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For the Cheshire R -publican ]
The Mitiiic Chin It
A BTME ABOCT DOI.I.AKS AND SENSE.
By Ed. P. Ackerman.
Sage* may think, and authors may write,
May con by day ami toil by nialit
On the folly of m m ami ihecommiinitly’s plight.
On the of lm -’Sms, r.? 5 their honesty
slight,
But, <]n they e’er think
It's the cl ink clink, clink, *
Os ttie magic chink
Which carries the day—let come what may !
Books have, been wntfcfch , and voiurfiee been
read.
Discussions been holrleh anil everything said
Tkat could be. t>#t still the world goes ahead
With the same old-fashioned, the *snu meas
ured tread,
While we don’t stop to think
That the clink clink, cliuk,
Os the magic chink
Is what rules the day—let couu what may
You may prate about principle, theorize about
fate,
You may whine over charity and weep over
hate ;
You may call enemies cowatjg, call them mean
and ingrate, ™
And with your owii «elf-con#eit try four brain
to elate,
But yon don’t stop to think
That tin- cliuk, clink, cliuk,
Os the magic chink
4Rll Carry the day—come o’er you wha
may.
Think a man e'er so bad. think him worse than
“Old Nick
'Call him all that’s outrageous, while at him
you stick
The finger of scorn, but, should he be quick
In paying'you. bill you'd think him a brick !
For. you'd soon stop and think
That the cliuk. clink, clink,
Os the magic chink
Had carried the day —lt’s always ‘the way I
If • maiden’s as homely as nature could make
her,
And so pond’rous and heavy that a gale
wouldn’t shake her ;
If she had nough dimes—and a check wouldn't
break her,
You’d think her a Venus, and, straightway
would take her ,
When you’d once stamped to think
That the clink, clink, clink,
Ot her magic chink
Would carry you whate’er you
might do!
but, be she as handsome as nature could Mould
her,
■So lovely. In fact, as to entrance her beholder.
If she was minus the rocks you will, no dobbt.
have told her
’“That the tiling wouldn’t do’’ —you would
•‘turn the cold shoulder.”
For you’d soon I -am to think
That the clink, clink, clink,
Ol her magic Chink
Was ail you w ts alter -and to Hades you'd
waft her!
Lfet a beggar have braids—in the world they’re
all stuff;
Let him sparkle with genius—“he's not up to
; anutf
But, lit b a fool—worse —a regular rough
If he’s got copper cents he’ll be fondled enough,
fur the community think
More of the clink, clink, clink
Os the m igic chink
Than they do of the talents money straight
ens the balance !
The dimes make their mark even with the good
preacher,
(And this, In my mind's the most remarkable
feature);
Mankind, when in tfaill of a spiritual t-acher
tfißconie down with the cash—look at Ilea
ky AV.vr l Beadier
R Just give a sly wink
With the clink, clink, dink
Os the magic Chink
And you’ll surely succeed—bul your pocket
must bleed!
If a fellow gets sick, or is Wangled, or mash'd,
Or into the depths of a drawbridge is dashed
Falls under the cars and into iniu.emeat is hash*
ed.
Or by some coward’s knile is mo3t terribly
slashed.
If h i can't give the wink.
Or his pockets don’t clink
With the magic chick
He’s about sure to die—jo physicians are
nigh!
But, yon take a rich chap with his diamond pin.
With his massive gold ring, and his purse full
of tin ;
Let him slip, and, falling, chance to damage his
skin
And a dozen M. D's will come tumbling in!
They won’t stop to think,
For the clink, clink, clink
Os bis magib Chink
Will hasten their pace—they like such a
base.
Jk. a. ■ * * * *
.ft * • * ft ■ • * *
But, wheii life is over, when Death takes com.
mand,
Bad before the great Jadgmcnt simple man
- must stand,
ffot the Woney he earned, nor the diamonds be
wore
Will pass him to Heaven—be must have some*
thing Wore 1
Will he then stop to think
That the clink, clink, clink
Os his magic chink
Has bad its lull day T It will sure be the
way!
What's the use, then, of riches. If not to do
f
Where’s the use of a million of gold ?
If a nun should live rich, he will surely die
If-biaaool fbr his money's been sold L
We will then stop to think
That the clink, clink, clink
Os the magic chink -
Will not answer there! ’twonil boa jihißi
Keenfrffitb-, frbb- *■'*,
CUTHBERT Ijl APPEAL.
From Aitbur’s Home M-saenger.]
Crowns For Your Brows.
BY MARY HARTWKLI.
titIAPrKK I.
A great many women (I am thankful
to know) have earned halos in their
time. Some we have heard of, and
n-Hne we know nothing about. Wo
men's faces witli the umeole shine out
of history, hut ftener they shine out of
human hearts, wherein they were pho
tographed long after their materia tty
bud passed away.
There are men who profess they ‘do
not believe in women.’ And they do
not lack Bentim«.:tiil imitators, devoid
of their vices because devoid of their
fibre, to cry the fallen sentiment. The
two hands of a man’s spiritual body
seem to me to he faith in God and faith
in woman Jf tie is mVimed of these,
wherewith shall lie work strongly and
worthily through his duration" I
know some women are course, hut I
know (and again render thauwa lor it)
that some rise up and earn halos —wo
men of wirm Uifood, and tried H -sh, and
many faults, whose aureoles were vi*i
ble within the doors of their homes be
fore they were set to shine on the doors
of their tombs.
Margaret Amyri lis did not know
she was earning one—it is a remarks
hie fact that those who arc thus illumi
nated seldom know it—she whs so oc
copied with doing her duly and gfow
ing lovely thereat. To grow lovely at
duty, to make our actions- re bound upon
ourselves, is the hardest, but the noblest
part of all.
