•••11,•-•*••• • •-z,,•••Si•-.1.•- • - •-• : •:•• • • , -• . . • .1 ;:!,• I *. '• • Ert • ii4 l l : ' • . . • "'' _ ;, , , f• • • - ,--, _ • - .•_ _ _ , ..• .V. 414.-7, i• • • • , • •t -11 J ‘ • 1 ,4 11 1,. ft; ".: , • • • '43iM=.WRIGHT, Edtor and_PiC•prietor. VULL3;IIE' r X~L;LNITI3EIt3.] ONO PUSBLILIED Evarskzugaly MORNIM Dice in Carpet .11a11, IV - era-arcs: earner of (Front and X..oeust streets. . . Terms of übscription.„ die Copyperunnum.i f pnidin advance. . if Inn paid whitin three • montherom commencemenwfthe year- 200 -46 Croatia' .ea, Cop -37. "Nro4ableription received fo•a Cr'. time than 4ix manilas; and no paper will ha di.continued anti! all +a•rrearstgas are patil,airiestnt.thA opthqoaort.be pah lCrMlaaeynsayhe,eraittcdbymahh a Whepublit.ll - rink. Rates of Advertising. .1 square-Di inesjone - week , 60 38 • thre'e weeks, ""V."etteli iiibisequintlitieition,., 10 — 112" I net] one week throe weeki." - ^ = = I-10 " • • Poelitob.equentinsertion. ,25 urrgertilverti.ement.in proportion " A itbertel ifacount wi ll be made to cotrterly,half enrly or rly tdvertinertriwho are strictlyconfined o I heir Ipu.itte... grelettipites. English Sovereigns In spite of his firm tramp, brawny arm and stalwnrt frame, the Norman conqueror was at length conquered, and retired from the field of battle to succumb to the last en emy in the monastery of Sc. Gervais at Rouen, the ehurch of which is now reputed to be the oldest structure in the city. The closing scene 'first a melitochoty spcetacle.— Robert, hie — first-lawn. 'to' withal ho be queathed Normandy, we* away prosecuting crusading adventures. William. the second son, staid only to hear hiMself nominated to the crown f Eogland, and thou left his father to get through his last 'twiny as he mull, galloping tiff tw the coast, eager to secure his prize. henry, the third 'son, lingered sulky and grumbling till his ready money was declared, when he departed likewise, hurried to the treasury. carefialy weighed the silver, and placed it tinder iron looks.anditintling4. No satinet; dhl the• fa tal event occur, about sunrise, on a Septem ber day, than nobles, knights and. priests. decamped.tu look after their own interests, while servants, set to work to plunder; and the, hody l of the once potent ;monarch stripped and deserted, till the charity of an obscure individual provided for• its convey ance to a resting.place at Caen, accorling to the wish of the deceased. But there was some difficulty in effecting the funeral, : as one of the bystanders, ti man of low degree. claimed property in • the site of the grave; and the service for the dead was not allowed - - to proceed tilltiiit'y;OUttitad been paid down as an instalmeat of his rights 'A plain gray marble slab before the high altar in the church of St Stephen now marks the sep ulchre of NVilliam the Cowrie' or; but not an atom of him lies beneath it. In 1542 the tomb was opened by the Bishop of &aye au:, when the body was found 'inlgood pres ervation, justifying by its appearance the rep.,rts of chronicles respecting hi- t.,1l stat ure. But thirty years later it was violated during nn insurrection, when the man was dug up and emptied of its contents, which, however, the care of a monk preserved in his chamber. Here they continued till a subsequeat insurrection, when the whole abbey was plundered, and tae remains were Jost, except one of the thigh-bones, which was reinterred, and a monument raised over it in 1642. Even this relic has disappeared, fur the revorationists of 1793 rifled the spot, and disposed of the fragment as if the last vestige of a dog. The furious democrats were not wise in their generation, for the fleshless remnant of the limb might have beenfpreserved as un impressive. memorial of the fate Of royalty; and a veritable thigh bone of the' dreaded conqueror would now fetch a handsonte price in the London mar ket, where all things oda and rare are read ily disposed'of to collectors who have more cash than brains. As a hunter gny, William the Red King entered the New Forest on a bright August morning. lie had slept the previous night at a lodge within its precincts. •'The Red King lies in Ma!wood keep To drrv.• er o'er iawii and steep; Ha's bowie hum wi h the morn. His et-eds are .wif hi • licuo.de are good; The like in coven, or high wend, Were haver cheered wall horn:, None more rigorously enforced the laws of the chase than he; or more , cruelly pun ished an infringement of them. It was consolation to the poor &sons . contemptu ously to style •him "a wood-pe eper and no dting;" at the sauie iime•lirtuly believing that their oppressors were nut always al :lowed to disport themselves with impunity, ,the Sell One sometimes inttrrupting their recreatien, in the hunting grouods, and marring revelry with sore disaster. The _event ~f the•day strengthenod this popular .suyeretition;:for,the lifelSss body of the hied Mint Wail soistt stretched un the gre ' ios'vrard .toy .the chance arrow of au attendant,- 4ifenry, his brothir, left him to his fate. and, putting spurs Wilts horse, rude off to Win chester to seise . the royal treasury. 