A Literary Party A Living Epistle Ancient Carthage A Heart in the Right Place A Thought A Romance in Real Life Absurdities of Human Life Arab Poetry A Scene in Courtship A Sketch Another Year A Linguist A True Philosopher A Parallel Advice to Ladies A Fair Offer An Eventful Year A Sensible Man A Celestial Reveric An Accident Advice to a Daughter Animal Magnetism Auld Lang Syne Authorities of Husbands Account of Gospel Manuscripts A Broken Heart Adams and Jefferson Anecdote of Baron Steuben Book, Most Costly Boston Musical Gazette Battle of 1100 Horses Beauty of the Village Birch Bark Borrowed Books Christianity Classification of Newspaper Readers Care of the Human Figure Capt. Lawrence Courtship on the Battery Cities, 100 Largest Coaches, History of Courtship and Marriage Changing Husbands Chaplet of Comus 7 23 55 63 79 87 103 111 Knickerbocker 113 135 151 167 191 199 203 Laziness 37 Martyrs 66 Nightingale Factory 70 141 123 Personal Decorations 115 Pronunciation 57 Poland THE POUGHKEEPSIE CASK++: A SEMI-MONTHLY LITERARY JOURNAL. DEVOTED EXCLUSIVELY TO THE DIFFERENT BRANCHES OF POLITE LITERATURE. For the Poughkeepsio Casket. THE CONDOR. province of Quito, that they had never captured any that measured over eleven feet. The length This mammoth bird, of the Andes of South of a male of nine feet in expanse, (which is the America, is to the feathered tribe what the ele-general size,) is three and a half feet from the phant is to quadrupeds-the largest, although tip of the beak to the extremity of the tail, and not the most rapacious, of its species. It is of its height, when perching with its neck partly the vulture species, and is larger than the great drawn in, three feet. Its beak three inches in lammergeyer of the Alps, or the bearded griffin length, and an inch and a half in depth when of the Himmalahs. closed. The beak is straight at the base, but arched toward the point, forming a hook. The head and neck are void of feathers, and covered with hard, wrinkled, brick-colored skin, from which shoots forth occasional black hairs. On the top of the head is a reddish colored comb, very fine, and serves as a helmet for the protection of the head. This is seen only upon the male. Behind the eyes the skin of the neck is collected into consecutive folds, extending down to the under side, and there connected by a lax membrane like that of the common turkey. Round the neck is a broad white ruff, of very soft feathers, resembling down. All the other feathers, except the tips of the wing coverts, are of a bright black, mingled with a silvery tinge. The legs are extremely thick and powerful, but it has no curved and sharp talons like the eagle. Unlike the eagle and vulture, it seldom attacks living prey; but having in its character the bold feroci ty of the former, and the filthiness of the latter, it fearlessly descends from its native region of eternal snow, upon the plains beneath, and feeds |