"X.. i era ee & s WEEKLY VOL. 1. GREENSBOROUGH, SATURDAY MORNING, JUNE 18, 1836. NO. a From' the Southern Literary Messenger. The following beautiful reply to the stan zas of Mr. Wilde published in the first number of the Messenger, is attributed to Mrs. Buckley, the wife a distinguished cit izen of Baltimore, a lady whose fine taste and poetic capacity are most happily dis played in these touching lines. The an swer is a very perfect counterpart of Mr, Wilde's stanzas, asnd if we were called on to decide upen their relative iricrits we do not know which of the two would niost demand our admiration. ANSWER, TO " MY LIFE IS LIKE THE SI" MM Ml ROSE." The dewa of night may fall from Heaven, Upon the wither'd rose's bed, And tears of fond regret be given, To mourn the virtues of the dead : Yet morning's sun the dews will dry, And tears will fade from sorrow's eye, Affection's pangs had lull'd to sleep, . And even love forget to weep. The tree may mourn its fallen leaf, And autumn winds bewail its bloom, And friends may heave the sigh of gric O'er those who sleep within the tomb : Yet soon will spring anew the llowers, And time will bring more smiling hours; In friendship's heart all grief will die, And even love forget to sigh. ,wThj; se a may on the desert shorn Lament-each f recent Tiears away ; The lonely heart its grief may pour O'er cherish'd friendship's tat decay ; Yet when all trace is lost and gone, The waves dance bright and gaily on : Thus soon affection's bonds are torn, Arid even love forgets to mourn. From the Sew York Mirror. The Table Turned -A Tale of "Leap Year. X . BY A YOUTH ABOUT TOWN. Reader, did you ever, in your boyish days, (for I assume, on my own responsibility, the fact that you were once young,) when your utmost literary fclieity was the .possession of a few leaves, by courtesy called a book, and filled with pictures arrayed in colors, far surnnssin? in brilliancy .the bungling at- j - rfJy- v . tempts of Dame Nature ; did you ever, while in the halcyon state of existence, meet with a little work, roprcscntinghe world turned upside down fishes angling lor men, (alas, for poor I sack-Walton-!) horses -drawn by their former drivers, (alas for our omnibus Jehu3?) and divers other such ingenious devices ? If you are so very fortunate as to hare setm tM then only can you form any conception of the state of anarchy now existing in the masculine-feminine world. The sun was brightly beaming, on the second day of the new-year, upon two fair dnmsels, who had ascended almost at the same instant, the step of a young batchelor's lodgings in Broadway. The bell was rung, and while they arc waiting its response, will honor you, my reader, with an intro duction to them ; so that, should one of them chance to loose her footing, you may be at liberty to pick her up. When I saw that the damsels were fair, I spoke meta phorically only; for though Miss Dorolhea Bridget Beaumont was fair as the white of your eye, ma belle reader, and was blessed with locks as rosy as your cheek our oth er heroine, Miss Emeline Julia .Adclgilha Stubbs, reminded you rather of the dark, downy blush on the peach, which tells how rich the soil of sweetness dwells within. For my own part I must confess a lurking ,,prefergn thi Stubbs ; especially as the odious last frajgment of her name may be easily chan ged of course supposing the lady to be willing. By this time the door must be open, so we will allow Pompey to usher the ladic9 into the drawing room, and then to call his master, who is in his study. Our hcroinesj when left alone together, gazed on each other with eyes full of ire, each instinctive ly divining the purpose of the other. Looks -were followed by words : and these might (I write with the fear of the fair sex before my eyes) have hcen succecdod by deeds, had not the Fates interposed in the form of the beloved Thomas Smith, (I like to dis tinguish my hejocs by name, as well as by character, from the common herd of man kind) upon whose entrance the aroused waves of passion subsided to a dead calm, and the mountainous sea of their anger be came as flat and as plain as themselves. " Well, ladies," cried Thomas Smith, af ter the usual salutations, "to what am i in debted for the pleasure of this visit ?" Miss Stubbs blushed, and Miss Beau mont sentimentally cast down her eyes, and applied her vinaigrette to the protuberance just below them. "Ah!" sighed Miss Dorothea, .." have youforg 'fon that it is leap year?" with another sigh. " You know our privilege," with a smile. " You must be sensible