'The in voluntary. author of the deed fled, fearing the consequences; and the barons ench. de psrted to ids residence to put it in a postute of defence, sus the succession might hare to be decided by the sword. Towards evening a man named Porkies, on returning home -through the forest from his daily tecupation of charcoal-burning, found the abandoned corpse lying on the turf, which was Rotor:1- W with blood. Ignorant of t is quality, he placed the slaughtered man in his cart, and conveyed hitu to Winchester. Liu fur found a grave in the cathedral, and was interred in - the centre fir the choir, With little cere molly, none gr:aving. The fall of s tower in the followinkyear;'which covered his tomb with its ruins, was commonly inter preted its a sign of the. displeasure of ',lea ven that he had received Christian burial.— 'Speed relates that his bones were after wards taken up, and, being laid in a coffin along with those of Canute, were replaced. A plain monumental stone now marks the spot.. It , is singular that, after the lapse of eight centuries, cottagers of the name of the charcoal-burner still recite in the New For est, and that a wheel of the identical cart descended; ; to o'reeeni'dato,"as un beir . loom from father to son, till used; for fuel during an inclentent7winter.:,o7? . Fleury I, like his, father..the,.-Conqieror, abroad, on tia Deceinie'r of a disease brought on by his fondness fur lampreys. ,This watt at Ltionii-la-Foret, now a small. town =approached through the remains of a 'forest in the vicinity of Rouen. His .remains were interred in the abbey of Reading, Berkshire, one of his foundations, astructure which ha. passed away, and no man knoweth of his sepulchre. Stephen z tertainateil his troubled ;reign .nt Borer, and found • a resting place' by the side of lkiitqueen and, son at. the monastery of Faversliant. in Rent, which he had found ed. There his corpse remained until the dissolution of the abbeys, when, for the posse-lion of the leaden coffin, it was ex ii.o.ued, nod its -contents thrown into the sea. 81 50 The restles and fiery floury 11. breathed his last at the castle of Chinon, the French NV, inds ! ,r J oy..the plantagenent kings, notymn imposing ,ruin, on_ st,commanding height, near the junction .of -the Vienne with the Loire. Courtiers, who had trembled at his word, took a hurried departure, and person. al retainers' follOwie-the i einiinrile':of their superiors; 'but not before tl.ey had stripped the dead man of'et;e'rY , rag, and the nPliit mem every ankle of value. 'Afte6atite delay,"cliarity found a windingsheee fur the aud •it wtorremoved far interment to theneighboriiig abbey of FonteVrand, thee one of tlieWeitlthiestecelesiastical establish ments in France, situated,ai, the head of a little retired and 'wooded, valley. Here, previous to the furteral,the corpse was laid in the church, when, according to legentlery story, it shuddered convulsively at the up munch of Richard, an undutiful sun, as if con demning and athhorriag his unnaturalcon duct. Richard 1., the conqueror of Saladin and hero of a hundred fights, received his death-wound before the castle of Cholas in the Limousin, the petty fortress of a sal, and was laid by the side of his father at Fontevrand, where also reputed his moth er. Queen Eleanor of Guienne, and of er wards Isabella d'Angouleme, the queen of his brother John. Recumbent effigies of these personages, were placed upon the tombs—one of the earliest instances we hate of this interesting sepulchral relic of the middle ages. The abbey remains. but it has been crayoned into a prison—Houma 6eutrale de Detention...one of the largest is Frattee..- The•churuh•dembarentire aisle the outside, but the interior. is wholly' changed. Nor are the royal W/11110 in their original position. They were turn up and rifled by the Vandals of the Revolution, who signal• ized their hatred of royalty by scattering the ashes of-the dead, and' mutilaiing the statues, which are now stowed away in a dark corner of the south transept. The effigies, thought sadly defaCed, still retain some of the cOloring with which they were ornamented, and are of great interest from the evident marks they bear of being por traits. Both kings are represented in royal robes, without armor. Gl'mur de Lion's fig ure is remarbable for its broad forehead and tall stature, six feet and a half. It has been frequently suggested that application should he made to have these anrauments of the first Piantagenets transferred to Westmin star Abbey as a fitting asylum, now that no fragment of the dead remains in connection with them—a cutmession which would doubtless be imtnediaiefy granted by the French government, in return !sr having received the body of Napoleon front St. Reletia, and his will from Doctors' Com- ECM The worthless Joint was,teized with tour tal sickness in the fens of Lincolnshire, after seeing the sumpter-hurses that carried his money drowned in the inarshei, and taking an immoderate quantity of peaches or pears and now cider to console tint-eit under the mist, none.