a similar proportion to
the time the animal takes to ite full
size. But man, of all the animal4, is
the one that seldom comes up to his
average. He ought to live a hundred
years, according to this physiologic d
law, for five times twenty are one nun* I
dred; hut instead of that, lie scarcely
reaches, 011 the average, four tiime
j bis growing period; the cat six times;
and the rabbit even eight times the
standard of the measurement.
.*'?. k J.V " V. |
| The reason is oby ions?man is not J
only the most irregular, and the most
intemperate, but the most laborious
and hard worked of all animals. [He is
also the most irritable of all animals,;
and there is reason to believe, though
we cannot tell what au animal secret! y
feels, that more than any otbor^animaJ,
men cherishes wrath to keep it warm,
and consume himself with the fire of
his own secret reflections. r'1
I t a,
DOMESTIC? PIETY. r
If there be one course more bitter
than another to man, it is to be the offspring
of an irregular home; of a home
whore tho voice of praiso and prayer
ascends not to God, and whero the ties
of human affection are not purified
and elevated by the refining iufinencc
of religious feeling; of a home to which;
if the caree or sorrows of liio shall
bring religion to tho heart iu after days,
that ncart canuot tarn without bitterness
of feeling, without anguish and
vexation of spirit. If there he a curse
to any country where tho truths of religion
are known, the deepest and bitterest
curse which can be inflicted-on
it is a multitude of homes like the one
T I.-? - ? -"J * '
niiivu X unva nupposeu. puCIl IIOU1CS
send forth their sons unchecked in
evil thoughts, unhallowed in their habits,
and untaught in h>ve of God: the
name and cross of Jesus Chrisht
stamped on their forehead, hut not
written in their hearts: and thoy send
them forth to prey upon the land, and
to become its curse and destruction?
Hut on the other hand, there is a blessing
to the religious hotne, which no
tongue can describe. The home where
in early years the heart is trained to a j
love of God, and to take pleasure in his
worship and service, interwoven with
the existence of many holy alfections
which die not with the circumstances
that gave them birth?which last long,
though they may bo for a season forgot
ton ami neglected and which shall
exereiso at least some check upon ^lrc
evil ot the human heart, ana often,
may, commonly, recall it to hear again
the word of God, and turn to the paths
of holiness and peace. How great,
how unspeakablo, is the happiness ot'a
land where homes like this are common.?liev.
J. //
A Sad. /\Vf!/ ?'??.? O! were the tongue
dipped in the gall of celestial dis-1
pleasure, I would describe the case of
a man expiring in.the cruel agonies
of unbelief. Ah, sec! Everything
conspires to trouble mo now. I am
dying; I despair recovering; physician?5
have given me over ; the sighs
and tea.-* of friends are useless?the
world cartTiv?t owe inc. Whither am
[ going? Wba?. will become ot my
body ( jMv G >d what a spectacle!?
The horrid torches, the uj^iual shroud, |
the cothn.jtho tolling hell, and 'he sub- !
terranean abode! Then what \riil bo '
come of my soul ? Iam ignorant of'
its destiny; and 1 am plunging into
eternal night! My infidelity tells me j
my soul is nothing but n subtile mat- {
ter ; another word, a vision, immortal* j
itv ; a fancy and yet I feel, I know '
not what, that troubles n?y infidelity.? j
Annihilation, terrible as it is, would j
appear tolerable to me, were not the
mens 01 neaven una lieu t<? present
themselves to me in spite of myself.? 1
I see heaven, that iinniurtnl mansion 1
of glory, shut against me. 1 see it, at
an immense distance. 1 see, hut my
crimes forbid me to enter. I see hell
?hell which 1 have ridiculed. It
opens under my feet. I hear the lior- j
rible groans of the demanded; the:
smoke of the bottomless pit chokes my ;
wordsand wraps my thoughts in suf- j
locating darkness.
Wiikbk is Mas. Lccy Stoxk-?An
old bachelor talking ot * woman V rights
in our offico yesterday, 6aid?"Talk ot,
equality of intellect, Vorsooth ! Let us j
see what they have done, whero tho
sphere has been uuqnostioned and wide
open to 'oin this thousand years.?
Sir?
No woman ever produced a groat
painting or statue.
No woman over wroto a great pooin.
No woman ever wrote a great drama.
No woman over composed a great
opera, or other piece of music.
No woman ov?r i?rorino??<l ??n in>rkr?r.
taut mechanical invention.