The western wind blew, and the
western sun shone upon her prairie
home; but potent as arc such winds
mid still, they never could spoil her luce
that set itsdt' tirnvely to them as it set
itself bravely to life. She had been
born m England. Mr. Amyrillis was a
gentleman. He could trace back his
ancestry through genefa’jons. Marga
ret had been an heiress. Hut Mr. Am
yrillis was weak, lie bowed under
misfortunes, and the tide swept him, al
most destitute, t» America. He brought
his delicate wife and daughter to the
prairie; and rearing such u home as he
could afford, and which he would not
have considered fit for a tenant in Eng
land, he began—mot to toil manfully,
like many another ruined foreigner, up
the free terraces of American promo
tion, but—to vegetato. And besides
him. a woman who refused to be com
{lined, tike Rachel, for ttie loss of her
fi st bortl ambitions, vegetated also.—
He grew like cypress, poor man, breath
ing and nourishing himself, but always
sighing; while Mrs. Amyri'lis, like
Ivy, clung tenaciously to all the ugly
‘aad disagi-eetihje parts of their situa
tion, and luxuriated solemnly over the
whole.
Between two such parents, with her
tastes put behind her and h«r fate to
face, Margaret Mmyrillis lived and toil
ed. iSu often had ugly thoughts in
that closet which Mrs. Stowe places
behind the human intellect, and which
she says is often filled with mean guests,
while the brain's trout parlor is inure
properly occupied. But blessed is the
soul who cun keep these thoughts in
the closet. There is more hope of ex
pdiing them hy the way they came in.
The AmynUm liotne was a wooden
building, with one room below and a
101 l above. These Margaret wrought
skilliul with. Thoj* ooilld not afford
•lieip;’ besides ‘help’ was not easily
found. I lie girl studied to become a
Cover I ttie housekeeper. She made
tint rooms us pretty and convenient as
po-sihle She planned and helped her
father to make a folding screen, which
at night separated her mother’s bed cor
ner into a chamber by itself. She etir
faint-d the walls with some tJd tapis
iry, and hung her own pictures here and
there. And in a little shed behind their
hut, she diu the meaner drudging, w-.th
hands you would have* shuddered to
see in relations to dishwater and soap
suds, though yell read in the plaCid
foiohead above them a conviction that
tins was appointed* and, therefore, cun
sedating work.
Margaret was not a boanfy She
had shapely hands and right hair; her
eyes were blue and clear; she was
small, and had a sweet dignity. In
tile sphere to which she was led, she
became a sainted presence. Y<m and 1
micfUl develop thus through our vexa
tions* sinter. We have j i-t as much
capital to begin with as had Margaret
Amyrillis And she is not a phantom
of the brain* hut to day exists a liv rig
soul anion** God's millions. Her wim
lets were cold, and her miiiinleis hot,
and her toil wearying, like ours. She
hungered lot* society, and received a
stone; she thirsted lor tendefnesfl, and
hud vim-gar to drink from her lerin*-nt
lug parents. She almost suff n-ated in
her tile* and used to look through the
loft window at the star*, tier bosom
bursting with its throes. And some
times the selfish question filled lief, ‘Why
must all this come upon tna ? I would
rather be blotted out than live so 1 —
Why, I wasu’t made for this!’ the in
dignaiil nature would add, till a!ie re
membered that the servant is not bet
ter than her lord; and believing herself
over-brooded hy love, this devout little
woman would turn back from rebellion,
confident that her being would yet
leach its symmetry, and find its an
swers. God never made a germ to
giow hideous for want of its proper
food.
Due hot J uly morning, she stood
churning her butter in the shed, and
soothing her mother in the house. The
churn gave forth a pleasant sound, but
Mrs. AinyriHis uttered most dolorous
ones. Sue lay in a rooking chair, fan
ning herself with one languid hand.
‘Oh 1 I can't stand this,’ said the
poor iuuy; ‘these tilings sire wearing
iny life out. I wonder what your lath
er ever intends to do. My health has
been sacrificed ; all your prospects have
been sacrificed. Ido not see bow any
worse things can befall us. It would
be well if we could all die in a heap
Dow. Margaret, you are growing to
look like a milkmaid V
‘Do you really thin* it is not worth
our while to live, since no worse things
euu befall U3, my mother V
‘. on seem to enjoy degradation ; I
do Wish, Margaret, yon would remem
ber you are a lady, liow large your
hands are becoming V
‘They are not s i large as to be un
wieldy, dear mother,’ hilled. Mkfg?*'
ret. ‘I do think,.’ shin added softly , with
emphasis in her lambent eyes, ‘that
there is no and gradation in iny trying to
comfort my father and mother.’
‘lt’s poor comfort,’ fretted Mrs. Am
yriilis, ‘to see oilr daughter toiling and
coarsening, with no hopes before her.'
Margaret had ‘hopes,’ hut her mother
would have regarded them as simply
•religious Feelings,* which were m.id«
for use in the temple, like the precious
thereof, and with reverence only to be
spoken of elsewhere.
The cream hud not yet yielded its
rich secret, hut was foaming amj swel
ling therewith. Mrs. Amyrillis, cry
ing behind her nervous hands, Was ft »t
likely ever to yield a secret that would
enrich anybody. Margaret applied
herself more energetically to both oases.
Sue hasLeued to S low her inoluer an
amusing article in the one newspaper
lin y atfoided; she kissed the lady's
heated temples, and mooned a pretty
air to give.her reading a pleasant un
dertone. Then she dashed the eburu-
handle with firmer bunds. iy„ her neat
dress, whitely banded at neck and
wrists, w ith h. r hair smoothly arranged,
and her noble eyes shining, she did not
look like a counselling woman.
The paper dropped, Oy and by, into
Mrs. Aiuyrilhss lap, and site slept
tni'ough the languid uours till Margu
rets riand was laid on her forehead at
noon.
