L DOLLAR PCR ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. TOWARD A.: Uhnreban fllornmn, lil rtlj 11, 1858. LOVE'S SEASONS AND REASONS. BY CHARLES MACK AY. I love my love in spring time, For beauty fresh as May, For cheeks like early roses, For eyes as bright as day ; For breath like balm of lilies, For smiles like sunrise clear ; I love my love in spring time, And love her all the year. I love tny love in summer, For promise warm and true, For truth like noonday throwing A lifcht on old and new, For wealth of bloom and freshness, And shady comfort near ; I love iny love in summer, And love her all the year. I love my love in autumn, For fruit of gentle dc-eds, For wisdom to be garnered T i serve our future needs ; For virtues ripening ever, L ke harvests full in ear, 1 love my love in autnmn, And love her all the year. I love my love in winter, For charities untold, For warmth of household welcome, For looks that thaw the cold ; For harmless mirth and pastime, As rich as Christmas cheer ; I love my love in winter, And love her all the year. Slllll e b £ a 1 iisECOND MARRI AGE. ITWAURF.N WARNER, ESQ., OF THE IN.VF.R TEMPI.E. A busy day in the assize court at Chester, checkered, as usual, by alternate victory and defeat, bad just terminated, and I was walk in? briskly forth, when an attorney of rather :o* oittf in his profession—being principally eai|iloved as att intermediary between needy felons and the counsels practicing in the Crown c/irt —accosted the, and presented a brief ; at the ame time tendering a fee of two guineas milked upon it. " I am engaged to-morrow, Mr. Barnes," I eiclaimed, a little testily, "ou the civil side ; \ besides, you know I very seldom take briefs it the Crown court, even if proffered iu due i time: ami to-morrow will Ire the last day of ' the a-size in Chester ! There are plenty of unemployed counsel who will be glad of your brief.'' " It is a brief iu an action of ejectment," rc v,:ed the attorney —" Woodley versus Thorn dyke : arid is brought to recover |>ossession of a fro hold estate now held und farmed by the defendant." "An action of ejectment to recover posses •vi of a freehold estate ; defended, too, I know, by n powerful bar ; for I was offered a j or J. and declined it. Mr. P leads ; and }ou bring me this for the plaintiff, and at the •a-: moment, too ! You must be crazed." 1 told the plaintiff and her grandfather," rejoined Mr. Barnes, " that it was too late to '•peak counsel's attention to the case ; and • at the fee, all they have, with much difficul ty 1 ceii able to raise, was ridiculously small ; '■Athey insisted on uiv applying to you—Oh, here they are !" We had by this time reached the street, and be attorney jtointed towards two figures stand • ! 's attitudes of anxious suspense near the ' gateway. It was dusk, but there was quite efficient light to distinguish the pale and in teresting features of a young female, dressed ;u faded and scauty mourning, aud accompa ud by a respectable-looking old man with Miite hair, and a countenance deeply furrow ed by age and grief. I told you, Miss Woodley," said the at ■ rnev, " that this gentleman would decline the brief, especially with such a fee." It is not the fee, man !" I observed, for I somewhat moved by the appealing dejec tvo exhibited by the white-haired man and t s timid grand daughter ; " but what chance on 1 have of establishing this person's right right .-lie have—to the estate she claims, " i! i> suddenly calied upon to act without pre- T: °nsconsultation ; aud utterly ignorant, ex- as far as this I perceive hastily-scrawled r: -fwil| instruct me, both of the nature of plaintiff's claim and of the defense intend w to be set up against it ?" h you would undertake it, sir," said the • age.oman, with a tremulous, hesitating T oin. and glistening eyes, "for his sake"— un I glanced at her aged companion—"who °jse he helpless." llie blessing of those who arc ready to I' Y'b will be yours, sir," said Che grandfather v , mc, ;k solemnity, "if you will lend your 31 !| i this work of justice and mercy. We "H' no hope of withstanding the masterful and wrong of wicked and powerful r;; e *cept by the aid of the law, which we taught will ever prove a strong tow , defense to those who walk in the paths l*ce and right." |he earnestness of the old man's language manner, and the pleading gentleness of Joung woman, forcibly impressed me ; aud . "d it was a somewhat unprofessional mode fn: asi * determined to hear their story j O,ll their own li}>s, rather than take it from " brief, or through the verbal nae- their attorney. „ Dm have been truly taught," I answered; really entitled to the property you t J"' * know of no masterful men that, in D , an d of England, eau hinder you from ob , k' u g po&seesion of it. Gome to iny hotel in tlip.m uIJ k°" r and a half from hence : I shall <3- to hcar whit you have to 1 aided, taking the two gui- nies from the haud of the attorney, who still held the money ready for my acceptance, "you must permit