LdOUAR per mm INVAmLY IN ADVANCE ' TOW-AJSHDA.: flnrs&flS horning, febrnarg 25, 1858. jiclecftit |)octrg. EARKSDALE— THE SCALPED CHIEFTAIN. AIR—" Hail to the Chief." .j,;] the chief that in triumph advances!" I Bearing in glury his crest through the crowd! Firm is his step as the great Hal! he prances, H s head high erect, with its full locks so proud ! Who can this chieftain be ? Tall, wise and brave is he ! Look! how he strides through the ranks of his peers ? Honored the name he bears! I Long live the fame he wears ! I Grand is his march for a man of his years ! I - Hail to the chief," where in Congress assembled, Sages and patriots come from afar ! I priding majestic, with hair undissernblcd. Like Saul 'mid the prophets, he stands above par ! Scorning all Northern freaks, Hark ! how the Southron speaks. Shedding broadlight from his face to the ground ! Champion of equal laws, Voice of the Nation's cause, List! for the great Mississippian's 'round ! " Hail to the chief!" —but alas he had marched up, Shielding brave KKITT, who knew not he was struck, j AUk! while his comrade by GBOW was all starched up. j His own gallant head felt a strong Yankee pluck ! j Chivalry went on a rig, Off went his curly wig. All scalpless and queuless he fled the melee 1 Long shall the tale be tnlu, OI WASHBURN, free and bold. And BARKSDALK the running, bald-pated M. C ! IU isttllantoits. "Then let him die." It was uot the words, terrible as they were in their simplicity ; nor was it the thought of i. atli to one so young and manly, hitter as that :i;ought was ; nor yet was it the fact that any ie could speak thus of a fellow-being ; but it was the voice, the tone, the suppressed but de termined anger that I heard iu the words, and it was tiie horrible truth that it was a father speaking of his only son, that so shocked me. "L 't him die." And wherefore should he die ? He was young, and not ready—by years or weariness—for death. He was not tired of living, nor had he sought the end himself. His eye was uot dim, his voice was not bro ken, his ear was still attuned to the pleasant sou:; Is of earth ; aud it was a beautiful earth, too, that in which he was born, aud in which he had grown to be a stout, strong mau ; and he loved life, and knew how to enjoy it—and why should he die? He was not one of the worthless and useless men of this world either, living for self, and heedless of all others, un loving, unloved, in cold sensual selfishness.— Not he. He was a noble man—young, ardent, affectionate, full of the love of life nud of his j fellows, beloved by all who knew hiin, and al- J ways ready to aid friend or stranger with 1 purse, hand, and heart. Why then should he die ? There were many reasons why Stephen For ster the elder was willing at that time that Stephen Forster the younger should die. Twenty-live years before the time at which our history is dated, there lived in an obscure village in the country, not far from the Hud s)u river, a man, some thirty years of age, with a young wife, not more than eighteen or twenty. The latter was the daughter of the wealthiest man in the county ; and, as it af terward proved, by the death of her brother, !ie and her children were his sole heirs. Ste phen Forster was a lawyer, gifted with some powers of mind ; not quick, bnt shrewd, in the true acceptation of that word ; and making money rapidly by speculations in farms and farm lands. I shall not pause to relate the painful circumstances through which he von the hand of the young daughter of the old Judge ; her heart he never had won. That was not hers to give hiin ; and from the day lie learned that fact, he hated her, with stea dy, persevering hate. But he married her nevertheless : and when the wedding ring was placed, 1 should say forced on her finger, she shuddered, and well-nigh fainted, for her eye caught at that moment the sud gleam of an eye that had once looked deeper into her own than had any other person's, and she knew then that as true a heart as man ever possess ed was broken. Broken hearts are not always followed by death. It is a romantic uotion that supposes it necessary. 1 have known men that lived many years with what in common parlance would he called a broken heart. Nay, I have known men that had lived thus for scores of years, wandering restlessly, almost hopelessly, U P and down the paths of this miserable world, yet bearing about with them cool, quiet faces, and eyes speaking no sort of passion whatever. cry much such a man was William Nor ton after the marriage of Ellen Dnseuberry, R fid lie was never seen again in the little vil lage, where he had been his father's clerk in the only store, until after all the events occur red which I am now about to relate. As years crept along Stephen Forstcr's fa mi'y increased, and four children sat at his board when he was forty years old. But there * : s no love between the father and his family. He was harsh, cold, stern, unforgiving in his treatment, and they rebelled, as children will Once, when he was punishing the oldest boy ■or some fancied offense, a neighbor who was passing, and overheard the occurrence, enter