NEW SERIES, VOL. I, No. 23.] CRABBIER. :WESTBROOK, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR Printing Oiler—Front Street. oppoßlie Bart.! Hotel Publication Office—Locust Street, opposite the P. O. TERM..—The COLUMBIA Sett In published every Saturday morning at the low price of ONE DOLLAR A YEAR IN ADVANCE, or one dollar and fifty cent., If not paid Within nne month of the time of subscribing. Single armies. THREE CENTS. Teams OP ADlMBSlSlNG—AdVerliferflelllll not exceed ing n sqloire three times for el. and 25 cvnts for each additional insertion. 'I hose of a greater length'', pro portion. Co.A. liberal discount made to yearly adver tisers. JOD PRI XTIXO —Stich as !rand-hills, Posting-hills, Card*. Imhels, Pamphlets. Blanks of every description Circulars, etc.etc.. executed with neatnessanddespatch and on reasonableternis. A vigorous prosecution of the War,the best means to secure a speedy and HONORAELE PEACE. Trout St No. 42. Front St WALNUT COLONNADE, CHEAP FASHIONABLE CLOTHING EMPORIUM. 1A.E13 ifa, YalelatilL No. 42, Front street, directly opposite the Bridge, and three doors below Black's Hotel, COLUMBIA, PENNA., Would respectfully call the attention of the public to his stock of Fashionable and Cheap Clothing, which exceeds in extent, elegance, and variety, any hitherto opened in this vicinity, and which he . pledges himself to sell at prices lower than even Le has before offered. Just look at the prices: Gentlemen's Fine Cloth Dress Coats, from Gcnticmncn•s Fine Cloth Frock Coats, from Gentlemen's Fine Cloth Sacks and Goatees. from Gentlemen's Fine Cloth and Cas •imerc Pant., from Satin and Silk Velvet Vests, Plain and Fancy, being the only kind of this quality for sale in this place, from 2.50 to 4.00 Roundabounts and Pea Jackets, 1.00 to 3.00 Shirts, plain and fancy, 373 to 1.50 Satinet Pantaloons, 1.50 to 3.00 Gentlemen's Cotton Half-hose, 6.1 to IS/ .. Silk Handkerchiefs, 373 to 1.00 Cotton do 6.1 to 123 Cravats, a new article, 373 to 1.00 Suspenders, - 61 to 373 Umbrellas, 311 to 1.50 Leather and Hair Trunks, 50 to 1.00 Travelling Iligs and Vannes, 1.00 to 2.50 Ladies' Pravelling Rigs, a beauti ful article, A Large Assortment of Fine and Medium Cloaks ALSO—A large assortment of BOYS' CLOTHING, Such as Pants, Vests, Roundabouts, and Shirts, and, in short, every article of apparel required by the gentleman, the mechanic or the laborer, with a va riety of fancy goods, calculated to tickle the taste and secure the patronage of all classes and condi tions of men. My thanks arc due, and I hereby tender ahem to the world of my patrons, for former favors, and I am determined to prove the sincerity of my grab !ado, by untiring efforts to furnish a Fashionable Wardrobe to every patron of the Colonade Hall of Fashions, as cheap as the itheapest, and as good as the best. REMEMBER TIIE 3 BIG DOORS, the place to buy cheap Clothing, No. 42, Front Street, Columbia, Pa., directly opposite the Bridge, and three doors below Black's Hotel. For further parneulars, engnito of the Captain on board. JAM ES L. PIZ ETSMAN. Columbia, Oct. 9th, 1847. N. EL A branch of the above establishment,where all the articles Amin:rated, and at the panic prices, may be obtained, has been opened in No. 4, Shrei ner's Walnut Front. NEW FALL GOODS. rpHE subscribers have just received their supply I_ Fall and %Violet., Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods, to which they invite the attention or their friends and the public generally. CLOTH , CASSIVICHILES, Etc. Their stock consists of superior French, and English Black, Blur, Brown, Mixed, and Olive Cloths; plain and Farley Cassimcrs, Sattinets, Tweeds, Jeans; Velvet and other Vestings. Gry de Rhine, Swiss and Matteona Dices Silks. ALPACAS.—PIuin, Plaid, and Striped, at 18, 25, 31, 37, 50 eta., &c. English, German, and French Merinocs; Plain Paris Cashmeres and De Laines, Lama and Tinier Plaids. French, Ballston and Manchester Ginghams; Prints of every style and price; Plain and Plaid Limeys; Taper Gauze and other White and color ed Flannels. SIIIRTINGS.—Three quarters, four quarters, five quarters, six quarters and ten quarters Bleached and Brown Sheetings, Blankets, Tickings, Chocks, Doeskins, C.c. A splendid assortment of Trimmings, Gimps, Silk and Cotton Fringes; Thread, Victoria and Bobbin Edgings and Insertings ; Lisle, Victoria and Brussels Lace, Collerettes,Gloves, Hosiery, &c. BE:8111A3, Loaf, Pulverised, Crushed, Havnnna and Brown Sugars; Syrup, L. H. N. 0. Molasses; Honey; Rio, Laguayra and Java Coffees; and the superior Tons of the Canton Tea Company of New Yurk. Oils, Fish, &c. ALSO : China, Glass tic Queensware. of wt,iott will be sold as LOW as the LOWEST, for cash or produce. Thankful for the liberal sham of !patronage heretofore received, they will by strict attention to business endeavor to, merit a continuance or the public's favor. J. D. & J. WRIGHT. Columbia, Sept. 1847.