• • With great ild&coas he successfully reached the castles of Simi ford ai,d Newark, in the last ut..wilich lie ended it disgraceful career, and was re oared at his own (Metre tulio'buried ih Wurce.•tei Cathedral. his tomb there, in the centre Of the choir, hamafull,recumbett effigy, the first memorial of the kind executed in Eng land for an English monarch. It was opened in 1796, when the corpse was found nearly entire, after an interment of live hun dred and eighty years. his son, the feeble henry ILL, died at Westminster, and was the first of our sovereigns interred in its Abbey-church since the'Saxon times, an ed ifice which be rebuilt from its foundation. The Pell Records contain .an entry of pay ment to two chaplains for divine service be ing performed at the hermitage of Charing: on the occasion of his decease, at• preen• one of tl-o busiest sites in the metropolis forcibly reminding us of the different char acter of the spot in the thirteenth century The tomb exhibits his Hfigy, - 6nely execute.; in braes, and cast at the same time as thy adjoining effigy of Oaten Eleanor. Edwarr f. expired . at the village of Burgh-upon "NO ENTERTAINMENT IS SO CHEAP AS READING, NOR ANY PLEASURE SO LASTING." COLUMBIA, PENNSYLVANIA, SATURDAY MORNING, - MARCH 17, 1860. Sands, near Carlisle, within sight of the Scotland which he had•vowed to subdue.— But although he is said to have left express orders for his bones 'to be carried at the head of the army till the purpose was ac complished, they werelquickly deposited in Westminster Abbey by an' unwarlike son, Where the body was found comparatively undecayed in 1774. It was rirayed in roy al robes, with crown and sceptre, and mea sured six feet two inches; hence the solphri pet of Longshnnks was notinnptly bestowed. The .obsequ es are said to have been per formed with great splendor. In the accounts of his executors we have, among other en tries,, one of £lOO paid. "f.r horses pur chased for koiglits tu,ride in the king's ar mor before his body, between the church of the Holy Trinity, Loudon, and Westmin- 12E1 The effeminate, and deposed.Edwerd 11., foully murdered in Berkiey Castle, Glouces tershire, by ordcrof Mortimer, the infamous paramour of his infamous queen, wee hur riedly couveyed to a grave in Gloucester Cathedral. Deplorable degradation marked the lust bears of Edward at Shene Pa lace, afterwards called. ,Riclimmid, for the practice of abandoning royalty in the arti cle or death was adopted in his case. Be fore the old mail's, breath,. left him, minis ters and iMrtierB went, off to- his successor; .the vile ba y .; wit ant he had cherished desert ed him likewise, after stealing the ring from his helpless finger; and his other personal attendalits quitted .the chamber taplunder the house. The the mighty' victor at Crecy repose, in the same. tomb with those of his wife, in the Confessor's. Chapel, Westminster Abbey, according to her re quest on her death-bed. The dethroned Richard LI, perished via,. lently in Pontefract Castle, Yorkshire; bat a more than usual degree of mystery rests upon the horrid transaction. "Raw Rich ard died," says Froissart, "and by what menus, I could not tell when Wrote this chronicle." lle then, inn naive an& touch ing manimr, contrasts his former , splendor and miserable bill; "fur never, says: he, had king of England spent sn mach money in keeping up at stately 'household.. And John Froissart, canna and treasurer' of saw it and considered 'it; and' I lived in it a qiittrterof at year. and gond cheer did he give me: 'and when I departed from hire. (it was at Windsor.)'on my ve taking, he gave too at silver goblet, gilt, and witbianne hundred nobles, therefore am I much 'hound to pray God for him." Richard was roost probably dispatched lay starvation. .0 o•e he the rogel chair. J'eji unit Fettifite AcOwt A heleful smile upon their haled guest." The corpse of the unhappy king was brought to London, and exhibited In St. ' Paul's as a pu blic certificate of death, which was doubled by some, then removed to Langley in fie ts• for interment, and finally to Westminster Abbey. [lie supplanter, and perhaps murderer, Henry IV., tact a I ,„ expected death in the Jerusalem Chain ber, aml was entombed in Canterbury Cu• thedral, by the side of his first wife, the only English sovereign buried in that city. Henry V. expired at Vincennes, near Paris, and was brought with mournful pump to hie native country for the