As Cresus rich ;-I'm sure What a confusion ! all stand up erect- These bow in honest duty and respect; Meet gratitude for such kind condescension ? “This is indeed beyond my comprehension :" But wisdom none can borrow, none can lend !" 66 DU GUESCLIN'S RANSOM. HOWITT. [This capital ballad may vie with almost any of the metrical romances of yo olden time.” It gives a graphic delineation of the days of chivalry-and of the noble sentimenis that surcbarged the breasts of the Knights Paladins. Duglesclin's words should peal out like the strong notes of a silver trumpet, and his attitude and manner should be that of a brave warrior sans peur et sans reproche.) THE black Prince Edward sate at meat Amid his chivalrie, And the rosy wine ran free: And the Priuce sate on the dais, Upon that day of grace : 66 And some they told the jester's tale, And some they gaily sang, Valenciennes There sate an aged knight, Had dimmed his spirits light; Doth mar our heartsome cheer! Sir knight, do battle with thy woe, Or stay no longer here." “ My liege,” said he, “my soul is dark With pondering on the wrong, Within a dungeon strong, To hear the small bird's song, Thou’rt blamed for his thrall, Even by the knights at thy right hand, And the fair dames in the hall !" “ He shall be free !” Prince Edward said, “No longer on a name, Shall rest unknightly shame! Myself will do him right.” Was brought the prisoned knight. Quoth Edward, " Thou’rt a noble knight Name now thy ransom fee, Thy ransom it shall be !" Stood proudly in the ring, From thrall a captive king; Prince Edward's brow grew darkly red; “Sir Knight, I say thee nay; Such ransom as thou nam'st, by Heaven, No Christian knight could pay !" Three paces stepped Du Guesclin on, And haughtier grew his brow, By such a man as thou ! a The sum would not gainsay, • My ranson they would pay ; All men of high degree, Would sell to make me free; Throughout this chivalrous land, To free me from thy hand.” W Give me thy hand !” said he, And thou honorest chivalrie, Unransomed, thou art free!" And they sate till set of sun, “ 'Twas a fair deed nobly done.' Next morning, on his gallant steed, With his own good sword and lance, The bravest man of France; In the sunshine shouted free, To France and chivalrie!" TEMPTATIONS OF LARGE CITIES. DEWEY. (This is an extract from a discourse delivered in the city of New York, by one of our most eloquent preachers and excellent men. The lessons are inculcated in powerful and elegant sentences; and bould be delivered in strong earnest tones, commensurate in solem. nity with the terrible truths enunciated.] How many youth are there, alas ! and must we say of both sexes? who came from their native hills, pure as the streams that gush forth at their side, and have found in our city, allurement, enticement, pollution, poverty, disease, and premature death. Look at that young man, if indeed vice and misery have left him yet young; look at him as he stands in the early morning, perhaps, at the entrance of some porter-house or grog-shop, pale, irresolute, destitute, friendless, not knowing where to go, or what to do; fix your eye, ay, and a compassionate eye, upon him for one moment, and I will tell you his history. A few years only have passed over him, since he was the cherished member of a ppy country-home. It was at that period that his own inclination, or family straits, led him to seek his fortune abroad in the world. What a moment is that, when the first great tie of nature is broken; the tie to home! The long pent-up and quiet tenderness of family affection swells in the eye of the mother, and trenibles at her heart, as she busies herself with the little preparations necessary for the departure of her son ; her charge, till now, from infancy. At length the day comes for him to bid adieu to the scenes of his early life. Amidst the blessings and prayers of kindred, with many precious words spoken to him, he turns away, himselt moved to tears perhaps, as he catches the last glance of the holy roof of his childhood. He comes to the great city; and for a time, probably, all is well with him. Home is dear at his heart, and the words of parental caution and of sisterly love are still in his ears; and the new scenes seem strange, and almost sad to him. But, left alone in the city throng, he must seek companions. And here, alas ! is his first great peril. Could he have been acquainted with but two or three virtuous and agreeable families, with whom to pass his leisure hours, all might still have been well. But left to chance for his associates, chance is but too likely to provide him with associates that will tempt him to go astray: Their apparently honest wonder at his country simplicity, their ridicule of his fears, their jeers at his doubts and scruples, ere long wear off the first freshness of virtue. He consents, for experiment's sake, it may be, to take one step with his evil advisers. That step sets the seal of doora upon his whole after career. Now, and from henceforth, every step is downward-downward-lownward-till, on earth, there is no lower point to reach. And what though for a while he maintain some outward decency! What though he dress well and live luxuriously, and amass wealth to pamper his vices! It is but a cloth of gold spread over the fatal gangrene, that is eating into his vitals, and bis very heart ! But, oftei, instead of that cloth of gold, are the rags beggary, or the garb of the convict. Vice is expensive and of wasteful. It wants means at the same time that it is losing credit. It must, without a rare fortune, descend to beggary or crime. How often does it find both mingled in its bitter cup! How many are there in this city who have descended from the high places of honor and hope, to a degradation of which once they never dreamed as possible! Alas! how sad is the contrast between what that man is and what he once was! But a little time ago, and he knew gentle nurture, and the music of kind words, and the holy serenity of nature, and quiet rural labor; the peace and plenty of a country-home were around him; and a mother's gentle tone, and a sister's kind voice, were in his ears; and words of sweet and solemn prayer rose each morning and evening, perhaps, beneath the venerable roof where he dwelt; and now-in the prison or the poor-house, or in some dwelling more desolate, pent up with stiffling filth and squalid wretchedness, amidst oaths, and blows, and blasphemies, he is pursuing his dark and desperate way to a grave, that already yawns to receive him ! And when he is buriedm" his pale forin shall not be laid with many tears” beneath the green fresh sod of his native fields; but he shall be hurried and huddled into some charnel-house, unwept, unhonored, unblessed, even there, where “the wicked cease from troubling, and the weary are at rest!" A REAL KING, From the Rev. JAMES WHITE's play THE KING OF THE COMMONS CHARACTERS. JAMES V., King of Scotland, [The subject matter of this play is illustrative of some of the inci. dents, highly romantic and dramatic, in the life of the gallant Scottish King James the Fifth. The portion that we have selected is where the monarch, having been rescued from assassination by a youth named Malcolm Young, interests himself in his behalf-the text explains the manner of his doing so. James is a fine bluff, hon |