.1: 1 )`e 11 7 1 1 0 ‘ r Ft 11l V c l r i 1 11 1,1 .11r-mL SAMUAL WRIGHT, Editor and Proprietor. VOLUME XXXI, NUMBER 33.3 PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY MORNING Office in Carpet halt, North-tress corner (If Front and Locust streets. Terms of Subscription. Oue Copypc raneurn.i f paidia advance. ••• • if act paid witilist three 4nonflisfromeommedeemealoithe year, Ccma.teis zL c.crp-sr. Not unocrunion received l oru le., tune than gar "annals; and no paper trill In. di-com 'num! !mil: nit accenrugesurepaid,unlo.it.at the optional' the pith s:4ler- I . U.Nloneygn aybe• em ittedb y it nn h s risk. • - Rates of Advertising squar I [GI inc..] one week, *0 39 •' three. weeks. 75 emelt.ubseqo en an serlion, 10 (12 inesNmeweek. 50 three weeks, t uo ~ emellAull. , equen 'insertion. :15 Larger Overti.ement.in prOpOrtiall A I ibera I tileountwillbe Mide to quarterly ,linif• early o r ?early Ova rtlaerg,who are strieti )eonfined otheir business. DR. 'DUFFER, DENTIST, ---OFFICE, Front Street 4th door Irma Locust. over $o for & MeDottalit'e Hook .tore Columbia, Pat. EL - Pl.:Or:wee, :ante a- Jolley'. I'llo togJ ph Gallery. neut 4 2t, - NVELSIf, TIISTICB OF THE'PEACE, Columbia, Pa. OFFICE, in Nit'lnpper's New Ilatlcling, below Ittlaek's Itolel, Front weet. IDPPrompi attention siren 10 all 11115111054 entrusted to hie rate. November 4'3, 1E37. 11. M. NORTII, A TTORNEY AND COUNSELLOR AT LAZY El cow In hi . Pa. Collection= 1 romptly ma de i n I.amm-1m and Yorl lounue a. Cniumbia,llTay 4,1930, J. W. FISTIER, Attorney and Counsellor al Law, IClcalia.rribict., Pea,. COI :eplcnl rl,, 1,%u _ S, Atlee Bockius, D. D. S. pit CTICE:z Orermive, Surgical rind llech.11) irnl Dviatlmeqth. of Delili-dry. ()Fru. ('...u'. I ill Ilou, and PC., naive, Colombia, l'a May 7 I -419. _ Harrison's Coumbian Ink t- -apertor tittle:rt. peratalettlift black 'r had ant corroding the pea. cut lie had tit nm Ate.hritte :Note, :tact til•trltet r• 1, D0r,1 Poll4l. 'elnt.' , ,a. Jaw. 9. I-410 Have Ju.st Received - FIR. CUTTER'S Improvrt! Cipst Expanding ;MO r utm r if; vi tr, it , telt in.., and Patent Skirt Supporter lb pi,l the article Ora I. W•git , rl/ r hut I.rit ( it MI see theta at Faintly NNalttitte `teat Odd re'lne.-' [April 9.1 Prof. Gardner's Soap I'VE have the New I-log hoot snap 1 0 . i hoce r not obutin n fl nm illy 'OA') .1110, is I no the -I:In. and will take gu'a , l. 901. It pm NVOO., Good-, II In Ille•lelore na nuwbu•'. for 3.111 worth of your 111011 Cy at the Faintly Nl,oh man aiiote Coftouloa, June 11, 1659. a MIHAIL or, 'Bond's Mon Crackers, for li ) .prpuc+, and el OW hoot fur in innid+ and elttldtcn—ura• of lele 4 ttt Cakttafit.t, at the Vnintly Medicine Sin: ee = QPALDING'S PREPARED GLUE,Thc want of ..v..cy slowly. mot slow it vast lie -applied; fur mettclussf, fu.unun•. I'lllll, W4l, cPladateniut wat k, toy, a, tattle t. floassos: ,upes tor. %V t. Imve found it o•eiul ru rep smog /11n) hfult Ci w inch have IJCCII 11.111Plil fur utouth•. You Jon St ut the onstA L',IIILY ntcivr•:.•rnat IRON 11/113, STRIIILI 711117.Slib , ritb,-.l3nve al)' of nil 60.1 and itAR IRON AND STEEL! Thrt• are ..,pr u•d with •elc in Ihi. Lrm••h 74 his hltritit'S..unit C. 141 tu:ri•h it lo CUS 41111 0 ir. 111 large or siniill 41t1:11111lieg, at Ow .1 HU ‘I & Leeti.a Street below tircoati, l7alumbia. l'a A aril 2.1. 1,60. ITTER'S fompouod Syrnp of '1 ••,.• and u Wild Olterry, for t•o,tp.th. Cold. he. F - tole a it • Golden Mortar Druarnore, Frout ht. July: A YEWS Compound Courentrated tract Sar.nparelln for the cur, of tiorof ea —V.v 11. 1111d:ill he rofulou+ atTeettotth, a fre tt• at, jut reeeived and for hale by It. {VILLA AMS. front hl , Oolinnlna, Sept t2l. FO R SALE. 200 .3 . 7..0 ,e 5 ... T , : j j c . tion Matelace, yea' . ImilZrAati Dutch Herring! t k . ry om fond of u good ring. 1,111 rit S. ' , A.:III:111.11i *r; Nov. O. ICi9. G merry sziorr, :1 Locu•l T . YON ' S PURE 01110 CATAWBA BRANDY and PURE WINI. . c.pceinlT tbr Alethenn, na Sacramental parprw. ui der Jan.2.l • I'l MI IX NI lIDIC I S 1 OM:. NICE RAISINS for 9 cts. per pound, arc to .1.1 be lord only ut I'AICRIXIN'B (:rocer) Store. rqurelt 10,1E60. N 0.71 I.ocu-i ( -- l_aßovi SEEM—Fresh Garden Needs, war mated pure, of nit k.tuf..ju+l teemed /LI ELIERLEIN'S Grocery Siore, I\brel. 10,15110. No 71 Loma .trret POCKET BOOKS AND PURSES. . Commonl l i c a e r t . l Rooks n o i r I F ro H :n e r i ce nts to lit Watt: tore and Newt; Depot. Columbil April 14.1 •GO, A EMT more of those beautiful Prints winch will lid •olil cheap, at SAYLOR Si DitiDONALD'il Colunilila, Pa. April 14 Just Received and For Sale. 500""St:, Grou t nd Alum Salt, in large A PPOLD'S Wn rchou.c. Culitt i Bum n. \InyS,•GO GOLD CREAM OF GLYCERINE.—For the cure will prevention in elnapped Itinitl..