last rites. Bish ops in pontifical attire, mitred abbots, and a vast multitude of all ranks, met the body, as it approached the capital. The church men chanted the service fur the dead as it passed over London bridge and through the streets of the city; the obsequies were per formed at Sc. Paul's in presence of the whole Parliament, and the remains were interred in state in Westminster Abbey. A headless and otherwise mutilated figure ot the king, carved in oak, and originally cov ered with silver, marks the tomb, above which are the saddle, helmet, and shield, supposed to have been used at Agincourt. The imam 'tie floury VI. died a captive in the Tower, probably by violent means, and was first interred ne atertsey Abbey, Sur rey, then removed to Windsor by ardor of Richard 111. [lts successor, Edward IV., elided his days of pleasure and profligacy at Westminster, and was exposed .at a board after death, naitu I tram the waist upwards. in order that the people might see he had wit been inurdered—an net stikiogly trati% e ..f turbulent times. lle was then buried iii St. George's Chapel, IVindsor, the exquisitely beautiful edifice which he found ed. A steel tomb, exe uteri by Quillen. Nl.t.sys, marks the slg. The body was tiiiifeeayed, the dress nearly perfect, is were the lineaments of the nice, in .1789, .titer a period of three hundred and six yeas. fhe boy-king, Edwad V., and hit• younger brother, the Duke of York auto ciUusly murdered in the Tower, were pri vately buried within its walls by the assas sins, at a spot which long remained un known. But in the reign of Charles IL, while some. alterations were making near the' hite ToWer;the workmen found, about ten feet in the grouni, the remains of two striplings, which, on etstnination, appeared to be th , se of two boys of the ages of the princes, thirteen and eleven years. They were in a wooden °best, and were re-inter .ed in a marble urn in Henry VII.'. Chap el, Westminster Abbey. A Latin Enecrtp •ion gives the commonly receierod account .f the sari tragedy: ••Elere lie the relics of Edwin! V.. King of England, and Richard. Doke of York, who, being confined in the Aver. and there stifled with pillows, were privately and meanly buried, by order of their Perfidious uncle, Richard, the usurper. Their bones, long inquired after and wished for, after lying one hundred and ninety-one years in the rubbish of the stairs, were, on the 17th4.f.fuly, 1674, by undoubted proofs, discovered, being buried deep in that place. Charles 11., pitying their unhappy late, or dered those unfortunate princes to be laid among the relics of their predecessors, in 1678, and the thirteenth of - his reign." Richard 111., the author of this foul deed, slain in the battle of Bosworth Field, was unceremoniously thrown across a horse, and conveyed behind a pursuivantmt-arms to Leicester. There the Corpse was buried in the 'church of St. Iklary:4s2beleaging to a monastry of the Gray Friars. his con queror placed over him a tomb adorned with his statue in alabaster, where it re mained till the dissolution of the Abbeys, when the: monument was utterly destroyed. the' grave rifled, and its human , remains ignominiously cast out. The stone coffin was made a drinking-t v rough for horses, at the White [horse Inn, Leicester. The first of the Tudors, Henry VII., died at Richmond Palace, and was laid in the mngnifieent chapel which he had• built, and which bears his name appended to Westminster Abbey. The tomb of, black marble stands in the centre, inclosed in an admirably executed chantry of cast brass, ornamented with statues. The brutal Hen ry VIII, wont to his account at Westmin ster, not aware, till the last moment came, of his true condition, none caring to tell him, -as several persons had been pat to dtz ! ith at various times fur, saying that the king was dying, or likely to die. Re found a, grave under the choir• of St.- Gleurge's Chapel, Windsor, where to leaden coffin was ob.erved, supposed to be his, upon the vault being opened in the year 1813. It measur ed nearly seven feet in length,• and app'ear ed to ha-c been beaten in by violence about the middle, as there wits a considerable opening in that part of it, exposinga mere skeleton of the 'inmate. Some beard re mained upon the chili, but there,was no thing to, discriminate the 'person, and no exterior inscription. The four next mice reigns-rrEdward VI., who died: at Green wich , Palaem, Mary, at St..J.itnes's; Eine bed), at ,Richmond,' and James I. at Theo bahrl iu lions—were all committed to the earth in Westminster Abbey. A stately monument marks the grave of Elizabeth, the last of our monarchs to whose resting- Wave ~ttch a memorial 'has been given. The axe of the executioner terminated the trouble: ,career La: ,Cluttles I. on the scaffidd before IVliiteball. A universal groan burst from the multitude assembled upon the sad occasion, at the fatal stroke. rush was made to dip handkerchiefs in the royal blood as a memento; but the trips put themselves in motion, cleared the streets, and dismal tragedy, end-d. This is the testimony of Philip Henry, father of Matthew Il.mry, the commentator, who was present. The remains were interred a t Windsor. in the same vault with those of henry VIII. and Jute Seymour. A few devoted cavaliers attended the ceremony, and noticed the coincidence be, aeon the coronation and the funerrl of their master. On the former nova- , iti the king. chose to appear in a white robe, o , m l : s it this was op posed by ht. trieods as contrary to he prat; lice of his pre.le. essors and to popular idea for purple was t..