me to return It is too much for you to pay for losing your cause ; and if I gain it—— but mind, 1 do not promise to take it into court unless I am thoroughly satisfied you have right and equity on your side—l shall expect a much heavier one. Mr. Barnes, I will see you, if you please, early in the morn ing." I theu bowed, and hastened ou. Dinner was not ready when I arrived at the hotel ; and during the short time I had to wait, I more than half repented of having had anything to do with this unfortunate suit However, the pleadings of charity, the sug gestions of human kindness, reasserted their influence ; and by tho time my new clients ar rived, which the} did very punctually at. the hour I had indicated, I had quite regained the equanimity I had momentarily lost, and, thanks to mine host's excellent viands and generons wine, was, for a lawyer, iu a very amiable and benevolent humor indeed. Our conference was long, anxious, and un satisfactorily. I was obliged to send for Barnes before it was eonclu led, in order to thoroughly ascertain the precise nature of the case intended to be set up by the defendant, and the evidence likely to be adduced in sup port of it. No ray of consolation or of hope came from that quarter. Still, the narrative I had listened to, bearing as it did the impress of truth and siucerity iu every sentence, strong ly disposed ine to believe that foul play had been practiced by the other side ; aud I de termined, at all hazards, to go into court, though with but faint hope indeed of a present sue vssful issue. " It appears more than probable," I remark ed on dismissing my clients, " that this will is a fabrication ; but before such a question had been put in issue before a jury, soine produci ble evidence of its being so should have been sought for aud obtained. As it is I can only watch the defendant's proof of the genuine ness of the instrument upon which lie has ob tained probate—one or more of the attesting witnesses may, if fraud has been practiced, break down under a searching cross-examina tion, or incidentally, perhaps, disclose matter for further investigation." " One of the attesting witnesses is, as I have already told yon, dead," observed Barnes; " and another, Elizabeth Wareing, lias, I hear to-day left the country. An affidavit to that effect will, no doubt, be made to morrow, in order to enable them to give secondary cvi- j deuce of her attestation, though, swear as they j may, 1 have not the slightest doubt I could ; find her if time were allowed, and her presence wonid at all avail us." " Indeed 1 This is very important. AVould von, Mr. Barnes, have any objections," I ad ded, after a few moments' reflection, " to make oath, should the turn of affairs to-morrow reader your doing so desirable, of your belief that you could, reasonable time being allowed, procure the attendance of this woman—this Elizabeth Wareing ?" " Not the slightest ; thongh bow thatwo'd help us to invalidate the will Thorudyke claims under, I do not understand." " Perhaps not. At all events do not fail to be early in court. The case is the first iu to-morrow's list, remember." The story confided to me was a very sad, and, unfortunately in many of its features, a very common one. Ellen, the only child of the old gentleman, Thomas Ward, had early in life married Air. James Woodley, a wealthy yeoman, prosperously settled upon his pater nal acres, which he cnltivated with great dili gence and success. The issue of this marriage —a very happy one,l was informed—was Ala ry Woodley, the plaintiff in the present action. Air. Woodley, who had now been dead some thing more than two years, bequeathed the whole of his property, real and personal, to his wife, in full confidence, as he expressed himself but a few hours before he expired, thr.t she would amply provide for his and her child The value of the property inherited by Mrs. Woodley under this amounted, according to a valuation made a few weeks alter the tes tator's decease, to between eight aud nine thousand pounds. Respected as a widow, comfortable in cir cumstances, and with a daughter to engage her affections, Airs. Woodley might have pas sed the remainder of her existence in happiness. But how frequently do women peril and lose all by a second marriage ! Such was the case with Airs. Woodley : to the astonishment of everybody she threw herself away on a man almost unknown in the district—a person of no fortune, of mean habits, and altogether un worthy of accepting as a husband. Silas Thorudyke, to whom she thus committed her happiness, had lor a short time acted as bai liff on the farm ; and no sooner did he feel himself master, than his subserviency v.