A Proverb at Fault.

Proverbial philosophy will occasionally fail, and we need go no further for an instance than the well known maxim as to the propriety of "a long pull, a strong pull, and a pull all together." Take six hearty coalheavers, and, putting between them a pot of porter, call upon them to take "a long pull and a strong pull," if you please; but pause before you invite them to the impracticable operation of "a pull all together."


VESTED RIGHT.

There's strength in rock, to take the shock

Of wave, with naked brows;

There's pith in oak, to mock the stroke

Of wind, with stubborn boughs;

But where grew wood, and where rock stood