of vour attractions" with a fond look, called, in vulgar parlance, a sheep's eye, a very appropriate term on the present occasion. " You will forgive my apparent forward ness," with an attempt at a blush, " and at tribute it to the overflowing of my heart to ward you, my dear Thomas," with a sigh, a blush, and some symptoms of a tear. " I am aware, Mr. Smith," said Miss Em eline, in her turn, " that I am overstepping the limits which custom has prescribed to my sex, but I disdain such narrow prejudi ces. I have long loved you, hopelessly, but constantly. While you have lavished your attentions on those who valued them not, I have hoarded up the t most trilling word which you have chanced to bestow upon me, and brooded over it in secret, as the miser over his treasure. I need not now recall my alternate fears and hopes; the ccstacy into which a kind look of yours has often thrown me, or the bitter desponden cy into which I have sunk,, when careless ly noticed by you. May you never feel the agonies which I have suffered ! I now cast the. bigoted fetters of , prudery, and o bcyingonly the dictates of my heart, I avow my ardent, despairing love." " Really, Indies," said Mr. Smith, " I should be very happy to oblige either of you or both, but unfortunately you are a day Uhi -late ffor I w marri&l 4atighi-" A flood of tears relieved Miss Emeline, and a fit of hysterics Miss Dorothea. Just at this crisis, Pompey entered with an e longated visage, and whispered " Massa ! massa ! three more ladies at the door, come a courting!" 44 Surely," sighed the half distracted Tho mas, as he rushed out of the room," surely it must have been a leap-year that forced Cowper to exclaim M Oh, for a lodge in some vast wilderness." ., Selected for the Beacon. YEGETABIJi HlEROOIJI'IIlCiJ. . LILAC.- FIRST SENSATIONS OF LOVE. The lilac has been consecrated to the first sensation of lovoj because nothing is more delightful thanthe approach of spring, of which this flower is the messenger. The frcshnes3 of its verdure, the flexibility of its branches, the abundance of its blossom their beauty, so short, so transient their color, so tender and varied all recall those emotions which embellish beauty and give grace to youth. Trj pWirrter has ever been able to Wend colors soft euough or fresh enough to por- tray the velvet delicacy and sweetness of those light tints on the forehead of youth. Van Spaendonck himself, unrivalled in flower-painting, let fall his pencil before a bunch of lilac. The graduation of co lor, from the purple bud to the open flow er, is the least atttraction of those charm ing masses, around which light plays and loses itself in a thousand shapes; all of which, blending in the same tint, form that harmony which makes the painter despair. What a re-union of perfume, of freshness, of grace,' of delicacy, of detail, and of a j whole ! There seems no sufficient reason alleged from cither nature or mythology, why the almond-tree should represent fickleness; but the fact connected with its blossoms may -be;, new to some, although they have often seen it; and it is prettily told. THE ALMOND TREE FICKLENESS. : An emblem of fickleness, the amond-trec is the first to answer the call of spring. No thinff hai a more lovely, effect than this tree, when it appears in the first days of trees still unclothed. I he latter frosts of ten destn y the precocious germ of its fruit ; but, by a singular effect, the flowers, far from being injured, appear to have gained fresh brilliancy. An avenue of almond trees, quite white in the evening, struck with the frost in the night, will appear rose color the next morning, and will preserve this new dress for more than a month, and only relinquish it for the green foliage. Sometimes the origin of the emblem is traced to a story, sometimes to an anecdote. Here are two of the latter. SCARLET GERANIUM FOLLY. The Baroness de Stacl was always angry if an untallented man was introduced to her. A friend one day hazarded presenting to her a young Swis$ officer of captivating ap- pearance. The lady, deceived by nis good looks .exerted herself, and said a thousand flattering things to the new comer, whom she thought at first struck dumb with sur prise and admiration: however, as he lis- tenen tor an nour wunoui opening ms moum she began to mistrust his silence, and ask ed him such pointed questions thathe wasi obliged to answer. Alas' the poor man could only utter nonsense. -' Madame de Stael, piqued at having thrown away her trouble and her wit, turned towards her friend and said: ."In good truth, sir, you resemble my gardocr, who thought he should gratify me by bringing a geranium but I must tell you that I sent back his flower, requesting that I might never sec it again." Why, then i"askedtheyoungman, quite aghast. " Sir, you must know, the geranium is a flower well dressed in scar let ; it pleases our eyes, but when we gen tly press it, we can only extract an insipid scent." Saying these words she arose, lea ving the cheeks of the young fool as red as his coat, or as the flower to which he had just been compared. A WHITE AND RED ROSE. The poet Bonncfous, sent the object of his affection two roses, one .white and the other of the most brilliant carnation ; the white to represent the paleness of his coun tenance, and the carnation the warmth of his heart. A FANCY. Every thing is to be gained from good company,, . " One day," says the poet Sadi, " I saw a rose tree surrounded by a tuft of grass. What I exclaimed, has this plant done, that we find it the companion of ro ses ? and I was going to uproot the turf, when it humbly said:-"Spare me; I am no rose it is true, but by my scent, you may know at least I have lived among roses." For two centuries this tree has inhabited our climate, but docs not yet deign to mix its proud head with the otjier trees of our forests ; it loves to embellish parks, to adorn chatcaus, and to shade the dwellings of kings. Standing alone, nothing can equal the elegance of its pyrimidal form, the beau ty of its foliage, and the richness of its flowers, which give it the appearance of an immense lustre covered with crystals. Friend of pomp and riches, it covers with flowers the green turf -which it protects, oads the atmosphere with perfume, and of fers to luxury a delightful hadef but it be stows on the poor on Ij useless timber and bitter fruit sometimes granting him the uttancc of fuel from its dried leaves. Naturalists and physicians have given to this child of India a thousand good quali ties which it does not possess. Thus this rec, like the rich man on whom it lavishes ts charms, finds flatterers, does a little good in spite of itself, and astonishes the vulgar by a useless display. Here is something analogous to the fall seaow.-'-:""-u,-"-"-"-'-';--'-;- " :- - WITHERED LEAVES SORROW MELANCHOLY. Winter approaches : the trees have lost their verdure, after being deprived of their fruits the retiring sun tints the foliage with deep or melancholy shades the poplar re scmblcs discolored gold the accacia folds up its light seed-vessels, no more to be arou scd by the sun the long tresses of the birch float in the air, already deprived of ornament and the pine, destined to pre serve its green pyramid, proudly balances it in the breeze. The oak is immoveable ; it resists the efforts of the wind to despoil its lofty head : but tho king of the forest will yield to spring, its leaves reddened by winter. We might imagine all the trees affected by different passions ; one, lowly bending, as if rendering homage to that tree which the tempest cannot shake ; the oth- er, appcanngl as u it would emoracc jls companion, the supporter of its weakness ; and whilst these mingle their branches to getlier, a third trembles in every leaf, as if surrounded by enemies: respect, lnenu ship, hatred, and anger, pass by turns from one to the other. Thus assailed by every ridrind, passion, we hear their lengthened wailings ; like the confused murmurs of an alarmed populace, there wpreraihng -voice, imt a heavy, deep, and monotonous sound, which fills the soul with vague terror. We often See clouds of dead leaves fall ing on the ground and covering it with a beautiful vesture. Wre like to look at the storm, which drives, disperses, agitates, and torments, these sad wrecks of a spring which will re turn no more. Spectator. Written for the Deacon. "ALL'S WELL THAT ENDS WELL," Thought I, a3 I was jogging along one plea. sant morning in the county of , in this State, on the day after the events of my present narrative h'ad transpired. ' It was about 2 o'clock, P. M., when I left the house of my hospitable friend, regardless of his frequent proposals that 1 should re' main over night, and the appearance of approaching rain. For the first several miles fZ) I met with no one, and from the silence which pre vailed around me, and the increas ed darkening of the sky, I became lost in thought, a melancholy and dreary mist o er shadowed my mind, in unison with the drea. ry appearance without, and in thus ruminat ing on things passed, scenes of my home til, WJKMJ1jlftM. . .r.r., ..v..... ..