-as changed to selfish indifference, and that gradu ally assumed a coarser character. He disco vered that the property, by the will of Air. Woodley, was so secured against every chance or casually to the use and enjoyment of his wife, that it not only did not pass by marriage to the new bridegroom, but she was unable to alienate or divest herself of any portion of it during life. She could, however, dispose of it by will ;• but in the event of her dying in testate, the whole descended to her daughter, Mary Woodley. Incredibly savage was Thorudyke when he made that discovery ; and bitter and incessant were the indignities to which he subjected his unfortunate wife, for the avowed purpose of forcing her to make a will entirely in his favor, nnd of course disinheriting her daughter.— These persecutions failed of their object. Au unexpected, quiet, jmssive, but unconquerable resistance, was opposed by the, in all other things, cowed aud submissive woman, to this demand of her domineeriug husband. Her failing health—for gently nurtured and tender ly cherished as she had ever been, the callous brutality of her husband soon told upon the unhappy creature —warned ber that Mary would soon be an orphan, and that upon her firnmess it depended whether the child of hina to whose memory she had been, so fatally for hemdf. nnfftfthful should be oas* betnefes PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. O'MEARA GOODRICH. " REGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER." and penniless upon the world, or inherit the wealth to which, by every principle of right and equity, she was entitled. Come what may, this trust at least should not, she men tally resolved, be betrayed or paltered with. Every imaginable expedient to vanquish her resolution was resorted to. Thorudyke pick ed a quarrel with Ward, her father, who had lived at Dale Farm since the morrow of her marriage with Woodley, and the old gentle man was compelled to leave, and take up his abode with a distant and somewhat needy re lative. Next Edward Wilford, the only son of a neighboring and prosperous farmer, who had been betrothed to Mary Woodley several months before her father's death, was brutal ly insulted, and forbidden the house. All, however, failed to shake the mother's resolu tion ; aud at length, finding all his efforts fruitless, Thorudyke appeared to yield the point, and upon this subject, at least, ceased to harass his unfortunate victim. Frequent private conferences were now held between Thorudyke, his two daughters and Elizabeth Wareing—a woman approaching middle age, whom under the specious pretense that Mrs. Thorudyke's increasing ailments ren dered the services of an experienced matron indispensable, he had lately installed ut the farm. It was quite evideut to both the mother and daughter that a much greater degree of intimacy subsisted between the master and housekeeper than their relative positions war ranted ; aud from some expressions heed lev.-!y dropped by the woman, they suspected them to have been ouce on terms ot confidential in timacy. Thorudyke, I should have mentioned was not a native of these parts ; he had an swered Moodley's advertisement as a bailiff, and his testimonials appearing satisfactory, he had been somewhat precipitately engaged. A young man, calling himself Edward Wareing, the sou Elizabeth Wareing, and said to be en gaged in an attorney's office in Liverpool, was a not uufrequent visitor at Dale Farm ; and once he bad the insolent presumption to ad dress a uoie to Mary Woodley, formally ten dering his hand and fortune ! This, however, did not suit Mr. Thornkyke's views, aud Mr. Edward Wareing was very effectually rebuked and silenced by bis proposed father-in-law. Mrs. Thorudyke's health rapidly declined. — The woman Wareing, touched po.-siltly by sympathy or remorse, exhibited considerable tenderness and compassion towards the inva lid ; made her nourishing drinks, and adminis tered the medicine prescribed bp the village practitioner —who, after much delay and pooh, jjot.ktng, by Thorudyke, had been been called in—with her own hands. About three week previous to Mrs. Thorudyke's death, u sort of reconciliation was patched up through her in strumentality, between the husband and wife ; an unwonted expression of kindness and com passion, real or simulated, sat upon Tiiorn dykes's features every time he approached the dying woman. The sands of life ebbed swiftly with Mrs. Thorukyke. Infolded in the gentle, but dead ly, embrace with which consumption seizes its victims, she wasted rapidly away ; and, most perplexing symptoms of all, violent retching and nausea, especially after taking her medi cine—which, according to Davis, the village surgeon, was invariably of a sedative charac ter —aggravated and confirmed the fatal dis ease which was hurrying her to the tomb. Not once during this last illness could Alary Woodley, by chance or by stratagem, obtain a moment's private interview with her mother, until a few moments before her decease. En til then, under one pretense or auother, either Elizabeth Wareing, one of Thorudyke's daugh ters, ot Thorudyke himself, was always present in the sick chamber. Jt was evening ; dark ness had for sometime fallen ; no light had yet been taken iutojthe dying woman's apatt ment; and the pale starlight which faintly il lutnined the room, served, as Mary Woodley softly approached on tiptoe to the bedside of her, as she supposed, sleeping parent, but to deepen by defining the shadows thrown by the full, heavy hangings, and the old massive fur niture. Gently aud with a beating heart.