‘Diuuer is ready, you see, mother
dear. 1 have carried yours up into my
room. The men are coming from their
tillesbing- to Luo table. Wnl you g< up
.stairs uow-T
‘Yes, Ugh ! those dreadful wretches 1
What customs do not the Americans
have J And you have to servo them,
Margaret ?’
•Ye*. Father would be but a bung
ling waiter, you know.’
‘Your lather, or you either, serving a
lot of teeking boors at ottr own table 1
011 1 what is the world coming to ?’
‘To dinner, my mother. At least, a
sufficient part of the world to demand
my attention at once. Ido not iniud
it, und lather does not serve. He sils
down with them, you know.’
‘Yes, he sits down with them,’ fumed
Mrs. Amyrillis. ‘The representative
of a house who no more allowed their
dependants to sit above the salt than
they allowed the dogs !'
-But these men aie not dependants,
mother. They are free born American
citizens.’
Mrs. Amyrillis put out her hand in
scout to repel the free-born Americau
citizens. Her daughter arranged her
scat, and found a liUto shawl to keep
her irom the draught.
•I wil. bring your dessert as soon as
they have begun eating,’ then promised
the'giiK tttruing to go down stairs.
T suppose,’ queried the mother, with
some indefinite qualms, ‘1 hope they
haps I ought to stay down there ?’
‘Oh 1 no,’ repiled Margaret, her sweet
dignity becoming apparent,’ they are
very respectful 5 they cOilld uot booth,
erwieo.’
The threshers crowded from out-door
world upon her white fi»or, just as her
own foot, de oendmg from toe last stqp,
pressed it. £>he noudod quietly to those
wuoiit she knew. They ait recognized
her presence. Some of them were
Milking lellows* woo had never before
been so courteous to a woman. Thus
imperceptibly she broke the ice between
them and a sex they diended. For
having greeted a woman properly once,
they would experience less terror at tho
next trial. Ttieir burnished faces, just
purified from Margaret’s bowls ol cool
water and IVesh towels, encircled the
tubus. Mr Amynlhs sat pice msly at
tne head trying to assimilate himself to
i. B companions. U.s la* e was a < oraicai
mixture of mirror at Western freedom
and a servile-desire to conciliate, lie
suuddered, oypressdike, to hour his old
and gentle nmne maimed Until it was
Armies*.’ And he was obliged to feed
the very hacking lips that maimed it 1
He looked stupidly at the men taking
tneir cups of coffee from his daughters
high hrt-u hands, and wondered if they
knew she came of a line three times us
old as their irtonstrous government!
Four man; there was less beef and
wine, uud more pastry and bile, in his
tnaKe-up titan Ibruiri-iy * ho could not
become healthlully Americanized, He
iou,d uot See, as his daughter Saw,
•men and brothers’ lit ti use stalwart
specimens. ‘Men and brothers’ they
did indeed prove themselves u t loug
alter in the war against the Rebellion.
‘ls Mi-s Armless uuwoll to.day !' ask
ed one neighbor, handing back las cup
for the fourth time. '1 don’t see her
knockin’ rouud.’
Mr. Amyrulis stared fiercely, but res
covered himself in a pile *us grin.
‘The lady—my wile —yes, she is
quite wel<* tuauk yovl. Her health has
never been poor.’
•The heat oppresses my mother,’ put
in Mafgalcl quietly oVer her father’s
blunder. ‘1 am afraid she will have fe
ver.’
•Sho !’ eaid the neighbor, gurgling
at his cup. ‘Now, this here's sluppm’
c«ffee l’ he exclaimed gallantly. ‘I
reckon you learned to make it in the
old country, didn't you, Marge V
‘No. I have only learned to work
since 1 came to America.’
‘YV uth you while to eome, then.
Girls allays ort u* know how to work
Orteu’t they Armless !’
Mr. Amyrillis whimpered, but finally
came out with triumph in bis mealy
grin. ‘Ekerc'se was healthy, 1 he euu
eeded.
‘To be sure it is,’ said the stolid farm*
er. ‘Have you had any agur feeliu s
since you come here ?’ he inquired.
The brokwn-dowu gentleman hesita
ted. He was almost tempted to a sol
emn pun. ‘Give me not poverty, had
often been in his miud, but 'Give me
not riches,’ never. He thought his
agur feelin’s had only been partial.
True to his cypress devoloyment, how
ever, he sighed and answered literally
that lie laid had one or two chills.
Marg-aret's eyes were drawn op du
nug a Jargon of talk to find one man
reverently watching her. he was
|ar ir e and bronzed. She remembered
to have heard him called Jack W arruli.
There wt» *»me breeding beneath hts
roughness. Seeing his gaze was no
ticed, he begged her for another glass
of milk. She gave it awd finding a
gap in Iter occupation, hastened to carry
up her mother’s desert, innocent o(
1 having made an impression, so com
pletely hud duty taken the place of sett
co4si uoifcMiees i.n her.
I As site returned, ai merry oath burst
from this man’s lips. He met her eyes
CUTHBERT, GEORGIA, THURSDAY, MARCH 17, 1870.
and colored, exclaiming at once with
w -stern frankness, *1 beg your purd m,
Misi Margaret. lam ashamed of that,
and t’ll try never to do it again.
‘Thank you,’ said the girl gratefully.
Her look, ha told the men afterward
—‘that look of her eyes went deeper
into him than an}’ sirmon that any
preacher ever pounded out of a pulpit.’
Thenceforward J ick W ir-en, west
ern farmer, 1 ved the little English lady,
and b“g »n to see the halo round her
head, which is yet to him a alar leading
upward.
CBVPrBa ti.
