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God's dc[ asu1e. :..?nst iler, and his puismieiit of their 4n sgressio'ns. .L'= t rio event has Sut~urud in the history of human so Sty, more necessary to the welfIre gt man than that saie revolutiioi atiI iw-.wars were ever waged that muoe Aliru.tly or rapidly advanced the so ut iuwau ireelomu than those geie mnis'. The violence of the one, ilthe protractiou and carlage of the other, indicated only that the vils both were desigud-1- . cre, haul, been endured too long. '1te ron iraue work o: feudalism ha I 'seste't so long inl its place above the 1iwte of the people, that no'slow .cor 8etin or steady rooting power couli 'it'ct its firmriess. A couvlsion that usouiid telar and rend everthing iasnditer was ineeded. It was the inevi atitblle effect of our declaration of rights Larriel back by the French armly hipch hal served in our revulationa -ry gtiugie, and uttered aloud in the - tit:desptism. Alarmed at this 'iiiid sudden birth Of tie piriinci. jl of reedmn in their midst, the -in%' of Europj gathered together ncastgraadon, to consult how they --ld best crush it with bayonets, and t this allied a:i tes moved d>wn i't 'the infant repubiic. France, Lit struggling to i th in a sea of 'er ow>,n bluod, Jh4 t citwt Wage iutlin, itid Eiropae in arims witout, there seei.ed mto hope but - t he re-establishment of the 3 urbion yasty. At this cr itical period arose - that strange maua, Naproleon l'aona j arte, inhu never after left the liehl Sis'ion8i, till lie disapearc.l in tle ir, ii Lco of Waterloo. Smjitin bitletow afte blo the Austrina Sarimy on the plains of Italy, he Lths heiL marehs of Eura 'pe it th:y at. ^ tempt to crush the pinciples tf free 1 diem in Faamice, his subhliers shall ciu r themi oil the poinlts of their Sabares too the banks of the Danube. il '".' world gilzed with astonishteut on the camilpaign of Italy, but :earcly had the war cloud swept fr.'an the enipire of the Cxsars, revealing a no ew daitnasty there, before the gle ini a iingO of Fench I hies was seen arouni the pyanidls of Egyj.t. Amtl while mien were listeniing to hear again the thunder of camon anil the tom.bs of the Pharaohs, 1o his ighty armies are hanging aloing the war cliIfs of the Alps, and the next Iti'omentt bursting tin o' their g .rgens . with the shout it victory on the la.iiins o .\arengo. Beflat e the smuko and ~& umult have cleaired miy , revealjing - ower stands. his tei ribbi' :standards reU shictu.r along the binksh of the A Jlrysthienes, hisi s:cemd is shiekingr his thu--at in the n~ aters of h. ime andie his 'eagles 50arin1 ma~id the~ ter anoether 1'i rap ie e fore our astoishmed naght . 'noug allh arieties of war, from the fero qY-Clous headlong rush of the moch round the pialaces of Paris, to the onset otf tihe steadiest troops of Eu woe-fromn the fiery valor of the .Turkish ceavalry, charging airoiund "the sepulchre of the Saviouir, to that of the fleet Cossack on the steppeas ot Russia, he passes 0on ini his~ terrn ibh career. lie shifts from scene to scene, so varied and opposite in its ~ haracter, that the bewildered mind aan scarcely recognaise his identity. - Amid the glaciers of the Alps, and viseyaris of Italy, on the sierras of ,~pami aml sands of Egypt, amid the ow of Rtussia, andl on thme Mount ~of Transfiguration, that form is seen e.tathed ina the smoke of' battle, un ; tilt lat, the common saldier is '(oeu to sit Cnahmly down by the tharone ,b~the emipireo of half of' Eaurope. 8~roc are over thr owni, kings dis -- jined;4.ynasties ehianged, anad thie - 11e.Miarachaes of the continent QEN' I)YNASTY; Or - j.