— Alary Woodley drew back the bed-curtain nearest the window. The feeble, uncertain light flickered upon the countenance, distinct in its mortal paleness, of her parent; the eyes recognized her, and a glance of infinite tender ness gleamed for un instant in the rapidly darkened orbs ; the right arm essayed to lift itself, as for one fast, last embrace. Vainly ! Love, love only, was strong, stronger than death, in the expiring mother's heart, and the arm fell feebly back on the bedclothes. Alary Woodley bent down in eager grief, for she felt instinctively that the bitter hour at last was come. Their lips met, and the lu.-t ac cents of the mother murmured, " Beloved Ala ry, I—l have been true to you—no will—no" . A slight tremor shook her frame, the spirit that looked in love from the windows ol the eyes departed ou its heavenward journey, and the unconscious shell only of what had once been her mother remained in the sobbing daughter's arms. 1 will not deny that this narrative, which 1 feel I have but coldly and feebly rendered from its earnest, tearful teudcrness, as related by Alary Woodley, affected me considerably —case hardened, as, to use an old bar pun, we barristers are supposed to be: nor wilt the reader be surprised to hear that suspicions, graver even thun those which pointed to for gery, were evoked by the sad history. Alueli musing upon the strange circumstances thus disclosed, aud profoundly cogitative on the best mode of action to be pursued, the " small hours," the first of them at least, surprised me in my arm chair. I started up and hastened to bed, well knowing from experience that a sleepless vigil is a wretched preparative for a morrow of active exertion, whether of mind or body. I was betimes in court the next morning, and Mr. Barnes, proud as a peacock of figur ing as an attorney in an important civil suit, was soon at my side. The case had excited more iuterest than I had supposed, and the court was very early filled. Alary Woodley and her grand father soon arrived ; and amor of commiseration ran through the nnditUfry as they took their seat by the side of Barnes.— There was a strong bar arrayed against us ; and Mr. Silas Thorudyke, I noticed was ex tremely busy and important with whisperings and suggestions to his solicitor and counsel— received, of course as much meaningless fa miliarities are, with barely civil indifference. Twelve common jurors were called and sworn well uud truly to try the issue, aud I arose amidst breathless silence to address them. I at once frankly stated the circumstances un der which the brief had cotne into my hands, observed that if, for lack of advised prepara tion, the plaintiffs case failed on that day, another trial under favor of the court above, would 1 doubted not at no distant period of time, reverse the possibly at present unfavora ble decision. "My learned friends ou the other side," I continued, "smile at this quali fied admission of mine : let them do so. If they apparently establish to day the validity of a will which strips an only child of the inheri tance bequeathed by her father, they will, I tell them emphatically have obtained but a temporary triumph tor a person who—if I, if you, gentlemen of the jury, are to believe the case intended to lie set up as a bar to the plaintiff's claim—had succeeded, by the gross est brutality, the most atrocious devices, in bending the mind of the deceased Mrs. Thoru dyke to his selfish purposes. My learned friends need not interrupt me : I shall pursue these observations, for the present, no further ; merely adding that I. that his lordship, that you gentlemen of the jury, will require of him the strictest proof—proof clear as light—that the instrument upon which he tvlies to defeat the equitable, the righteous claim ot the young aud amiable person by my side, is genuine, aud not, as I verily beleive"—l looked, as I spoke, full in the face of Thorudyke— " FORGED." " Alv lord," exclaimed the opposing counsel, " this is really insufferable !" His lordship, however, did not interpose ; and I went on to relate, iu the most telling manner of which 1 was capable, the history of the deceased Airs. Thorudyke's first and second marriaires ; the harmony and happiness of the first—the wretchedness and cruelty which characterized the second. I narrated, also, the dying words of Mrs. Thorudyke to her daughter, though repeatedly interrupted by the defendant's counsel, who manifested great indignation that a statement unsusceptible of legal proof should be addressed, to the court and jurv. My address concluded, 1 put in James Woodley's will ; and, as the opposing counsel did not dispute its validity, nor require proof of Alary Woodley's identify, I intimated the plaintiff's case was closed. The speech for the defendant was calm and guarded. It threw, or rather attempted to throw,, discredit ou the death-bed " fiction," got up, Mr. P said, simply with a view to effect ; and he concluded by averring that he should be able to e.