-tisisidered the color appro prism.: to sovereignty. Ile was superstiti ously reminded that, of two exceptions. to the ride—Richard 11. and Henry VI., who wore white satin at their eigninations—both had cotne to a violent end. But Cheries persisted in his purpose; the third "white king" was crowned; and he went to the grave in his favorite color. The snow fell heavily at the time, so as to cover the black velvet pall with a silvery mantle, on the passage of the bier from the Castle Co St. George's Chapel. All knowledge of the pre cise place of interment was afterwards lost, till the year 1813. when, in the course of ma inn sone retrials, the workmen acci dentally opened the vault; and, to clear up a douptfull point in history. its contents were examined in the presence of the Prince Regent, Sir lleory Ilalford, and others. There w.ts a plain leaden coffin discovered, with two more. The .ureter bore the in set ipt ton, in large legible characters, on at scroll of lead encircling it, "King Charles, 1348." It contained a wooden man, very much decayed, in which was the body, care fully wrapped up in cerecloth. Upon dis closing the face, the skin was found dark and discolored; the. forehead and puppies had lost little or nothing of their muscular substance; the cartiliago of toe nose was gone; the left eye wits, open and full, in the first element of exposure, though it vanish. ed almost immediately; and the pointed beard, eo characteristic of the period, was perfeot. The shape of the face was a long oval: and its strong resemblance was in stantly recognized to the coins. busts, and e•peuially the pictures of Vandyke, by which it has been made familiar to us, When the head had had been entirely disengaged from the attachments which confined it, it wo found to be loose, and without any difficult‘ was taken up and held to view. It lb • evident marks of having been severed by , heavy blow. inflicted with a very sharp in 'unmoor. The hair at the hack was thick. but short. contrary to the prevailing cited.• of the time; and had probably been cut ofi for the convenience of the executioner, ot after thralls. to furnish friends with relics. Oliver Cromwell departed this life a' Whitehall, on the anniversary of the battles of Dunbar and Worcester, two of his great est victories. A fearful storm raged in Eng land and over nearly the whole of Europe on the preceding night'and worn. The un chained winds distur• ed the waters from the Baltic to the Bosphorus; the seas were strewed with wrecks from the coast of Nor way to those of Italy and Spain; while towns and forests suffered by the hurricane, from the Grampians to the Apennines. The Protector had a state funeral in Westmin ster Abbey, the cost of which his represen tatives were afterwards called upon to pay; and, contrary to the maxim that "English vengeance wars not with the dead," his corpse was disgracefully disinterred, for the purpose of being treated with indignity.— Contemporary accounts state that the heads of Cromwell, Ireton, and Bradshaw, were exposed on the roof of Westminster Hall, and that the bodies were thrown into a neighboring hole, after being suspended no the gallows at Tyburn; but a tradition for merly existed among the inhabitants of Red Lion Square that they were interred in the centre of that particular locality. It is probably true, an not at all at variance with the other relations, for the gallows was frequently erected at the Holborn end of Fetter,Lane, within a short distance of Red Lion Square. Most likely,. therefore, the Protector slumbers his last sleep in the lo cality mentioned. But though discarded from the mausoleum of royalty; and igno mininusly treated,- his name.lives in history with far greater honor than that of his spite ful antagonists; and none of the legitimate sovereigns have, like him, been panegYrized by four such eminent contemporaries as were Milton, MUM., 'Dryden, and LLnike. Ri6hard'Cromwell, his son, and his secces sor fir little more than seven months, after n long expatrhttion spent his last daie, un dera feignedliarne,' nt Cheshunt, where lie died peacefully, 'in 'the reign of Queen • • `_"• , Anne. " The dissolute lire and -disgraceful reign of Cli'title's 11.. ended suddenly at Whitehall, and ,was justly, followed bye neglected fu neral: file king, ; ' says Evelyn, .