wa . =2raaa . D3 • .I'.lQ '7O (From the Democratic Review.] The Shot in the Eye. story of Texas Border Lite. DT C. WILKINS EMI Nly word for it, reader, I should ne- .ventured to construct a pro-. ressed romance .out of incidents so wild . 23( 1 -strange as those of this narration. only with the hop.e•that you will ' 4l .,..cpept in good faith Ihe assurance given the same spirit, that theie things did occur while I was in the country, and most of them within my .-., - ...persrmal knowledge—that I venture to relate- them -at all. Remember, the 1- Irene is laid on a frontier county of texas,-and if you have even a remote 'conception of the history of that repub '‘'tand the general character of its so -4 elements, you will be prepared for igood deal. BLit, though you might even have visited its cities and older enlements, you would still find it dal : cult to realize all that is true.of frontier life, unless, by extended travel and ex r_ perience, your faith should be fortified. When you can have to say, as I can, what mine eyes J),,a4e seen and ears heard,"—on that ground alone you will be fit audience though few," to receive,.-as matters of course, relations, which would doubtless, for the mo ment, shock others as monstrous in improbability. The man of high cul tivation will find great difficulty in un derstanding how such a deed as I am about to ,relate, requiringmonths to consurnate, would Have been carried through in the face of law and the local authorities—but the man who knows ' this frontier will tell him that. the rifle and bowie-knife are all the law and lo eal authorities recognized. Witness the answer cif President Houston gave when'application was first made to him - for his interposition with the civil force to quell . the bloody " Regulator Wars" which afterwards sprung up in this very same county—" Fight it out among yourselves, and bei d—d to you." A speech entirely characteristic with the man ,and the country, as it then was! It was in the earlier stages of the organization of this same " gulntor " association that our story corn- menses. Shelby county, flying in . Western Texas, on the: border .of the "Red I4nds," was rather thinly settled in the latter part of '39. What popula tion it had was generally the very worst ,cast of border life. The bad and des perate men who had been driven our :ruder formed a rallying-ground and bead quarters here—seemingly with with the determination to hold the court iy,goud against the intrusion of all bon -get persons, and, as a sort of Alastia" jof the West, for the protection of' out , and villains of every grade. And, indeed, to such an extent liad this pro cription been carried , that it had be come notoriously as much as a man's 'lfe or conscience was worth who set ad with any worthy pur ?ose in view ; for lie must either fall an their confederacy—lea-re--or die ! this was perfectly understood; and te objects of this confederacy may be adity appreciated, when it is known i hat every now and then a party of men itould sally out from this settlement, punted and equipped like Comanchees, with the view Of carrying off the horses, ?lundering or murdering some marked izen .of: a neighoriug county,--then re r4rning with great speed, they would htband their plunder, resume their ac- ttitorned appearance. and defy pursuit investigation. Not only did they attil together for their operations in 'his wv; but a single man would car ora fine horse or commit a murder ‘ltlth a most open audacity, and if he q succeeded in escaping here, was Iblitly protected. 1 do not mean to understood that the whole popula ` at this time were men of such 1p avowedly. There were some few whose wealth degree protected them in the obser ices of a more seemly life—though were compelled to at least wink the doings of their ruffianly and more ierous neighbors ; while there was another, but large class of sturdy tightforward emigrants, who attract solely by the beauty of the country, come into it, settled themselves wherever they took a fancy— chtraFteristic recklessness neither lag nor inquiring who were their ighbors, but trusting in their own it arms and hearts to keep a footing. :purse all such were very soon en in desperate feuds with i the horse res and plunderers around them ; they wire . : notyet strongenough Ike head efficiently—were one af 6'1074 0 f a • lc r; 0 4, r OforeiN 0 ter another finally ousted or shot. It was to exterminate this honest class, that the more lowless and brutal of the other associated themselves and assum ed the name of ,‘ Regulators." They numbered from eight to twelve—add under the organization of rangers. com manded 'brm beastly wretch named Hiuch, they professed to undertake the task ofpurifying- the county limits of all bad and suspicious characters ; or in other" words of all men who dared refuse to be as vile as they were; if they Were, who chose to act inde pendently of them and their schemes. This - precious neighborhood soon be came the scourge of all that region.