&c. r o t 4.1 e 111 the UOLDUS RT.A DRUG STORE. Dec 3.1t4r,9. From -treer.Cottsinina Turkish Prunes! 4 011 u,fi,st rut 4 ere.tele :\:ov ID, tS)9. tocr:y Store. No 11 I.oellsl SI GOLD PLZsb, JTNIT trrrivrd a !urge and Ant*a.soranent of Cold l'ene. of' Newton mid Grttrv0rd`...1,,,,fi.,,,,e, at S.IIIILOR 1 :11cDONA LIPS Do° r•tore. •t••til 14 from •IreCt 11-I. • Flt CSEI GROCERIES. ron:izette Ip sell Ihr ..f.ev" Syrur. W hlre and Cnrl;•e- nucl choiriT to t. S.oLl nI C.olumbiA 01 the New Corn.. sluhr. op pothut Oat I re/lows* 111111, nod sit Ihr h.-limn ing the s lk• if. C. FONDER:S.)Ii /11, Segars, Tobacco, &c. I.;°eTo:,f,d'Z'.l",e Stgar..Tobsern and SolutT a al) a nr.t 1 rule .I , r i, ri e ele of .üb-co tber. lie Lerp. 11. 'S• F. EUERAZIN'S Groerty Sore. Loeu4t Si,Co'umla.a. Pa. MOSE CRANBERRIES, ivr EW Zrop Prunes. :New Goon at .1. 1 1 Oet 20.1,60. A. A SARDINES, Iljoree.ter-hire 'Sauey, Itefined r7bena. be.. ;um re V 4 l 3 ' ,.t riez , ell ) 43d fig vale by S. CRANBERRIES. TUST reerir..l n fro.lt it of Crnnbcrric• and New Currant...at No. 71 LOVtl,l Slfret Ott 21, lat.°. s. r gantions. A Dreadful Story CEO =III "Bless me!" cried an elderly- gentleman in a railway carriage on the Great North ern line, as he Ipoked np from the perusal of the Globe just purchased at King's Cross station; "bless me, so they've found out the great Waterloo Bridge Mystery at last!" "Indeed!" ejaculated a quiet-looking, wel dressed individual, seated opposite to the speaker. "As that, sir, happens to be a matter in whiah I have always been speci ally, not to say personally interested, will you favor me with the details?" "Certainly, sir,. with much pleasure;" and the old gentleman, with due emphasis, read aloud a glorious canard of an imagina, tire "penny-a-liner," touching an old Irish apple-woman, who was reported to have been overheard confessing her complicity i n that dire marvel of modern crime. "Thank you, sir," returned the quiet man. "I happen, however, to be in-a posi tion to prove that story to be an utter fabri cation, R 3 will probably be know to the world before many days. In the first place—" "Now, my good sir, pray don't talk of that matter now. It is really very unfortu nate, besides being, as one may say, a strange coincidence, that this subject' should turn up—just at this time too. Pray don't. Let it drop for the present." These words proceeded from a sturdy individual seated next to tho quiet gentleman. At a . first glance, one would have set him down as a detective policeman. "I cannot refrain from speaking of it.— The misery of that secret—innocent deposi tary of it as I may be—has weighed upon me already far too long." His fellow pas:.engers, all sate the sturdy min, started: as well they might. The (pia gentleman proceeded to take advan t v2;‹ , , i the interest this awakened— " Yes, unhapiiy indeed, that secret is, and alw•ty-1 • 10! . ^ to me. Would it "Piny, sir." the old gentleman, lay ing ,wit the G:ube nn lIIS knees, ' , do y , a really mean to tell 1./9 that you can and mice this horrible mystery?" "I ran anti mill."' The sturdy me» resigned himself vvitl, ga , p, and foldea his artn. , , the very imper. sonation of li.olvssnesg. The quiet gentle- man proceeded: "tl - ell, in the first place, to relieve all anxiety, I tell you that no murder has been committed; secondly, that the unfortunate individual whose bones were discovered never breathed: thirdly, that be died and two subsequently dissected by his own net: and fourthly, that he was—myself. You may probably teceive my statements with some slight degree—l will not say of in credulty, but with just a shade of doubt.— Such, nevertheless, arc the facts ai I am a. out to explain." The elderly gentleatiin rubbed his nose with a puzzled air. The quiet gentleman's manner .ras so calm, and sa full of confi dence, as in itself' to assist conviction. So the old gentleman replied, that, without iu the slightest way wishing to impugn the veracity of any mortal whatever, either in a bag or out of a bag, he thought it just pos sible that sonic little error had led the quiet gentleman into a mere turn of expression not altogether correct in a strict logical sense. The quiet gentleman smiled, and proceeded --"The case is in Iced a strange one; and its solution is no less strange than its mys tery. The fact is, that fur many years I hare suffered under a most extraordinary affliction. I have been troubled with a superfluous body:" ",A—a—ichat?" exclaimed the listners in amaze, "I repeat, a superfluous body. I need not argue on the possibility of such a calamity, having experienced it. Unnatural growthq, which I have been led to study, have been common, to some extent, in all ages anti climes. From the wart on the schoolboy's thumb to the horn which sprouted from the Frenchwoman's forehead, we ace continual instances of the eccentricity of nature.