VOLUME 19. eclat VJaetrl► aub filistellang. TIC El ,B.A.PDATII. Il=o3 Babliath holy To the lowly, gill% thou art n weleonie'day, When thou contest earth and ocean, itihade and brightne7s; rest and motion Help the poor man'i heart to pray. Bun-waked forest, Bird, that Foarest O'er the tuute einpurpled moor, Throstle-song that stream-like tlowet, Wind that o'er the dew-drop goert, Welcome now the woe-worn poor. Little riv • fir, Young (of ever Cloud., gold-bright with thankful glee Ilappy woodbine. gladly weeping, ithin the It ill rose keeping, Oh, that they were bli!ssed as ye! Sabbath holy ! For the lowly - rain( with flowers thy glittering &cod! For affliction's sons and daughters, - Bid thy ino.natains. 000da and waters, I'ray to God, the pair titan's God ! From the feter, (Idle never Where on (lope, Want brirs the door) From the gloom of tialess alleys, ,' Lead thou to green lulls and I otters Weary landlord's trample,' poor. Pale, young mother, Gasping brother, Sister toiling lit despair, tirief•boweilsire, that life long chest, White lippe l child, Chit sleeping sighed, Come ani drink the lijitt aril air. Tyrants eurf.c. 3e, Wilde they nurse ye; Life foi deadliest wrongs to pay; Yet, 0 Sabbath t bringing gladness Unto hearts of weary duels, Still art thou "The r Maa's Day." NEVER BE POSITIVE talc of Citrum:tattPal Ovibente. "Vrnt• well, Morley. if that's all, Pll swear to the fel low's identiq Tye not a shadow of doubt upon the sub- ject—none!" ..Eh! What's that, Toni ?—llo what?—Swear to somo man's identits ?" "Yes, sir: the poacher we seized yesterday crossing the park. Morley has some qualmish double iv/leather he is the man who escaped from us, in the scuttle, other night, in the woods; and as we took him withoUt arms orgame, morels• in the path of the lower coppice, he does not liko to detain him unless he is quite certain the right man. After the mistake at Stanfolid, it might be awkward, you know." "Av. indeed! Sir John does well to.pause: and if is not as sure as that yonder bright sun now shines over as, ho would do better to let the man go free." '"Go free! friz . dear uncle" only consider thogamel— besides, I have no doubt at all, and I was present at the atTray." ...Well, if you have none—no fraction of misgiiing— no anspicion, the very faintest, that you may be wrong— then let justice take her course. But, if you hatle, stop while you can, and, in God's groat name, Tom, lot the man go." Tho speaker„a fine old matt- r one of a - race now wi l dl nigh extinct, the English country squire—rose, as he spoke, from the seat ho had taken upon a fallen tree in his nephew's park, and laid a hand upon the shoulde of each young man who stood by him: "You wonder. boys, to hear a veteran sportsman plead thus for a suspected poacher, and, 1 dare say, think tne either superanuated or mad. But I have a wartg memory ever present when / hear the question of id n uty discussed: and when 1 tell yon what - it is, you will, I think, agree withome, that nothing less than a certainty so positive that it is impossible to hesitate, should make ono man take that terrible oath which fastens upon another the perpetration of crime. "Forty years ago, I was in the commission of the po co for this county,lnd, a healthy active fellow of thirty, I was considered a somewhat useful addition, oven a Bench then boasting some of the cleverest men in tho di vision as its magistrates. About ton miles from my place was the faintly seat of the Wharton'', Occupied .by the head of the race, stern.old man, who, With the posiies sloes of a prince, lived the life of a miser. Ho had one child, a daughter. A most beautiful creature was Min ale Wharton; gentle and generous, graceful as a fairy. and blithe tie a bird, no one over looked upon without loving her; how she came to be the child of that mieera- Vs old man, Dame Nature has it among her 'whims to answer for. I said every 'me loved Minnie, but I wrong; her father did aot! Courteous as a high soldier of the ancient school be was always, even in austere parsimony, buthe never forgave his daughter) crime of not being a eon, end eo 1046(4 the broad I of Wharton pass away to a nephew he detested. Bitter ly did Colonel Wharton and his heir abhor each miser; seine unusual clause in the dered of entail gave young Wharton a power of enquiry and supervision over the es tates—a very hateful right in a successor, and one zJied ing to be most tenderly exercised: but exerting it as Charles Wharton did, stretching such an obnoxiouslau lhorilY to its utniost limit, oven a milder man them his uncle must have detested him. At last. when his bate was at its fullest, Minnie, who had boon, for a few years, in Scotland, under the care of her mother's family, ciliate back to the Abbey—from being the pet and darling of her aunts' to the cheerless home of a penurious father. who scarcely exchanged a dozen words with hcrlot a time. In her wanderings about the grounds, she !met her cousin, who, struck by her beauty, and guessing who she was, accosted her. They walked on, talking of pleas ant things, and the first hour of peace and happiness Mamie had spent for some months, now passed. When ahe returned to the Abby she would have named her companion to her father, but he was in one of his !old est moods; so her heart failed her, and she was silent.— la this way on glided the summer; and no wonder that, before antumn leaves began to change, Cyarles and Min nie Wharton were pledged lovers—while now, for the first time, when she confessed her innocent love ! she yearned the enmity subsisting between her father and lov- er. . . "'lie hates me, Minnie, because all these wide tcres met pus from you to me: but, oh, dearest and belle— when I give them back to you, asy their sweet mistress, bunhonod only with myself, ho will learn to look kindly even upon me,' said Charles, as Minnie clung, shiver ing, to hint when he described the Colonel's aver:nen, and the stormy scenes ho had roused and revelledin." "1 hare often wondered how so gentle a being u Minnie could give her Iteartto such a man as her Cons , in: but omen-ate strange inconsistencies , and, I istip -1 Pose. I handsome face and figure won het ghat* tan 4t, CY. le ahrays seemed to me a poet's idea of a fallen "g e l embodied—daring, haughty, bold and brive.