~'i~?a ypats Vaami y iy the K j~ a 1 l. largo -mo .* Gloth. .aImPthk~aIttiaaot~-o -in I V are seen on their knees before a sili gle adventurer. If lie paused a mo ment in his sublime career, it was to gwa: on the strange spectacle of ter. rified kings, scarching timidly amid their ove.rturied thrones for their lost rw ii. Kings become plebianis and pleb iais b.-eco:a kings-soldiers from the ratiks becamne princes, and princes become beggals, for man had asserted his superiurty to titles and decorations ; and the wizzaril who wrought all this, at last consente~d to take to his plebian bed the dau:ghters of the Ctcsar. With such strength awil majesty did he move along iis triumf aut way, that he was able to carry his whole family with him. On the head 4 of three of his brothers he placed cro'wls, two of his sisters hoe min-ie g1iic'n-u a thid a grand duchlss. lie . e t:lishell a Dy nasty, of which the book before us is a couplete history. The portrait and bi.gratphyf of each of there inli. vidlis who figured inl Napoleon's career is given. They are here grouped'together in a masterly man nier, and we have the Bonaparte tami. IV before us. It thus makes a valn aile addition to every library, and the inure so, as a 1on1 a to is again at'the head of France, and the end is not yet. To Napoleun as the cen tral orb of this new system, a third of the book is naturally devoted. Without filling up the gaps betweCn, the author steps from height to height, sketching only the great events of his life. The fullewing will b.: new to mnst readers : " It is a strainge spectacle-to see the youlig oflieer struck frull the rolls of the French army by the very men who alkerwards contended for the ion r of the meanest posts ill his Eapire, and one of w'hom (Sali. , etti) owed t ii ,'l.:S5 flic 1 itii. Ite withdrew for a while from Pa ris, an-d j.,ined his famuily e lie were living in very reiuced eircilstances at MarseilleS. It alpears that he th1eir.o f.,riel aniother ten-ler attach. ieit, and wouild have manriied Ma' lenaiis tel~ Cle1ry, [who afterwardis haerlne the wife of lirnalotte and Queen of Sweden,] had it not been for his p->.ivert v which was IIJw cx trmire. il the moothi of May [1795], N apoleon r nta-ed to Pm is and1l ii, plied to t:ie o(.vcrnmueint for employ imet. lie hail fixed his eye oi the East, that toldl Iheatre of E.i pi re, al.d he aiikd for a Uissi.ii to 'uirkey, to endler that king loIn a miore fourui.I. ile harrier against the ceroaii cinuet of Russia awiil Enhanidl-to repair the old defences and erec: new ones, and diffuse theu ugh the I at the spir it of mo-lern civilization. There were (ublOitless, dtreams of glory and the charm of a-lventure inl his iliagili i lOl. JIamlieic teiamrks that " if the Coiuniiittee hadl written ,/g,,nteud at the bottiom of the aIppIlicatiotn, it woauld have chalnged the flate of Eu I UOpe." S) tIhe youn soldier tuned away dej. etedl; mad had it n- t beent for his frienid J unot , whow dIivid ed wi th himt Ihis lpurse5, lhe would most likely have grona I desperate. 1It is miore th an pr obable that thle timen lv arival fromt J unot's mothler of it small sum of mneiy, whii:h lie at once shared with .Napholetin, kept him 1 cima-- weret thickeing, anmd thle iL e anid niegl'ced' \.img aspi rat was s:Jvn to ii scepe for all h'Gr' activitv.'" This looks but hiti Ie like tile cn querer of Europe. Ini sp'eakinig of the character o .Nal oleoin aind cause of is dlownldl, the author utters the followinag eloqjuenit language: "'The era of e/muge began, andI wenit oni with violence. The era Uf reseneratvin was to follow, afr - r'ope had1( found repose from