e ! and remonstrated with Forster for his bru tality. The result might have been anticipat ed. He was turned out of doors without cere ®oty, and left to console himself by relating J?e story to his neighbors, whose opinion of WUS ne ' t^er i m P rore d tior injured Death came into the household, and the ? avcyard gate was opened three times within THE BRADFORD REPORTER. a year, to admit children of Stephen and El len Forster. When the first one died, the wife, broken down by the terrible blow, sought comfort in the sympathy of her husbaud, and lifted her eyes from the dead boy only to meet the cold, stony eyes of the man that hated when he married her, and she pressed back in to her heart the feelings that were well-nigh flowing toward him for the first time. When the next—her darling namesake—shut her eyes on life and love, and went the dark way whither no mother's love may prevail to fol low until God permit, she sought no sympathy from her husband, but bowed her head in lone some agony. And when the third blow came, she bore it with the firmness of the mother of old times who scorned to weep. There was semething terrible iu her gaze, as she now looked into the face of her husband. That third trial, and his continued coldness and sternness, had made a new person of his once gentle wife, and she now repaid his scorn with scorn—his hate with unforgiving, unrelenting enmity. In the brief limits assigned to this sketch, I can not pause to explain the mental process by which this gentle, lovely girl became trat s formcd. It was no slow process. It was like a lightning flash. She had been calm, placid, bowed down with grief iu the morning, when she stood by her dying boy, and talked with him of the land that was shining dimly through j the clouds and cuists of death on his eyes, that j was shining even through her sca'ding tears j on her own faithful vision ; but the light of heaven was gone when the boy was dead, and ! the angels that had lingered around his couch j were gone with the light, and fiends came in ! the darkness and possessed her ; and she was changed—how changed ! Imagine if you can that household for the next ten years, while young Stephen grew up to manhood. It was in the most beautiful of valleys, with rich fields around it, and deep forests full of the forest glory close at hand, and a brawling stream dashing over rocks, and birds, and flowers, and all that God gave to Eden except only innocence Yet there was one long war in that house, the father on the one side and the mother and son on the other —for she won the boy from him. They eon tended long for him and his love. Even in his childhood he learned that he could not love both, and that he must select one or the other ' to attach himself to. He hesitated and varied from day to day, as children do, and it was months, even years, before he fully decided ; but when he chose it was forever. Nothing could move, shake, or change him. At the first, after this determination became manifest, the father, with his accustomed malignity, sent him away to school a hundred miies from home. But the six months of his absence convinced the hard-hearted man that his house was un bearable if he and his wife were to have no one between thorn, and he recalled the boy, and contented himself with hating both him and his mother. And so the boy grew to man hood, ignorant, save as his mother had taught him, yet marvelously gentle and lovely. He at length became the light of the house to those who knew the family, and his presence was welcomed every where. In all the conn try gatherings he was the star ; and at length he began to extend his limits, and once in a while ventured as far as the city. Here or somewhere, it matters not where, he began for the first time to appreciate the importance of knowledge, and to understand his own in feriority to young meu of his class and stand iug Grieved and abashed at the discovery of his ignorance, he set about repairing the loss, and for two vears he was a book-worm, devouring everything that came within his his reach. It is astonishing how much an ac tive mind may accomplish in so brief a space of time ; and at the end of these two years he had learned as much as most boys would in teu. But lie was not satisfied with this brief period of study. He had learned to love study for its own sake, and he confined him self now to his room ; and strange stories got abroad of the events that were passing in the old house, to which no one had access. At last the old Judge died, leaving his en tire fortune to Stephen Forster the younger, subject oidy to a life estate of his mother in the real property. This was more than a year before Stephen entered Ins majority, and when his life was most closely devoted to his books and studies. ;\ nd this brings us to the period at which I first became acquainted with the father and son. A rumor flies in the country with windlike velocity It was one of those soft spring moru iugs when the sky seems immeasurably deep, and the air is laden with life and health ; when the birds sing loudest, and the wind's voice is softest, and the gurgle of the spring