—tf. Stoves, Stoves. THE subscribers have constanly on hand a full assortment of Wood. Coal. and Cooking Stoves of every size and descrint ion, Cannon Stores. Also, Headenbnrg's Patent AIR-TIGHT PARLOR STOVES, which has given full satisfaction in all cr,ses. The public are invited to call and exaWne for themselves, at the hardware Store of Oct. 9—tf RUMPUS & HESS. A FRESH assortment of all kinds of the best spices just received at septlll7—tf YOUNG alc. CASSEL'S No. 50. THE COLUMBIA SPY THE FOUNTAIN OF YOUTH . . Ye who would save your feature• florid Lithe limbs, bright eyes. unwrinkled forehead, From age's devastation horrid, Adopt this plat.— 'Tw ill make, in climates cold or torrid, A hale old man : Avoid In youth luxutinite diet; Restrain the passions' lawless riot I Devoted In domestic quiet, Be wisely Kay; So shall ye. spite of age's Sat, 'tells( decay. Seek not in mammon'• worship, pleasure, But find your richest. dourest treasure 111 books. friends. music, poliehed lelaurs; Let miiid. not sense, Make the sole scale by which ye measure Your opulence This is the solace—this tile science -I.l(e's purest, sweetest, best appliance, That disappoints nut roan's relriuce. W e'er Il le state ; nut chatlencee, with calm defiance, Time, fortune. fate. CONQUEST OF PERU. History of the Conquest of Peru, with a Prelimi nary View of the Cintlization of the Incas. The historian of the Conquest of Mexico worth ily completes that labor with a History of the Con quest of Peru. It is very ably executed. Though (tie materials arc less brilliant than those of the struggle and adventure of Cortez, we derive from the present work a higher impt casion of the writer's powers. The style is less forced. The subject is as thoroughly grasped, with an easier treatment. It is not a paradox to say that Mr. Prescutt's partial blindness, unassumingly described in the preface to the present work, enables him, in an historical sense, to see with greater depth and ac curacy. Ile has to weigh all his authority with a thoughtful intentness; nothing is rejected (as with the best inquirers occurs too often) on a cursory and imperfect glance; all has to be considered with impartial care; his materials stored in the mind before the pen is taken in hand, have time to assimi late with his habits of thuuglit and most natural modes of expression ; and the result, in the present as in farmer instances, is exhibited in historical writing of a very high order. Mr. Prescott avows himself a disciple of the Hameln school of history. He would place his readers amid the vivid realities of the scenes and times of which he writes; but whir the means of critical judgment as well as of clear perception. And for the most part he suc ceeds in this. Excellent arc his descriptions of events, and in the discrimination of results he is generally just and fair. The history before us is constructed like its pre• decessor. In an introductory book the native insti tutions of the Incas, as they existed before the fierce and bloody inroads of Pizarro, are elaborately per. frayed; and the remaining books areoccupied with the norative of the conquest, and of the desperate feuds of the conquerors. For the conquest of Peru differs from that of Mexico in the singular impor. lance of the events which intervened before the final settlement of the country. Less than ten years were employed in the victory, and upwards of twenty in taming the victors. Mr. Prescott has vividly set before us these rude, fierce broils, omit ting no finer trait with which his Spanish heroes may scantily hare redeemed their ferocity, their bigotry, or their barbarous rapacity. The condition of a country at the period of its subjugation must always in some sort determine the moral justice of the conquest and the character and motives of the conquerors. So considered, we know nothing in history so striking as the differ ence which presents itself, in estimating the proper. tions of glory and of shame to be awarded to Spain, in respect of her rapid conquest of the two remark able nations which had begun the work of civiliza tion on the great western continent. There seems little reason to suppose that the Mexicans and Pe. ruvians were even conscious of each other's exis tence; yet were they both, almost simultaneously, pursuing a career of conquest over barbarous races, one in the north and the other in the south, with results (in respect of the conquered) in many re spects strikingly similar, thougi. by means—and with effects upon themselves—directly opposed.