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Again I would steal unnoticed into her room, and listen as she recited strange events of history, which made my young blood run cold, and my heart beat so violently that I was glad to discover myself, and ask some favor at her hands. At last I came to spend a great deal of time in her apartment; and Aunt Alice would relate to me, in the same passionless style, long-forgotten stories of our house; marked passages of history relating to it; and a minute and almost tedious narrative of historical events, relative to any subject I chose to start. These were always entirely free from the ordinary gossip with which lovers of the marvellous are apt to lard their stories, and therefore produced the stronger impression. Of course Aunt Alice was familiar with the prophecy to which I have alluded; but she only spoke of it as a historical fact, and by no persuasion or artifice could she be induced to give an opinion of its application; neither would she listen to any from another person; so that my morbid fears found no relief from her. Treated with marked respect by my father and all the family; allowed to have her will in every thing; this very remarkable woman lived among us like a spirit of another world. She came and went unquestioned; continued year after year, pursuing the same round of strange employments; solitary and soulless; having no sympathy with her sex, no feeling with her kind.

THE DYING YEAR.

BY MISS MARY GARDINER

WITH dirge-like music, low

Sounds forth again the solemn harp of Time;
Mass for the buried hours, a funeral chime
O'er human joy and wo.

The sere leaves wail around thy passing bier;
Speed to thy dreamless rest, departing year!

Yet ere thy wing has swept

O'er the wide threshold of the shadowy past,
Give back the treasures to thy bosom cast,
The harvest earth has wept:

Give back the lily's bloom and violet's breath,

The summer leaves that bowed before the reaper Death.

Give back the dreams of fame,

The aspirations strong for glory won;

Hopes that went out perchance when set thy sun,
Nor left nor trace nor name:

Give back the wasted hours, half-uttered prayer,
The high resolves forgot that stamp thy annals fair.

Give back the flow of thought

That woke within the poet's yearning breast,
Hushing its wild and passionate unrest:

Love's rainbow visions wrought

Shelter-Island.

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Give back the kindly words we loved so well;
Voices whose music on the spirit fell

But tenderness to pour:

The steps that never now around us tread,

Faces that haunt our sleep; give back, give back the dead!

Give back!-who shall explore
Creation's boundless realms to mark thy prey?
Who mount where man has never dreamed to sway
Or Science dared to soar?

Oh! who shall tell what suns have set for aye,
What worlds gone out, what systems passed away?

Not till the stars shall fall,

And earth and sky before God's presence flee,
Shall human vision look or spirit see

Beneath thy mystic pall:

But hark! with accent clear and flute-like swell

Floats up the New-Year's voice. Departed one, farewell!

As the bright flowers wake from their wintry tomb,
I've sprung from the depths of futurity's gloom;
With the glory of Hope on my unwritten brow,
But a fear at my heart, earth welcomes me now.
I come and bear with me the fetterless flow
Of infinite joy and of infinite wo:

The banquet's light jest and the penitent prayer,
The sweet laugh of gladness, the wail of despair;
The warm words of welcome, and broken farewell,
The strains of rich music and funeral knell;
The fair bridal wreath and the robe for the dead,
Oh! how will they meet in the path I shall tread!
Oh! how will they mingle where e'er I pass by,
As sunshine and storm in the rainbow on high!

Yet start not, nor shrink from the race I must run,
I've peace and repose for the heart-stricken one;
And strength for the weary who fail in the strife,
And falter before the great warfare of life.
I've love for the friendless; a morrow of light
For him who is wrapped in adversity's night;
With trust for the doubting; a field for the soul,
That has dared from its loftier purpose to stroll,
To haste to the conflict and blot out the shame
With the deeds of repentance and resolute aim;
To seek mid the struggle with tempters and sin,
The high meed of virtue triumphant to win.

Unsullied and pure is the future's broad scroll,
And as leaf after leaf from its folds shall unroll:
The warp and the woof, they are woven by me,
But the shadows and coloring rest, mortal, with thee!
"Tis thine to cast over their brightness and bloom
The sunlight of morning or hues of the tomb.
The past will give back from its fathomless sea
The hues of thy spirit unaltered to thee;
As the clear lake reflects in its silvery breast
The dyes of the sun as he sinks to his rest.
Though darkness and sorrow to all must be given,
There's a vista of light that leads up to Heaven;
Nor utterly starless the path thou hast trod,
Till thy heart prove a traitor to thee or to GOD.

THE BENCH AND BAR OF VERMONT.

ANECDOTES OF THE SAME."

THERE are many excellent stories of the Bench and Bar of Vermont, very current among the good people of the State, which however I do not remember to have seen in print, and which I dare say are little known abroad. Some of these I shall here set down precisely as I heard them from the mouth of an old lawyer, who is well known as the Nestor of the gown and wig in Vermont. If it should turn out, as it often happens in matters of this sort, that any of the incidents here related shall be claimed to have occurred somewhere else, to the honor of some other of our sovereign States, I beg leave to declare, according to established usage, that any such pretension is wholly unfounded, and that any versions different from my own are altogether apocryphal.