In this community, Sabbath was a
mire day of pause —a period at the end
of the week, which they often ran over
and rendered quite as bu-y as any com
ina preceding H. Tuere was no chure.h
to attend. O ice in throe months an iti.
nerunt minister called a few worshippers
together in the school house. t -
Marg.iret missed so sorely r.he chimfr
•>f bells, her seat in the old chu.ch, ami
the lieaUtiful lessons and serViee * she
missed the light falling fro n stained
windows, her father's tenants with their
respectful looks* the sweet thrills of the
organ; she missed everything hut the
spirit of devotion in her own heart.—
Tills she carried up to her chamber af
tor the Sunday morning work was done
—alter the was made trim, und
her mother co nlortably settled in the
easyehair, with Bible, Prayer-book,
smelling hott.e, fan and George Her
bert’s and Her father brushed
and tidied like the infant that he was —•
And h iving earned it up, she turned
the attic into a little chapel and wor
shipped. iShe had curtained in one side
of the attic, and garnished it as prettily
ns she could. Without the folds the
family stores were arranged : within
was the maiden’s bower Her cot stood
by the square hole known as tlie win
dow, wuicti she covered with musquitn
bars iu tlie summer. Pictures in fanci
ful frames of leaves or burrs hung about,
Here Margaret salon Sabbath morning,
and tried to believe herself in the old
church. She read the prayers find the
Psalter, and hummed the old organ
notes, till all the former peace would
come and encompass her. H -re, also,
on this diy, she <>petV.-d a look ;d draw
es, and looked at the pictured face of a
young man. She was careful on every
such occasion to admonish herself con
never kissed it and fondled upon it, as
most girls do, but heiiips and hauds
trembled.
“Now, M trg iret Amyrillis,’ ran her
suriucn, “look at Mr. Waller Chevelier
if you must, hut remember he no longer
cures for you. He will come buck from
India to marry some beautiful woman,
and live in London, lie is rich, and tal
ented and good. You are a poor far
mers daughter in the United Stales,
with nothing to distinguish you, and are
often exceeding sinful. But there i-un
he no harm in your trying to become
such a woman as he would approve of
Be careful, however, that you do not
make an iih igo of this little miniature-,
and plap tao p ipist, fir then At wul have
to be tiisir.jyed, aii.l you will see the
frtend who heip-i you u i more.’
Tne Amyrillis family were not troub
led with Sabbath visitors, tboiign ull
their neighbors went visiting on that
day. J£arly in their sojourn, Mrs. Amy
rillis ha 1 set the ueig.iborhooj On lire
by her ej -ction of a good Wife and tiro id
who came to spend the day with her.
Disturbed and exasperate 1, she resen
ted the intrusion euergetieilly, to the
distress of her daughter and tne horror
Os her husband, go-iug ‘my good we
man” quite as sound a piece ot advice us
if‘buy good woman" quite as sound a
piece of advice as if ‘my good woman’
Had been oue of her cottagers, instead
ot har American equal. M u garet fol
lowed their yid.gn tot neighbor out, and
begged she would n >t bo deeply offen
ded at wnat Mrs. A n/nttis n»1 said,
aud tiiat site w i lid let her little Children
com > s«hne tulle tA be formed into a
Sabbath class. But, without a word,
the ueig ib »r drove off , an t Until ioag
after, the Ainynllisses were not trouble 0
with vis-tois on any day,
*1 think you were a tit-le b’i irp, irty
dear,’ rein instrated Mr. A m/riilis.. “To
be »ure, we raspaet oi la id time-honored
customs, but we ought to try to Cjneili
ate ’
‘Yes, .yes-, Mr A nyrilhs,’ replied the
acid laily, nodding, ‘that’s your policy,
1 know. It really seems to he yoiy
mission in this world to mike way with
old and time Uon >red tilings !’
Upon which Mr. Amyriliis looked
around for his hat aud suu-umbrella, re
marking—-‘I believe I will go out among
the sheep-, my dear;’ which very appro
priate thiug ue did.
CHAPTER- in.
So they lived on, a dull, same, life its
only oreuk being an occasional visit to the
nearest viiage for supplies. Margaret
seized on l.llle things, and threw joy
from them. A bird song would make
her happy for a day. 6oine pleasant
tidings m the newspaper from the old
laud would unlock volumes of sweet
thoughts for her. She saw all tin) tbits
of the landscape. Arid when Jack
Warren brought her rare wi and dowel's,
she was so delighted with that he never
afterward saw their delicdto taees with
out being reminded of her delicate lace.
This seemed the most languid sum
me* Margaret had ever known. Her
outer weariness was wearing in, and her
inner weakness was wearing out} sd the
two were likely to strike hands and form
an alliance over her slight body. Hit
she was young and brave. Slid fought
diseases oft herself, and wrought hard
to cast it out of the house. Early rains
on luxuriant vegetation made the uu
tutnn a sickly one. Mr. Amyvillis took
the fever, tuid his wife groaned beside
him in ague fits. The sloughs, whose
growth of tall, dark grass had been the
ouly thing to distinguish them during
August days, turned to noisome ptmds,-
aifd through them the doctor's hor*j of
ten splashed.
Mr. Amyrillis »»ghed and meekly
Nourished on- his sick-bed as he hud
sighed and meekly flourished lit health
and cow hide boots. Hut Mrs. Amy
rilfw,. shaking through all her ivy leaves,
became such a doleful reminder of
church yards aud grave stones, was bo
querulous and exacting, that she wea
ned her patient child more than any
other trial.
Many neighbor's, whor had les3 sick
ness at home, came aud ett’ered their
services to Margaret—western people
do not carry their hearts in a lough per
icardium—and she was grateful.
Margaret’s head grew large and her
neck thin ; her eyes took vivid lights;
time became to her a lony drawn crisis.
Tne sky and earth looked so solemn
that autumn H-r cat' stalked about
with a g.-innt and solemn air; the Very
cocks ir, the barnyard crowed with a
solemn cadence. She had a fancy of
calling herself the ‘An -ient Mariner,’
but shuddered lest her Ether and moth
er should become the and -ad upon the
deck of her motionless ship on that mo
tionless prarie sea.
