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POETRY.
'Human Life—-By Bernard Barton Es*.
“In the morning it flourisheth, amtgrow-
eth up; in the evening it is cut down, and
withevcth.”—Psalm xc. 6.
I walk’d the fields at morning’s prime,
The grass was ripe for mowing,
The sky-lark sang nis matin chime,
And all was brightly glowing.
V \ml thus,’’ I cried, “(he ardent boy,
His pulse with rapture beating,
Deems Life’s inheritance is joy •
The future proudly greeting.”
I wandered forth at noon:—alas!
On earth’s maternal bosom
The srlhe had left the withering gras,
Anti stretch’d the fading blossom.
Anil thus, I thought with many a sigh,
The hopes we fondly cherish,
Li l^e flowers which blossom but to die,
Seem only born to perish.
Once more, at eve, abroad I stray’d,
Through lonely hayfields musing;
"While every breeze that round me play d
Rich fragrance was diffusing.
The perfumed air, the hush of eve,
To purer hopes appealing
O’er fho’ts perchance too prone to grieve,
Scatter’d the balm of healing.
for thus “the actions of the just,”
When Memory hath inshrined them,
f’en from the dark and silent dust,
Their odour leave behind them.
FROM THE NATIONAL GAZETTE.
Oft when the glowing tints of Autumn’s
Have o’er the west their golden radiance
Soft as that hallowed light that hurst from
*Whe^serajft minstrels to the shepherds
sung— ... ,
When not a cloud has on the horizon hung;
When stillness has her peaceful mantle
spread, . .
And calmed e’en whispering zephr into
rest—
Hushed each discordant note, and gently
shed
Her holv, happy influence o’er the breast;
Thus have 1 thought the righteous seek
repose, r
Thus shine refulgent ere their labours close.
But dearer far to me the evening hour,
When, from the earth in massive columns
roil’d
High up the blue empyrean, vapours low
vlj _ _
And leave below a glorious space of gold;
For thus I’ve hop’d, though clogg’d with
earthy mould,
Tho’ Sin her cloudy veil around me cast,—
When all my littlc'hour of life is told,
And all my errings and repentings past—
Thus have I hop’d shall Faith disperse the
gloom,
And thus with peaceful promise gild the
tomb.
C. DELWYNNE.
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SCRIPTURE TRANSLATION.
The Parable of the Prodigal Son, Luke
15: 11—31; with Remarks.
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HYMN. G. M.
The Prodigal Son.
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TRAiTS OF INDIAN CHARACTER.
The ‘following beautiful remarks are
jmMhfi'pen (/Washington Irving,
originally published in the An elec-
tic Magazine.
“In the present times, when popu»
lar feeiing is gradually becomeing har-
uened by war, and st liish by the ire-
(tuent jeopardy ol hie or property , it
is certaiiby an inauspicious moment
to speak m behalf 01 a race oi bemgs,
whose very existence has been pro
nounced detrimental to public securi
ty, Jbut it Is good at ah times to raise
tne voice of truth, however feeble; to
endeavor if possible to mitigate the
fury ol passion and prejudice, and to
turn aside the bloody hand ol violence.
Little interest, however, can proba
bly be awakened at present, in favor
oi the misguiued tribes of Indians that
have been drawn into the present wart
The rights of the savage have seldom
been deeply appreciated by the white
oian—in peace he is the dupe o, mer
cenary rapacity; in war he is regard
ed -as a ferocious animal, whose death
is a question of mere precaution and
convenience. Man is cruelly waste
ful of life when his own safety is en
dangered and he is sheltered by impu
nity—and little mercy is to he expect
ed from lnm who feels the stirg oi the
reptile, and is conscious of the .potvei
to destroy.
-Tt has been the lot. of the unfortu
nate aborigines of this country, to be
doubly wronged by the white men-—
first, driven from their native soil by
the sword of tbe invader, and then
darkly slandered by the pen ol the his
torian. The former has treated them
like beasts of the forest; the latter, has
written volumes to justify him in bis
outrages. Tire former found it easi
er to exterminate than to civilize; the
latter to abuse than to discriminate.—
The hideous appellations of savage &.
pagan were sufficient to sand ion the
deadly hostilities of both; and the poor.
wandems of the foies’s were persecu
ted and dishonored, not because they
were guilty, but because they were ig
norant.