brook is most musical ; it was on such a morning that a terrible rumor spread over county, and even on the opposite side ol the river. The story was that Mrs. Forster had been poison ed by her son for the sake of having his for tune unencumbered, and that he had also poi soned his father in the same bowl. The ru mor added a thousand horrors to the tale, of which no more was actually established truth than the fact that Mrs. Forster was poisoued the evening previous, and was already dead. The young man had returned from the city the day before with a package of various arti cles, which he had brought professedly for chemical purposes. It was supposed he had procured some deadly poison uiuong these, for the effect had been swift and certain. Certainly the internal state of that house hold was no worse than it had been for years. For her. the care-worn, weary mother, doubt less that repose was profound and welcome af ter the long storm. She seemed to be resting in peace as she lay there, aud the angry waves of the sea of her life had heard the " Peace, be still " of a heaverdy voice, and had obeyed. The husband stood near her while strangers came in and looked with far more interest than he on the placid countenauce of the dead wife, and bis countenance wore a steady, motion less look, in which no trace of suffering, or of emotion, or regret could be found. He nei ther wept nor smiled ; bat occasionally strode I up and down the long room in which her body PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. O'MEARA GOODRICH. " REGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER." lay, and uttered some expression of discontent at the tardiness of the coroner and his jury, and then resumed his position near a window, and near his dead companion. Stephen was in strict confinement in an upper room by order of his father, and no one knew what was go ing on there. No one that knew him and his love for that mother, would believe it possi ble that he had murdered her, and yet the case was said to be even clearer than circum stancial evidence, for the father himself had seen the son mingling ihe fatal draught, and had not dreamed of its nature till the catas trophe proclaimed it. 1 was visiting at a friend's house in the neighborhood and heard of the occurrence. I may be pardoned for adding that the daughter of my friend was not visible that morning at breakfast, having heard the terrible history from a servant, and having been a very close friend of young Stephen. Why need 1 disguise the truth. This is in tended to be a simple history, without plot or plan, other than to relate each incident as it occurred, and I may therefore say at once that she loved him with a woman's adoring love, and that she was not unloved in return. That she scorned the story of his guilt you will not doubt, and it was at her suggestion that I rode over to the inquest. I had never seen them before. Never heard of them indeed. Yet I was struck with both faces ; of the father quite as much as that of the son. Tne latter was noble and manly—a keen black eye gleamed with the look of conscious innocence, not unrningled with hatred of the father, who had suffered him to stand bound by his dead mother, accus ed of murdering her. The father's face was pale, calm, even lofty. But he avoided the eye of his son, and looked only where he was certain of receiving no answering look, even into the face of the sleeping woman who had been his wife and that boy's mother. She looked neither lovingly nor reproachfully at him now. It was never thus before, and some how he had no difficulty in keeping his gaze fixed on her, so wonderful was that placid si lence. I shall not pause here to describe the cu- J rious evidence which was presented to the | coroner's jury going to establish the guilt of the son. It is incredible to one uot accustom ed to these scenes, the amount of evidence that may be amassed against even an innocent man. Aud in this case, as step by step, with out aid or suggestion, the testimony revealed itself, oue by one the friends of young Ste phen dropped away from him, aud I was left, as lawyers often are, alone by the side of my i client, for such he had now become. On my word, 1 believe that but for the ! clear, confident tones of Mary Wilson's voice j assuring me of his innocence, I should have i believed the story myself, and left the matri- j cide to his fate. The jury adjourned till evening, to allow a ; post mortem examination to take place, during : this interval I sough) a meeting with the fa ther. The result of it is given in the words j with which this history commences. It was , iny last argument to a father's heart, that at tempt to move him, by the love of his son, to some exertion on behalf of the boy. •' If you do not aid him he will perish.'' " Then let him die." 1 looked suddenly into the man's counte nance. He was a tall thin man, of even com manding appearance, and the eye did not dis pute the stories I had heard of his former life, that he had been dissolute, and that of l ite he had resorted again at times to the companions aud employments of his younger years. As