— Think of the Siamese twins. 'I heir case, or rather his, was similar mine. But, instead of simply a superfluous body, he—for he was actually only one—had both body and mind in duplicate. True—they were conjoined. I was separate. Yet, what was our first mother but a seozrate. and redundant growth from the rib of Adam? But to my story: "My f.tther died soon after my birth.— My mother, poor woman, broken more with sorrow than years, died on my thirty-fifth birthdr.y. Her last gift to me was the key of an old armoire, or tall closet. A slip of parchment attached to : the key informed me that 4 was not to use it till after her funs:rod. She was then lying speechless. After the appointed time I hastened to the armoire, and there, to my horror, I found— myself l A horrid figure, dressed in a cheap slop suit, was there in an erect .cesition, with h's life like eyes horribly fised on me I recognised my own pale cheeks, my fair moustazho which I then wore, my peaked beard, my curling hair with a siugle gray streak, this very distortion of my left little finger. I stood awhile in speechless terror. At length I toadied the Thing's hand. I: lt-as deadly cold. I laid my hand on its heart. Thom was no pulsation. The oh "NO ENTERTAINMENT IS SO CHEAP AS READING, NOR ANY PLEASURE SO LASTING." COLUMBIA, PENNSYLVANIA, SATURDAY. MORNING, MARCH 16, 1861. ject could not stand, I found, without sup port. It did not breathe , . It showed no lite but in those horrid eyes, which were always open, and fixed enly on me. I next perceived, lying at the feet of this strange Alter Ego, this counterfeit Me, a letter ad dressed to myself. It was from my mother, and briefly narrated her trials and suffer ings endured in consequence of this fright fill monster—how silent and nerveless it had grown with my growth, always keeping its oyes turned to the point where I happened to he, unconscious of its existence—how the secret had hitherto been rigidly concealed from every eye and ear, in the hope either that my life would end before its revelation should be necessary, or that the h rrid Thing should perish and decay—tha fit ever became necessary that I should learn the secret, that I should consider whether it should be avnwed, or whether means should be taken for the destruction of the Object. I need not tell of the days ~a nd weeks of agony I endured while retaining this secret, and debating in my own mind as to the course to pursue. At length I de. cided. I called in Dr. Meeraeker, the emi nent physician; also, Mr. Phibbs, the scarcely less eminent surgeon. I discharged every servant except my mother's aged and faithful housekeeper. And these three, by prayers and urgent entreaties, I persuaded, nay almost compelle I, to take a fearful oath of secrecy. The terms allowed no loophole of escape. Under every circumstance this secret was to ho kept inviolate. On this oath being administered, I gave them my confidence:and introduced to their view dila ghastly monster. "We held a long consultation. The doc tors and I. They both agreed that it was no human Thing, and that its destruction would be lawful—that that scintilla of vi tality which was exhibited in the constant glare of its eyes on me, could not strictly be regarded as no evidence of natural life —that, in short, this horror ought to be cut off, by surgery, like any other excrescence. I requested them to perform the operation at once; hat they informed me that the ease was so peculiar that I mast give them time for deliheration. During; the consultation the Thior, kept its eyes still, as ever, fixed ESE= "I v ' no 1 urger: 'Fiend, mon ,t- r, t•or,e, ‘‘r h‘t you may be;' f shrieked, •thi , mlst mat' I snatehed a knife from Mr. Pir ibbs' ease., and. sr ringiog U pun tae tiAure, struck at .t wildly till ray arm wear ied; and then a tin and again stabbed it through tie breast where the heart ought to have been, but was not. The two doe tors stood aghast at my fury, and the house keeper sunk into a swoon. The blows were effective, for the monster's hideous eyes be gan slowly to be overspread with a film.