— Whenever an individual was unfortu nate enough to ;Make himself obnox ious to them, whether by a successful villainy, the proceeds of which he re fused to share with them, or by the hateful contrast of the propriety of his Course—he was forthwith surrounded— threatened—had his stock driven off or killed wantonly—and if these annoy ances and hints were not sufficient to drive him away, they would publicly warn him to leave the county in a cer tain-number of days, under the penalty of being scorged or shot. The com mon pretext for this was the accusation of having committed some crime, which they themselves had perpetrated against him•. Their hate was entirely ruthless and never stopped short of accomplish , ing its purposes ; and in many a bloody fray and cruel outrage had the question of their supremacy been mooted, until at last there were few left to dispute with them, and they tyrannized at will. Among these few was Jack Long, as he was called, who neither . recog nized nor denied their power, and in deed never troubled himself about them one way or the other. He kept him self to himself, hunted incessantly, ,aid nobody knew much about him. Jack had come of a wild-turkey breed," `as•the western term is for a roving-fami ly ; and though still a young man, had pushed on ahead' of the settlement of two territories, and had at last followed the game towards the south, and find ing it abundant in ; Shelby county had stopped here, just as he would have stopped at the foot of the Rocky Moon •tains, had it been necessary to pursue it so far. He had never been in the habit of asking leave of any power where he should settle, and of course scarcely thought of the necessity of do ing so, now ; but quietly set to work-, built himself a nice log cabin,•as far off from every body - as he could get. And the first thing that was known of 'him, he had his pretty young wife and two little ones snugly stowed away in it, and was slaying the deer and bear right and left. The honest brotherhood had made several • attempts to feel Jack's pulse and ascertaing his availability; but he had always seemed so impassively good-natured, and put them off so plea santly that they could find no ground for either disturbing or quarreling with him. What i 3vas more, he was physi cally rather an ugly looking ,‘ custo mer," with six feet four inches of brawn and bone; though the inclination just discoverable in his figure to corpulency, together with a broad, full, good4hu mored face, gave an air of sluggishness to his energies, and an expres=sion of easy simplicity to his temper whieh offered neither invitation to gratuitous insult nor provocation to dislike. He was the very impersonation of inoffen sive, loyal honesty, slumbering on its conscious strength ; and these men, Without exactly knowing why, felt some little disinclination to waking him. He had evidently never been aroused to a knowledge of himself, and others felt just as uncertain what that knowledge might bring forth as he-did, and were not specially jealous of the honor of having it first tested upon their own persons. So that Jack Long might have been left for many a day in quiet. even in this formidable neighborhood, to Cultivate his passion for marksman shjp at the expense Of the dumb, wild things around him but for an unfortu nate display he was accidentally induc ed to make of it. Happening to fall short ag ammuni tion, he went one day to. store " for a fresh supply. This cabin, to gether with the blacksmith's shop and one or two oilier huts, constituted the "country town," and as powder and liquor were only to be obtainea there. it was the central resort of the regulators. Jack found them all col lected for a shooting match, in prepara for which they were getting drunk as fast as possible, to steady their nerves. Hinch, the Regulator . captain, had al ways been thq hero . of . such occasions; for, in addition to being a first rate shot, Regardless of Denunciation from any Quarter.—qpv .P -RTEU InKAinosm.t i , Immo:Foram razimiu s , Tac o ammoill as s , IleiltSc. it was known that it would be a dan gerous exertion of skill for auy man to beat him—for he was a furious and vin dictive bully, and would not fail to make a personal affair of it with any one who should mortify -his vanity by carrying off the prize from him. In addition, the band of scoundrels he commanded was entirely at his service in any extreme, so that they made fearful odds for a single man to contend with. Every body else in the county was aware of this state of t things but Jack Long, and he either didn't know or did n't care. After they had fired se veral rounds he went lounging listlessly into the crowd which had gathered around ilia target, exclaiming in admi ration over the last brilliant shot of Hinch, which was triymphantly the best. The bully was ras usual bluster ing vehemently, taunting every one around him, and when he saw Jack looking very coolly at the (anions shot, with no grain of that deferential admi ration in his expression which was de manded, lie snatched up the board, and thrusting it insultingly close to his face, roared out— Here ! You Jack Long-Shanks— look at that !—Take a good look ! Can you beat it ?" Jack drew back with a quiet laugh, and said good•hu tnoredly— • Psha! You don't brag on such shootin' as that, do you ?" Brag on it ! I'd like to see such a moon-eyed chap as you beat it ! • " I don't know as I'd be very proud to beat such bunglin' work as that." " You don't, don't you ?" yelled the fellow, now fairly in a rage at Jack's coolness. " You'll try it won't you ? You shall try, it by G—d ! We'll see what sort of a swell you are !" " Oh, well !" said Jack, interrupting him as he was proceeding to rave for quantity ; "just set up your board, if you want to see me put a hall through every hole you can make !" Perfectly astonished at this rash bearding of the lion—for it was diffi cult to tell whether contempt or simpli city dictated Jack's manner—the men set up the board while he walked back to the stand, and carelessly swinging his heavy rifle from his shoulder, fired seemingly as quick as thought. " It's a trick of mine," said he, moving to wards the mark, as he lowered his gun; " I caught it from,shootin' varmints in the eyes ;—always takes 'ern there.