I i looked into his face the idea came over me i with lightning force that the motive for niur- ' der was quite as great on his part as on that of the son, for could he but kill the mother and ; hang the son, the inheritance of ample farms i and funds would be his alone. Could it be possible? It was a terrible thought, but the life of a city practitioner had even then ac customed me to sueh ideas, though it was in the younger years of my practice. I returned to Stephen, and talked with him. Ills a>tonishmeiit at his position had by this time given away to grief for his motlier, and he was weeping bitterly, yet such tears as no murderer ever wi pt. I paused while he recover ed calmness, and the deep screnetyof his grief overpowered me for a moment, while I looked at hiin. The conviction of lis innocence grew on nie as I talked with him. but the weight of evidence against him was overpowering, and the examination which was now concluded, had confirmed the worst aspect of the case.— It needed only the proof, furnished within a few days, of the chemist in New York from whom tie had purchased the article, to com plete as strong a chain of evidence as ever bound a mau to the prospect of ignomiuious death. I pass over all the incidental history in con nection with this sorrowful affair. The effect iu the family of my friend Wilson—where, if I desired it, I should go to find a spice of ro mance and sentiment to add to this history—l shall leave for the imagination of those who have defended friends against the verdict of a harsh world. Let me therefore pass on im mediately to the court-room and the trial of Stephen Forster, which took place some two months after the death of the mother. It was a hot summer day. The day was oopressive at the early hour when I was arous ed to go over to the court-house, and as I rode across the country, the sultry air was exceed ingly dispiriting. I had not taken charge of the defense myself. Two eminent counsel were engaged, familiar with criminal practice, men of keen intellect, and whose experience in that branch of the profession enabled them to catch at every chance for life, aud to de tect every flaw, however minute, in the links of the evidence opposed to them. It was a very old court-room in which the trial took place. The bench for the court was at the end opposite to the entrance, and con sisted of a raised platform, with a table on it. and a rail in front of it, which looked as if it I might bare done service in a colonial eonrt.—. On each side of the doorway the seats wore elevated ODe above the other, rising toward the rear of the room, so that you entered be tween two walls which grew lower as you ad vanced to the bar. The only bar was a high, close board fence—l cau call it nothing else — sweeping in a semicircle around the room, in closing the seats and tables for the gentlemen of the profession. The prisoner's box was outside of this fence to the impossibility of an escape. The audience occupied the elevated seats in the rear, and siuie vacant places be hind the jury box, which was on the judges left. The latter mentioned space wasgeneral ly occupied by ladies, when any case was on trial which interested thero. On the occasion of which 1 now write there was not room there for thein. Long before the hour of opening, the court-room was throng ed with the female population of the country, almost to the exclusion of the men who came from all quarters to attend this, the first mur der trial in their neighborhood. The Jurors were in their places an hour before the time, j as if they feared that the crowd would prevent I their being admitted. The bar was, as usual, thronged with lawyers and their clerks, chat ting, laughing, and joking, as if the most im portant question of the day were how to keep cool, and no one had anything to do with the life or death of a young, strong man. The prisoner was brought in before the court' was opened, and took his seat iu the box. lie turned his gaze for a moment around the crowd-; ed room, catching the eyes of many that he had known and loved for years. There was one face that he knew as that of one of his mother's friends, a kindly woman who had held him on her knees a hundred times. She look ed iuto his face with a longing gaze, that ask ed him as plainly us if he had heard the words, whether indeed he were guilty of that horrible crime. And the reply was as plain, as legi ble, or audible, whichever you choose to call it, as was the question. Every one who knew the relation of that boy to the good woman, knew that his answer was true, and if there had been doubt before, it Hed before that clear, bright look of rectitude and calmness. And now the presiding Judge entered the court-room. For a little while there was a gathering near him, and lie chatted pleasantly with the members of the bar whom he knew, and then took his seat. Before opening court, and while the clerk was calling the jury, he occupied himself iu reading a newspaper from the city, interrupting himself occasionally, or allowing himself to be interrupted, to grant an order ot sign a paper thrust before him by an