— There was no struggle, no sound; but those glazed eye-balls, when I unwed, followed me now ne more. "It was then I found that the difficulty had, in tact, only 'commenced. The two doctors could give no certificate as to death —firstly, becaus? the Thing bad no nor c; secondly, because its dissolution was not natural; and thirdly, because It was not hu man. Moreover, even dispensing with nll these, a burial must inevitably have exposed the affair, in which event all human kind would look upon me as a being scarcely less monstrous than that wkich I had destroyed. The doctors left me in my perplexity. The fearful It must be concealed; and after the doctor's departure dismembered it and placed it in pickle, intending to remove it piecemeal. My housekeeper knew of my outgoings day after day—now ". with the head, now with a hand or foot, dropping one into a lime-pit, another into the sea from Ramsgate packet. Poor wniumem.: The secret weighed heavily upon her. Worried by continual agitation—dreading lest every shock should be the prelude to the -entrance of a constable, she, one night, precipitated matters by the disposal of the residue at the bridge, in the way everybody knows. "When, after the lapse of time, my mind became capable of calm reflection, I began to see how small had actually been may crime, if any. The public agitation was still con tinuing, and I therefore determined, at all risks, to declare the truth. But I spoke in vain. In vain I wrote to inspectors of po lice or to newspaper editors. They treated my nsseverations with contemptuous neglect. I appealed to Dr. Meer:Leiter and Mr. Phibbs, but they, either dreading the connexion of their names with the affair, or in strict re gardance of their oath, absolutely denied to my very face, all knowledge of the matter. My housekeeper, who left me the day after the disposal of the remains, was evidently in league with them in their denial. The doctors, accompanied by the housekeeper, called upon me only yesterday. They in troduced this gentleman" (the sturdy man), "and in his presence, at my urgent repuest, they admitted, or at leastceased to deny the facts. Nay, more: they furnished me, through him, with me letter of introduction to a physician who, they tell me, cam easily prove my case not so exceptional as it had appeared at first. 1 hear that he has arida. his charge several cases somewhat analo goes to mine.. I go to discover them, and then, in the face of all the world, to disclose, irrefutably, the true solution of the fearful mystery. I feel it can no longer be kept a secret. The effort to keep it so has pro duced upon my mind such an effect that already the results are—" vColonel Hatch! Colonel liateh!" shouted the guard, us the tmin at this inatant stop- ped. The sturdy man took the quiet gentle -4 morn's arm as they both alighted, wishing their fellow-travellers hastily good morning. "Ah! poor soul!" ejaculated the elderly I passenger, with a deep sigh, "there's the 1 1 Lunatic Asylum. lle will indeed find there a good many afflicted with his disorder.— Bodies beside themselves:" And thus ends —a Dreadful Story. How Sir Philip Sydney Died Motley's "United Netherlands" affords a graphic account of the chivalric death of; Sir Philip Sydney, which we do not remem ber, in the various relations we • have met with, to have seen related with any approach to the same force and distinctness. The action, it will be remembered, was in inter. cepting a convoy of provisions sent by the Spaniards to the relief of Zutphen, which was besieged by the Dutch and English.— The affair on the part of the young English Knight was an anticipation of the courage and bravado of the famous cherge of 600 at lialaklava. Sidney, it will be seen, owed his death to a piece of trancendental chival ric refinement: It was 0 o'clock of a chill autumn morn ing, October 2, 1588. It was time fur day to break, but the fig was so thick that a man at the distance of five yards was quite invisible. The creaking of wagon wheels and the measured tramp of soldiers soon became faintly audible, however, to Sir An Norris and his fi. e hundred, as they sat there in the mist. Presently came galloping forward in hot baste those nobles and gen tlemen, with their esquires, fifty men in all —Sidney, Willoughby, and the rest—whom Leicester had no longer been able to re strain from taking part in the adventure. A force of infantry, the am.unt of which cannot be satibfactority ascertained, had been ordered by the Earl to cross the bridge at a later moment. Sidney's cornet of horse was then in Deventer, to which place it had been sent in order to assist in quell ing an anticipated revolt, so that lie came, like most of his co npanions, as a private soldier and knight•errant. The arrival of the expected convoy was soon more distinctly heard, but no scouts or outposts had been stationed to give timely notice of the enemy's movements. Suddenly the fog, which had shrouded the scene so closely, rolled away like a curtain, and in the full light of an October morning the Englishmen found themselves face to face with a compact body of more titan three thousUnd men. The Marquis del Paste rude at the head of the force, surrounded by a band of arquebus men. The cavalry, tinder , the famon. Epi rote Chief, George C're‘ , eia, Hanoi ht.l Gonzango, licntivogtio, Seen, Conti, and