the aIuM bles of a quarter of ai cnturty. - T1hose terrible revolutions, which rocked the world lty years ago, frighiten our' childrenl when they read them, anid the recollection of Auster. itz, and Waugram, and Eckmnuhl, haunt the m iemory of the acters in those awfl sceneis. NapjolOean hlad rev.A.iiniz~ed, but he had not r'egen-. e'rd tw Earmpe.' If lhe could have 1il~t up lie future as easily as lhe ha l leldiem out of their house of bonidaige--if thle lad redeemed the pihed,' lhe had givenl to the confiding muilli is of Europo as truly as they had interpreted it ini the beginning, lie would have bee not only the gratest cltioftaith Jut, the- greoate~s benefact.>r of the tiodern woild. He would have united in himself all that we now admire in Hannibal and Washington. But at the close of his atounding career, mankind felt that they had been deceived. The warm hearted soldier, who saw nothing beautiful over the field ofi Maitieigo, but the glory of France, an I his peerless Josephine, had grown selfish and iron-hearte I. Gencrous and nob feelings had been burtied out of h soul by the wasting fires of ambition. Every energy of his na ture had been concentrated in a deathless effort at self-aggiandize ment. Those mighty 1 assiuns that had heaved his stormy soul on a hun dred battle-fields, drifted in a single direction ; and when lie repudiated Josephine, he repudiated Europe. His eye was fixed on a still higher point of glory, but his Steps were leading him to ruin. lie stued for the hand of princess of the louse of llapsburgh, and by the act, deliber ately gave the lie to all that he had ever said and done. H. married the fresh, the genial, the immortal, the glorious, the newly-born future, which all comiing ages will claim, to the cor rupt and effete and putrid corpse of the Dark Ages. e abandoned the princilles he had pruofessed, and be trayed the hopes lie had excited. Ile was subdued himself by the very prineit.le againist whicll be had al ways been cuntending, and be hlaced hinaself in antagonisti w ith the spirit of his age." We have but one ob jection to this, and that is the bla me'is put on the wrong sluldcrs. Na poleon did not fill Ibec:use he struggled to reach a higher point of glory. lie struggled fur existence and full inl the attempt to preserve it. All bie ar:d .11 w '1 r 4__Lmuc, - N .1aaai~t t l, c1 . ", dOfJtiS of hurope, dli i to win nore gl.>ry. The conquest of barren thrones had ceased t-, interest him; lie fell simply because no nation can staad forever against' Eirope eonslidated agai.st it. It is true he abantdioned the princip !es le had p~rofesed, but if he haud not, France would have ftlien back ilato the rinids of the l' ur ous lhng beforc it *lil. Despotism forced hi:1 to con. cia:trate' his power' ini full, Eur-pe cointidlled the alternative B1o-rrbonl Or Bona).alrte. The very republies lae funed , h gg 'd to I e takein iito the empire. for othei wise they would have been swalluwe I up by znoi e piwa'rfuil tatcs. The ne .t longest article ii dlevoted to Josephit, atid a be';atitiful po,:rait is -l.awn ' f this finsciiatin g ou ta The follow m g ltseriptiun of her first ineetiln with .lBonaiarte, after his rLe tutn from Egypt is admtiralbly told. IM11anors lad1 reached the young gen eral's cars of haii wife, whaich hail filled his heart with jtealoulsly and anla - er. Jovsephinle no sooner heard ofl her husband's landing at FreLjtas than she starteil to ineet lahia. Ar rivinag at Lyoins, she furnI he had lepia'rted for' Paris. Without st-. ainag to irest, she innnedci iatelyv orderi ed haorse, and spedl back to the capsi tal. She ariri ved