— Fearles s in danger, reckless of peril, but geode as a obild to her, turning his deep and commanding voidinto low and musical words forher ear--perhaps there &lit tle marvel that she was festinated. kw.. agreed that i - , - . 1 1 4, • 1 - , ,• . [ • "F.- i . , . i ! . .3.i.,' . , ~,, ' i . 1 • . . , t ' ' ' . • ', 1 . • .. t , • ~1 ,.. , -.: - . ~ (.1 t....- - . f . , r -1. ~ , i i v., : 1 If v ~ 1:1 Hoii. '4 • iT' .',. 1 HT - ITO • ' qiloo ie . .PFT - 17,...1 1 . if.•:.x..: - .4 ) - X ••••, 1 ;, - .: -. -- l• i c t^,V i til l I I V.; ' •, ' "- - Fi.iti . J*4l6 , 4 . ,, -...„, „ a y s . ~. , . Iti , o -s t:t/ .; 11 1 -.,.. t. a :-, ' '. 0 1.:. t icitcm • , . ....,_ t, i3O 7f; -,• '"l 'r, C I A C. I ; . • . , , , • , 1 , t tt 4 -.1. L. 5. ''T :1, 1.1..,:t1 t) 1 e i 1 • 1 . • . , , , .. - , -,:.• , . • • e 7 1 ft, . 1 _ ____. .1 :',.'',l' !i:il , f . ;1 ::-' ' 4 . “ 1 .?. - 4 ( - i I='.. -.!), ~ .i oi '.' ,IgA t r ..-, •.*, ' - '-' '--..:' - ----Y..: . - ----.- -_ ----'' ----. ' - :1 411 :: :-..-d. ki:•li. ::.; ~. :, I-., ~,,,,, , , .... :,1 it, 1_ ,.: ;::::: 4 :1 : 1 4 ..,1 i5 a , , l 'a rn l 9:..t 9:.: 1 1? '1 9 5 1 11 109 ,, ' ~. ? I ,ll li t: ti l c ' s t. :3 11 t - al 7, .. i 9. ~1. ~ ;., j ..., r ,.-, , 4 -" _ ... 4 , "- i ''• :::1!..“'„ , , I:. .. . •••,. - , - , , . . • 11 'all . a . . . •„ . ) , ... r ..; r•s• i ft4 '1 .. :1 ; . : 1 . :1 : -1: , ..t • • -•, I s . • : - !;•, , % 1 !,....: .:: , . • • i I - 9'D le (11(.11 nAr6 ~ _ „ . am prod his the nds he should see her father, confess their love, runt ask her from him. , •, "'Oh, I fear: I fear!' said, Minnie, covering her eyes with her hands, as if to shut out the image other _terrible parent. . • "'Why—why, my own lov'e? De you but say yes t and you shall be mine, iu despite of lfathor or fate? Minnie, be you but true, and you shall he my wife, - though t eleath stands in my - path.' And h 9 drew the ,trembling girl nearer and closer to him, ,whia . iihe shuddered in his am, brace as if sorbs horrible foreboding crept over her. "The next day, at a wild gallop, the pace he always rode, young • Wharton creased :his uncle's park,.and—, throwing tho reins upon hie horse's neck, to wander where he listed lentered the old Abbey Hull, au& in a few minutes, steed before the colonel. l What was spo ken at that stormy interview n4no can tell; but, that it was such, the loud tones of thie fpeakers„ and their recce ghastly with passion, too plainly revealed.. At last, With a violence threatening dertruction, the library door was thrown open, and Charles , W,herten passed out, saying, as ho did 80—'1 have sworn it!—and, by the sky above me, Minnie is mine, though 1 Win her with MY blood!' "When he was gone, Colonel Wharton sent ror his daughter, and, - trembling so piteously that she had no power to stand, she came before him. In the calm tones of concentrated - rago,'he spoke the horrible words of a father's curse; and; though she fell senseless at his feet with a wild cry for mercy, Ito no otherwise noticed it than to bid her maid take her from his sight. - A brain fever —no unlikely consequence of such a shock—ensued, and Minnie's life was despaired of: yet no symptoms of soft ening did her father show, nor did ho ever once—though her plaintive wailing rang sadly. through the corridor— enter her room, ur speak a single inquiry: that she lived, he only knew by the low moaning ho Gould not help hearing as ho passed her room. "Minnie had been ill a fortnight, when one morning a gentle tap upon the window of her chamber called the nurse to it—and, his hair damp with the night-dew, his face pale with watching, and his powerful frame trem bling with anxiety, Charles iVharton stood before her.— She had never, till then. seen him, and the impression made upon lietby his appearance at that hour. clad in tho dress of one of his own keepers, was ever after firm ly stamped upon his own mind. ...Let s ine see her, nurse—oh, for the love of Heaven. lot me see her!' do not refuse me!' he exclaimed, seeing her hesitate, 'for it will. be useless. I wilt see her, even if her father and' all the fiends etood in my way. Call him now, if you with! but in his face I will still see her.' ""He entered as he spoke, and wont to the bed. There lay Minnie; her long, fair, hair, which ought * to have been cut oil, but which had been spared iu pity to its beauty, hung, tossing on her pillow;' her lips black with fever, her eyes wild, but unconscious, ronthliug hither and thither without recognition, and her arms bared of their covering hYher constant restlessness, formed a sad contrast to his late interview: " "For a moment, nil unused to such a scene, and per ceiving that her eyes fell upon him, he fancied she knew him, and he exclaimed, in ecstacy: 'lt is I. Minnie; my darting Minnie. speak to me:' But almost before the words' were spoken, her brief notice; had passed away. and she was gazing upon the window. For nearly an hour ho stayed in that melancholy room. listening to her wordless moaning. At first, the agony of her sufferings seemed to overpower him, but gradually his prow began to . darken, his hands to clasp each other; and when the poor girl uttered another painful cryt ho started, and the lips which had been silent dared to speak..as if uncon sciously; then ho rose from his knees, and turning to the nurse, ho said: •• •9he does not know me—l :co it now. I did not ask you if she will diet but do you Say to that most uti . - natural old man, that if she .does, from that hour vett: gence will be my sole end in life, and I will take such a reckoning that men's breath shall stop for fear when they hear it—l swear it—here, by the bed of her ho has kill ed.' "Ile bent over, and fixed his lipi'upon her pale brow. 