— At the time when Spain stepped in upon the scene, the contrasts of character and civilization in Mexi co and in Peru were es those of darkness and of light. And here we find the source of the satisfac tion with which we cannot but contemplate, with all its drawbacks, the career of Cortez; and of the shame and sorrow with which, notwithstanding much that redeemed them, we peruse the achieve. merits of Pizarro. Mr. Prescott's materials have been more abun dant for description of the condition of the incas, titan he possessed in describing that of the Aztecs, and there is nothing more interesting in the present book than these introductory chapters. They paint a picture of Peruvian civilization which in. deed isstartling. We may compare it, too, in its origin and growth, by Mr. Prescott's help, with that of the Mexican. We may observe, in war, the exterminating system of the Aztecs, side by side with the more prudent policy of amalgamation pur sued by the Meas. We may contrast the grinding fear with which the iflexicans held down the infe rior race, and were weakened by it; with the pa. rental love by which the Peruvians raised it up, and received strength from its adhesion. In religion, in agriculture, in all the larger details of government, the sante marked superiority exists. In what may be termed the more learned arts, on the other hand ; in astronomy, in the means of communicating thought, and even in the minute mechanical arts; the Mexican appears to have excelled the Peru. vian. Why this should have been, would open a difficult question. The broad types of civilization which occur in pursuing the comparison are evi. dently those of the T 1 • and the Persian. Mr. Prescott finds resemblances to the the Chinese, the Hindostanee, and the Egyptian, in his description of the Aztecs; bat their government would seem to have been at once the most patriarchal and must absolute that ever existed in the world. It was a thocracy more effective than that of the Jaws; a 85.00 to 910.00 4.00 to 10.00 2.50 to 5.00 2.00 to 4.00 2.00 to 2.50 AND LANCASTER AND YORK COUNTY RECORD. From Llueli'v Living Age COLUMBIA, R&. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1847. despotism more potent than that of Catholic Rome. Individual rights had no existence in it. In a land where manufitctures and agriculture had made large advances, where even social refinements ex ercised singular influence, where public.. troika were carried to an extent unprecedented—money did not exist; property seems to have been un known; and, unless by express sanction ...nd aid of the government, the exercise of any craft or labor, the indulgence of any amusement, a change of residence. or of dress, even the selection of a wife, were prohibited to the Peruvian. Government pervaded and overlooked all. The monarch bud the authority of divinity; only less divine, and with a power which supported yet never controlled his own, were the slues of hereditary nobles; and to these, in their united sway, there was absolute and unconditional submission. It is impossible to ac- count for the moral and physical condition of a people apparently so enslaved—as that condition was discerned at the period of their conquest—ex cept by the supposition of a most gentle, careful, snd patriarchal administration of these powers.— We must assume it to have been so, to a most ex traordinary degree. The people were governed as by a loving but exacting rather. A native of that some New World on which the experiment was tried, and from which it has passed without leaving a trace or vestige, now writes its strange history; doubtful, it may be, if the very opposite experiment which has fnllot.vcd, and is now in actual progress, will have a better or more enduring fate! It is not easy to comprehend the genius and the full import of institutions so opposite to ihose.of a free republic, where every man, however humble his condition, may aspire to the highest honors of the state—may select his own career, and carve out his s fortune in his own way; where the light of knowledge, instead of being concentrated on a chosen few, is shed abroad like the light of day, and suffered to fall equally on the poor and the rich ; where the collision of man with man wakens a generous emulation that calls out latent tolent and tasks the energies to the utmost; where a conscious ness of independence gives feeling of self-reliance unknown to the timid subjects of a despotism; where, in short, the government is made for man— not as in Peru, where the mnn seemed to be made only fur the government. The New World is the theatre on which these two political systems, so opposite in their character, have been carried into operation. Tho empire of the incas has passed away and left no trace. The other great experi tricot is still going on—the experiment which is to solve the problem, so long contested in the Old World, of the capacity of man fur self-government. Alas for humanity, if it should fail! 00 It * " We