audacious attorney. At the moment when Stephen Forster was arraigned and pleaded to the indictment, avail ed lady, leaning on the arm of a well-known country gentleman, entered the private door of the court-room from the sheriff's apartments, and took a seat near the judge, and within the bar. 1 need not conceal the fact that this was Miss Wilson, whose faith remained unshaken to the Inst., although I doubt much whether the prisoner recognized her at first, or until his vision had penetrated the filds of her vail, at a moment when she was remarkably occu pied in listening to the opening counsel. There is one prominent fault in our system of administering justice, which is derived from old times in England. I allude to the pre scribed course of conduct on the part of the prosecuting officer. I know by experience how difficult it is for the attorney for the State to get rid of the professional idea of an tagonism which requires him, if possible, to be successful in the contest. But it is manifest at a glance that the whole duty of the district attorney consists in having a fair, impartial statement presented to the jury, and then lay ing before them the entire testimony, while he takes care that no illegal course is pursued by defense. The custom of suppressing testimony of not subpetiaing witnesses whose evidence is likely to favor tiie prisoner, of stretching rules of law to their utmost tension, or with the aid of an easy court, even beyond all legitimate bounds —the laboring assiduously with all the force talent, trickery of the profession combin ed, to procure a conviction, and the opposing every effort of the prisoner to establish in nocence and good character, all this is an of fense against justice which prevails to a great extent among officers of the State in our courts, and which by no means tends to pro cure justice or to secure the punishment of crime, since it reduces trials at the bar to a skirmish between opposing counsel, and leaves justice to be administered according to the skill of the contestants. There is no more painful scene of an idle looker on, than the anxiety to some district attorneys to procure the conviction of criminals; and, indeed, it is at the first a painful employ ment to the attorneys themselves ; but the ea ger excitement of prefesrional labor soon re moves all thought of pain ; arid the eagerness with which the victim is hunted to the death, while every avenue of escape is guarded and stopped, is absolutely appalling. Let us look and labor for improvement in these customs of the courts, and for a substitution of impartial, substantial justice in the place of the two-sided contests which now assume the name of jus tice, and in which court and jurors vainly strive not to enlist their feelings with one or the other side, and which result necessarily in the escape of the guilty, or the punishmeut of the iunoceut, quite as often as in correct ver dicts. In the trial of which I now write, the prose cuting attorney was a man of undoubted talent, whose life had been devoted to his profession, and who regarded a verdict of not guilty as in all cases a triumph over himself, which he must strive against with might and main. He o{>ened the case to the jury with delib eration, but with tremendous force. Ho de tailed the simple incidents of the family his tory with telling effect. He hail not spoken ten minutes before the audience begau to look dark, and a gloom settled on the countenances of all present; for there were few iu that crowd who had not loved Stephen Forster, aud who did not feel deeply his awful position. As the counsel stated the testimony which be proposed to offer, there was a hopeless | look in the eyes of the whole assembly which ' I have never seen before nor since iu all my practice, and when he closed their was a feel ing of relief, a momentary breathing, as if a weight were removed from the breast of every one. Then came the testimony, slowly piling up its mountain-load on the young man's fate. First of all was the medical testimony, de scribing minutely, aud in terms which physicians alone know how how to use, the death and the causes of death. Then followed the !oug arid cross examination, which failed to shake the calm medical men, and the State called its next witness. The day wore along slowly and painfully, and the evening approached. The court had taken a short recess for dinner, and an inter ruption of a few minutes now occurred, daring which I approached the prisoner and conversed with him. He seemed to have made up his mind to a verdict of guilty, aud to be weary of the delay. " I wish it were over," he said ; " why tor ture me in this way ? I do not love life enough to pay this price for it. I have had but one wish since I sat here to-day, and that was, that I had died like my old frieud, three years ago. " It was a summer night like this ; the clouds lay even as now in the west when he died.