'Farewell, my own, my angel Alinnie; fear nothing, fo r I will watch over you; if you could be moved with safe ty, I would take you'now, in his very teeth. If I lose you' --rest, rest, Minnie, for tears of blood shall be 'wept to' give your spirit peace. Take care of her, nurse; for ev ery hour of ease your. attention gives her, the minutes shall - be paid in gold; it will not be for. long—.not -very long, shall she be at his mercy.' And as lie passed out he shook his clenched haixd in the air. "Three hours after this: before the'frightened nurse had well recovered from her panic, the whole house ech oed with the terrible news that Colonel 'Wharton had been found-murdered in a coppice about a mile from the Abby. One of the keepers, in going his rounds, had dis covered the body; -and in a few minutes from the firet in telligence reaching the house, the murdered man was brought in. Medical aid was quickly procured, for peo ple fled hero and there, winged` by fel ror and wonder, ris If the angry spirit of the dead still ruled them; but it needed not tho experienced eye of a surgeon to see that all skill was fruitless—the soul was gone. On the tom. plc was the only mark of violence, 'Yet that was enough to account for death; ft 'heavy blow, dealt by some blunt instrument, had shattered the skull, and the brains %ore mingled with the gray hair. There appeared to hale been but a slight struggle, if any, though tho clothes of the deceased were viot with the blood oozing front a sev ered vein. • ***lcon do no goo d .' said the surgeon. a ft er carefully examining the body. 'Who can have done this?' ; 1 * 'His nephew, Mr. Charles Wharton; who else so "Hush, seaman!' exClaimea the startfed doctor. as the nurse, who had entered the room, replied to hie ques tion. 'Do you know what you esy?' "'Yea, sir—'tis a horrid deed, bad ns the old man used them; and :ft will have horrid4ayment; 'twasn't for nothing he swore to-day to hastetload.' "The vulgar aro always lovers of the marvellous; and to her eager listeners the woman recounted Charles' vis it of a fow hours bofere, with her comments; till all, even the cool-headed surgeon, unable to separate the true from the false, decided ho had done the ruthless deed they looked upon. Before night Charles was arrested; and the whole country. far and wide, had heard the hideous tale that Ciilonel Whiirtort had been murdered, and that his nephev l r was in .enstody for the crime. At a game'. keepers's cottage, whore ho had been at first denied to the officers. Charles was found; and Upon the; breast of the velveteen jacket ho had worn in his visit to. Minnie`a flick room, wore clots of blood, scarcely yet dry; the right wristband of his shirt, too, was stained and torn. When I first told of the murder, he seemed paralyzed and herror stricken, and at once accounted for the .blood uron'his clothes, by saying, that on his way from the At boy to the cottage where he then was, he had been atta . e.ted by a dog. which he had stunt:red, if not killed, by a blow from the butt-end of a gun be had with . hint; and this explained the fact of his fowling-piece being discovered in the bro W-house of the Cottage. sticky. and' red with gore. 'Upon going to the place he described, the dog wee , found. and so much' of siteplcien was removed; still the megistrateis' did not think themselvoii juinified l in unlit , . him at liberty until the inquest had att4uniihe 'was d 6. tamed a planar at the Abbey. - almost.defiantly■ he repulsed the !accusation' • of being the murderer; ,b,tit.when 4ko worths anspichins of his hitherto frientla,,and their conantinetniainunailte NM =I ATURDA • wFapped;!iip3ielf,irt tho armor of hi fidenee, andtie 3 :ther answered or , , 0 The jury et, saw the i)ody, t been found, abd then heard theavi reioni, and clotiely ‘ watclaid tho prop over. His oTins wereloidild, and iCivo moVod; and it was" only by th the'hand, caused by thetr asp he he knew how intensely lie was lean cold,moyelesS as marble: 'i Dads, o . , —.snowed 1.,_ - toms of suffering—it was when the natio- repeaed,:hritik exaggeration, his visit to Mitrnie`e:chambeit 'then 'the pale lips quivered, and the eyelids fell eve the eye, but that all. .Hie solicitor Was in attendanee; a d When all the evidene l e had been apparent]: given. ha submitr tad that no case had been made out against his / elientl'ill any rate, nothing to justify his detentien in custody. Just then, a loud sobbing was heard in the hall, and the det# opening, admitted a constable, brin ing iMit young girl, aboutiwenty, and amen not nine 1 older. On seeing them. Charles started, and his lip sightly Curled. "Oh. Mr. Wharton, do not haok I so; , indeed, I could .1 not help coming—indeed. I could ot; and her tears felt 1 (aster. After much vain questioni g , aho sobbed out: , "that she was Miss Wharton's mai • and: that she Wad engaged to the young man beside h r, one'of the coloneltri foresters; that / early in the previous" orningshe had gone out to moot h a l er lover in the park, n 1 d that they had wallt' l ed together fir' some time, when al some distance they!' observed their master corning towads the apring coppice.' where the hotly was afterwards fou nd; thatthey concealed' themeselves i i ttitil he should have assed through. when, just as they tl ought themselves out of sight, lie turned and walked beside the coppice, in tend Of entering it. 1 and the trees and brushwood inter ceptedAheir view; the: next time they saw (1111,ho had 604 joined by the , pries ones." And,here t a witness eobbed so piteously that it 1 was with greet difficulty the coronecould induce her to proceed. "'They were very fright tied." - she said, wheal they saw Mr. Charles, for they kno v the scone likely to ' follow, ns it was she who had taken Miss- Minnie from; ' the fl oor on which she had fallen, lien her father had cursed her so sadly. They were toil far oil to hear what was said. and too frightened at thedee of being found listening, to i do so attentively; b t they saw Colonel Wharton turn back to the coppic , and the prisoner, after standing a moment or two, as if thinking, follow, him. They then seized the opportt nity to caeape, and parted on leaving the wood; but af t r she had gone some, iW way, she looked back and saw harlee rush from it across the pork, end did not see hi n again until now, nor the colonel till she saw him deaf in the other room." Every word of this was confirmed by her lover. 