must not judge too hardly of the unfortu nate native,because be quailed before the cwiliza. tion of the European. We must not be insensible to the really great results that were achieved by the government of the incas. We must not forget, that under their rule, the meanestattic people en joyed a fur greater degree of personal comfort, at least a greater exemption from physical suffering, than was possessed by similar classes in other nations on the American continent—greater, proba • bly, than was possessed by these classes in most of the countries of feudal Europe. Under their sceptre the higher orders of the state had made advances in many of the arts that belong to a cultivated com munity. The foundations of a regular government were laid, which in an age of rapine secured to its subjects the inestimable blessings of tranquility and safety. fly the well sustained policy of the incas, the rude tribes of the forest were gradually drawn from their fastnesses, and gathered within the folds of civilization; and of these materials was con. structed a flourishing and populous empire, such as was to be found in no other quarter of the Ameri. can continent." The extraordinary union or the despot and pairi• arch in the character of the inca, will be noted in this curious extract: The sovereign was placed at an immeasurable distance above his subjects. Even the proudest of the Inca noLi lily, claiming a descent from the same divine original as himself, could not venture into the royal presence, unless barefoot, and bearing a light burden on his shoulders in token of homage. As the representative of the sun, he stood at the head of the priesthood, and presided at the most important of the religious festivals. He raised armies, and usually commanded them in person. He imposed taxes, made laws, and provided fur their execution by the appointment of judges, whom he removed at pleasure. He was the source from which everything flowed—all dignify, all power, all emolument. He was, i■ short, in the well-known phrase of the European despot,.. him self the state.' "The inca asserted his claims as a superior be, ing by assuming a pomp in his manner of living, well calculated to impose on his people. Ills dress was of the finest wool of the vicuna, richly dyed, and ornamented with a profusion of gold and pre cious stones. Round hi■ head was wreathed a turban of many-colored folds, called &tutu ; and a tasselled fringe, like that worn by the prince, but of a scarlet color, with two feathers of a rare and cur lions bird, called the caraquenque, placed upright in it, were the distinguishing insignia of royalty. The birds from which these feathers were obtained were timed in a desert country among the moon. tains; and it was death to destroy or to take them. as they were reserved for the exclusive purpose of supplyingthe royal head-gear. Every succeeding monarch was provided with a new pair of these plumes, and his credulous subjects fondly believed that only two individuals of the species had ever existed to furnish the simple ornament for the dia dem of the Incas. "Although the Peruvian monarch was mind se far above the highest of his aubjecte.be condo- scended to mingle occasionally with them„and took great pains personally to inspect the condition of the humbler classes. He presided at. some of the religious celebrations, and on these occasions cnter• tained the great nobles at his table, when lie com plimented them, after the fashion of more civilized nations, by drinking the health of those whom he most delighted to honor. "But the most effectual means taken by the incas for communicating with their people, were their progresses through the empire. These were conducted, at intervals of several years, with great sta,te and magnificence. The sedan, or litter, in which they travelled, richly emblazoned with gold and emeralds, was guarded by a numerous escort. The men who bore it their shoulders were pro. vided by two c•ties; especially appointed for the purpose. It was a post to be coveted by no one, if, as is asserted, a fall was punished with death. They travelled with ease and expedition, halting at the tabus, or ions, erected by government along the route, and occasionally at the royal palaces, which in the great towns afforded ample accommo. dations to the whole of the monarch's retinue. The noble roads which traversed the table-land were lined with people, who swept away the stones and stubble from their surface, strewing them with sweet scented flowers, and vying with each other in carrying forward the baggage from one village to another. The monarch halted from tithe to time to listen to the grevisnces of his subjects, or to settle some points which had been referred to Isis decision by the regular tributsals. As the princely train wound its way