- v. . , ...V. . ..- ... .. ... r m " of my childhood, my thoughts naturally turned, and clung with fondest delight, to the mind's image of her, who had then been my all, and if possible my idol ; and being of a somewhat singular disposition, I com posed the following lines, which, poor as they are, I nevertheless beg leave, to force on the reader, as they proceeded from a bo som fired with all the ardor of youthfirf lope : The world may scorn and bid me flee, This ruinous passion love ; And friends unite in winning strain My folly to reprove ; May warn me, but alas ! too late, To ."Finn love's rugged ways, They little know what passion deep My every action sway& No, no, though severed from thee now, My thoughts are with thee still, Though thou mayst look on me with 6Corn, Yet love I must and love I will. Nought can persuade me to believe, That thou to me art false, Nought better prove that thou still lov'st As once I know thou didst, Than once again to view thy form, And gently flowing hair, Once more to view thy soft blue eye, And read love's language there, Till that blest pleasure I enjoy, I'll fondly dream of thee, And none find place in this true heart, " KdVTOrHoT one tart lhee7 " I had scarce finished my youtful effusion, when 1 was aroused from my reverie by a smart shower, which forced me to put up my pencil and urge on my steed, finding that I had been coming but slowly for the ast few hours, and night was approaching. After proceeding a short distance I had the good fortune (as I thought) of meeting a second person, of w hom I could inquire the distance to the house I had contemplated stopping at for the night ; -but on approach ing nnd addressing mm, I received nothtng in reply but an idiotic grin ; I repeated my inqairvi but to no purpose-f I Aben pokei another language, thinking he might. not understand plain English, and however I succeeded in squeezing from out his thin ned brain somewhat moro intelligible words and gestures, I was far from being satisfied. So after again repeating the interrogation with no better success, and being not at the I time in a mood to be fooling, or to be made a fool of, I bade him a good evening, and proceeded onward at a brisk pace, and in not a very good humor, as in addition to the cotor'tfa tion of the evening, twas now quite late, and no house nearer than several miles; but at length arrived at the long looked for abode, was soon seated beside a comforta ble log fire, and my weary companion doubt- ess snugly provided for. Of the company here, and other matters about the house, the reader will please form the best idea possible until next w eek, when he shall again hear from A WAINDEKL.ll. TI I d CHURCH-YARD. You have f iiintercd, perhaps, of a moon light evening, out of the precincts ol the livin"-, moving world, to linger and contem plate among the grass grown, memorials of those who are gone - "The body to its place, the soul to heaven's grace, And the rest in God's own time." An appalling chill shoots through the current of life, at the undisturbed and uni versal silence of the scene the stars tran quilly shining otithe -'white-jnarbkj nml free- iy illuminating mo name,, h iucu ineimmi had carved for the slumbefer beneath ; here the "'grass- waving injankiuiiuiaoce, as if to hide the triumphs and the tropaics ot death, and there a human bone unearthed from its timeworn sepulchre, a ghastly vis itor to the realms of day ; a wooden tablet, making the repose of the -humble ; a cross, the sign of the believer, and lofty and mag nificent memorials over the mortal relics of the wealthy and the great. Ah! who, in such an assemblage as this, can be accoun ted great ! What gold survives the cruci ble of death. We can learn nothing from tho living w hich the dead do not teacn us. Would beauty be modest and unpretending, let her quit the hall and the festival for a moment, . a Iff i and carry her toilet to the tomb. Would the proud learn humility; the penurious charity ; the frivolous seriousness ; the big oted philantbrophy ; would the scholar a certain the true objects of knowledge ; the man of the world, the true means of happi ncss here and hereafter ; and the ambitious, the true source of greatness ; let him re tire awhile from the living and commun with 4he dead. vWe must all come to th mournful and silent grave. Our bones nrist mingle in one common mass. Our nrlec tioo should travel in the same path, for they must terminate in one fearful issue. Life is full of-facillties of virtue and Of h;n- . ' ' i a l aL 1 