'and the strictest cross-examination failed to shake their evidence. Charles looked surprised, but said nothing, merely rids- ing his eyes when his attorney saitl:= "'Look at Mr. Wharton, youngi women. Aie' you ) sure he 'is the man you saw 1• Be stolid. Remember , ' , Wong likenesses are.' very eye turned upon him, and mono of us but at a very cursory, glance, indeed, would bo siiffi- , 1 o fix his features and figure id our meneriesYtv WO . , r Car of mistaking them' for ollirs. So thought the , ;a, for, with a yet louder burst of sorrow, s he ex -41-...• Oh. no! I could never Mistake Min. '' I have him and dear Miss Minnie too'often.''God help , God help her ! She 'twill date s surely ' a prisoner started to his feethiti fate' dtishiti for sent' but. in another, 'all Ivaa. ealtn. still his oyes alpon the' groinid."iret, tfOrit#ii instant, I !eft as - .- J as though 'bed seen thedeefclat M e, that Charles, trne by anger and love, was tle urderer. With else was the old Mati'al such open war ? Where ra been from' the tune he lefthe Abbey ? And, if spared for some such `deed; why and what were range threats ho had used 1 or did f. till long af rds, lose-the conviction-4nm h ; as oria.ef the via.' justices of the minty Oa , Sail, I ' him frequently —1 . na-I was leaving biscuit. a ft e seeing, with a sileriti ./ l.which was all that passed bet eon us-4halevery isuras in duo order .' he called me back, rind a fter 1 kgizing ford ing so , .be.said: • I have - a request lo ' 0, that I can place in none buthe handset agenda.; . You are aware that I have o moans of- learning ly the, state of my ' plighted , ifs.' I'hear, indeed, l i i 'reports from the surgeon z but ho 'dels only with ody,and 1 pine tel know, truly ]lowlier mind boars der this ealaninity, You know her, and she values L usts you. . Will yOu do use much kiiidneas as to i' r,' and cheer her, if She 'needs it? Tell her to me oven now ;' and if she lasso doubt—for sickness niers mistrust and! fancies, otherwise I would not so I. her—toll her that ! ' am innocent of the foul eharge 'make against me. As God 'lives in lietiVen—as I 'iit—as I believe in this book-Land his hand rested ke Bible-1 am utterly. wholl;• innocent ! I. never ll'e murdered man from the hour I parted with him. I library, to that 1 looked upon him dead. :You do elieve rue. It matters not i }L e will ! hush sir mthink I lava Arr.:l Should I add the bar'of a rhtered father to those alreadk between us ? Men ar the marvellous. , or they %iota' laugh at such a re i ' LEE ME MIME EC witnett, watch her!' 'i•T a" nil,' fixed CM ovi , re who had i ot p' to 8 ril iung Onc bow I . thine apolo. mak man exac daily the . 1 I up 9 I and t j ace h I trust enge insul 'Air an instant, lia fine, pros : my belief in his i l guilt—but he stronger. k r e 1 w Minnie, ;lately. she was sill to ill too Tory soon otter, the assizes canto on ; a true bill was I, and, charged *ith : his unele's murder. Charles Irton stood at the felon's bar. The. trial was bnt a ition of many another such ; lid although the first lon the circuit, with a loader retained and brought I ially from town, exerted over • nerve, I do believe' lury, long before the closing peach was over, had led upon their verdict. It w aas strong a case of ewemstantial evidence as I ever heard ; and, after the I vexing testimony', of the girl, I, 'he swore most posh- 1 tivato the indentity 'of tho prisoner with the man she, hadkeen in the park, there. seemed no shadow of a, dou t. Yet all our preconceived ideas of the apperaneei it of guilt were at fault/ Defiance. boldness might have bee the veil with which a strong -nerved' man would' chose to mask his consciousness of crime ; but there, was no such manner iu the prisonr. Dauntless—as if; be the result what it would. he wire fearless--seornful withis haughty lip curling in a stga.diedain, he looki ed mon the court. II it was most p uzzling. All we heal! lou . illy proclaimed his guilt; all we saw as loudly spok 1: of nnocence. ' Ho was asked the usual luestion ; to wh ch he answered, in tones clea r and unfaltering aa . the had over been'on the coy_ ei's i sids : I I l i . 'I am innocent, my lord . I aimil say . nothing more. for I cannot prove it, while nothing less can satisfy jas;- tic ._ Only that this is a public rceord,.l would_not sty so uch ;,,but that, with th e chronicle of my death, may go o rth the protest ef,innoconce.! The judge looked keenly at the glotiotus ,figure he w about to sentence to a frightf4l depth ; and. surif he re d something irtthattlmmtless bow he could not com p bend , turned over his rioter again and again.. • The he o ' b t a te tio rs k ‘ 4 l t e io nne c t ini ac i rr ci : f h li e l i l : S tlti b i t i, e , j. it'4)g .l 7, 0 ; e . , 7 1a n d5 7 0, 7 i, ,i p. 4 t lo My' as the judge iiii f: in 'did r ato c-ap... The smite* . r i , w ' pealed, eild;dtirimed to die a felon's' death; Oierlfs Wharton left the dock. " Vie obit Any; tw, a aiiiii* j o, the hothie'ltr ifiti Wridei- r ilierifr,'Whea - 41 - tifite4eler * . of Whlehiqatiiifisbiti;**Otioito.' ,' to'm e ISt ts, * - ' * lt isiiriio!i:, a* • Ceiba *ith "the behrei : histantliii * Me; Alla ng. l . • 1 shoo IMI foul Wh repo man spec, tho deci lirld =REM . It. 4 'll 4 NEM own pride . .. d con •ad alumni:a. ~:.!,. ! I e place whe e• it harp , t!ence. `1 w ! in ,the taiiniatind, ilia . prisr 'is 'teeth seep riot . is e staking in i uSclari of I(1upon tr l litOok, - ;w :, i outivali4 all W , ly, - ho showpd iiyiilp '11: d tono and bearing nly that it might re lea he. requested ; but, :43 Tnado awaro of tho ) mac= MEI ;.1474 N'IN , 11 :MOR, *itit Sou come ins ing Mimi! Mr. Wha lobo Btoi I • pelf atpito r i a gi 'Or!' :!!nd, to 4.11 no of n shopeeted the jail.. the box, o Wen) VIOL aft 4 astob ".Thee nor door. notseen was hi d3jug fro Sornelbin poor folio of hie un At any ra you to ink!' or, as au it. Cony Wo di. a boil. in his head a man tented to if his spiri fags hidd about eigl on our on side of th face, reve beauty Ili I she asked i.fesr—p Siwaet 1114 this horri le weight upon his soul! Oh. sir, save him! for his so l's sake arouse him! 7 -Philip. Philip!' and she tossed her long ringlets back; andidsced her fair hands. on which we now saw the marlin a ring glittering, on each Side Of hor.husband's head, a d kissed him. Ho stirred fai ally._ !Philip. do you hear me? Annie—it is Annie: shall I speak? do you knot what I say? may I tell?