•She told the quaint story to Jack
Warren one October morning, as he
drove her from the villag* with her
m >nthly supplies. Economy was then
so important in the family, that she could
not. trust this mis-ioti to another
‘An l if father mid mother should die !’
«he tre allied. ‘Tnat image of the ‘An.
cient Marrmer’ -vould not he a more
desolate thing than I. And I have
committed worse si us in my life than
killing an albatross.
‘Hu prxyeth best who loveth best.
All things, both great and small,
For the Greet God who loveth us,
lie made and loveih all.’
I’m afraid it has a!w iys been my fault
•o-love some persons and things very
mu- h, to the exclusion <-f others.’
Jack shook tlie lines and whistled
softly. He could not tell her in deli
cate sentences ail that was ehQrning in
lus contained bos.an, but he lay and by
and by brought forth the product of tilt
commotion in a compact and manly pro
po«al.
4 1 don’t think there’s any danger of
your father and mother dying; (nit if
they do, no family on this panirie will
ever see you shelterless, Margaret Am
yrillis. And there’s more boys than this
one would be glad to offer you a home
of your own whenever you’d take it.’
Margaret recoiled, as women are apt
to do when an unwelcome hand comes
knocking at the inner guest chamber,
and her recoil was greater because the
man who had sjMtken for a place already
occupied, was of what her English sense
still denominated • the people.’
Stie had always placed him beneath
her, and regarded him with much the
same confidence und affection that she
hud given to tlie respectful laborers
among her father’s tenantry.
Bat • a mm's a man for a’ that,’ and
when he Gomes with his heart in tiis
hand, is not to be disp sed, though he
weie meaner than a landholding Amer
ican voter, with the way to American
kingship open beloi’o him.
‘ 1 know I’m not your equal,’ contin
ued Jack, 'I haven't the education and
the manners, but I’ll take care of you
as the apple of my eye Tin well off,
ami liKely to bo rich; and you couhl
make such a man of me as a woman
needn’t be ashamed of.’
As Margaret looked at the glowing
face aud clear, simple eyes, her heart
was moved toward him.
‘1 cuu’t many you, Jake.’ shfi said
with kind dircciuess. ‘I love you a
great ik-al to. your goodness ’
‘My gooiiue-s ! I haven’t any, except
what you iaujj»*t mo, Margaret Amy
rillis,’ lie attested ‘I never saw auoth
er won* ui like you 1’
• But I cannot he yclur wife. Some
one (letter adapted will fill tile place
you offai’ me. And I uin always your
friend.’
‘Which is about aa much a$ a fellow
like me ought to ask ’ resigned Jack
sadly ; ‘lull I'd ratlief have you for my
friend than any other ono Eve seen hir
my wife,’ he concluded, unoorrsc ously
repeating a compliment that men have
often paid to excellent women.
As tlu-y rode on tni'ough the black
t*ning twilight, he looked at her by
turns, though in ire in reverence than
regret. An earnestly good woman is
not tost to every man eX ;eptitig the one
that wins her wedlo-k.
When I think of those two, dra\Vn
through the sunless prarie air together
—Margaret’s phle face looking on and
at ttie stars, Jack’s turned aside to hers
—an 1 remembe ed the struggle set be
fore each, l wonder how any soul can
iin Igine we came into this life for ease,
and can evade our tusks like cruel chit
dren.
bIiAPTEk IT.
lii Ihe lute October days, Margaret
fell sick. Wlien Mrs. AmyrHJis grew
conscious <*f tlio fact —and site had to
jffi-ow into. eon.Mjiousnes* of it— great
was fier ni.stiing un.l wailinln vain
Margaret assured her she was ihit Very
ill—Hhat she was only tired, and must
rest. The lady felt sure the time had
come for them ‘to die in a Heap’ and,
from her manner* it did not seem the
best thing Unit could happen after all.
Margaret saw, through her lofty win
dow, the scregr.nvn prarUs; no amber,
and gold, and crimson frost bitten re
lieved their dullness; and her brain
grew duil as the prospect. Day and
night went rapidly by, leaving her weak
and spiritless.
lint one afternoon, in a time when
October was about to give over his
gleanings to the hands of November,
Margaret staggered from her cot, dress
ed and -trapped herself* and sat down
in her low rocker. The woman whom
it had required both love and money to
procure as her substitute hosekeeper,
cone ilp, and lifted her hands in lisloc
isrwient.
‘lf you wanted anything, why didn't
you call me?’ cried Mai Ilia reproach
fully. : * \
‘1 do not want anything,’ replied Mar
garet weakly, ‘except from that monot.
oiious bed.’
■l’ll make it up,’said Martha, going
at it vigorously. ‘lf your bed was uu
comfortable, you orto have told me.*
‘Go ! don’t mind it,’ pleaded Marga
ret, ‘I do uot need any attention now at
ail, and you must be tired.’
‘And when I’Ve done it,’ proceeded
Martha, who worked all the harder for
being asked not to, and was secretly
pleaded with Margaret’s solicitude, ‘l’m
a goiu to bring you up some chicken
broth; y iur mother’* had some, and
she likes it. it’s prario chicken, and
the broth’s good, and I’ll fry you some
of tne meal, if you’ll eat it/
‘1 know your broth is good,’ smiled
the sick girl, ‘and I shall like a little,
but I do uot want the try; and, Martha,
when you come back, lain going to
.n ike you s-it down in that chair and
uot n*>vo until I have finished eating.’
‘He! ha !■’ tittering Martha,- her
pleasure outshining the good nature m'-
lier face, ‘and l expect you and take all
the afternoon to eat in No, you don’t
ketch me restin’till rny work’sjdone. I
ain’t tired 1’
So Matha elattered down atairs, with
light heart though heavy shoes, and the
invalid turned her face to watch the
dull square of prarie her window gave
her. Suddenly a horse neiglied, and di
reottly across the dull oqnre he car
ried his rider, a large man, with abun*
dant whiskers.