neara minu aiiht. anad hale and exha austed, inuiiiedia tely sought her Ihusbatal's preLseniice. Tihae iuteirview, anid a f'er r'econaciliati, are thius described: "Eugeae, who haad been Napo. lcon's conistan t comnpaniaon, aushed- to bea the couirt-yardl, as the r'ariage (Irove in, and field his nmothuer ( who I'a24J)een eighteenm n:oth- separa ted ft o Mih.') tin:' ner nhi bsm 'ti-s to the little flamuily iroomi v ..e Naipoleona was sittinig with Jo. ephi. lie trned a repulsive anda~ Ireezing look on the girou p, and~ said, ''Madame, it is any wish that yon r tireo imediately to Mahnais n."-. .The brave ana I genaerous Eugene ::aught his fallinag inotheri in his armis, anda drew her silenitl y farom the apart. menit. Shaortly af'ter-, theiir stepsi wer-e haeardi as they desecend to leave the haunse at iuitighit. Napoleon, whaose car at that mnomnit vibirated to every sound, statrted fraomn his chiaiir, strode violently roundl the roomt and thought--for lie could tnt have foi gottona-that f'or near'ly a week Jo sepine had lived ini heri carriiage and now the eonifidiing, Inovinig, an priostiratc ife wvas b-inig dr iven in :atrkness anid glooii fraomn hea- home. lie opened the.~ dooi', aiid, callinug to Eugene, tohil himn he haid better' re turn for tho unighit. Hle had not the naginniilnity, tQ ulelitioti thc l ne v his wife; but Eugen ietood hitn The sad group agnit urned to the dwelliig, and Josep At 6ci h6'. self on her bed and itAdrcelf to sleep. For two days no i ogprse took place between the e husband and the offended wite t. the third day, he entered the a t'ent where Josephine and Ilortei die sitting -the former at her rato table, wetting with her tears passionuate letters of love Napole had sent to her during the first I tdoif his so jurn in .Egypt; while 'rtense was leaning pensively by 'jopen win dwg half hid by the pcty. Al. ter a -moment's besit :he ap proache his wife, and 0- aioi voice uttered tile name, "Mg I 'd !" Eie only epithtt she. o er apo leon. ills better niirr . S9rt ed its right to cotiatnl lb s W? i; and he had already pieres fiIMM gauze of that infernal web [i had been woven around 'H first extended his haud- 4i d it, and bent before him. 1' i bosom," he said; andl they erided their convulsive joy and a? tow to gether. From that -mentai Napo lcon ceased to suspect li:; , e, qaW loved her as he never hat', at$ never did another woman till t6 d I mt day of Is life. A uiioth aft r z eturn from l*-gypt, those ever ; .1'itd oc Curred, wlich we have dy rc cordel. that ended inl his' ! o the Uoverincnt-seatterinl p and factious legislative s, amid aninihilating tyranny of. ly and corrupt Directory. We have omiittedl to qua' a4rb~ the bol u:di:'- sketehe. 1 ;es shewiin the scite of i r enuoi n-ril" i+eiden ;ts tilt P; ' pr'e esident oi 1rainCe , ! ill he read wt ith interest. This ma;:lwhose elevation to oflice was consihh a-ed on. lV a g..o'd practical juke, has t;'u': fair l.afiled all his enetites, untid >eging a:reay.l to iisp ire with dread %hie ve rv nations wl. ridiculed hi1. ile certainly has the fuieilty of I eeping hlis un cunsel, for there i not a in >na-ch inl i: i'i ~n r i.hose in enitions ail plicv are wrapt in such inpene. a!,le instery as his. The ierklcey uen sa y of him : It will be said that some of hi Political acts-- articuiit rl li ~('o1) ud' Etat -:le Shoo~tigli of ois two th.oiisandl mieln inl the s:reets tf Paris, ;aindl the eharg!e of his ('1, de I !nee nnes ill oin the iak: .b t of the in1-ie-h's eiram.i:i ;h hb City of tilt Press -Is : of a vast n1ut.e of eminet :t--his imihprisonment of inany of I ,a the exile of otlClS, with i" v * cts b~esidles that we mit it t~ '. rate, stanty himii with the la ck s - of a Caligula. W\ithou 1_t en :ipsed It jutil ,'ach, tom-asure? ' - i a o ly conteinphiatinlg themat I . that have ocelr rel, mul we tx . -:. it would he by ino ..