— It's a notion I've got—it's my fun."— They all ran eagerly to the target, and sure enough his ball, which was larger than flinch's, had passed through the same hole, widening it ! " He's a humbug ? It's all by acci dent ! He can't do that again ?" shout ed the ruffian, turning pale, till his lips looked blue, as .the board was held up. " ket the 'ears of a buffalo calf against his, that he can't do it again !" "I you mean by that, to bet your own ears against mine, take you up !" said Jack, laughing, while the men could not resist joining him.— Hinch glared ground him with a fierce chafed look, before which those who knew him best quailed, and with cotn 7 pressed lips silently loaded his gun.— A. new target was put up, at which, after long and careful aim, he fired.- - - The shot was a fine one. The edge of the ball 'just broke the centre.— Jack, after looking at it, quietly remark ed.— Plumbing out the centre is my fashion; 111 show you a kink or two, Captain Hinch, about the clear thing in shootin'. Give us another board there, boys !" Another was set up, and after throw ing out his gun on the level, in the same rapid careless style as before, he fired; and when the eager crowd around ,th 4 target announced that he Lad driven the centre cross clear out, he turned upon his heel, and with a pleasant nod to flinch, started to walk off. The ruffian shouted hoarsely af ter him:— " I thought you were a d—d cow ard ! You've made two good shots by accident. and now you sneak off to brag that you've heat me. Come back, sir 5 . You can't shoot before a muzzle half as true !" Jack walked on without noticing this mortal insult and challenge, while flinch laughed tauntingly long and loud—jeering him with exulting bit terness as long. as he could make hin►- self heard, as "a flash in the pan,"— ~ a dunghill cock who had spread his white fe'ather," while the men who had been surprised into a profound respect for Long^,land were now still more as tonished at what they 'considered his backing out, jqined clainorously in hooting his retreat. The fools ! They made a fatal mis take, in supposing he left the insult un resented for any fear for himself. Jack Long had a young and pretty wife at home, and his love for her was strong er than his resentment for his own in dignity. His passions were slow, and had never been fully roused—none of them at least but his love, and that pre sented her instantly, forlorn and desex ted, with her little ones, in this wild country,,hould 'he throw away his life with such desperate odds ; and seeing the turn the affair was likely to take, he had prudently determined to get away before it had gone too far. But had any of those men seen the spasm of agony which shivered across his massive features, as these gibing voices rang upon his ears in insult which no , proud free hunter might endure, they would have thehint, to beware ofchaf ing the silently foaming boar any longer. This was an ,ill-stared day for Jack, though ; from this time troubles began to thicken about him. The even tenor of his simple, happy life was destroyed, and indignity and outrage followed . each other fast. Hinch never forgave the-unlucky skill which had robbed him of his'proudest boast that of being the best marksman on the frontier ; and he swore in base vindictive hate, to dog him to death, or make him leave the country. Soon after this a valuable horse belonging to a rich and powerful _planter, disappeared. He was one of those men who had compromised with the Regulators, paying so much black mail for exemption from their depreda tions, and protection against others of the same stamp ; and he now applied to Hinch for the recovery of his horse, and the punishment of the thief. Tliis Histeh, under their contract, was bound to do and promised to accomplish forth with. He and some of his men went off on the trail of the missing horse, and returning next day, announced that they had followed it with all their skill through a 1 great many windings, evi dently intended to throw off pursuit, and at last traced it to Jack Long's pick et fence, and there could be no doubt but he was the thief ! The planter knew nothinnif Jack, but that lie was a new comer,' and demanded that he should be forced to give up the horse, and punished to the extremity of the frontier code. But this was not Hinch's policy vet awhile. Ile knew the proofs were not strong enough to make the charge plausible, even before the Lynch Court, of which he himself was both the prosecutor, judge and execu tioner. His object was first to get up a hue and cry against Long, and under cover of a general excitement, accom plish his devilish purposes without question or mock trial even. So that , after a great dbal of manmuvreing, for eight or ten days, during which time the charge against Long was indus triously circulated by his myrmidons, so as to attract general attention and ex pectation, as to the result of of his in vestigations—he proclaime'd far and wide, that he had found the horse at last, hid in a timber bottom . near Long's ! This, of course, seemed strong confir mation of his guilt, and though the mob were most of them horse thieves, to all intents, yet it was an unpardonable crime for any one to practice profes sionally among themselves; so that Long was loudly . denounced, and threatened on every side, and ordered to leave the county forthwith. These proceedings Jack by no means comprehended, or felt disposed to be. moved by ; but gave them one and all to understand, that he meant to remain where he was, until it entirely suited his inconvenience to go ; and that if his time and theirs did not happen to agree, they might make the most of it. And Jack was such an uncompromising snaggish lookin g somebody, and his reputation which hadnow spread eve ry where--'-of possessing such consum mate skill with the rifle, that he thought it a condescension to shoot game any where else but in the eyes—was so formidable, that no individual felt dis posed to push the matter to a personal collision. He might still, therefore, have been left in quiet, but Hinch had unfortunately, take!' tip the int pre,ssion, from Jack's conduct in the shooting match affair, that he Must be a coward. and if this were true, then all his s kill amounted to but little ; and like-.:any other bloody wolfish brute, he followed him up the more eagerly for this very reason, which would have disarmed a generous foe.—Besides, Jack had given fresh and weightier matter of offence, in that he had refused to obey, and de fied his authority as Regulator. The very being of That authority seemed-to require now that a wholesome example should be made of him, for the awing of all refractory persons hereafter.— The wretch, who was cunning and fe rocious, and had sworn in his inmost heart to ruin and disgrace Long, from the moment of that triumph, now avail ed himself remorselessly of all his in fluence, and knowledge of the society around him, to accomplish it. 'Sever al horses now disappeared, and 'robbe ries of other kinds, perpetrated with singular dexterity, followed in quick succession. All these things he man aged, through the clamors of his seoun drely troops, to have laid. directly or indirectly, to Jack's door. But in the popular estimation they counted as nothing, in, fixing the charge of dangerous malice upon poor LOng, in comparison with one other incident. About this time not only Hinch him self, but every other person who had made himself conspicuous, by insisting upon Jack's guilt, and the neeesssityot punishing him summarily, began to lose, every day or two, valuable stock, which was wantonly shot down some times in sight of their houses; and it soon began to be'remarked that evL ry animal lost in this way, had been shot in the eye! This was instantly asso ciated, of course, with Jack's well known and curious predeliction for that mark in hunting, and a perfect storm of indignation followed. A meeting was at once convened at ‘, the store," of which the planter was chairman ; and at it, by a unanimous vote, a resolution was passed condemning Jack Long to be whipped and driven out of the coun try—and Hinch with his regulators appointed to carry it into effect! He could hardly contain himself for joy; for now, whatever extreme his pitiless malignity might choose to indulge itself in, lie had no fear of afierclaps or ques tioning. The meeting had:been a mere form at any rate. But these formali ties" are all-powerful everywhere, and unsettled and elementary as was the condition of society here, this ruffian leader of ruffians felt the necessity of acting under their sanction, though he himself had dictted it. He would and could have consummated his purposes without ; but the faint life of conscience within him—by a species of logic pe -1 euliar to itself—felt relieved of the grievous responsibility of such a crime, in the sense of participating with so many 'others. Many a man has gone to the devil in a crowd who would have been horrified at undertaking the-jour ney alone. It was the third day after this meet ing. Jack, during all these persecu tions, had deported himself with the most stolid indifference. Avoiding all intercourse with the settlers, he had continued to-hunt with even more assi duity than usual, and was in a great measure ignorant of the unenviable no toriety he was enjoying. He 'had heard something of the charge with which his character had been assailed, but attributed them all to the jealous enmity he had incurred at the shooting match. He could understand perfectly how one man could hate another who had beat him in shooting, and thought it natural enough ; but he could not understand how that hatred might be meanly and desperately vindictive, and therefore gave himself no uneasiness about it. He was only anxious that his wife should not hear and be annoy ed by any of these things, and preserved his usual cheerfulness of demeanor. He had just returned from hunting, and laying aside his accoutrements, partook of the simple meal her neat housewifery had prepared for him ; then stretching himself upon the buffa lo robe on the floor romped widr his two rosy cheeked boys, who rolled over his great body, and gambolled and screamed in riotous joy around him ; but mother wanted some water from the branch, and the frolic must be given over while Jack would go and bring it. So jumping up, he left the little-folk pouting wilfully as they looked after him from the door and started. The stream was only about, a hundred yards from the house, and the path leading to it was through a dense high thicket.