along the mountain passes, every place was thronged wills spectators eager to catch a glimpse of their sovereign; and, when he raised the curtain of Isis litter, and showed himself to their eyes, the air was rent with acclamations as they invoked blessings on his bead. Tradition long commemorated the spots at which he halted, and the simple people or , the country held them in rev erence as places consecrated by the presence of an BESI Thou to make an object of unrestrained affection out of what would seem an image of the most re pulsive tyranny, is something of the same process which we note in their wonderful cultivation of a cheerless soil. Out of a desert they made a para. disc. Canals and aqueducts, nobly executed, fer tilized the sterile ground ; hills, too precipitous and stony to be tilled, were cut and hewn into terraces, and covered deep with earth that the husbandman might not toil in vein; everywhere richness re placed barrenness; and as little amid the everlast ing winter on the heights of the Cordilleras, as in the freshness of perpetual spring on the table-lands below, do this extraordinary people seem to have spared their patient and discriminating labor. We take Mr. Prescott's account of their great roads and pnsts. Even their wonderful proficiency in architecture yields to the interest of these: "The most considerable were the two which ex. tended from Quito to Clam and again diverging from the capital, continued in a southern direction toward Chili. "One of these roads passed over the grand pla. teau, and the other along the lowlands on the bor. dere of the ocean. The former was much the more difficult achievement, from the character ofthe coon try. It was conducted over pathless sierras buried in snow; galleries were cut four leagues through the living rocks; rivers were crossed by means of bridges that swung suspended in the air; preci. pices were scaled by stairways hewn out ofthe na tive beds; ravines of hideous depth were filled up with solid masonry; in short, all the difficulties that beset a wild and mountainous region, and which might appal the most courageous engineer of mod. ern times, were encountered and successfully ore:- come. The length of the road, of which scattered fragments only remain, is variously estimated from fifteen hundred to two thousand miles; and atone pillars, in the manner of European milestones. were erected at stated intervals of somewhat more than a league all along the route. Its breadth scarcely exceeded twenty feet. It was built of heavy flags of freestone, and in some parts, at least, covered with a bituminous cement, which time has made harder than the stone itself. In some places where the ravines had been filled up with masonry, the mountain torrents steering on it for ages, have gradually eaten away through the base, and left the sttherincumbent mass—such is the cohesion of the materials—still spanning the valley like an arch! "Over some of the boldest streams it was neces sary to construct suspension bridges, as they are termed, made of the tough fibres of the maguey, or of the osier of the country, which has an extraordi nary degree of tenacity and strength. The osiers were woven into cables of the thickness of a man's body. The huge ropes, then stretched across the water, were conducted through rings or holes cut in immense buttresses of stone raised on the oppo. site banks of the river, and there secured to heavy pieces of tinier. Several of t hese enormous cables. bound together, formed a bridge, which, covered with planks, well secured and defended by a railing of the same osier materials on the sides, afforded a safe passage fur the traveller. The length of this aerial bridge, sometimes exceeding two hundred feet, caused it, confined es it was only at the ex. tremities, to dip with an alarming inclination to. wards the centre, while tho motion given to it by the passenger occasioned as oscillation still more frightful, as his eye wandered over the dark abyss of waters that foamed and tumbled many a fathom beneath. Yet these light and fragile fabrics were crossed without fear by the Peruvians, and are still retained by the Spaniards over those strea ma which, from the depth or impetuosity of the current, would seem impracticable for the usual motes of convey- ER "Thu system or comrauoieatton through thcir dominions was still further improved by the Peru• vian sovereigns, by the introduction of posts, in the same manner as was done by the Aztecs. The Peruvian posts, however, established on all the great routes that conducted to the capital, were on a much inure extended plan than those in Mexico. Al! along these routes small buildings were erected, at the distance of less than five miles asunder, in each of which a number of runners or chasquis, as they were called, were