-tablish tiie genuineness of the will of Ellen Thorudyke, now produced uv irrc-sistable evidence. That done, however much the jury might wish the property had been otherwise disposed of, they would, of course, return a verdict in accordance with their oaths and the law of the land. The first witness called was Thomas Head ley, a smith,, residing near the Dale farm He swore positively that the late Airs. Thorn dyke, whom he knew well, had cheerfully sign ed the bill now produced, after it had been deliberately read over to her by her husband about a fortnight before her death. Silas Thorudyke, John Cummins, Elizabeth AYare ing, and witness were the only persons present. Alrr. Thorndkye expressed confidence that her husband would provide for Alary Wood ley. " And so I will," said sleek Silas, rising up and looking ronnd upon tho auditory. "If she will return 1 will be a father to her." No look, no sound of sympathy or approval, greeted this generous declaration aud he sat down again not a little disconcerted. I asked this burly, half-drunken witness but one question : " When is vonr marriage with Rebecca Thorudyke, the defendant's eldest daughter, to be celebrated ?" "1 don't know, Air. Lawyer ; perhaps uev er." "That will do ; yon can go down." Air. F now rose to state that his client was unable to produce Elizabeth Wareing, and another of the attesting witnesses to the will, iu court. No suspicion that any opposi tion to the solemn testament made by the de ceased Mrs. Thorudyke would be attempted, had been entertained ; and the woman, una ware that her testimony would be required, had left that part of the country. Every ef fort had been made by the defendant to disco ver her abode without effect. It was believed she bad gone to America, where she had rela tives. The defendant had filed an affidavit setting forth these facts ; ami it was now prayed that secondary evidence to establish the genuine ness of Elizabeth Wareitig's attesting signa ture should be admitted. 1 of course vehemently opposed this demand and broadly hinted that the witness was pur posely kept out of the way. "Will my learned friend," said Mr. P with one of his slyest sneers, " inform us what motive the defeudaut could possibly have to keep back a witness so necessary to him ?" "Elizabeth Wareing," I curtly replied, " may not, upon reflection, be deemed a safe witness to subject to the ordeal of a cross-ex amination. But to settle the matter, my lord," I exclaimed, " 1 have here an affidavit of the plaintiff's attorney, in which he states that he lias no doubt of being able to find this impor tant witness if time be allowed liirn for the purpose ; the defendant of course undertaking to call her when produced." A tremenduous clamor of counsel hereupon ensued, and fierce and angry grew the war of words. The hubbub was at last terminated by the judge recommending that, under the circumstances, " a juror should be withdrawn." This suggestion, after some demur, was agreed to. One of the jurors was whispered to tome out of the box ; then the clerk of the court exclaimed, "My lord, there are only eleven men on the jury •" nrid by the aid of this ven- [ erable, if clumsy expedient, the cause of Wood Icy versus Thorudyke was de fucio udjourued to a future day. I had not long returned to the hotel, when 1 was waited upon by Mr. Wilford, senior, the father of the young man who had been forbidden to visit Dale Farm by Thorudyke. His son, he informed me, was ill from chagrin and anxiety—confined to his bed, indeed ; and Mary Woodley had refused, it seemed, to ac cept pecuniary aid from either the father or the sou Would I endeavor to terminate the estrangement which had for some time unhap pily existed, and persuade her to accept his, Wilford senior's freely offered purse and servi ces '( I instantly accepted both the mission and the large sum which the excellent man tendered. A' part of the money I gave Barnes to stimulate his exertions, and the rest I plac ed in the hand of Mary Woodley's grandpapa, with a friendly admonitiou to him not to allow his grandchild to make a fool of herself, an exhortation which produced its effect in due season. Summer passed away, autnmn had come and gone, and the winter assizes were ouce more upon us. Regular proceedings had been taken, and the action in ejectment of Wood ley versus Thorudyke was once* more on the cause list of the Chester circuit court, marked this time as a special jury case. Indefatiga ble as Mr. Barnes had been iu his search for Elizabeth Wareing, not the slightest trace of her could he discover ? and I went iuto court, therefore, with but slight expectation of in validating the, as I fully believed, fictitious will. We bad, however, obtained a good deal of information relative