—'lo moved his lips. *Bless you! God absolve and hiesel l your she exclaimed; thou turned to'us with the greco l of a princess:— "1 do tiet understand the form of law well," the said, "but you' will instruct me. This Man is 4my husband; ho has been guilty of a great crirria, known only to 'my self and o' to other; for this deed another min is condemn ad to die. lie carne horo to-day tatatike the* iiriiiiiier's innocent krionM; but the horse th pt brought us rodueed 1 him to th . strit horse you see. 'He is f tl •sensible, Ib • _ • p f CC ) . c liovO; is to not; sir?" (to Mr. Rob' rts) "and God and our Mess d Lady will give him tilt ugth to sign the con fession I hall make ,for him. Hi name is Murray— Philip M rritY; iliagititnate son oft o Into Colonel Whar. tot..- bp lama* •eruollY - deceived other, 'win). though her Mari agii had r bien a 'itecret , iin . till wi th in' ,ti neck a i Of her 410 fielit;iedhinolf his W,erided wife: Opti,Pliit-, 1 1;:_jibr.tirt'vc*tiTtlig/la'i!f,:efia truth kiilid her;" ,fierce, hayP4Wail uPtiotweery the fatbr,and I his, ill,use'd soh; anti,they ratitly...atisf. There is no need, to tell Son' the t;il Wilts:die deserted- one' fell- i to-='this ' dead,' athoitt God absolve ! bah - those to' answer for; 'but ' six Montilla sinceive were Married =(1• int . it Catholic)—and from that de): p. oix9 has', striven toa'reforin An oppi rtunity of settling welt '..1 opened tops, pd Philip wrototo his l e father ref/nesting the means of .d n , ing so. o answer carts; and he resolved to come he and see hiut. Bor. roxvings'keoper's dross. that ho m ght be unnoticed if soon in the park, fie went there to meet the colonel—he did so--anti angry Words passed between them, all which Philip bare till the cruolold mansp oke vita words of his dead mother, swearing no child , Of hers should have IMlp from him; and raisitig'his arm hie °tidy to strike Meson, that sou, iiftlie irriinalse a uttgoie mild.) passion. swung round the gun lio'heltl, and his fat t er fell derid at his feet. j ' Ho god; andin onr first terror (f he'tilld 'no all) wo left the country, and. knew nothing ofeudsequont evonts; but when ho heard that Mr. Wharton was accuseil, and likely to:oldie. ho returned at once, Mi . d would ,have con reseed all to save him, had it not b een for this accident. • I , Now, gentlemen, put this into•what language • you will. ,'only moko the.trutfievident; !din i • husband be spared the guilt of another roan's blood, a d God will strength en his hand to sign it." . . " We did so; qtiiekly; for liy the / Over tlieltortOred feet?, wo sew don after reviving &alight given li)t il sufficiently to hair the tlepositionsl " A l'oMan,Catholic pripat, wh now arrivod. and wo loftiho room form, n person in the ante-room us man; but, with a lowly reverence, and loving yoang wife, who had a we eaw to whose exertions in the yielded. •Now for London and the ll° o Secretary!' I said, as the carriage drove' furlowily b, ck And in half an hour, as fast ns'siz of my best ho :es could get over the road,,Sir John Iclostyn and, I win , on our way to town, with Philip Murray's confession. Thoso were no rail road days, but. never had I travails . at such a pace before; and but fur such another need, no or will I again. That night's erred cost the lives of fot r 'horses; I shot them with my own hind, to rape(' the from the agony 'that killing:pace had caused. BM thou gh my heart reproach ed mo, as I watched their reelin ~ tottering frames, as they were led out from the truces, the horrible apparition of an innocent man dangling on tl o scaffold extiaguish od the r i sing pity. and on, on—fas or, faster, we wont, in incessant struggle, as that speed nly, and barely,,coultt save young Whatton's life. ' Rou tog the Secretary from his bed, we hurried him tato St.. am's, where, happi ly. the king 'then was; who, if or a brief consultation with his minister, signed with "g 1 dorm the pardon we sought. ••A week after that, Charles (h i appy in the prospect of ,et speedy union with Minnie; now rapidly recovering) and I followed the body of Philip to the grave; and as the solemn service was read. and I looked from the'coflin to the living man beside me. who, but ' for God's powerful interpoSition as by a 'miracle, would have occupied as narrow a bed,'l vowed a solemn Tow, never again to be sprt) of the 'identity of any; huinatibeing,.unleis_there was `ne possible room for even a reasonable doubt. Ever 'since then, the thought of what might have been has coma, upon my inemory, saving many a mischief—and : . NICYLICHZ roarrtve is angraven on my heart.'L ' . , . WU? PDlELLS.i.ioig4—pp a hoto woonan'es' stall,in front BoyleMro market, ( Itonon.) Jost season, a , fent live ;lob 'dee., i larere eiposed (or male. - A 1 otmnger unacquainted, arithithhology time along-. 44 the same' time:awing one. of thin to a eine iiroxionity vfithi his' nose. , ' ' : -•- _ - " Wh'eto Iniitird the3falleme-- 41:- Pit hive yen' fosoiten d ' tint li ASA'S I" ' ' ''• ' 1 "' ' ' ' ' , ; At, this,: hisiatit; the , johiter' ehtyc; thiooofiryth ,' a ~:uwii liif talteani 'firnolinpon t o gOntleman'oßpoot,' : „ 1, i n., old woman placed her an tothimbo; - , l i to trionoptt-,- old eel Ili Wii i' ihe utehllio=Man n iiii 4 Z-'aivaiileunik i o inn now nosier?" ' . , I , 'DI7 t3V ..... v „ Jr.a, 0 N3i# tta 1 , 2'1:: \ IV din . .;f4,..1..,„ Slit L!),111 , 11 - 1 1,1 SO at Etlii . 