stationed, to carry forward the despatches of government. These despatches were either verbal or conveyed by means of quipus, and sometimes accompanied by a thread of crim. son fringe worn round the temples of the ince, which was regarded with the same implicit defer ence as the signet ring of an oriental despot. "The chasquis were dressed in a peculiar livery. intimating their profession. They were all trained to the employment, and selected for their speed and fidelity. As the distance each courier had to per form was small, and as he had ample time to refresh himself at the stations, they ran over the ground with great swiftness, and messages were carried through the whole extent of the long routes at the rate of a hundred and fifty miles a day. The office of the chasquis was not limited to carrying despa telt es. They frequently brought various articles for the use of the court; and in this way fish from the distant ocean, fruits, game, and different commodi. tics from the hot regions on the coast, were taken to the capital in good condition, and served fresh at the royal table. It is remarkable that this impor tant institution should have been known to both the Mexicans and Peruvians without any correspon dence with one another; and that it should have been found among two barbarian nations of the New World, long before it was introduced among the civilized nations of Europe. "By these wise contrivances of the incas, the most distant parts of the long-extended empire of Peru were brought into intimate relations with each other. And while the capitals of Christendom, but a few hundred miles apart, remained as far asunder as if seas had rolled b:stiveen them, the great cap. itals Cuzco and Quito were placed by thelligh.roads of the incas in immediate correspondence. Intelli gence from the numerous provinces was transmitcd on the wings of the wind to the Peruvian metropo lis, the great focuslo which all the lines of commit. nication converger Not an insurrectionary move. ment could occur, net an invasion of the remotest frontier, before the tidings were conveyed to the capital, and the imperial armies wore on their march across the magnificent roads of the country to sup. press it. So admirably was the machinery con trived by the American despots for maintaining tranquillity throughout their dominions! It may remind us of the similar institutions of ancient Rome, when, under the Caesars, she was mistress of half the world." Mr. Prescott's essay embraces, in like manner, accounts of their religion and military tactics, their agriculture and modes of cultivation, their legal ad. ministration and provisions for justice, their dra. matic exhibitions, and other various details of their civilization and prosperity; but we cannot dwell longer on the settractive theme. We may possibly speak, at a future day, of the most strictly historical pallor Mr. Prescott's !shows. We shall best satisfy the readers curiosity at pre. sent, by exhibiting, in a few striking extracts, the tone and spirit of tile narrative. It is life-like al. ways; the dramatic collisions of character arc fully exhibited; and the deeper b cenes of the tragedy lose nothing in intensity and power : rizAnnes nary r.XPERIENCE or rant; "On the departure ofhis vessels Pizarro marched into the interior, in the hope of finding the pleasant chatnpagna country which had been promised him by the natives. But at every step the forest seemed to grow denser and darker, and the trees towered to a height such as he had never seen, even in these fruitful region., where nature works nn so gigmtic a scale. Hill continued to rise above hill, as ho advanced, rolling onward, as it were, by successive waves, to join that colossal barrier of the Andes, whose frosty aides, far away above the clouds, spread out like a curtain of burnished silver, that seemed to connect the heavens with the earth. "On crossing these woody eminences, the felon adventurers would plunge into ravines of frightful depth, where floe exhalations of a humid soil steamed up amidst the incense of sweet-scented flowers, which shone through the deep glnoms in every con. ecivable variety of color. Birds, especially of the parrot tribe, mocked this fantastic variety of nature with tints as brilliant as those of the vegetable world. Monkeys chattered in crowds above their heads, and made grimness like fiendish spirits of these solitudes ; while hideous reptiles, engendered in the slimy depths of the pools, gathered round the footsteps of the wanderers. Here was seen the gigantic boa, coiling his unwieldy folds above the trees, so as hardly to be distinguished from their trunks, till he was ready to dart upon his prey:and alligators lay basking on the borders of the streams, or, gliding under ilia waters, seized their incautious victim