-chron iclindtlie event, !:was this night buried very obSetively in a vault, under Henry, VlL's Chaliel,Without any manner of pomp, and soon forgotten"—an apt commentary upon the; wise man's übservation: "So I saw the wicked buried, who had,come and,gone from the place of the holy, and they .were for gotten in the city where they had so done." James IL, a king fur twelve years after his expatriation only in name, surrendered his nominal sovereignty 'at St. Germain's, near Paris. Vicissitudes, as strange in death as in life, seem to have attended this Misgui ded man. He left his heart to the Panics de St. Mario. at Challiot. He bequeathed his brains to the old Scotch College in the Rue des Fosses' St.-Victor, in the chapel of which, now leased to a private school, there is a marble monument to his memory. Au urn of bronze-gilt, containing the king's brains, formerly stood on the crown of this monument; but it was smashed, and the contents scattered over the ground, during the French ReVolut'on. The body itself was interred in the monastery of English Benedictine Monks, in the Rue du Fair bourg St. Jacques. Upon the destruction of this building, it was exhumed, and, after being kept fur some years in a temporary tomb in the neighborhood, it was transport. ed to the parish church of St. Germain's where a monument was placed over it by George I P. William 111, and Anne both died at Ken sington Palace, and repose in IVesttninster Abbey. George 1., arrested by the hand of death white traveling abroad, expired,,at Osnabargh, on the very same bed on which he was born, and was laid by the side of Ids ancestors in n vault beneath the Schloss kirehe, at Hanover. George 11. departed this life at Kensington, and, under cir cumstances cf some interest, woe laid in Westininirer Abbey. As a proof of his re spect for his consort, Queen Caroline, who had preceded bins to the grave, he left di rections for their remains to be mingled to exther. The order was obeyed. by the two coffins being placed ,in a largo stone sere°. Onus, when the sides of the wooden coffins nearest each other were withdrawn. This WAR a tradition merely at, the Abbey, till confirmed in the year 1837. At that time the vault was opened, under authority of Secretary of State's warrant, in order to re move a child of the : l)A° of Cumberland's, late king of Hanover, which had been burl. ed in it, to -Windsor. Dr. Martian super intended the disinterment, which took place by night. In the middle of the vault, to wards one end, the large stone sarcophagus Was seen, with the two aides of she coffins, which had been" withdrawn, standing up against the wall. Windsor was the, scene of the death and "•urial of the three next sovereigns—George George IV., and William IV. They .ie in the Royal Dormitory, to the east of it. George's Chapel, where all the members f the reigning family, deceased in England .ace been placed, since its application to •1, 0 purpose of a mausoleum, with the ex eptiun of the Duke of Sussex, buried by pie own desire in Kensal Green Cemetery. . rid the unhappy wife of George IV.. who ..ne removed to New Brunswick. These eminiecences of royalty .in its ruins em• Matien.lly suggest the moral of the poet: "Tire glories of our blood and state Arr shadows, not substootlal things." $1,50 E.E.11"13.A1l IN ADVANCE; $2,170 . 1F NOT IN ADVANCE. laird Nic4 Laird Nicky, about forty years ago, was a conspicuous inhabitant of the village of Half- Starvlet, in a mountainous district of Scot land. A most indefatigable wrestler with the difficulties of this life, was the Laird; a mere day-laborer in his calling, but one so diligent and so ingenious in turning all things to account, that before_ he was past middle life he lied realised enough of money to purchase a field in his neighborhood, for which reason ho had obtained an appella tion which, in Scotland, is denied to no pos sessor of land, however small ire extent. Nicky was a bulky man, always dressed in the meanest of attire. Ile bad a cottage, with various accommodations for an old horse, a cow, a pig, and some poultry. To anything by which money could be made, he was ready to turn his hand. lie even swept chimneys, reserving, however, fur that duty, Saturday, for the prudent reason that that was the last clay of his weekly shirt. While doing day work for others he was sure to have several half-hours out of every four-and-twenty to devote to delving and debbling in his own garden, to repair ing his hemlines° and piggery, or driving l out dung to his own land. Sometimes be would be seen mending the thatch of his j house, invested in a woman's petticoat, to I protect his clothes, albeit one would have thought them