oth r distinguished commanders, followed; the columns of pikemen and MU keteers lined the hedge-rows on both sides I the causeway; while between them the long train of wagons came slowly along under their protwtion. The whole force had got lin motion after having sent notice of their arrival to Verdugo, who, with one or two thousand men, was memod to sally forth almost immediately from the city gate. There was but brief time for del.beration. Notwithstanding the tremendous odds, there was no thought of retreat. Black Norris called to Sir William Stanley, with whom he had been at variance so lately, nt Ries burg. "There has been ill blood between us," he said. "Let us 140 friends together this day, and die, side by side, if need be, in her Majesty'scause." "It you see me not serre my Prince with faithful courage now," replied Stanley. "ac count me forever a coward. Living or dy ing. I will stand or lie by you in friendship." As they were speaking these words, the young Earl of Essex, General of the horse, cried to his handful of troops: "Follow m:, good fellows, for the honor of England and of England's Queen:" As he spoke he dashed, lance in rest, upon the enemy's cavalry, overthrew the foremost man, horse and rider, shivered hie own spear to splinters, and then, swinging his curtel axe, rode merrily forward. Ills whole little troop, compact as an arrow head, flew with an irresistible shock against the opposing columns, pierced clear through them, and scattered them in all directions. At the very first charge one hundred Eng lish horsemen drove the Spanish and Alba nian cavalry back upon the musketeers and pikemen. Wheeling with rapidity, they retired before a vollley of musket shot, by which many horses and a few riders were killed, and then formed again to renew the attack. Sir Philip Sidney, on coming to the Geld, having met Sir William Pelham, the veteran Lord Marshal, lightly armed, had with chivalrous extravagance thrOwn off his own cuishes, and now rode to the battle with no armor but his cuirass. At the second charge his horse was shot under him, but, mounting another, ho was seen everywhere in the thick of the fight, behav ing himself with a gallantry which extorted admiration even from the enemy. For the battle was a series of personal encounters in which high officers were doing the work of private soldiers. Lord North who bad bean lying "bed rid" with .a min ket shot in the log, bad got himself pot on horseback, anti "with one hoot on and one boot off," bore himself "most lustily" through t'ae whole affair. "I desire that her Majesty may know," ho said, "that I jive but to serve her. A bettor barony than I have could not hire the Lord North to live on meaner terms " Sir William Russel laid about him with his curtel-axe to such purpose that the Spaniards pronounced him a devil and not a man. "Whereever,"ottid an eye witness, "he saw five or six of the enemy together, thither would he; and his hard knocks soon separated their friend. ship." Lord. Willoughby encountered George Crescia, General of the famed Alba nian cavalry, unhorsed him at the first shock, and rolled 'him into the ditch. "I yield me thy prisoner," called out the Epi rote in French, "for thou art a preux cheva lier:" while Willoughby, trusting to his captive's aford, galloped onward, and with him the rest of the little troop, till they seemed swallowed up by the superior num bers of the enemy. His horse was shot un der him, his bases were torn from his legs, and he was nearly taken a prisoner, but fought his way back with incredible strength and good fortune. Sir William Stanley's horse had seven bullets in him, but bare his rider unhurt to the end of the battle. Lei cester declared Sir William and "old Heade" to be "worth their weight in peer]." Hannibal Gonzaga, leader of the Spanish cavalry, fell mortally wounded. The Mar -1 quis del Vasto, commander of the expedi tine), nearly met the same fate. An Eng lishman was just cleaving his head with a battle axe, when a Spaniard transfixed the 'soldier with his pike. The most obstinate struggle took place about the train of wag ons. The teamsters had fled in the begin ning of the action, Lot the English and I Spanish soldiers, struggling with the horses, and pulling them forward and backward, tried in vain to get exclusive possession of I the convoy Which was the cause of the ;Le -1 lion. The carts at last forced their way slowly nearer and nearer to the town, while the combat still went on warm as ever, be tween Ow hostile squadrons. The action lasted an hour and a half, and again and again the Spanish horsemen wavered and broke before the handful of English, and fell back upon their musketeers. Sir Philip Sidney, in the last charge, rode quite throngh the enemy's ranks