15 it. rad a teth l bla ~ . .0010 )74:1 3 tiff lsw oils, los 11:2 rg , ',) 4. 1 b ift I 'aD le "h •r, li ,-,:.,rii.,,J 7, ,,,, -. ,vad-q:- I t • .. 40.11.:,r _...aEv 4 . „• , 1,,, ....-,.. - J. 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( ', tie Ilt. . ‘ l l' idrov,o Atiii•d'iy , : on, greatanrprise, filmed out of the to*nt, into a good &parte. where'stittni the cottage of some .= , atthatti. , , - -We -had tone ed we - were -going to Viten '.vire eluppad, our 'nditetgr'sPrang frodi (I riisted 'lair) tin; hound `Wit followed, '44 c / , I,llla. Roberts. 'lle 'was pile with anxiety, l i htnOnt.' , I , lieain that room. ! he said. pointing to an in n mans* like Charles 11 7 hartoni that if I had 1 in in his cell two hours sine!, I should _swear Not a feature. not ag slurs. 4dreis• 'SF' is 4 " a wound occasioned by fell from aho e.— .. - to. on hitt mind., • Cod knows whether that 's-words may not be trust, and ho is - Innocent 1 lets murder. The very map may be here.— = . e. iomethiag is wrong ; Mid I have sent' for I any depositions be may' ly as the day anus, he with use.' 1 • i so, and entered a mall, 11 'dreiss just such as youn! andaged and his taco drai laid, so frightfully like hi ale death but tho befli Ihad met our gaze. Beni n in the pillow, was a yi teen years of age. She lance. but as Mr. Bobert dying man, she looked ling as she did am her t I have seldom seob its c in a voice of agony. .lutbly beton, morning.' their, no;—unconfessed, ,piaopf,left A BEAU:4IEOIc CONTRAST. • . it ,f4r l V tWoyeam niter the hirtli,of John Quincy Adams. AltnikAPPullirt*.in lthgt blogiterranean,- Bno, a - hparan o spiritii newly bortrosudowed w ith equal genius, without She mOll3llOl Mudides of jaws* Wed he nevolenee. Which Aden* pisiseiiwia in ittAt etVerninetat'degree. A like career opened to orb Ike, _anis, a subject of a liitg:=Ltitephiid of more genial AMA,. like bhp became patiiSt , ! no ! , ciozonuf p new ayf great roPnblie••, Like Adams. be lout his services to the State in precocious youth and its he hours of need, and won its confluiende. •But.uttlike Adams. ho `would not , wait thedull'dolays of slow and laborious advancement. He fleecmght power by the hasty road that leads to carnage, and he became likeitdams, a supreme magistrate, a consul. Theirs were other consuls—ho was not content. He thrust them aside and was consul alone. Consular power was too short. Ho fought ~twe battles and was consul for life. But power confessedly derived from . the pOople, must be exorcised in obedience to their will, and must be resigned to thorn agale.,niJesst In death. 'He 'desolated Europe afresh, subviirted the republic, imprisoned the patriarch who presided over Rome's clam prehonsOrer See, obliged him to pour on his head those cred oil that made the persons of Kings divine, and tbeir right to re'gn indefensible. He was an emperor. But he sass around him a mother, brothers and slaters not en nobled, whose bumble state reminded him and thO world that he was a plebeian, and that ho had no heir to wait impatient for the Imperial crown.. Ile scourged the earth again.'rind again fortune smiled on him_ oven in his wild extravagance. He bestowed kingdoms and prin cipalities on his kindred—put away the youthful::wife of his youthful days—another, a daughter of Hap burgh's Imperial house, joyfully accepted his proud alliance. Off spring gladdened his anxious sight. a diadem was placed on his infant brow, and it received the homage of prin ces even in its cradle. Now he was indeed a monarch by divine appointment—the first of an endless succession of monarchs who held sway in the earth. lie gathered new and great armies from his own land. from sujugated lands. He culled forth the young and the brave—one front every household—from the Pyrenees to the Zuyder Zeo—from the Jura to tiro Ocean. He 'marshal-- led them into long and majestic columns, and went forth to seize the universal dominion, which seemed al most within his grasp. But ambition had tempted him too far. The nations of the earth resisted, repelled, pur sued,-surrounded him. The pageant was ended. The crown fell front his presumptuous head. d,1^:,1 'loci induced to rhake, will never live toneo w room. where. on Whortosib i od worn. in oiside with agony. im wo had heard sest re, that we started no ding over the bed. her o t ung girl, apparently over 'raised her head passed round to the fearfully up into his own, of such groat Rqual. 'Will he die t' Rlcaa - thatt four houre. 'Oh, no. no. no? oh, ithout a priest. and Tho wife that wedded him in his pride, forsook him in the hour when fear camo upon him. - His child was ravaged from his sight. His kinsmen were degraded to their first estate, and he was no longer Emperor. nor con nor evens citizen, but an exile and a prisoner, on a. lonely Island, in the wild Atlantic. Discontent attended him there. The wayward man fretted out a few long years of his yet anbroko.. manhood. looking off at the earliest dawn and in evening twilight, toward that dis tant world which had just eluded his grasp.. His heart cor roded. Death canto unlimited for, though it came even then unwelciUne. He was stretched' on his bed within the fort flint constituted his prison. A few int;t: ur d faithful friinids stood around with the guards. wholsjoiced,that.tha„hour, of.reticf. from long and wearisounsAratching., teas et hand, • hllt his strength wail:wetted attar. dellriumntirred brain from' its king and Inglorious ftinetirity. The ptigeant again re Wised.. 'He tyai`ngab - a lieutenant,' riconiml; an 'Em pOror of France. 'Ho filled again IliertbieWiff'Chiiirle inagne. Isis kindred pressed around him, again invest ed with the pompous pageantry of royalty. Thodaugh- } ter of ,a long line of .If.ings again -stood proudly by his side, and the sunny face of his child shone out. from be neath the diamomd that encircled his flatting locks. The Marshals of the empire awaited his comrhaild.