-aims a dhi a usk to show4 that iniu whateve.r h. h dn that hias excitedl the indilainationi or couritedlilI the riiistal of f 'ritn in tionis. lie has been'u sustainedi hv a~ very* large majorjity of thle French People thiemselves. - -' I1t does very wvell for iFiglishmeni whlo rare i o var naever lind agy~thinig in France. lhxeept th.e ganize' and the silks of Lyonsia. oar the laced of. Valeia. cienines, (or then paoreebtiidaf Sevires, or the grisettes of Pari to their liking, Io pour outt their sa t ina. dligniationi al >i on the at in idl af J iat S writc and exaini knowledge of has gone, have entirely overluol TIhc political ina the gr-eat meni ini Fr attempilted te guide ad inii stert gover...ne sinice the IRevoluitonii o iuary, has alreadyv becom Th'le very mien whose ag' the time of the prohibited .1 quets, and for mnany years befoie,' ..dcontribu tedl to nmnenat tlhe & v lutiory that exiledl Louia Phillipe, bill as fair cliance as men ever bad, to djltplami their. capacity for goveriiring' citgi try; and .Larnartibie himseif - dde ' the purest iobtlet and miost gift'ed' of wiiters, and of men, turned. out so utterly inconpetentto the great tasik of tonitroliing the unchained passions of the million, that nothing but ire pea ted harangues, from l.is eloquenit and persuasive tongue, to the liiob-of Paris, day by lay and hour by: hour, kept the city frombeing whelned in an ocean of blood. Socialist dream ers in the Provisional Government were allowed to proclaimn to the mob the adoption by the government of the Utopian schemes of' the Social. ists. It was, only with the hope of a consolidated government, on thepart of one class of the connluity, and the dream of Agrat'ianism on the otliei, that Lamartine's government Iasted a few weeks. And finally, IeM it not been for Cavaigiac's ac ikion to power, and had he not held ist d the sword of the army. with the' ; y of tuilitary achievewents, ittsag, .fikris never would have be'tnmiwcd iintLoSubjectioi to authori. tyla nnd i w ;, 'And when the election of a 'Piesident fi htr years caine on, Id vcry man in France was al low to gLve lis v'te, and thereby Le his pretercncC fur a rulcr- of tht te, who % the mnan whoii ni1 Ihs of the pealle clamored for? -as Louis Napoleon: and aboin ' -haj-.s not one in one thoutsai uteu wh i voted for himt, st t": li, debate,' or reflect; ' y evident to the phs, - that. eve ry vote so unta ry X r' frun iv . c- r", nior~1 if she desire an t nirig else thian the Napoleon Dynaa9ty, asa compromise between Bourbonism, or the past, and Republicanism, or the future. - Every body out of France, except a few men who utderstooil the actual state of things, pro;.hesited that the N.. tional Assembly. would interpose barriers to what were called the usu rpationis of Napoleon; but when it was found that the Asseibiy itself, it controlled by the outward pressure of the people, and guided by the nat ural instincts of Frenchmen, inter posed few or no cheeks to the 'usur I ations' of the P esi-leet, then it was supposed in, England and in A merica, that, as a matter of cuirie, inhernal maachintes or dI .:gers would soon put an eut to the lij of this trifler with the f'ate of Frantce, and the peace of Europe. Again when all these proihesies failed, foreign nations scemed to r'c plse all their hopes on the clee:ion of May., 1852, when a new 'residcnt by the Constitution was to be chosen, and when, of coirse, L)uis Napole on wa s to be succeeded by the Prince de J oinville, Cavai';ignae, Thieirs, or' somne other illustrious tman. E.veryv bodly out of Francie seem to hav'e beenitI delded by this c himtera . A gi tators in .England eveni uttered warn tngs ags . the French Prince, in the Britahi H ituse of C'oniznous. Tfhe Chartists, ReIciealers, and Rleoriers, rang ma hanli1Cli ges on the sam ue ex peetancy;. 