SecoNd FEsttval or THE Soxs of NEW HampsHIRE, Celebrated In Boston, Nov. 2,1803

The proceedings at this Festival, and an account of the proceedings in Boston on the day of the funeral at Marshfield, and the subsequent obsequies commemorative of the death of Daniel Webster, have been published in a beautiful volume. This association numbers among its members many of the most eminent men in the nation, of all professions. Daniel Webster was their first President, and he has been succeeded by Marshall P. Wilder. The speeches, poems, and sentiments, as may be supposed, are of the highest order. New Hampshire has here something to be proud of. We should say the book contains excellent portraits of Daniel Webster, Marshall P. Wilder, Samuel Appleton, and the late Jonas Chickering. The following happy allusion to one who has done much, and who we trust will live to do much more, for American horticulture, will be read with interest:

"Our principal theme of discourse here to-night, Mr. President is New Hampshire and her sons. When I look over this spacious hall, and behold it filled with men brought up in, and brought out from, the lowly hamlets on and about our hills, and scan the course, as illustrated in one of your mottos - "New Hampshire has a man for any place" and that every where there is a place for him and that he will find it - and shine in it! For instance, sir, take a wild New Hampshire boy, it may be from Rindge. Trace him in his coarse to the City of Notions, and he soon becomes Wilder in useful and prosperous business. Intelligent and influential, you find him presiding in the Senate. Public spirited and a lover of rural art, he is President of the Massachusetts Horticultural Society, taking the lead in all improvements of agriculture and horticulture, with his highly cultivated fields, hundreds of specimens of the choicest fruits, and delightful flowers in profusion. In a Wilder flighty he is seen as the presiding genius of the National Pomologi-cal Society, with his four hundred varieties of Pears in congress assembled.

And still winging his way upward, he is found at the head of the United States Agricultural Society, in the exhibition of five hundred of the finest horses, four thousand beautiful women, and twenty thousand first-rate men! And now, here, we find him leading the van in the Festival gathering of fifteen hundred sons of New Hampshire whom he delights to honor, and they to honor him. Here he is, yet Wilder, and ever will be, till time shall put a stop to his career in his flights of usefulness, honor, and renown [Great applause]"

Every man born in the Granite State, where ever fete or fortune may have placed him, should have one of these books on his table.