— The legions 'of tho:o)il !Gin:l,44m again in the field, their scarred faces rejuvindted4 and-their ranks, thinned: in many battles, - replenished.. Russia,-Austria, Prussia, Denmark andtitglerid gathered their -mighty 'twits to, give them battle. Otieeruire he mounted his impatient' charger and rushed to 'the conquest. Ho - waved his' sword aloft and cried • • Tete de Armee."' The feverish , vision broke—tho uteckery ended. The silver curd was loosened, and the warrior -fell back upon his bed, a life less corpse.. This was the cud of earth. 'The corsimtn was content`—Gun. Seward: • EFFECTS OF Imihnix.vrion.—The following anecdote was related by the'eelt brated Father Taylor. in the comae of a recent lecture . : ' It happened years ago, in the days ,of old faithioned ' meeting houses, with theiipeWs like ens, and theii pul- ' pits perched up at an elevation which placed them with. out the pale of human sympathy, and' whon a fire for the purpose of warming a church, was unheard i( l ff, but t , om o enterprising young men who had worshipped in such a church, determined to have the church worth oil by stoves. But project encountered the most violent, and virulent opposition from all the old people.. The}i declared that it should not be—that stoves were not gospel ordinance—thit a congregation must suffocate —1 The young men, however, prevailed; and one Sabbath Coe congregation beheld in the church two formidable black stoves, with the pipes traversing the entire length of the house. The old men and women looked on with horror, and held their breath for the result. The exercis es of the church proceeded.. Soon a lady fainted away, and in a few minutes another gasped for breath and was carried out of the church, and then another. At last 'a stout burley Mall swooned and fell. The frightened min iliter dismissed the church, and there was a general rush of the indignant people toward the stoves. The down were thrown open, and they wero-nd out to precipi tate the offenders out of the house, when lo and behold ! the stoves were cold ! ntid,not a particle of fire had been kindled in either of them. The masons had not time to finish' them up. and no fire had been. mido. The --di of the young adventures of stoves were complete. gray shade gathering h was coming; and ie burgeon, 'he rallied, read; and sign them, had been sent Jur, etationing, as a mere custodian of the dying we bent to the bravo ted so heroically; for l ig`tt the sufferer had uttip I• CO . PEING Taixonsmr.—The copying tolegr' has been tried from London to Slough; it is calculate will transmit 400 letters per minute, with a single %vit.:, N. y. Com. Ade. • This "copying telegraph" is a mo.t astonishing vontion. Ills ono of the three modes of telegraph g it embodied in esine's plain, which is no • ., we are infoi ed. the only system in nee in Engle d. It might more appropriately . termed the fac aim tie telegraph, a 11 :mantas the exact counterpart of the communication left for transmission. - ' It may startle_the incredulous to be told that an exact copy of their writing, signature and all, may be sent a thousand miles by lightning. yet such is .the fact. The system is based upon elect:o -chimistryi and The process is u simple as eating. The person in Albany who wish. es to communicate with a friend in New York. writes what he wishes; with a gummy substance upon prepared paper. This placed upon a cylinder, and at once transmitted to the other extremity. What the oporition ig, we do not fully comprehend; but the gummy sub. i stancis and the prepared payer has every thing. to do with dt.-- But this we do cortipretendtho thing is .done. for vve have hesn it. -i s Mt Belli , his '1 rongb Modelln New Yoi ';bititidredi hiiie "mein , sad 'admired..-Al6: Ea; Jow" 12EEI , ,i, Ll7' T o Bopton,Pcstryi cl : ,,t, J Pl l ll* . .l l : i r i * '`'' ' i r ,i : 1 ''"saii Itc!ai#ni)n4iiei,_ tackeiiiltimbr,Ciir a, stisie.:_ , i smg rili t be to be ap!mametl ki l7 l;" , ; 4 f,wfks ",c,titeti amano iiihother =MI , .. L . A CAt3E OF Ibil I About fifteen yei;nt'aitTetres, hot child, and as a sort of balm* afterwardl took and adopted a f. ton mo nths . o ff ered to her , by a the okins of the city. To'w or ho she came possessed 9f i 1 refused to afford any informatiot however, who took Ufa child, a i and the child has since resided u ceased lady's mother, has been ‘ now a pretty and interesting e growth, of black hair and der] learned enough of her !limitary whom sho owes the care of her aro not her parents, although th i q tended to her great kindness, shi the world, and daily, as years rip mind. the one idea of knowing 't taker; deeper and. deeper 'hold' of now, after fifteen years, her solic at times painfully affecting to w she was returning i . from ri neigh l i ered an advertisement on the 1314 in which a parcel she held in h e, enquiring for a child some yearsl , she has since been more soljeitc , peculiar situation made public. by the colored female from why whether she had been left with h sert t Al afterward, or whether sit i now living, are matters all unkm ate the liveliest solicitude with Pdger. CULTARITIES 'Or DIS . -i Washington letter writer. n describing ithe peen. 1 lasi ice of some distinguished .