'ilhe talitan revolutionists seretly tnnen u t !Arhis hiope in theirz hearts, and' the Enniian r'epiulicanis were everywhe I:re writing to their frou is among foreign tnationis, that crc only waitiing for a general r'isinig. uitilI the mnonth of May. uri own Confeuder'ation, with its thirty ralpuhblic, then listentinag to the ma gi ced 11 lo l(nce of the I tluinrian Pa Id-c deijl .e.P ca fo all his L.>pe~s of revolunen ; anJ itw: genierally:~ understood, and hue im."i{l unaiversally conveyed the idea, 'tat at the period of tie new electioi in lie tocsin of' a European would be sounded, and ainedl countries onco more d from the thraldomn of ts. icenly, unexpectedly, al iyon the 2d of' Decemn 11l the Coup1 d 'Etat of .'leon like a holt tromi -en.. It stunnedC~ the wvorld--it riali'id Oppoesition and ended the -'iggle. In sinagle hour, by one b.>ld stroke from the hand of a man who knewv wmhere he stood, an~id who he was dealing with, the tocain of a revolution caused to sounad, souialhisni hung its head. and the foild be uI ko 1.111 th.dan.faliaf bic~ is Ie ois Nopoleai,: It .ova ial, :~t: to sad' tJat~ sucli'a man is.. uiter de titute of wietit riiities~fur "iovernien~t 0i a kuio lcd~ie of1 the tin o via.. ivhucl he 'AAi.~s. I:hs book is -berwitully. got up ih 1 01 tia of .eah of. the ]lorn p'it to' family: being attached,: to the, iaior l " tv, hdmr.Cces.tho:'vaine'of the. iv'Qrk: This grotuping~ of -theta. all togvether iii one voluino, is. ai.lmappy. idea, and, will secure it a-peimttraett place aiing ;our valuable, -hi~toricai ivorks., 'Tik'e it all inwall, it, is the most. valualilef attractive, and beauti~ fiul work 'publishedl during the~ season. 'Reyi. W. II. Beechier, in. one', of lia 1eetll1rcs to y'ullg 1111 , uses tihe folo ing lauaguarcve 'which should bo read andt~ reltcllarld 'I may here, it well as anywhlere, impart the secret ot qgood and bMad lu~ck. 100~r Lire mtch wiho, stfqosig Provi-" dei.eo to have 21.11i tnplatthia spiite l~iliItasL thuill t hi man in the p~ui'ty of u wre:uht ei I age the iiaisttjituiies of tliiriveLuc 1tk forever' rani ogalust tlhemi maid tanr othe. , Qu, with ii good *pi'akssioui, lot his luck in the river, whenv lhe x.10111 l have been in is of~ic.e. .ballthelr, w.itlh ai goodt trade. pterlIttIl.l ly IJurit up Jats luctk b y his hot temper, 11 Well prutvk. d hi.,.( o laployers to leaive him. Aiiotf a with it lueqative bnisi ness, lost lil. luck~ by nhnlzisug diligecnce ttir, VIld--tt-a.!it y folilowed his tradie, a.s .steadty ltd (:'- . 1 iii b)ottl. Autt. er, who1) wait} liat.t t u1I- utot alt ip witk, cIII.. !,~ U e y ~ L~ 1e iia iai-.ii;g uwiatia; lie. laked dIi .ta' ii -Elio-1 3 lule tl "i l- lck by end,u ; ti, Li JIii tcuIi t)1 tnuairri i t' is a-ni, aud Ivlii , ltu~ ccllaiz t o'fir)n1(1' *, and "# A gooid clhtlractLer, "oiud~ hai its, anad1 iron iiadustrv ,ire iaaalrc'riiallt to the. assaults of all the jill l~tk that 1: o -s ev er drteaiid of: lint ivlieat l see a eery ha1te inl the 111'12(l a:oi, wiith i hmandy~ -'tuck in lais l iik t tihe im of 11k latt&L uraied upj, amd thle crowni kiau'ked ii, I k laow ht:. lilt: haid. Iuiael fthIle *ioa""t of' all l uck is to bull1 aI~~~l t hiaye r I' t tij'lir." A DJASIIINO u0LxG XX"iIjw.