little worthy of such care. At 1 another time you would see him driving home a load of some country stuff, of which ' he was going to make a merchandise. Long before any learned agricultural society pointed out the thing. Hickey bed found it to his advantage to lay a set of old donre over his dung-heap to 93.ve it from evapora tion, and had learned to drain it into a lit tle hole, which he kept carefully. .covered over with a large slate. lie had a wife in delicateshealth, and many smell bairns, and was rather hard to them all, his iron will leaving him no Sympathies for the ,weak flo.BBS of others. Poor Nell) , wished much to be allowed the little luxury of tea; but had to take it standing at.a cupboard,which she ws:s . ,redi,to shut up if her husband should aortae in.: S iaehas been known, neon- Bien:illy, in his presence, to take it as a medicine in a cup sprinkled with meal. At dinner, he sat, with the potato-pot between his knees; taking care,:in the distribution of the 'cO n ten ts,' that, the hunger of the bread winner of the family should be amply satis fied, come of the others what might. He was a healthy man under all Millard work, until the establishment of a Friendly Soul ' ety, in the village, after which he generally had an illness of several weeks in the dead I of winter, especially if the usual labors of such men ae lie were interrupted by snow. Nicky would then mount an old plaid and poly-cliromotic night-cup, and . taking up a position by the fire-side, become entitled to an allowance of five shillings a week from "the Box." " There was a scandalous story of the inspectoror visitor of the society has ing found him one day engaged in the 'aeria -1 ing of his thatelt; but strict justice obliges I us to record that, on' the visitor expressing his gratificationt at seeing him well again, he cried "Weell Pm far frac wee!. D'yo no see, man, I've a man working at the hock u' the house, here, and I was just show ing him what was to be done." It must also be remembered in Nieky's favor, that, amidst all his worldly prosperity, he was a man who never forgot that ho was mortal. In his walk and conversation, he was rather noted for seriousness, well as n constant readiness to testify to the infirmity of poor human nature: "It was just grand," his neighbors declared, "to hear him ex- , pounding points by the fireside in the ' gloaming; and at a death-bed he was nearly as po'orfu' as the minister him-er." In the younger days of Laird Nicky, gnmo was a thing little thought of in the north. Men now and then went oat with fowling pieces, and spent a forenoon in the turnip- i fields seeking fur partridges, or in the moors i looking for grouse, nod next day were at their usual avocations. No country gentle man as yet thought of deriving a revenue from the wild animals on his estate. No man dreampt of' going to live a month at it time in the wilderness merely to amuse him self by the slaughter of the fowls of the air. But, by-and-by, it became customary for English gentlemen of fortune to take large 'tracts of Scottish moorland on lease, with a ! view to the exclusive privilege of shooting I no these grounds; thus establishing n kind I of rent fur such rroperty, often not much i less than the first. Many rich Southrowt bought hyperborean estates for the sake of the sport they could afford. It was, of course, essential to this system -that the game should be encouraged and protected as much as possible, so that there really might be birds to shoot; for to go -with nll the proper apparatus and ample provision for a month's living at a particular place, and, after all, senrcely start a single wing, was a solecism not to be submitted to if it could be at all avoided. Laird ?rickey marked the revolution which was going on. and could not but ob mtree witb profound interest how, since the game bad begun to be protected by means of keepers and shepherds, there had been snob nn increase in the quality which his unpre tending neighbors were able to send by the carrier to be sold in Edinburgh. Ile heard ,f the high prices which grouse realised. Ind longed to take a pert in the traffic. It 'coursed to him, however, that merely to pick up an occasional brace in the course [WHOLE NUMBER 1,543. of a country ramble, and, commit diem to Jock Jaffray next day as he came past with his cart, in the hope of getting three or four shillings returned from the poulterer in the ensuing week, was poor work, not wordy of a rrmii of any genius. Ho soared a irieter flight. He announced his intention of ta king out the license for game, like his more wealthy neighbors. People thought nay had gone mad. Pride in his little field, recently purchased, had evidently turned his brain, And many were the moral reflections on, the subject. "Eh, dear sake, to think on the wand's gear haeing sic an effeckl Virhaes the guid o't, if he canna guide