to the former history not only of the absent Airs. Wareing, but of Thorudyke himself ; and it was quite within the range of probabilities that something might come out enabling me to use that knowledge to good purpose. The plaintiff and old Mr. Ward were seated in court beside Mr. Barnes, us 011 the former abortive trial ; but Mary Woodley had, fortunately for herself, lost much of the interest which attaches to female come liness and grace when associated in the mind of the spectator with undeserved calamity and sorrow. The black dress which she still wore —the orthodox twelve months of mourning for a parent had not, yet quite elapsed—was now fresh, and of fine quality, nnd the pale lilies of her luce were interspersed with deli cate roses ; whilst by her side sat Mr. John Wilford, as happy-looking as if no such tilings as perjurers, forgers, or adverse verdicts exist ed, to disturb the peace of the glad world.— Altogether, we were decidedly less interesting than ou the former occasion. Edward W are ing, I mu-t not omit to add, was, greatly to our surprise, present. lie sat, in great appa rent amity, by the side of Toon-dyke. It wus late in the afternoon, aud twilight was gradually stealing over the dingy court, when the case was called. The special jury answered to their names, were duly sworn, and then nearly the same preliminary speeches and admissions were made and put in us on the previous occasiou. Thomas Head ley, the first witness called in support of the pretended will, underwent a vigorous cross-examination ; but 1 was unable to exact auythingof importance .from him. " And now," said the defendant's leading counsel, " let me ask my learned friend if he lias succeeded in obtaining the attendance of Elizabeth Wareing ?" I was of course obliged to confess that we had been unable to find her ; and the judge remarked in that case he could receive secon dary evidence iu proof of her attestation of the will. A whispered but manifestly eager conference here took place between the defendant and his couusel, occasionally joiucd iu by Edward W arcing. There appeared to be an indecision or hesitation in their deliberat'o is ; but at last Air. F—- rose, and with some ostenta tion of manner addressed the court. "In the discharge of my duty to tlie defen dant in this action, my lord, upon whose fair fame much undeserved obloquy has been east by the speeches of the plaintiff's counsel— speeches unsupported by a shadow of evidence I have to state that, anxious above all things to stand perfectly justified before bis neighbors and society, lie has, at great trou ble and expense, obtained the presence here to-day of the witness Elizabeth Wareing. She had gone to reside in France with a respecta ble English family in the situation of house keeper. We shall uow place her in the wit ness-box, and having done so, 1 trust we shall henr no more of the slanderous imputations so freely lavislied upon my client. Call Elizabeth Wareing into court." A movement of surprise and curiosity agi tated the entire auditory at this announce ment. Air. Silas Thorudyke's naturally cada verous countenance assumed an ashy hue, in spite of his efforts to appear easy and jubilant ; and for the first time since the commencement of the proceedings, I euttrtained hope of a successful issue. M rs. Wareing appeared in answer to the call and was duly sivoru "to tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth."— She was a good-looking woman, of perhaps forty years of age, and bore a striking resem blance to her son. She rapidly, fJEJbothly, and unhesitatingly confirmed the evident*, of Head ley to a tittle. She trembled, I observed, ex cessively ; aud on the examining counsel inti mating that he had no more questions to turned hastily to leave the box. " Stay—stay, my good woman," I exclaim ed ; " yon and I must have some talk togeth er before we part." She started and looked back at me with frightful earnestness ; and then her nervous glances stole towards Mr. Silr.s Thorudyke. There was no comfort there—in his counten ance she only saw the reflex of his agitation and anxiety which marked her own Sleek Silas, I could see, repented of the rash move he hud inudo, and would have given a great deal to get his witness safely and quietly out of court. It was now nearly dark ; and observing that ! it was necessary the court and jury should see, I as well as hear, the witness, whilst under ex VOL. XVIII. —NO. 40. ainination, I requested tbat lights should be brought in. This was done. Two caudles were placed in front of the witness-box, ouo on each side of Mrs. Wareing j a few others wore disposed about the bench and jury desks. The effect of this partial lighting of the gloomy old court was, that the witness stood in strong and bright relief from the surrounding shad ows, rendering the minutest ehuuge or play of her features distinctly visible. Mr. Silas Thorndyke was, from his position, thrown en tirely into the shade, and any telegraphiug be tween him and the