<‘The same prejudices seem to ex
ist, in common circulation, at the pre
sent day. We form our opinions of
the Indian character from the misera
ble hordes that - infest our frontiers.—
These, however, are degenerate beings,
enfeebled by the vices of society,
without being benefited by its arts of
living. The Independence of thought
and action, that formed the main pil
lar of their character, has been com
pletely prostrated, and the whole mo
ral fabric lies in ruins. Their spirits
are debased by conscious inferiority,
and their native courage completely
daunted by the superior knowledge &
power of their enlightened neighbours.
Society has advanced upon them
like a many-headed monster, breath
ing every variety of misery. Before
it, went forth pestilence, famine and
the sword; and in its train came the
slow, but exterminating curse of
trade. What the former did not
sweep away, the latter has gradually
blighted. It has increased their wants,
without increasing the means of grat
ification. It has enervated their
strength, multiplied their diseases,
blasted the powers of their minds,
'md superinduced on their original
barbarity the low vices of civilization.
-’hey saw every one a
round them sharing the same lot, en
during the same hardships, liying in
the same cabins, feeding on the same
aliments, arrayed in the same rude
garments. No roof then rose, but
what was open to the houseless stran
ger, no smoke curled among the trees,,
but he was welcome to sit down, by
its fire, and join the hunter in his re
past. “For,” says an old historian of
New-England, “their life is so void
of care, and they are so loving also,
that they make use of those things they
enjoy as common goods, and therein so
compassionate that rather than one
should starve throughout, they would
starve all; thus do they pass their
time merrily, not regarding our
pomp, but are better content w’ith
their own, which some men esteem so
meanly of,” Such were the Indians
while in the pride and energy of primi
tive simplicity: they resemble those
wild plants that thrive best in the
shades of the forests, but which shrink
from the hand of cultivation, and per
ish beneath the influence of the sun.
]to be continued.]
tit
FRECIPICE OF KOLAU
From the Journal of Mr. (Stewart, late
Missionary to tht Sandwich Islands,
recently published—
It seemed like enchantment, to find
myself transported,' in the short space
of an hour, from the dusty plain, stag
nant pools, dreary beach, and various
desolations of the sea-side, to the fresh
ness and verdure, luxuriance and
bloom of a woodland region, where
the eye rested only on objects of gran
deur and beauty, and the ear caught
no sounds amid the solitude of the for
est, but the chirping ofbirds, the mur
mnrs of the mountain stream, or the
dashing of the distant casc ade.
The path we took led up the valley,
immediately in the rear of the village.
As this gradually contracted from a
width of three to that of one mile,
the scenery became more and more
picturesque arid delightful, till at a
distance of five miles from Honoruru,
it far surpasses any thing l^have ever
witnessed. The mountains are so
lofty and so graceful in their outlines;
so rich and beautiful in their foliage;
so diversified by dark grottos, project
ing cliffs and spouting waterfalls—
while all below presents an exube
rance of vegetation almost incredible;
that I cannot but think it among the
finest of the exhibitions of nature, in
a state of undisturbed simplicity and
wildness. Such was the character
of the scenery for the two last miles
of the walk, while our path led suc
cessively through glnde, copse, and
dell, and was frequently, for long dis
tances together, entirely embow ered
by the interlacing branches of the
spreading hau-tree, species of hybiseus.
After ascending from one of these
dark passages, Mr. Bingham suddenly
cautioned me against th'e violence of'
the wind \ye should soon meet. At
tant shores the peac<pil biller w «
the Pacific Were rolling,' itt ever-vary
ing and snowy brightness; while fails
er stjll, the blue vjratqrs of the ocoan
rose in gradual ascent, still apparent
ly midway between heaven and earth,
they met the ajsy, in a haziness that
rendered eitllilr distinguishable from
the other, only by the regularity of a
scarcely discernible horizon. m
To the right and to the left, within p
a stones throw of the rock: on which lf a
stood, two richly covered peaks rose!
many thousand feet above my head; * 1
while beyond them, on cither side,
summit after summit of mountains,
whose broad bases were planted in the
valley below, appeared in long per
spective, still with a semicircle sweep /
both terminated hr the sea by bold arid jl
romantic headlands, rendered more «
picturesqe by a partial continuation of w
detached cliffs & islets. In full view ^
behind, was the bautiful valley thro’
vvhich we had ascended, gradually
sinking, from the very spot on which
we storid, to the ilOw miniature town
and port of Honorurur, beyond which
againros© “theMlimitable sea.”