it? Eh, ny. Eb, we're puir frail creature, and hae mickle need to pray for strength to keep us out o' yam ties." Nickey said n , thing, giving no reply even to questions which were merrily Tut to him, as to the moor he designed to take for the season, the friends be. intended to in vite to his box, and so forth. When the longed for Twefth arrived, he remained at home as usual, very busy, however, in erect ing a curious, many sided hut or lodge at the corner of his field, apparently designed as a. kind of summer-house. It was also remarked that he spent a good deal of time in taking down and doing up a number of old fowling-pieces which he had lately pur chased. lie seemed so much engaged in these pursuits as to have forgot his harvest. There was his crop of oats, fully ripe and regularly "stocked," but no word of Nielly taking it in. What could it 4 mean? S.,me weeks elapsed, and the labors of nu t= were everywhere at nn.end. ,The octo her frosts were setting, in, and still there were Nicky's oat-stocks standing, out in the GUI Why, the very birds from the neigh boring moors—Sir ,qoorge . Telfair's par ticularly—wore •begining to, come, down to eat the neglected grain, it was evident that in a Very little while they would make an end of it. All his usual thrift bad certain ly deserted him. Ode forenoon the quiet of.the,vidlage was disturbed by a quick series of, sharp lend sounds, not unlike a feu de joie, andjutuatof the people , were iminediately-astir lee what had , happened. On due examination it wiis found that the sound had proceeded from the queer latioking , hut, pc aum,iner house in Nieky's field, and ,was produced by a'set of fowlingpieces which that mys terious persori had. arranged there on a frame to go off together on 'the setting fire of a train, and which had actually , at this first shot killed about a score of: grouse and partridges. Nicky was now coolly gathering up his many victims in a large isack, I t appeared that he had tal.en hieidea from the machine of the regicide Piegelii, oftlyrci fixing his pieces that one bore directly : upon each of tbo six or seven heaps into which he had collected his crop. !lacing prepared everything in the most careful manner, Le had set himself down to wait until a ,eori siderable number of birds were gathered in the spot; when, firing the train, lie had dealt sudden destruction amongst them, with the result which has bean stated. his neighbors were lust in wonder at what they saw, and it was some time before they thoroughly comprehended the drift of the whole, affitir. When at length they under: stood Nicky's plan 'and its, effects, they, readily yielded him tho admiration doe to his superior genius. "Gehl faith. dicky kens what lie's about. Fee warrant he's an nuld aoe. Eh, whit would hue thought it?" I When Nicky ital got his machine reload ed, he found it necessary to warn:his admir ing neighbors stump from the premises. "Ye see. coy friends, this is a solitary busi ness o' mine. The birds winna come unless they see a cleur field. Let every man. then, gang hamo to his ain house, and come as little this way as possible. I hope to get another shot afore dinner time." They readily obeyed him; and in a coot•le of hoar. or as he did get a second shot, and an effec tive one, nearly the same number of birds being slaughtered. In short, Nicks , was able to send forty brace of birds into Edin burgh next morning by the hands of Jook Jaffrny; thus, as hesaid, clearing the license the first tiny, besides a "wee thing owrc." It was nut a game to be played at too much, fur in that case he would have soon created a general impression among the bird population of the district to the effect that Nioky's field was dangerous ground.. Too knowing for Ibis, be abstained from firing for three days, during which . , however, he left a single stack expose.). jostle keep up the connection. Then be once store exposed the whole of his crop, and taking up his po- sition in the summer-house, made doe prep orations for what he called another field•day. The birds came in nearly as great numbers as before, and by superior marking he was not less successful than he bad been at first. lie generally bagged from six to ten brace at a shot, and before the evening be was generally in a condition to send a good load of game to town. By this second day'a pro. ceedings hie profits cnuld 'net well be less than five pounds. The intelligence being quickly spread over the district, there was it degree of fury inspired in the breasts of the gentlemen of, the adjacent moors such as bed no ,psrallil in the annals of sporting. The first impres sion everywhere was that McIT was a poacher, alike without government , license and permission of landlord, so that there eoald be no difficulty in suppressing and punishing him. flat it soon became known that Nick did pnapetie a liceitse, and only