And, sir, no woman was ever ft
great cook!
The best that can be said of thoiu is
this. They have written elovor letters,
tolerable epics. Thev have made no
sculptures, no music, no paintings
worthy of the name, and as to 'inventions'
sir, they have invented nothing
outside of millinery and mischief
since the world began!
We were about to roply, when we
discovered the wretch had disappeared.
But really these ore grave charges.
Where is Mrs. Lucy Stone?
Significant Fact.?Wo deem
worthy of more especial notice than
wm had In t he proceedings of the meeting
of the Kansas Association of this
District, held on saleday last, the ffect
that William Ellison, a colored ioiul
' nod a resident of Statcburg. in tfH
II I M .11 III I
District contributed, -011 that day, the
sum-of ode h andred dollars to the funds i
of the Association. Betokqning a gencrous
and liberal spirit, it abo gave
evidence'of the estimation ana esteem
in which afro hold by him our sectional \
iuterests and insitutions and of his
readiness to defend with his money the
common cause of the South. Ellison
once, a slave, but now a slaveholder,
lies, entirely by his industry, attained
his present. state of prosperity, and, wo
.might $fcy, wealthy bib. being the possessor
of aargc land productive cotton
plantation. We are pleased to see such
a manifestation, lrom Bijfcli an one, for
such acauae. . The example too, even
t'min fillolI ?1 onnrort io I... ll.A
. v.M %? WVMIWVJ 49 H VI WUJ VUU IIUI"
tation of those whose superior means
and in tellect render them not only
more able to give, but to discern more
clearly tho necessity of giving, and giving
liberally to this cause.
Sumter Watchman.
flUraS^" |
Book and Job Printing i
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11AVING A FIXE SELECTION OF
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stra&a.
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PLAIN AND COLORED CARDS,
ilpoi) i\)& IVTo^t Jflbofyblt* Jerhis.
?ixwa tejfi a\ ?am&h*.
The Sou 111 Carolina
AGRICU LTURIST.
rT~MIE Executive Committee of the State
A Agricultural Society of South Carolina,
having selected the subscriber to edit their ,
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A - .K~ ! ?I -?--l M e
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Editor, Columbia, S C.
Noutheru Literary Mcdirngcr,
run tin; vk.wi 1850.
L\ isxtiing the Prospectiu of the twentysecond
volume of the SOUT11KI1N LITcn
?l)V \n.vocv/-ri> . i ??
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July C, 18.">5. lv )
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PBTERSCN'& MAGAZINK, jl
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January 17. Richmond, Virginia. |J
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Important Announcement.
r) nit persons afflU-v?-0 with Sexual diifiiM,
such (wSp?nn?torrhoc?, Btmin*I Wtikncw,
mpote.ice, OonorrheeaTGleet, Bymphilfs, the
fiee of Onanism, or Self-abuse, Ac., Ac.
The HOW Aft!) ASSOCIATION of Pkiladel
>him In vknc pi the awful destruction ?f human
ife and health, caused by Sexual diseases, mud
he deceptione which are practised Upon the ra<
brtunate victims of aueh diseases by Quacks,
tave directed their Consulting Surgeon, as a
charitable act worthy of their name, to give
klcdical Advice Gratis, to all persona thus afflict
>d, (Male or Female,) who apply by letter, with
i description of their condition, (age, occupation,
isbits of life, Ac.,) and in eases of est rem# povcr v
aid suffering, to Furnish Medicine free ef
Charge
The Howard Association is a benevolent Insti"
utiou, established by a special endowment, for
the relief of the sick and distressed, afflicted with
"Virulent mnii rp ? ? x n. - .
A/mam, am in iuna*
>nu be used for no other purpose. It hu now m
lurplus of means, which.the Directors hare voted!
to advertise the above notice. It ie needles# te
idd that the Association commands the highest
Medical skill of the age, and will furoisl) the
post approved modern treatment. Valuable adrice
also given to sick and nervous females, sf.
licted with Womb Complaint, Lcucorrhoee, Ae
J3f Address, (post-paid,) Dr. George R. CaJ
oun, Consulting Surgeon, Howard Association,
S'o. 2 South Ninth 8treet, Philadelphia, Penn.
llv order of the Directors,
F.ZRA D. HART WELL, President.
GEO. FA1RCHILD, Secretary,
aug 24. 15 tf
The Home Journal for 180S.