— He had not lived long enough to know that the world is a poor place to live, a hard place to suffer, a pleasant enough to die out of. To him it seemed agony to go, and he longed for life aud its experiences. How blessed to go ! away thus, and yet he knew it not. How j blessed to die in the young spring of life, and yet he would have l-ngered till tie summer ! heats overpowered him, or the wiuter frosts I chilled his very soul. " And here am I, the mock and gaze of the crowd, waiting to hear the doom which is soon to be pronounced, and which you lawyers are postponing hour by hour, only to increase my pain. Let it be over at once aud forever, 1 beg of von. Let—" " Mr. Phillips—one moment, if you please." I hastened to the counsel for the defense, who were calling, and found them deep in con sultation about a proposition suddenly started. I The object of the elder Forster iu convicting j his son of murder was to my mind very clear. ! lie had doubtless expected to inherit the really splendid landed estates of Judge Dusenhu-y, and the motive appeared by uo means insuffi cient, when tiie eumity and hatred which had ; existed for years between him aud his wife and sou is taken into consideration. The testimo ny for the prosecution was now all in, except ing only the clinching evidence, namely, that of Stephen Forster, the father, on close exam ination, proved to be the sole evidence which connected his son with the poisoning. The proofs thus far had been complete, to the ef fect that Mrs. Forster had been poisoned and war dead, but no idea was given that her son had committed the deed, except in the fact that he had purchased the article iu the city short ly before the death ; bat this was relieved by the circumstance that lie had purchased other articles for chemical experiments at the same time, and had several times, at least twice pre viously, purchased the same poisonous drug. It was therefore with no small degree of risk, and yet with a cool and well-advised pro fessional determination, that the counsel enga ged for the defense determined to direct all their force towards breaking down the evidence of the elder Forster, and abandoning all other chances. It was, in point of fact, a new idea, suggested by the junior counsel at this stage of the case, and involved the abandonment of the previously adopted theory of defense,which had been that the harrassed and weary wife hud committed suicide. The moment of time in which this consultation took place may well afford to readers of this history au iuea of the momentous responsibilities under which law yers labor. The cool face, the smiling coun tenance, the quick sparkling retorts, the gay, ti ding manners, which lead the bystander to imagine that the lawyer is enjoying his con test as he might a game of chess or of billiards, often to cover the deepest anxiety, the most fearful tremblings for the fate of the client whose life hangs on the quickness or skill of that apparently thoughtless intellect. I think there is no other consideration needed to con vince me that the profession is one of most terri ble labor and responsibility, than the idea that in such a trial as this I am now describing there may be several moments when it is ne i cessary to determine, again and again, what new theory of defense shall now be adopted, what new plan of action devised, to save the life of a man whose innocence is clear to the mind of the lawyer, but whose guilt appears almost established to the minds of the jury. Such was the responsibility which I now felt, for the senior counsel had not yet seen the dreaded witness, and made up his mind on my brief description. It was decided in an in stant, and the first blow to be struck was de vised by the junior counsel, who had indeed formed the idea of this plan of defense from the fact that he had learned a few moments before that young Forster was that day twen ty-one years of age. In five minutes I had prepared a brief but comprehensive last will and testament for the prisoner to execute, giving his entire fortune to Mary Wilson and heirs. We begged the indulgence of the court a moment, while it was duly executed, and theu announced our readi ness to proceed. it was strange that Sephen Forster the el der had never thought of this. It afterwards appeared that he had made an error of an en tire year iu his sou's age, and had not dream ed of his being able to devise real estate with in a twelve-month. As Forster took the stand at the opening of court after the recess, a cloud came up and obscured the setting sun, while the low mut tering of a distant thunder foretold a coming storm. I did not notice the face of the senior counsel of the prisoner when the distriet-attor ney commenced his examination, and when my attention was first called to it, I was appalled at the expression which I saw coming over it. Slowly, steadily, it grew pale, fierce, and calm. There was a fined stare into iLe eyes of the witness, which ma le him uneasy, aud he avcrt- VOL. XVIII. —NO. 38. Ed his gaze. Otherwise Fonder was cold aud firm. But my associate followed him which ever way he turned, with a fixed icy gaze that might have frozeu him with horror had he bat caught it. I He related his storv, with enongh apparent reluctauce to gve an idea of bis suffering ; and some, indeed ail, pitied the broken down man so