till he came upon their 'entrenchments, when a musket hall from the camp struck him upon the thigh, three inches above the knee. Al though desperately wounded in a part which should have been protected by the cnishes which he had thrown aside, he was not in clined to leave the field; but his own horse had been shot under him at the beginning of the action, and the one upon which he was now mounted became too restive for him, thus crippled to control. He turned reluctantly away, and rode a mile and a half back to the entrenchments, suffering ! extreme pain, for his leg NV.IS dreadfully shattered. As he passed along the edge of the batt'e field, his attendants brought hint a bottle of water to quench his raging thirst. I At that moment a wounded English soldier, who had eaten his last at the same feast,?' looked up wistfully in his face, when Sidney I instantly handed him the flask, exclaiming, "Thy necessity is even' greater than mine " He then pledged his dying comrade in draught, and was soon afterwards met by his uncle. "Oh, Philip," cried Ldieester, in despair. "1 ant truly grieved to see thee in this plight." But Sidney comforted him with manful words, and assured hint that death was sweet in the cause of his geeen ' and country. Sir William Itussell, too, all bloodstained front the fight, threw his arms around his friend, wept like a child, and kissing his hand exclaimed. ' 0:1! noble S:r Philip, never did man attain hurt an honor ably or serve so valiantly RS yon." Sir %Villiam Pelham declared "that. Sidney's noble courage in the face of our eneru;as had won him a name of continuingli;nur." The Lady of Shalott Thnngh many thun4andi have admired the fine heroic rhythm, quaint imagery, and delicate mystification of Tennysnn's poem, "The Lady of Sltalott," few, comparatively speaking, aro familiar with the striking legend on which it is founded: , •lln either ride the vier he Lanz field., of !Meer tint of rie• hat clothe the world and nice, the •I.t; And throu.th the field+ the streatn Tommy towered Cameto•; A ad up and dawit the people gu. (fazing where the blow 'Lomat an Woad then• below— The istas.d of Shuloti., A few days ago we chancel upon a vol• ume containing this romantic legend, among other reminifcences of "The Age of Chiv alry," and believe that we shall gratify a majority of our readers by copying it here in full: I= King Arthur proclaimed a solemn tour nament to be held at Winchester. The king, not less impatient than his knights fur this festival, set off some days before to superintend the preparations, leaving the queen, with her court at Camelot. Sir Launcelot, under pretence of indisposition, remained behind also. Ilia intention was to attend the tournament in disTuise; and, having communicated his project to Coe never, he mounted his horse, set off without any attendant, and, counterfeiting the feebleness of age, took the most unfrequent ed road to Winchester, and passed, untie ticed, as an old knight who w'as going to be a spectator of the sports. Even Arthur and Sir Gawain, who hap pened to behold him from the windows of a castle under which be passed, where dupes of his disguise. But an accident betrayed bim.. Ilie ; horse happened to stumble, end the hero forgetting for a moment his as sumed character, recovered , the animal with a atrength and agility so peculiar to him• $1,50 PER. YEAR IN ADVANCE; $2,00 IP NOT IN ADVANCE self. that they instantly recognized the inimitable Launcelot. They suffered him, ' however, to proceed on his journey without interruption, convinced that his extraordi nary feats of arms must discover him at the approaching festival. In the evening, Launcelot was magnifi cently entertnined'as a stranger knight at the neighboring Castle of Shalott The lord of this castle had a daughter oT exquisite beauty, and two sons lately received into the order of the knig'Ahoutl, one of whom was at the time ill in bed, and thereby pre vented from attending the tournament, fur which both brothers had long made prepa rations. Launcelot offered to attend the other it'll° were permitted to borrow the arm or of the invalid; and the Lord of Shalott,with out knowing the nameof hiprguest—being sat isfied from his appearance that his son could not have a better companion-in-arms—most thankfully accepted the offer. In the mean time, the young lady, who had leen much struck by the first appearance of the stran ger-knight, continued to survey him with in creased attention, and, before the conelush,n of supper, became so deeply enamored f him, that, after frequent changes of color, and other symptoms which Sir Launcelot could not possibly mistake, she was obliged to retire to her chamber, and seek relief in tears. Sir Launcelot hastened to convey to her, by means of her