NEW AND BRILLIANT SEBDB.
WE Inst week issued the first number of
the New Series of the Home Journal
or 1850, in a new dress, and with new atrnotinn*.
It contained Chapteis I. and II.
>f PAUL FANE, OH PARTS OF A LIFE
ELSE UNTOLD. A Novel in Serial Num.?ers.
By N. P. Willis.
That number also contained tlia cein
ueucemeiil of a series of original novelette
n verse, founded upon fact, called, 4,Th?
ironv or a Star," by J. M. Field.
Resides the contribuiionH and labor of the
Editors?tho Home Journal contains the
Foreign and Domestic Correspondence of
mge list of contributors?tho spice the o
Cuiopcaii Magazines?(lie selections of thef
itosi interesting publications of fie day?
lie brief novels?the piquant atoriea?the
parkling wit and amusing anecdote?the
lews and gossip of the Parisian papers?the
H-rsotial sketches of public characters?the
lining sei nes of the world wo live in?the
Iironu-le of tlie news for ladies?the fashions
? the facts and outlines of news?the pick
?f English information?the wit, humor and
taihos of the time*?the essay* on life, liter
it me, society and morals, and the usual >v
iety of careful choosings from the wilderness *
>f English pe:judical liluinlure, critici m a
metry. etc. We need not remind our rea?
lers that wo have also one or two uusurpai.
ed correspondents in the fashionable society
f Acw York, who give us early news of
\? r\ now feature of stile and elegance alitor g
lie leaders of the gay w orld.
Tkumh.?For one copy . $2; for tlweecopies,
'o?or one copy for the three years, fco?
ilways in advance. Address.
M0KHI8 k WILMS, Editors and
Proprietors, 107 Fulton-st. N. Y.
Tlic True Carolinian.
I'M IE undersigned will issue at Anderson
C. II., on or before the first of Fcbuarv,
a LITERARY and NEW S JOURNAL,
hearing the above title. It will Lo
in iiide]>cndent paper in every sense of the
citn. It will be the size of the late Grtenille
Mountaineer, nnrl ?? t ?
, ?IU Iiirg? ns 111*
"hizotte and Advocate. It will be published
it the unprecedentedly low rate of One L>olar
per Aiinuni. l'ersons desiring to subcribe.
would do well to send in their name*
is soon as possible, together with the subcription
price, as we intend to require it in
idvance, or send no paper.
JOHN V. MOORE,
l'eb 14-tf. Etl. and Proprietor.
THE EXAMINEE.
to south r un writers.
Tilt-, editor of the The Examiner, desir>us
of enlisting the aid of SOUTIIREN
ATRRARY TALENT in his enterprise, ofers
to those who may be disposed to render
hat aid, a prize of FIFTY DOLLARS for
be BEST ORIGINAL TALE, not to occu>y
lets than twenty columns of the Examinr
(about fifty pages of foolscap in ordinal^
ftiling.) The manuscripts will be snbmitcd
to a competent committee and their deision
published. Should nny other of the
ales, in the editor's opinion, be deemed
rorthy of publication in The Examiner, the
rii er will be furnished with the paper for
ive years free of expense.
This proposition will remain open unti'
lie first of May, 1850.
Writers may enclose their names h? a sep.rnte
envelope, which will not be opened unit
the decision of the committee shall be
nade known.
Address ,W. B. Jonssroa, Columbia.
wllliai^mafeaiti; h, '
Wholesale Ac Retail Clrocem
AND BUYERS OF COUNTRY PRODUCE,
Greenville, ?. C.,
[TAVE Jnst received, and will continue te
LA keep ou baud a good supply of .
toffee, Sugar. Molasses, Rice. Salt, Bacon,
Lard, Flour, Meal, Nails, and
fany^othor Articles pertaining to a Grocery E*>
iv wnirn we invite public
We are trading in Article* that require large
lash Investment and admit of but abort profit*,
nd we find. l>y experience, that it i* impossible
o do business on a limited credit. We ahall,
hercfore, discard Looks, and in future, without
ist inction or exception, require the CASH on
elivery of Goods.
We are also BUYING PRODUCT of every docription,
ar.d will pay the highest market prices,
ither in Cash or Goods, at tne pleasure of tka
eller.
aoohm. vcastie. un*iw#tuiu.
Nov. 1 U tf.
i - - - I
HOOK AND JOB PRINTING, neatly don* at
D the "Enterprise Office." ^