soon to be childless and desolate. They did not know the fiend. At length came the cross-examination.whicti was to have been conducted by myself. But the seuior laid his hand on my arm, and turn ing to him, I shrauk from his now ghastly countenance. He essayed to speak, but his iips emitted only a husky sound ; and he mo tioned to me that he would go on if I would pass the paper 1 held in my hand to the wit ness. While 1 did so, he drank a glass of wa ter. When I passed the will of his son to Stephen Forster, he looked at it, swept his eyes over it, stared a moment in rny face, lifted his eyes, and thought in silence. Through what tempest uous years did that fierce soul sweep back to the spring morning when his boy lay, a young babe in his arms 1 How did he count them— one by one —those years of bitterness, of hate, of want—want of love, bitter poverty of affec tion, hatred, malice, and all mauner of house hold anguish, up to this last and blackest year in all the twenty-one ! And when he counted the last—when the lawyer's intellect had done the child's problem in subtraction, aud taken the year 18—from 18—, and found the differ ence proved that he had made the most awful error of his life in his former count—he utter ed a cry, a howl of agony, that startied the si lent court-room more than the thunder crush which followed it. " What paper is that ?" demanded the dis trict-attorney, furiously. " Merely a menorandum we have prepared to help your ease. We have made your wit ness disinterested by giving bis son's property to another person." The effect of this snggestion was instantane ous, and was visible to the jury box as well as iu the audience A hundred curious eyes were turned toward the witness, whose countenance was ashy, and whose disturbed, bewildered air was precisely was what we anticipated from the somewhat extraordinary course we have adopt ed. The whole aim and object of his terrible occupation being removed instantly and forev er, he knew not what course to pursue, and while he hesitated and perplexed himself witli doubts and uncertainties, the first question of my associate, asked in a low voice, scarcely audible tone, reached his ear. " Where were you born ?" A gloom almost like night suddenly came over the room, and the storm bursts on the village with furious violence. The witness sprang from his seat at the question, and siuk ing back. j>eered into gloom with curious, anx ious eyes, as if striving to connect that voice with the face of some known persons, but ho made no reply. " You were boru in England," continued the same low voice. The witness trembled from head to foot. I could see it, and I observed it, overwhelmed as I was with anxiety aud astonishment at the course of the leader. ' Your father's name was Gordon ; he was a lawyer in Loudou." Still no reply. " Your mother—who was your mother ?" For a moment there was profouud silence. Even the sharp district-attorney, in his sur prise, forgot to object, and the judge leaned eagerly forward to watch the strange scene. At length Stephen Forster rose from his chair, and gazed across the bar, and uttered a strange sentence for a witness : I "In God's name, who are you ?" The counselor rose to his feet, and stretch ed his tall form to its utmost height. The look of fierceness that I had seen was still there, and a flash of lightning illuminated the room, throwing a wild light on his face, at which the witness in the box uttered a cry of horror, and sunk motionless to the floor, while torrents of blood gushed from his nostrils and mouth. The court was instantly adjourned to the next morning ; and the astonished crowd sepa rated, each relating his own fauciful idea of the cause of th's curious scene. My companion walked out leaning or. my arm, which scurcely supported him, hanging on it as he did. That uight we stood together by the bed of Stephen Farster, now going fast by the dark road. " George, George I—Mother of God, is it you ?" "It is none other, Stephen Gordon. And I thank that Holy Mother's Son that I was here in time to save you this last and mort awful crime." " George—our mother V " Head, thirty years ago 1" A deep groan and a gush of blood Were the response from the dying man. " And Lucy ?" muttered he, as soon as be was able. " Her grave is by my mother." " And father did thev know—" " All—everything—even to the weapon you used. He lived long cnongh to curse yon, and died with a curse half uttered on Lis tongue/' "It is enough. If there be ho hell for others there is one for me." " The apostate returns to the faith of his youth," said my associate, with a sneer that I never forgave. " The apostate has no hope ori earth, or in heaven, or hell. 1 attx dyiug, George. For give me ! Forgive me I', " Stephen, Gordon, my brotb^. ( murderer of my father, ray mother, sister, of four ! own wife and son, destroyer of my own once bright home, of my honor, of my all in life, if God forgive you in the day of jndgment I will, not " No, no ! j have not yet murdered my son. Tb* rent is true, all true ; hut I can save Mm yet. Let that be some atonement.'' " Atonement for what ? Can you call the