It was formerly a custom in Vermont, although now little practised, for a lawyer, when promoted to the dignity of the bench, to follow up his old retainers;' and accordingly whenever a case came on in which 'his Honor' was concerned as counsel, he immediately doffed the ermine, resumed the gown, and battled away among the attornies, in the old style. Apropos of the metamorphose in question; a story is told of Judge Chase, now many years deceased. The judge was a man of very ardent temperament, and in debate was exceedingly vehement and vociferous. In an important cause he was making the closing argument to the jury, and with much warmth and earnestness of manner, insisting on a verdict for the plaintiff.' A friend of the defendant, who had been listening to the concluding part of the attorney's address, and who supposed that he was acting in his judicial capacity, ran out of the house, declaring that he never saw such abominable partiality in his life.' Meeting the defendant in the street, he told him he might as well go home at once, for the judge had charged his case to the devil, and the plaintiff was sure to recover!'

Judge Chase was a man of excellent sense, and withal a great stickler for the dignity of courts. A case of very trifling importance, having well nigh run the gauntlet of legal adjudication, came up at length to the highest court in the state. The counsel for the plaintiff was opening with the usual apologies for a frivolous suit, when the subject-matter, to wit, one turkey, of great value,' etc., catching the ear of the judge, he called out: Mr. Clerk, strike that case from the docket; the Supreme Court of the State of Vermont does not sit here to determine the ownership of a turkey!'

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There lives in the northern part of the State a lawyer and exjudge, who is very famous for his wit. He has kept a respectable law school at his chambers, on and off,' for the last forty years; and is still teaching the elements of his profession to a knot of legal limbs,' having

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survived several suits begun within his remembrance in the English chancery, and arrived, through an honorable career, to the advanced age of eighty-six. Many instances of repartee are related of the old judge,' which for genuine epigrammatism are scarcely inferior to some of the best of Piron and Talleyrand.

When a practising attorney, many years ago, he happened, while arguing a question of some difficulty, to illustrate a point in his case by a pretty free use of the vocabulary of the card-table. The presiding judge abruptly inquired what he meant by addressing such language to the court?'

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'I meant, your Honor, to be understood,' was the reply.

On another occasion, a judge, vexed with the difficulty, or irritated by the insignificance, of a cause which T was conducting, cried out: Sir, why do you bring such a case as this into court? Why not leave it out to some of your honest neighbors?' 'Because, your Honor,' replied the barrister, we do n't choose that honest men should have any thing to do with it.'

In the early days of Vermont jurisprudence, the strict decorum which now very generally distinguishes the New-England bar was comparatively unknown. Nothing was more common than sharp altercations between the Bench and the Bar; such wranglings indeed as would now be deemed contempt of court,' were they to occur only between the lawyers themselves. On one occasion Judge T—, who was then plain Esquire,' had addressed a sound argument to the court, and sat down. The judge, who chose to argue the question rather than decide it at once, replied in a feeble argument, which the lawyer in his turn demolished. The judge rejoined by repeating, without any material variation, his first reply; and then closed the pleadings' by an adverse decision. 'Your Honor's two arguments,' said T, addressing himself partly to the court and partly to the bar, ' remind me of a story. A foolish old woman in Connecticut, being one evening at a party, was greatly at a loss for something to say. At length she ventured to inquire of a gentleman who sat next her, whether his mother had any children? The gentleman politely pointed out the absurdity of her inquiry. I beg pardon,' exclaimed the old lady, perceiving her mistake; you do n't understand me; I meant to inquire whether your grand-mother had any children?'

I remember an anecdote of Judge O —, father of the distinguished president of the Wesleyan University, which is very characteristic of the man, and is, I have no doubt, authentic. At a session of the court in Addison county, Judge O was violently attacked by a young and very impudent attorney. To the manifest surprise of every body present, the judge heard him quite through, as though unconscious of what was said, and made no reply. After the adjournment for the day, and when all had assembled at the inn where the judge and many of the court-folk had their lodgings, one of the company, referring to the scene at court, asked the judge why he did not rebuke the impertinent fellow?' 'Permit me,' said the judge, loud enough to call the attention of all the company, among whom was the fellow' in question; 'per

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mit me to tell you a story. My father, when we lived down country, had a dog; a mere puppy, I may say. Well, this puppy would go out every moonlight night and bark at the moon for hours together.' Here the Judge paused, as if he had done with the story.

Well, well, what of it?' exclaimed half a dozen of the audience at

once.

'O! nothing, nothing whatever; the moon kept right on, just as if nothing had happened!

St. Albans, Vermont.

J. G, 8.

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