üblic men, any*: t t is-interesting sometimes I. see the different ways [ n m trich d A irer c ent ih individuals t I .et n ou t t a o f f the ( same o d m i: ut ( occasionally one sticks in hi throat, in the pronnci tionls, like Macbeth's *Amen.' In such a mute he gives po l lutant twitch or two at his a in collar, and runs his nY fingers through his long : ey hair till it fairly bris tles cagain. Wpbster, when ..thered for • word, or snar ed up in *sentence,- iIIMOS invariably scratches the an r corner of his left eye care if his right hand. , Failing in *tercel? with the bent kmiehle tier xesort, he springs his kn resemble an eclipsis. then p in his pockets, he throws' the u smartly forward and the word is pass, in a similar predicamen 'kite lower edge of his vest. Mr. I re that the remainder of his se Mr.lnsrigom is violent, and th Plied by Occk-hack-sho l Mr. I Crittenden and Mr. Hannegh they Weak right on.' and thei dent's English are never distioni EGTPT:-ITS Paicsracr Govan proclaimed between Egypt and' Syria was restored to the Sul the Viceroyship of Egypt, ahem faMily of Mehemet Ali Pacha. er has become imbecile and p (icic l e the terror of surrounding tint e l) actually determined to din pir , is now entirely childish, down; and his eldest son, Ibr skilful soldier. has been invest° arrived at Grand Cairo to as Egypt. The old Pacha resich near Cairo; where his tomb is intervals, hits young and favorit communicated to him the intell superseded in the Government pressed hie indignation; but I lethargy. and forget, all about i of money and very Penurious: parasites of different nations, i ernment, and make a general r tending that Egypt neveicieric foreigners, who. if they could their twin country, would navel Ono of those employers, Colt" Englishman by birth, was in tl years ago, and is quitelan able Ibrahim will take care of the I °this country; but will stop making in the navigation of man of liberal enterprise liks dier, not particularly attache or the arts, although he has tem rope. There is but little pro! 'Mitten Governments of the E. l or following the proms, of t cism is a great barrier to all ki l Y. Star. HOW 4. YOUNG MAN GOT A WI —Mr. Smithson. (an *pr. name of Smith.) wished to to improvement) to the opera. intimacy with the family for a apoko of love, on the contrary hie intention l ot remaining a put hie hiind to the bell-handl James," exclaimed Miu Jan yourself so long?" This took Smithson a little he preceding evening with tt answer, however, Jane's broil number) had gimbaled about 1 courage he said. 1 4 '1 have I "Not here. James.'—not now mered Smithson, "if you're oh! water, quick!" " What er. "who says she's engaged? said Smithson. in *confusion tinned Mr. Brownlr, "von c when you have always been cing, and taking poor Smiths "take her, my boy, she is a g distraction. May you both b long." Thereupon mother and oh son and wished him joy, an , moment, the affair was told So S •'ithson got a wife wit' and almost before he knew ii help thinking hcaras he 64 Rem WORTHY Or ALL Pains. lir. J. S. Hall, who ace* oti his tour, as the adtocate prosecuting the cantss front ou t s companion_ was etricken rnbined with the ex-Govern the'llindest manner until d his works The thanks of sincerely tendered to this t tistiti in the dolt of -the i ts any ha r 4 remark ahlat ; i him &Sing the campaign:, with the remains of Guy - ,panipd by Col—Fsliet4itt tinguisbed (demi kips , no I MI ER 29. EREOT. er4bla married lady teat • her grief, a few 'weeks male infant. of nine or bored female . living at lore the child belrged {he coloredpaisa seer I . whatever. The WY. ew years afterward died. ith the family of the de• roll' brought up. and .is almostS to woman 4t blue eyes. She has to 'know that Alum to infancy.ind childhood. ley have uniformly ex it) feels herself alone in, Pen and strengthen her 'the author of her being, f her faculties, so that cityde on this subject is itnesi. Lust week, es •oring store, she discov i' ece of au-old newspaper I ' hand was enveloped. go lost T or stolen. and It ; than ever to have he? 'Whether she was stolen, otn she was taken. or Grand unnaturally de.;t ter of her parents ant own. and naturally ere :he child.—Philadelphia INGUISHED MEN fully with the third finger his. he rubs his nose quits If his thumb. As • der sea apart until his legs unging his bands deep per section of his body bound to come.' Gen. passes his hand along Benton sinks his voice tenee is ueinteligible.—• obdurate word is sup , Johnson. -of Maryland. at. are never bothered; r drafts upon the Presi ored." . . I MENT.--When peace trmt the Ottoman Porte, and it was stipulated that d remain forever in the Tho old Pacha, howay . - • fly insane—he who was countries. and who at one ember the Turkish Em pemnnuated and broken him Pacha, a brave and with the Caftan. and has ume the government of s in one of his palaces" - , uilt. In one of his lucid son, Mehemet Alt Bey. igence of his having been .f Egypt. at which he et. • soon fell into his usual . 4 Ibrahim Pacba is fond Be will banish host of, '). employ of the old 'goy. eduction of salaries. con. ed any benefit from those Ihave got their living in have settled in Egypt.— t ey. a physician. and an .is country some fifteen , man. Ho is still in office. ortifications and defences he costly impiovements hi Nile. He is not the 'is fatheil but, a mere sol. 'to commerce. learning soled considerably in En ron making in the Mue .t, in a change of system.. e age. "Religious fanati de of improvement.—N. E WITHOUT lETICEDING • ement on the clebrated le Miss Browitly. (another .le had been on terms of out five year:i t but never he had frequently declared chelor. One morning be and wee admitted. "Oh. ..where hove you kept abaCk, for he had spettt family. Before he could,' era and sisters (8 or 10 in him. Summoning*l/ his come to ask you-" oh!" "That is,' stem• 1 ot engage o—...." " Oh ! l s that," inquired her fath. ' "' 1 didint mean---" "Of course not," con , uld'at suppose such a thing r favorite." Then &drills- I nby the hand. • he. said— ; od girl. and levee you to . as happy as the day is Igen crowded open flftnith• company coming in at the o them as a profound secret. • out popping the guestioU. himself. "int we cannot . ed' into matrimony.—P . The Mississippian says: mpanied Governor MoN • tt .f whip doctrines. deelitt - d the moment that his illuatil down with disease. He re . r and ministered to him ath had performed his te - i.._ e friends of the deceased - Me ottoman. He forgot the pair , and we may wen retraet e-have made in relation Ito (Mr. Hall retu rn ed to thitielty °Nutt: he was also noordet. o. whose devotion to his dis• hounds."