‘Dear me !’ tlionght Margaret weari
ly, ‘I hope it isn’t one of those cattle
buyers again. He wili certainly work
father up into a high fever.’
She heard the stranger, after a little
space knock at the and inr; hut she heard
hlso her mother utter a little cry that
shot through her nerves, and shook her
brain from its lethargy to the keenest
sensibility,
Bhe bent forward and listened, living
a longer tune in that suspense, so far as
activity of the mind is concerned, tbay
the last months had seemed.
Bhe was not trembled with surprise,
therefore, but rather with the effort of
selfcontr<>l, when through the gap in
tlie curtains that her handmaid had left
she saw Walter Clevolier’s head and
smoulders appearing up the stairs
Margaret tried to rise but he put her
gently back, and kissed reverently the
white fingers she gave him. Ho then
placed a chair for himsslf near by.
‘You do not know how it .pains me
to find you thus,’ h« said, turniug his
dark tender eyes upon her.
Margaret curtained her own from the
glance. ‘I must not let you see how
utterly weak I am,’ she thought.—
though if lie knew, he would be too
generous to use his power. He was
always noble.
‘I shall soon be well again*’ she re
plied. ‘You see 1 Htn obliged to make
haste in my recovery, for father and
mother need me so much You are
making the tour of America V
‘Yes, and I could not forbear intruding
on my old friends.’
‘You afe heartily walcoine, Mr. Chev
alier, as my mother has no dou'it as
sured you.’ (‘I will give him loom, and
i will go down to tlie settee, decided
the provident little maiden, noiselessly.;
•And now, what tidings for exiles do
you bring from England ?’
*1 have not seen England since I last
saw you ?’ replied the gentleman.
Margaret looked up in astonishment.
‘Circumstances were such that I have
not found it necessary to visit England
for nearly three years.’
•It was nearly three years ago that
fattier was obliged to emigrate,’ said
Margaret innocently. ‘I am afraid
these years have told on my parents.'
‘I do not think,’ said M . Cbiveiier,
‘that Mrs. Amyrillis is nearly as much
changed as you are, Miss Margaret.’
Tne woman in her overmastered the
woman. Pain at the loss of his admi
ration throttled fear that he should
learn her secret * she lifted her suffering
eyes with a look that made this man’s
next words decided.
‘I have something to confide to you,
my old playmate, t have found a wife.’
Now the climax of all Margaret Amy
ril is's trials was reached. She t urned
cold us stone* Some women will un
derstand what a volcano surged be
neath her immovable crust. For, true
to fein.nine instincts, she gave him such
a calm aud frank 'I am glad, for you
mffst be happy,’ and such a decidedly
platonic touch from her cold hand, that
lie was disconcerted, hut citing to the
remembrance of that look.
‘ls she beautiful ?’ a-ked Margaret,
with brilliant spots springing to her
cheeks; ‘and will you return to Eugland
after your marriage V
‘She is very beautiful,’ replied the
gentleman reverently ; ‘and whether we
leturn to England will, «>f course, de
pend entirely upon herself.’
‘Oh 1 she is an Eastern lady, then 1
And of high rank, is she n*>t V
1 i’es, she wears a coronet.’
‘Aii l I uiuglud you will have Such
aposition,’ said Margaret, her eyes spark
ing s.ftly
‘lt will he a fine thing so me, who
have three great brothers between my
self and the paternal estates,’ laughed
Mr. Chevalier. ‘I am glad it pleases
you, too. Eveybody loVuS the lady 1
have chosen.’
‘But you haven't told wo her name,’
said the young sufferer* leaning her
weary cheek against her chair.
‘lt is—my little lamb! my Margue
rite ! my little patient saint, whom I
have sought so far and found so wor
thy 1’
The fOader, who cannot see the pan
liniinie in an author’s hriiu, is respect
f lly iiiforme 1 that during this rhapso
dy Mr. (J.ievelior held Miss Margaret
Arflyrillis in his arms, whether she found
herself with her midnight world inver
ted and turneO to the sun a great deal
quicker than such changes occur in Na
ture.
‘But you said, trembled Margaret,
abttost absorbed into him; sii closely
did the ardent lover hold his little saint,
‘that that she—had—a coronet 1’
‘And so she has, replied Walter, res
ting one hand. *1 have learned that
every eye on this prarie sees a holo of
goodness around her forehead/
‘But they love me —they are partial—
they are iriy friends, sobbed Margaret,
quivering with exctteigen.
‘And whom do we want td haVe par*
tial to us blit frietlda wtf loVe ?’ asked
Walter, with a great deal of aucouipa
ninuut of look and lip pressure.
Martha’s Head appeared ott the Stairs
at that instant; alfd was suddenly bob
bed almost Into tile bowl she carried.
The careful and busy damsel want tit
tering down. “That’S ’uuff siglit bet
ter for her than chicken brotfl,’ she an
nounced to the slignted bowl, tittering
over its very face as she set it on a cup
herd shelf.
Do you see the pidtifre ? Do you im
agine the raptuire of heart melting pure
ly i to heart ?
But I say reverently that Is dot Wot
thy to be a figure of the joy that shall
crown those who do Well hi faith, when
they are possed behind the Veil 1
U3C* frequently occurs in the
spring when the farmers are feeding
their cows upou rutabagas, or turnips;
that the infllk becOirL-s so strongly nn
pregnated by their disagreeable taste
and odor us to be unfit lor butter ma
king. To obviate tilts, put a pinch of
finely powdered saltpetre iuto every
gallon of erearnr.
At the last count there were 1,
238,000,000 human beings on the face
of the globe.
New York Lsttbr.