pmcss ; ana wnen vou wouta auusc uiem, go purify your affections, and humble your pride, and leave your hopes at the tomb of u friend, when the stars are shining upon U like the glorious beams of religion on tho mansion of death. - THE BACHELOR'S SOLILOQUY". We are informed there is in the other world, a place prepared for maids and bach elors called Fiddler's Green, where they arc condemned for the lack of good fellow ship in this world, to dance together to all eternity. One of a party, who had been conversing on this subject, after returning home, had his brain so occupied with it, that in a dream he imagined himself dead, and translated. to this scene of incessant fiddling and dancing. After describing Lis journey to these merry abodes'of hopping shades, he says, that on passing the Con fines, he perceived a female figure advan cing w ith a rambling rapid motion, resem bling a hop;skij)andjump. Uc now cast his eyes ori his own person, as a genteel spirit would naturally do, at the approach of a female, and for the first time suw, that although he had left Jiis substance in tho other world, he was possessed of an airy form precisely similar to the one he had 1 ! tb?li:nl hi'OjJind yvaslad htlia ghost of- -a suifof clothes made after the new est fash ion, which he had purchased a few day s be fore his death. As the figure came near she slackened her pace, and struck into a beautiful chase forward, at the same timo N mo'ioiiing to him to cross a rivulet, which he no sooner did, than he fell a dancing with incrc.iscd agility. 11c is then conducted, or rather whirled awuy by his fair companion, to the mana ger of the green, where he lias an opportu nity 01 beholding the congregated cehbicy of the place. The grotesque oppearaiicu of the various groupes particularly amused " Mm" Tl ToLythe Monkish cowl, tb? Monastic veil, ii d tile blankets and fr-ith.rsof the Indian, were mixed in luocious contript. Iho allotment of partners was equally diverting. "A gentleman in ah embroidered suit led off a be.'gar girl, while a broad shoul- red Mynheer flountcd with an Italian countess. Queen Elizabeth was dancing a jig with a jolly cobbler, a person of great bonhommic, but w ho failed not to apply tho strap when his stately partner moved with -agility- than ''com'prfMwriKltHiom--- His attention was then arrested by-the ap pearance of a spare looking gentleman, ad vancing to the genius of the place in his glee. Poor man ! he had no sooner como ip to the group of ladies, than a tall, swar thy, lantern-jawed, antiquated virgin,' rai scd her foot as a challenge for him. to dance, whereupon they both fell to, and " had danced six months when 'he left them, w ithout any propect of cessation. Among all the productions and inventions of human wit, none is more admirable and useful than Writing, by means whoreofa man may copy out his very thoughts, utter us mind without opening his mouth, and signify his pleasure at a thousand miles !' stance; and this by the help of twenty-four Iv'tters, by various joining and infinite com binations of which. all words that are attain able ami imaginable may be framed, and tho several ways of joining, altering, and trans posing these letters, do amount (as Ualvm the Jesuit has taken pains jto compute) to 5,B36,T39,4f;964,uO::ways,so thai all things that arc in heaven and. earth mav be expressed by the help of this wonderful alphabet, w nich may be comprised in tho compass of a farthing. Three excellent things, and of great utility, aro Reading, Conversation, and Re flection. By reading we treat with tho dead; by conversation, with the living; and by reflection with ourselves. Reading ep. riches tho memory, conversation polishes the mind, and reflection forms the judg ment. But of these noble employments of the soul, were we to say which we think the most important, we must confess that reading seems the ground work of the oth er two, since without reading, contempla tion is fruitless, and conversation, dull and insipid. A long life" may be passed without find ing a friend in, whose understanding and virtue we can equally confide, and w hoso opii.:on we can value at once forits just, ness and sincerity. A weak man, however honest, is not qualified to judge. A man of the.worl.l, however penetrating, is not fit io counsel. Friertds arc often ,choscn for similitude of manners, and therefore e: ch paliatcs iiw other's failing, because they ar his own. Frie ids are tender, end un-. willing to give oain, or they are interested aiid fearful to offend. AAraon. J- , -fc..- .jt.-.