brother, the informa -1 tion tat his heart was already disposed of, but that it would be his pride and pleasure to act as her knight at the approaching 1 tournament. The lady. obliged to be satis fied with that courtesy, presented him her scarf, to be worn at the tournament. Launcelot set oil in the morning with the young knight, who, on their approaching Winchester, carried him to the castle of a lady, sister to the Lord of Shalutt, by whom they were hospitably entertained. The nest day they put on their armor, which was perfectly plain, and without any device, as was usual to youths during the first year of knighthood, their shields being only painted red, as some color was neces sary to enable them to be recognised by their attendants. Launeelot wore on his crest the scarf of the Lady of Shalett, and, thus equipped, proceeded to.the tournament, where the knights were divided into two com panies, the one commanded by King Ar thur, the other by Sir GaeMout. Ilaviog surveyed the combat fur a short time from without the lists, and observed that Sir Calehaut's party began to give way, they joined the press and attacked the royal knights, the young man choosing such ad versaric.4 as were suited to his strength, while his companion selected the principal champions of the Round Table, and succes• sively overthrew Gawain, &Mort, and Lionel, The astonishment of the spectators was ex treme, for it was thought that no one but Launcelot could possess such invincible power; yet the favor on his crest seemed to preclude the possibility of his being thus disguised, fur Launcelot had never been known to wear the ha lge of any but his sovereign lady. At length Sir [lector, Launcelot's brother, engaged him, and, after a dreadful combat, wounded him dangerowdy in the head, but W;1.9 himself completely stunned by a blow on the helmet, and felled to the ground; after which the, concieror rode off at full speed, Monde I by his young companion. They returned to the raitle of Shahitt, where Sir Glance lot was attended with the greatest care by the good awl, by his two sous, and, above all, by his fair daughter, whose medical skill probably much hastened the period of his recovery. His health was almost restored, when Sir Hector, Sir /30- 11,,n, and S;r Lionel, who, after the return of the court to Camelot, had undertaken the quest of their relation, discovered him walk ing on the walls of the castle. Their meet- ing was iery joyful; they passed three days in the castle amidst constant festivities, and bantered each other on the events of tho tournament. fauncelot, though he began by vowing vengeance against the author of his wound, yet ended by declaring that he felt rewarded far the pain by the pride he ook in witnessing his brother's extraordi nary prowess. Ile then dismissed them with a message to the queen, promising to follow immediately— T it being necessary that he should first take a firma] leave of his kind hosts, as well as of the fair maid of Shalutt. The young lady, after vainly attempting to detain him by her tears and solicitations, I saw him depart without letiving her any ground for hope. Itwas early summer when the tournament took place; but some months ,had passed since Launcelot's departure, and winter was now near hand. The health and strength of the Lady of Shalott had gradually sunk; and she felt that she could not live apart from the object of her affections.' She left the castle, and, descending to the river's brink, placed herself in a boat, which she loosed from its moorings, and suffered to bear her down the current toward Camelot. One morning as Arthur and Sir Lionel looked from the window of the tower, the walls of which were washed by the river, they descried a boat, richly ornamented, ; and covered with an awning of cloth and gold, which appeared to bo floating down the stream without any human guidance. It struck the shore while they watched it, and they hastened down to sae what it con tained. Beneath the awning they disoov ered the dead body of a beautiful woman, in who•c features Sir Lionel easily recog- [WHOLE NUMBER 1,595. nized the lovely maid of Shalett. Pursuing their search, they discovered a purse richly embroidered with gold and jewels, and within the purse a letter, which Arthur opened, and found addressed to himself and all the Knights of the Round Table, stating that Sir Launcelot of the Lake, the most ac complished of knights and most beautiful of men, but at the same time the most Cruel and inflexible, had, by his rigor, produced the death of the wretched maiden, whose love was no less invincible than his cruelty. The king immediately gave orders fur the interment of the lady, with all the honors suited to her rank, at the same time explain ing to tl.e knights the history of her affec tion for Sir Launcelot, which moved the compassion and regret of all. Such is the very beautiful little Arthurian romance on which Tennyson's celebrated poem of 1832 is funeded. Row fine k his description of the last scene of nil: ••I'nder tOtVer And balenstv. Ity garden wnll and g.rlle•l, A gleaming }hope, the 11•mt••d by, A vol., between the high, Ntent slit) C3llllelOt Out 1/[lOll /be Whatii they r•.ani.