A gentleman, born and roared at the
North, and wiio is known to ihousands
at the South, has sent us the following
letter from New York. We will keep
it on fife in our office ;
Dtiar Sir .- I extract the following
from Harper’s Bazaar of Feb. 12. It
will doubtless be appreciated by the
readers of the Southern Home :
‘A I'ttle girl, nine years old, attending
a public school in- Manchester, Uonnec.
tion t, having failed to recite her geog
raphy lesson perfectly on a Thursday,
was required on Friday to repeat the
lesson for that day and the day before
failed again, and, as a punishment,
was required to stand on the floor in a
pass.ige-a ay, where there was a draft
of cold air, while she learned it. She
stood there for an flour, and afterward
was compelled to stand in the school
room five hours longer, till site learned
Thuiaday’s lesson, and for an hour more,
trying to learn Friday's, and was not
released until sometime after the other
scholars had been sent home. 6he is
said to have been full of health aud
spirits on Friday morning; but on Sat
urday her legs began to swell, and she
suffered intensely, soon becoming deliri*
ous, trying to learn Friday’s lesson
which was the occasion of her pfmish
went, and begging of her teacher leave
to take her seat After a few days ol
agony she died. An investigation was
made, and the teacher found guilty of
; error iu judgment.’ The error was a
very great and serious one.’
These are tlie good, pious (?) kind
hsarted philanthropists who sent their
missi ma y teachers to enlighten the be
nignted slaveholders, and raise the poor
down-trodden, negro to his tine position
in society, viz: political and social
equality with the white race ; and if
perchance the negro, in asserting his
claims to equaiity, should accidentally
remove his white neighbor to make
room for hunself, it will be accounted to
him an 'error in judgment? and his char
itable white teacher will tell him to ex
ercise a little forbearance. I vfould
suggest the propriety of our Northern
Journals, in their daily record of mur
ders, suicides, assassinations, &n., head
ing the list with * Error* in Judgment.'
When the faithful Northern historian
sha t record tlie valorous deeds of G ant,
Sherman & Cos , the humane butchers,
and But er, the Beast’ (who did rob
the tombs of New Orleans, and appro
priate certain tabie ware belonging to
helpless wotn -n, and who did not'take
Fort Fisher, but who did take a half
gallon or loss of. B mrbon a day,) they
will do well to embody all un-fer one
head of ‘Errors iu judgment.’ If our
Southern friends will insist on using
Northern school books and taking Noi*
them periodicals, let them not be offen
ded at tlie contents buts -t down every
thing that is olijectionable (even though
it white washes the negro, or ridicules
the gentleman) as ‘Errort in Jud/M;nt.'
Yours Truly,
—Southern Home.
The atUuwion of Lie people is
just now attracted toward the fluctua
non* irt the gold market, and the down*
ward tendency of.a few days past ex
cites muuh comment. The toiling s rug.
gling. tax paying millions have been
promised by the administration engin
eer Cheap goodss and less taxes An I
now they look upon all commodities as
high in price, with gold at llff, asori
the “black Friday” when it reached 160,
and have a ten so and increase in taxes.—
Tbe workingmen pay just as high a
price for every household necessity as
they did six months ago.—nut a cent
reduction, and they marvel at it. But
when they live longer they will feurn what
faith is to be put in Radical promisee,
and do what vile snliter!itg«n and tricks
their oppressors are susceptible, to fi! 1
their own pockets When gold takes
its inevitable leap upward, and tho ad
ministration pets have by this trick fill
ed their empty pockets, tlie toiling la
borers will comprehend tile extent of
this little S'-nsatiouai comedy in Wall
Street. —New York Democrat.
Cf>TTo>f Receipts.—-^ The receipts of the
staple at New Orleans up to the Ist in
stant amounted to 873,000 bales, about
equal to the entire receipts of last year*
which proves tiiat they will amount to
ov r a million the present season.
Tlie receipts at Savannah ilp t.d the
present time are, in round numbers,
387,000 bales, or nearly 40 000 bales
more than were received for the entire
season last year.
These reports frdm tiie two largest
cotton ports iff the riouth will afford
some data for estimates of tbe crop of
1860.— Sav. Republican.
Hundreds and thousands and
millions aud billions df robins afe perch
ed On the trees along Shaw’* Greek,
four miles from Hillsboro* N. G. Their
roost extends over hundreds of acres,
und they are picked off by thousands*
by pdrsdfis wlio travel a great many
miles to fill their bags upon “poor robin
red-breast.*’— Sentinel.
Shrinkage ix Slaughtering.—The
shrinkage of hogs in butchering vaiies
fftjirl one eights to one fourths o e the
gross weight. A well fattened bog that
Hits no’t been fed for sixteen or twenty
four hours before slaughtering and will
weigh 300 pounds gross* will weigh
about 200 pounds dressed. It is be
lieved that hogsnhat have attained ma
turity, or about twenty mouths old,
when fattened, will shrink less than
those that are from nine to twelve
months old. Beef cattle will, on the
average, shrink atwrnt 40 per cent, in
slaughtering i. e. the moat will equal
nearly (50 p;r cent, of the gross weight.
In the case of both cattle and sheep,
much dejiemls upon whether they are
well fattened, and some breeds, as short•
horns and south downs,- show legs
shrinkage than iftfier.
' B&. In Great Britain and Ireland,
and also in various parts of the conti
nent of Europe, weeding tongs, made of
W«iod *»r iron, shaped like laige pincers
and provided with grooves or teeth to
hold the plants, are used by farmers for
pu ting thistles out of ullage and past
ure laud.
V&* Milton Merrill dd, of Providence,
caught fi.ty-two rats in one night, by
exchanging a barrel of oats tfmt had
been often visited by rats far one of.wa
ter, Covering the surface with- dial?.—
Tbe varmints unsuspectingly pitched
Jf.j and; tact a watery grave.,
VOL. IV—NO. 18.