witness was thus rendered i impossible. This preparation, as if for some extraordinary and solemn purpose, together with the profound silence which reigned in the court, told fearfully, as I expected, upon the nerves of Mrs. Elizabeth Wareing. She al ready seemed as if about to swoon with agita tion and ill defined alarm. "Pray, madam," said I, "is your name Warning or Tucker ?" She did not answer, and I repeated the qvestion. "Tucker," she at last replied in a tremulous whisper. " I thought so; and pray Mrs Tucker, were you ever in trouble in Loudou, for robbing your lodgings ?" I thought she attempted to answer, but no sound passed her lips. One of the ushers of the court handed her a glass of water at mv suggestion, and she seemed to recover some what 1 pressed my question ; and at last sho replied in the same low, agitated voice, " Yes, i have been.' " I know you have ; Mr. Silas Thorndyke, I believe, was vonr bail on that occasion, and the matter was, I understand compromised— arranged—at all e-'ents the prosecution was not pressed. Is not that so V' " Yes—no—yes.,' " Very well ; either answer will do. You lived also, I believe, with Mr. Tnorudyke, as his housekeeper, of co irse, when he was iu business us a concoctor and vender of infallible drugs and pills ?" "Yes." " Ho was held to be skillful in the prepara tion of drugs, was he not —well versed iu their properties V " Yes—l believe so—l do not know. Why am I asked such questions ?" " You will know presently. And now, wo man, answer the question 1 am about t) put to you, as you wiil be compelled to answer it to God at the last great day. What was the nature of the drug which you or he mixed with the medicine prescribed for the late Mrs. Thorndyke ?" A spasmodic shriek, checked bv a desperate effort, partially escaped her, and she stood fixedly gazing, with starting eyes, into iny face. The profoundest silence rcigued in the court us I reiterated the question. " You must an swer," woman, said the judge, sternly, " unless you know your auswer will criminate your self." The witness looked wildly round the court, as if iu search for counsel or sympathy ; but encountering one but frowning and eager faces —Thorndyke she could discern iu the darkaess —she became giddy and panic-stricken, and seemed to lose all presence of mind. " He—he—he," she at last gasped, "he mixed it. Ido not know . But how," she added, pushing back her hair, and press ing her hands against her hot temples, "can this be ? What can it mean ?" A movement amongst the bystanders just at this moment attracted the notice of tho judge, and he immediately exclaimed, "The defendant must not leave the court." An offi cer placed himself beside the wretched mur derer as well as forger, and I resumed tho cross-examination of the witness. "Now, Mrs. Tucker, please to look at this letter (It was that which had been address ed to Mary Woodley by her son.) "That, I believe, is vour sou's handwritiug." " Yes." " " The body of this will has been written by the same hand. Now, woman, answer was it your son—this youug man who, you perceive, if guilty, cannot escape from justice—was it he who forged the names of the deceased Mrs. Thorndyke, and of Johu Cummins attached to it ?" " Not he—not he !" shrieked the wretched woman. "It was Thorndyle—Thorndyke himself," and then, with a sudden revulsion of feeling, as the consequances of what she had uttered flashed upon her, she exclaimed, "Oh, Silas, what have have I said ?—what have I done ?" " Hanged me, that's all, you accursed devil 1" replied Thorndyke, with gloomy feroci ty. " But I deserve it for trusting in such au idiot ; dolt and 100 l that I was in doing so " The woman sank down in strong convulsions, and was, by direction of the judge, carried out of the hall. The anxious silence which pervaded fho court during this scene, in which the reader will have observed 1 played a bold, tentative, and happily-successful game, was broken, as the witness was borne off, by a loud murmur of indignation, followed by congratulatory excla mations on the fortunate termination of the suit. The uefendaiit's counsel threw up their br efs. and a verdict was at oucc returned lor the plaintiff. All the inculpated parties were speedily iu custody ; and the body of Mrs. Thorndyke having been disenterrcd, it was discovered tbat she had been destroyed by bichloride of mer cury, of which a considerable quantity was de tected in the body. I was not present at tho trial of Thorndyke and his accomplices—he for murder, and Headier for perjury—but I saw by the public prints that he was found guiltr, and executed ; Heudley was transported ;the woman was, if I remember rightly, admitted evidence for the Crown. M nry \V oodlcy was of course put into im mediate possession of tier paternal inheritance ; and is now—at least she was abbot four months ago, when I dined with her a d h-r husband at Daio Farm—a comely, prosperous matron ; and as happy as a fcptoau with a numerous progeny and ar. cast-tempered pbrf-