— It was against Jack's religion ever to leave his house without his gun ; but the wife whom be loved above all tl o universe of sentiment and everything else, was in a hurry for the water, and the distance was so sLort,—eo he sprang daily out with the vessel in lie hand, laving the rifle behind. The water had been dipped up, and he was re• turning along the narrow path closely bordered by brush, when be felt a light tap on each shoulder, and his career strangely impeded. He had just time to perceive that a lasso had been thrown over him,• which would confine his arms, when he saw himself suddenly surrounded, and was rushed upon by a a EDT Is la IZio clicooutatteat, cow. number of men. lie instantly recog nized the voice of . Hinch, shouting, " Down with him ! Drag him down ! ft as the men who had hold of the lasso about his body jerked at it violently in the efforts to throw him. All his tre mendous strength was.put forth in one convulsive effortt which would have freed him, but that the infernal noose had fallen true, and bound his arms.— As it was he dragged the six stout men who held it after his frantic bounds nearly to his own door, before he was prostrated, and then it was by a heavy blow dealt him over the head with the butt of a gun. The last objects which met his eye as he sank down, were-the horrified faces of his two children -and wife looking out upon hint ! The blow deprived him of his sen ses for some time, and when he reco vered he found himself half stripped, and lashed to a tree a short distance from his house,—Hinch in front of him, with a knotted rope in his hand, his wife on the ground, wailing and clinging with piteous entreaty round the monster's knees, his children weep ing by her, and outside this group a circle of men with gun's in their hands. That fearful awakening was a new birih to Jack Long ! His eye took in every thing at one glance. A shudder, like that of an oak rifting to its core, sprang along his nerves, and seemed to pass out at his feet and through his fingers, leaving him as rigid as marble; and when the blows of the hideous mocking devil before him fell upon his white flesh, making it welt_ in - Purple ridges, or spoutldull black currents, he felt them - no more than the dead lintel of his door would have done ; and the agony of that poor wife thrilling a fran tic echo to every harsh slashing sound seemed to have no more e ff ect upon his' ear than it had upon the tree .above them which shook its green leaves to the self same cadence they had held yesterday in the breeze. HIS wide open eyes were glancing calmly and scrutinizingly into the faces of the men who stood around—those features are never to be forgotten for while Hinch lays on the stripes with all his furious strength, blaspheming as they 'fall, that glance dwells on each face with a cold, i keen, searching intensity, as if it mar j ked them to be remembered in hell ! The man's air was awful—so ' concen centrated—so still—so enduring ! He never spoke..er groaned, or writhed— buethose intense eyes of his !—the wretches couldn't I , tand them, and be gan-to shuffle and get behind each oth er. But it was too late ; he had them all—ten men l—Tlity were registered. We will drop the curtain over this horrible scene. Suffice it to say, that after lashing him until he fainted, the regulators left him ; telling his wife, that if they were not out of the country in ten days he should be shot. He did go Within the specified time ; and, as it was said, returned with his family to Arkansas, where his wife's fatherlived. The incident was soon forgotten in Shelby county amidst the constant re currence.of similar scenes. About four month's after this • affair / in company with an adventurous friend, I was traversing Western Texas, our objects were, to see the country, and amuse ourselves in hunting for a time over any district, we found well adapted 'for a particular sport—as for bear-hunt ' ing, deer-hunting, buffalo-hunting, Stet Either of these animals is to be foetid in greater abundance, and of coarse pursued to greater advantage in peculi , ar regions ;—and as the were anxious to make ourselves familiar with all the modes of the modes of life in the coun try, we made it a +point to stop where- , ever the promise of any thing specially interesting offereditself. Prairies, titn her and water were better distrbuted to Shelby than any county we had passed through--the timber predominating over the prairie, though interlaid by it in every direction.' This diversity of surface attracted a greater variety and quantity of' game, as well as afforded mere perfect facilities to the sportsman. Indeed it struck us as- a perfect Hun. - ter's Paradise ; and. myTrierd happen ing to remember a man of some . wealth who. had removed from his native coun ty, and settled, as he understood in Shelby, we inquired foriltim, and very readily found him. Whatever else may be said or. ain't of the Texans, they are unquestionably most generous and hospitable. We were frankly and kindly 'received, and horses, servants, guns, dogs, and what. ever else was necessary to ensure our enjoyment-of the sports of the country, as .ell as the time of our host himeelf. were forthwhh at our disposal, and we were soon, to our hearts' content,,C,n. gard..in every kind of exciting Chase'. COXcLUDED NEXT WEEk.I Ino