•_ lZutight and burgher, lord and deter. Asa! round the prow• they toad her us Ime • I he Lady of t•ltalott., "Who 1. alld %Vital is hotef And AO ltglited ptllttec near I/4rd the tOOll4l of royal cheer; And they eras-ell thetrowlres au' fear,. All the knogltte at Itot I.III.IaCrIOIMUFCti a 114tha space; •aul: 'She u lovely lace; God so hi.< merry lend her grace' Tun Ludy of Shalo:t.," Giving the Sack Some eighty or a hundred years ego the body of a man was found in the Tiber at Rome. It was recognized ns that of a por ter well known about the city, but a stranger thing was that a second body false that of a man) was found nt the same time tied up inn sack which was strongly stitch. ed on to the collar of the coat of the rorter. This body was not se easily recognized, but the strangeness of the circumstances set all the authorities immediately to work in the greatest earnest, and excited much interest in the city. Before long suspicion arose which attached itself to a woman of do.itic ful character, who lived in the outskirts. and whose husband had all nt once disap peared. All, hovres er, that was knoWit was this, that she had lived unhappillywith him. Nothing could be diimovered' or brought home to her, beyond the foot that he was gone, and of course the maintained that be had left her, and that she was a much injured person. And thus, as there was no proof, after awile the talk of the stf. fair eras dying out, when all at once.it was fanned into a flame again, the suspected house was revisited, and the woman aetualy brought to confess the truth that qto had murdered her husband, and caused likewise I the death of the porter. Upon this, with out further ado, she was apprehended at.,l had to undergo her trial. The obtaining of this confession, and the discovery of what had baffled the wisest beads in Rome, caused a very great sensation, but nobody seemed to know how it had been brought about. Upon hertrialshe saidshe ittf murdered her husband out of jealousy, and i with no help front any human creature.— The great difficulty she found was in die ; posing of tho body. At last else hit upon this contrivance. She crammed it into a sack and sent fur a porter with whom mho was acquainted. It was then the dusk of the evening. On his arrival she represent !ed that she had been cleaning out her house, and had collected a great mass of rubbish, which she did not know what to with, or Ito* to get rid of; she thought it a good plan to stuff it all into a sack and halo it thrown iuto the river. It WAR heavy, silo I • aaii but she would pay him well fur 1,1.4 j o b, and give him refreshment before I. started with his load. The matter wino thus arranged, they supped and earouse.t together, and she so plied him with drink that he was well nigh overcome. She thee brought out the sack, and pretendings•to jnst it to his shoulders, stitched it strongly to the collar of liis coat, telling him all he had to do when he got to the middle of the bridg: was to lean it toward the edge, and chuck the sack as far as be could over the parapet, so as to get it clear out of the way into the current, and she would give him his money when he came back; which of course he never did. She could not 'tell, she said, how it had been found out, but she supposed God and the Virgin Mother had brought it to light; that was the whole truth, the added, and all she had to tell.— When the trial had arrived at this point, a young lawyer stepped forward and asked her, "if she ever told' anybody what she had done, or had any accomplice who couhl divulge it?" "No," she said, "nobody ha.l liellke.l her, end they might well suppase she ;vocal n. 4. be such a fool :19 to tell it tii nny creature." "What. nohmly?"the young lawyer :tatted "No," said sl" "only my conte‘snr Here was a RAH t ion of the whole nes., and the lawyer soon discovered that the rots. lessor had a brother in the galley.. and cal ling to mind an old custom that if a galley slave can be the means of bringing a trorse criminal to justice than himself, ha raceived his freedom, he arrived at the conclusion that the galley-slave had furnished the clue which turned out to be the fact. The wo man escaped punishment as the discovery had been made through a breach ofthe con fessional. The father confessor absconded ns soon as possible. Thr• lawyer roc culizicnco 11