The sublimity pf the whole was not
a little increased by the almost over
whelming sounds of the trade wind,
as it swept along the mountains, which
resisted its progress' to ibis narrow
pass, and through, which it rushed
with irresistible velocity and power,
bearing in its broad current and Whirl
ing eddies, leaves, sand and even peb
bles, which might claim the name of
stones. Such was the effect of this,
that though every thing far and near
gleamed in the brightness of a cloud-*
I ess sky and noon-day sun, I could aot
resist the impression that we were
standing amidst the ragings of a tem-'
lest; an illusion not diminished by the
harsh s . reams of the sea-gull and cry
of the tropic bird os they passed us
on rapid wing to the lof:y peaks above
or hastened again to sail in the calmer
regions beneath our-feet.
None but mi atheist could have kept
his thoughts from rising to that Being
of majesty and power, who “founded |
the earth arid hnng it upon nothing;” |
“who formed the mountains and crea- L
ted the wind;”—“ who shut up the itj
sea, and said, hitherto shalt thou come, f
but no farther; and here shall thy f«
proud waves he staid.” And in the \ t
lively contemplation of the marvellouB 1
wisdom and omnipotence that over- jf
looks and upholds the mighty wonderj
of the universe, we could not but Teel '
the force of humbling interrogative,
“ 0 Lord, what is man, that THOtf
art mindful of him, or the son of man,
that thou visitest him?”
The battle that decided the fate of
Oahu, in the conquests of Tamehame- ;m,
ha, in which lie gained the victory
that made him the sole monarch of the
group, was fought in the valley lead
ing from Honoruru to this pass. The
king Oahu, after a desperate conflict,
fell byavely at the head of his army; up
on which a complete rout ensued.
One party of more than three hundred
warriors, fled towards this precipice,
and were pursued so closely and with
such relentless purpose, as to have
been plunged, without, an exception,
from the tremendous offsett to thfr
depths below!—JVest. Rec.
the same time, the rushing of heavy
blasts was heard, intimating, like the
roarings of a cataract, or the murmer-
ings of a volcano, an approach to one
of the most sublime phenomena of na
ture; and on abruptly turning the an
gle of a projecting rock,—with an ad
miration approaching to terror-I found
myself balancing in strongly conflicting
currents of air, on the brink of a pre T
eipice, little less than a thousand feet
in perpendicular descent, without the
parapet of a single stone to guard n-
gainst the fatal consequences pf (. false
step. Immediately before me, at the
foot of this tremendous offset, in mns<
perfect bird’s-eye view, ,-k>y a widely
extended, cultivated and thickly it
habited country, against whose dis-
Jllonnt Ararat.-—Nothing can be
more beautiful than the shape of Ara
rat; nothing more awful than its height.
All the surroumjing mountains sink in
to insignificance when compared to it.
It is perfect in all its parts. No rug
ged features—no unnatural promin
ences. Every thing is harmony; and
all combines to render it one of the
most interesting, objects in nature*
Spreading origiii&lly from an immense
base*, the slope towards its summit is
easy and gradual, until it reaches the
regions of snow, where it becomes
more abrupt. As a foil to this stu
pendous object, a small hill rises from
the same base, similar in shape, arid
in any other situation, entitled to, rank
among high mountains,. No one since
the flood seems to have been on the
summit of Ararat. For the rapid as*
cent of its spowjj
the attempt itn
certainly has asci
times. When the ad'
fort failed, it is noi
one else has succet
ml. —
ANECDOTE.
“Make way* gentlemen,” once ert*
ed a Massachusetts representatives to
the ponulncs, who were crowding him
out of his place in the procession on
election dav, “make way; we are" the
representatives of the peoole.”—»
“Make wav yourself,” replied a stur
dy member of the throng, “we are th^
people themsehe#.”
»appears to render
le. No man,
I it in modern
turous TournelJ
obable that any
“ * ’Hie Jour*
l