lad of mettle, he took his axe on one shoulder, and his gun on the other, marched into the thickest of the wood, and, clearing a place, built a log hut. Pursuing his labours, and handling his axe like a notable woodman, he, in a few years, cleared the land, which he laid out into thirteen good farms; and, building himself a fine frame house, about half finished, began to be quite snug and comfortable. But Squire Bull, who was getting old and stingy, and, besides, was in great want of money, on account of his having lately been made to pay swinging damages for assaulting his neighbours, and breaking their heads, the squire, I say, finding Jonathan was getting well to do in the world, began to be very much troubled about his welfare; so he demanded that Jonathan should pay him a good rent for the land which he had cleared and made good for something. He trumped up I know not what claim against him, and, under different pretences, managed to pocket all Jonathan's honest gains. In fact, the poor lad had not a shilling left for holiday occasions; and, had it not been for the filial respect he felt for the old man, he would certainly have refused to submit to such impositions. But, for all this, in a little time Jonathan grew up to be very large of his age, and became a tall, stout, double-jointed, broad-footed cub of a fellow, awkward in his gait, and simple in his appearance, but showing. a lively, shrewd look, and having the promise of great strength when he should get his full growth. He was rather an odd-looking chap, in truth, and had many queer ways; but everybody that had seen John Bull saw a great likeness between them, and swore he was John's own boy, and a true chip of the old block. Like the old squire, he was apt to be blustering and saucy, but in the main was a peaceable sort of careless fellow, that would quarrel with nobody, if you only let him alone. While Jonathan was outgrowing his strength, Bull kept on picking his pockets of every penny he could scrape together; till at last one day when the squire was even more than usually pressing in his demands, which he accompanied with threats, Jonathan started up in a furious passion, and threw the TEA KETTLE at the old man's head. The choleric Bull was hereupon exceedingly enraged; and, after calling the poor lad an undutiful, ungrateful, rebellious rascal, seized him by the collar, and forthwith a furious scuffle ensued. This lasted a long time; for the squire, though in years, was a capital boxer, and of most excellent bottom. At last, however, Jonathan got him under, and, before he would let him up, made him sign a paper giving up all claim to the farms, and acknowledging the fee-simple to be in Jonathan forever. THE ALPINE SHEEP. BY MRS. MARIA WHITE LOWELL. (ADDRESSED TO A FRIEND, AFTER THE LOSS OF A CHILD.) HEN on my ear your loss was knell'd A little spring from memory well'd, And I was fain to bear to you That it might be a healing dew, After our child's untroubled breath And friends came round, with us to weep The story of the Alpine sheep Was told to us by one we love. They, in the valley's sheltering care, To airy shelves of pasture green, That hang along the mountain's side, Where grass and flowers together lean, And down through mists the sunbeams slide. But naught can tempt the timid things Till in his arms his lambs he takes, Then, heedless of the rifts and breaks, And in these pastures, lifted fair, This parable, by Nature breathed, A blissful vision through the night Holding our little lamb asleep, SPRING. BY N. P. WILLIS. HE Spring is here, the delicate-footed May, And with it comes a thirst to be away, We pass out from the city's feverish hum, Like a cool sleep upon the pulses broods: |