Appreciation of Real Estate is S;
vannah —At the City Marshal’s so
yesterday, lot No 61, Forsyth vVard, '
the southern portiou of the city, vr
sold f<ir $4,575, being an increase oyi
the city valuation of $2,075, said 1
having been only recently valued by tli
the City Assessors at 2,500. We and
rect attention to this sale as indicatin
the rapid appreciation of real estate i
Savannah. The lot of ground nbov
mentioned is unimproved, and is locate
in a part of the city whion, but a fe
months ago, was a waste common, »>ve
grown with weeds and wild sh übber
It is, however, in a portion of the cii
domain which is fast being occupied b
improvements, and which must, in
short time, become one of l he most pop
ous and elegant quarters of the city.-*
The lots on the right and left of Fo
syth Park, extending South, occupyin
the ridge of the water shed between th
eastern and western slopes, arc eligihi
in every respest for private residence!
the street railway, present and proi
pective, making that section conveuicn
ly accessible from the business centre*
Those desirous of investing in city res
estate will do well to give this luculit
attention before the lots appreciate' !>•
beyond their present estimated
Savannah Morninj Newt.
To What We are Coming.—Wm
dell Ph ilips in a lecture before a
ton audience, recently said :
“If you need an amendment to th
Constitution, make it; but I do not be
lieve it. The XlVth Amendment cov
era it. If necessary plant a squad u
soidiers in every voting district in th
thirty eight States, but lot the flag c
the Union protect its own citixons whei
ever it floats. fApplause.J Aunounc
the principle that whenever a Slat
neglects its duty, whenever forty house
holders ,11 any district call upon th
Union to protect its own ballot box, tba
it shall be the duty of tiie President u
the United States to send a compauy
or regiment, into that section, and, soi
that the pulls are kept peacefully open
Disauamo.—A Yankee school-marm
who has been engaged in teaching j
colored school in this city for sever.)
months, was arrested yesterday upon i
warrant issued by a Justice of Peace
charging her with seducing a colored
•nan, the husband of the colored womar
at whose instance the warrant was is
sued. The testimony tended to provt
that the parties were found in the eam«
bed at th* same time. The school
marrn appealed to the magnanimity o
the colored lady, with many tears, and
promised her that in case she wouk
withdraw the prosecution she (tht
school-marm) would never seduce tin
culind gentleman again, whereupon th«
culled lady relented, and the case wu<
amicably settled.
The school-marm is fair, fat and for
ty, and the culhu! gentleman, who was
so I need by her charms, is between fifty
a.id sixty years of age-— Sav. Republic**
Ax I.XTEKESnStt Calculatiox — Th
Portsmouth (N. 11) States and Unio
makes the following statement and cal
dilation, which aim >st every transae
tion in United S;a ! es bonds will verife
It says; We know a man—and then
are thousands of just each Cases—who
in 1862, had sil)Jt) in go'd. H e sold it
for $2401) in g<callbacks in 1863.
With those greenbacks ho bought $240)
in bonds. These bonds, of course, co>.
him just SIOOO in gold. For seven
years he has drawn six per cent, an
uually, also in gold, ou the face of hi
bonds. Six per cent, simple interest
on $2400, is $144 per anuum. For thi
seven years, it has amounted to SIOOO
or eight dollars more than he investei
ic the first place, reckoning only simp’
interest. Now, the Mirror say* :
him thO face of his bonds in gold, or, ii
other words, pay him $2400 in gold so
what cost bun oitiy SIOOO. So now, »
the end of seven years, be receives
Principal, $2400; interest, $1008; to
tal $3408 tu gold, for what cost him on
ly SIOOO. It is a net profit of rnoi
than 240 per cent.
A SIGX FROM THE GoLD ROOM —.
New York correspondent of a Puilade
phia paper writes :
“To prove how little confidence th
operators themselves have in the pertna
nency of the gold room, I need morel
to mention that where lasi year the
asked a bonus of $2 500 for a Gold Ex
change membership there, they ask to
day only SIOOO, and SOOO is all that i
costs to become a member of the Goh
-Boom.”
A Remarkable Case of tjie Susfen
sro.v of Life.—A daughter of /osiul
King, brother of ex-Governor King o
linode Island* now lies dead in Stou
mgton, Connecticut, yet such is the ru
markable preservation of her feature
and complexion, and such the retentioi
of warmth in the body, ibat the be*
medical men are iu doubt as to wbelb
er the case is one of actual death or oi
ly temporarily suspended animalion.-
All the ordinary testa of life and deat
lead to tbe inference that she is reall
dead* while absence of other phenomu
uu of death leads to a counter cooclii
sion. The case is c.msiderd oae of th j
most reuiarkable on record. It will no
only start new discussions in tho scier
tifij world, but it will biiug into impot
tance the inventions for protecting th
buried against the dangers of the grav
or vault, where inanimation is in doubt
Chinese Coming. —A corresponded
writes to the Savannah Hepub imn a
follows: “I learn from a friend in Bon
Kong, under date of the ,Ith January
that two Southern gentlemen, Meesn
Gift and Williams, were then the?
mating arrangements t) send one thoi
sand Chiu*;.,e laborers to Savannah an
New Oilcans, My correspondent add
•oat these gentlemen found no difficult
in engaging the Chinese. He do-.s no
however specify tbe terras of their cot
rads.”
A Goon Thing.— Tb-rs Coven ion t
the Methodist, Church, at Syracuse, N
Y., the head quartern of Spiritual iei
and Abolitionism bus resolved to mak
no efforts at re-union with tho Meth<
dist Church Smith. This was tbe rigl
tiling ill the right phet, — Exchange,
Down on ths Da itKiy.—After Brat in
the everlasting nigger a
to fume aud fortune, lives I
JJ* r T C< ’. n - better spare Afn<
. !'" r . L^ingffoo”— a continent
blacks throne Vhibj qg?-