-Ofzili thuigs ini creatio.n, thiere is notlaina SL)1 i'apti'atli ts aI 1)'oA0011111 yuln tv"id 1)11, iatldhian so lolgl, Si, loveatle - l'ieht fa..l h awlia hii the race''IC Rg is'er, is 1i ca t iii poult. WXhile. iii A rktlals ill D~ecemba er lint, sle- lld Cuol Versed w ith a youalag tutau beautifual igi:aax,1, only 27 y ears, old, who ha~d ztal hawcd'ta, the gIave thais hi,,ditas oi'lier fur Hausbantds. it wals at a country1 p'arty, il that ild III 'tdoli weI first sai.L ha e r . X 1 ' t l i k e d h e ry a pp u 1ac a i il c e z a n d b t i l d : t ' u l L l i t u i a l litb, ad Lit latit al. Th'e lslruI rofa ah In niec: was lier del ight, anad shei a . jh'ltId 'the 'gayest oft tilt. guy~.' XWe talIked ol ila tJuIhtry, ti'idt gal1lle, dit= tu$ ' SAoil1 o w$$ n ! is, 1islh~ou s e )4 is' thosecret of livir4g asBs s edo upon linall Iinda# 8so Irilt aneauseat all, e lourish "w1en their eno ' eiglibors are rumiinj d li ii parently froin liinitea k~ g ie wvatching arixi iby ti. i 'ti t if every ceit, antd ec a l . reat nioety the wants 0f tbioj With noe. apparent netise ti t is tistonishing to'wetiet i oftisenees, in ..d as' or aticl fod that would oditefaru cothes. E'specially t dies, is no stirnt hr;he.. st fiibiics the most lashivnable u are obtain ld, arid frequent chain L ,ccur a nodes change. Places fo aci i mnent -are visited by tlem *wbo families of them; balls air atnn- 1 often, and. the usual unstinted'ex penso of trimming up for snclilt*ea sions. Money is~ lavished tip f t i purse of Fortunatus were at )cO mand, or they .could draw 'doll:? from the Crotun pipe. Thei t$ is burdened with, all delicacies, from e. wares, and sparklin i dish ps. make their high- cnti h'ous .rilliant, in which evenin cal re entertained on-choice se rought from heav en .kiiq Pianos may be herd, nm ons unshaken mesecddli . too. beneath their arms -. ringing -at front doorf ushered rnzb red-arumed Irish girls. But it done? _11o rdo thug ive ? . vainly sk, and cchoes ansye "doun't khr., "" They iave, no means. 1very body. roungft$ know. s-them and their resoures ever% Uody knows that a a alone crn eet xpences "Solomori iin=A~~ " i fared so well in his Jii., re ter beef, or wore Letter clotho. It is by no means prompts the above uerie i simple curiosity. see -o16ne men tui!ing and' meilnig mid'e ring, living scantily, dressing poor their failies as poor as themseiv& the whole of whose earnuig% I Larely cover their expenses, the other class spoken of above, thrive and growe. and flourish o b ame snil, with far greater Iuxuria uid wi h 'a less inaans. PAu.'s ES-rIMATE OF UE vv reckoin," ho says, like a man skill hiiis spiritual arithmetie, "I rcclhw itter a due estin ve of their corto :ive value, i the sutlerbn~s :his present e are not rwothy ,U cotinareie ,ith the glory that aJiri No, mai was ever so well qM m: nake this estinate. Qt itfferirgs of the present wotd ' nad shared more largely: tlja uther man. l had heard the " >t' God, and seen the vision of it nighty ; amd the 'result. of tbi , edged experienced was, he dsrd ' ecape from this valley of team ti4 te was ilupatienit to recov.er thecoe .a l vision, eager to peipetuate the i mendtary foiretuaste of the glorigs ofi notlt.Hannah .Moore. Timi Two, Sans. Whena" tish youth goes astm'ay, friend~ er around him in- order to ~~ thm to the path of virtue., tess and kindness are lavishedi a imi to win him shack agaim~i once and peace. Noyos uspect-that ho had eversaitiei wben a poor conf! ding? t rV, rayed she receives tde brand of '{ -iety, and is3 henceforth dr ivenr hel wa vituo. The be io pected,b evicti