before he was aware of their approach. Many of the Spaniarda r perished miserably in this way, and others were waylaid by the natives, who kept a jealous eye nn their movements, and availed themselves of every, opportunity to Like them at ad. vantage. Fourteen of Pizarro's men were cut sag' at once in a canoe which had stranded on the bank of a stream. "Famine came in addition to other troubles, and it was with difficulty that they found the means of sustaining life on the scanty fare of the forest—oc casionally the potato, as it grew without cultivation, or tho wild cocoanut, or, on the shore, the salt and bitter fruit of the mangrove; though the shore was lees tolerable than the ibrest, from the swarms of mosquitoes which elimpelled the wretched advent or ere to bury their bodies up to their very faces in the sand. In this extremity or suffering they thought only of return ; acid all schemes of avarice and am- [Witor,E NUMBER. 914 hition—except with Pizarro and a few dauntless spirits--were exchanged for the one craving desire to return to Panama." When this desire took more resolved shape, Pi zarro met it by a resolve yet more decisive: "Drawing his sword, he traced a line with it on the sand from cast to west. Then turning towards the south,'Friends and comrades!' he said, 'on that aide are toil, hunger, nakedness, the drenching storm, desertion and death ; on this - side, ease and pleasure. There lies Peru with its riches; here, Panama and its poverty. Choose, each man, what best becomes a bravo Castilian. For my part, Igo to the south.' So saying he stepped across tho line. He was followed Ly the brave pilot Rai: ; next be Pedro do Candia, a cavalier, born, as his Mime imports, in one of the isles of Greece. Elev. en others successfully crossed the line, thus inti. mating their willingness. , to abide the fortunes of their leader for good or evil." • One or the treacherous massacres by Pizarro is .thus vividly described: "Pizarro saw that the hour had come. Ho waved a white scarf in the air, the appointed sig. nal. The fatal gun was fired from the fortress. Then springing into the square, the Spanish captain and his followers shouted the old war-cry of 'St. Sago and at them P It was answered by the battle cry of every Spaniard in the city, as rushing from the avenues of the great halls in which they wcro concealed, they poured into the plaza, horse and foot, each in his own dark colrimn, and threw them. selves into the midst of the Indian crowd. The latter taken by surprise, stunned by the report of artillery and muskets, the echoes of which rever berated lilsethunder from thesurrounding, buildings, and blinded by tile smoke which rolled in sulphur oua volumes along the square, were seized with a panic. The knew not whither to fly for refuge from the coming ruin. Nobles and commoners—all were trampled down under the fierce charge of the cavalry, who dealt their blows right and left, with out sparing; while their swords, flashing through the thick gloom, carried dismay into the hearts of the wreteliLd natives, who now, for the first time, saw the horse and the rider in all their terrors, They made no resistence—as, indeed, they had no weapons with which to make it. Every avenue to escape was closed, for the enterance to the square was choked up with the dead bodies of men who had perished in vain efforts to fly; and such was the agony of the survivors under the terrible pres sure of their assailants, that a large body of In dians, by their convulsive struggles burst through the wall of stone and dry clay which formed part of the boundary of the plaza It tell, leaving an opening of more than a hundred paces, thrOugh which multitudes now found their way into the country, still hotly pursued by Ow cavalry, who, leaping tire fallen rubbish, hung on the rear of the fugitives, striking them down all directions. Meanwhile the fight, or rather massacre; cur.. tinned hot around the inca, whose person was the great object of the assault. His faithful nobles, rallying abort him, threw themselves in the way of the assailants, and strove, by tearing them' from their saddles, or, St least, by offering their own bosoms es a mark for their vcageance,to shield their beloved master. It is said, by sortie authorities, that they carried weapons concealed under their clothes. If so, it availed them little, as it is not pretended that they used them. But. the most timid animal will defend itself when at bay. That they did not so in the present instnnee is proof that they had nu weapons to rise. Yet they still continued to force back the cavaliers, clinging to their horses with dying grasp, and, as ono was cut down, an• other taking the place of his fallen comrade with a loyalty truly afflicting. ...The Indian monarch stunned and bewildered, saw his faithful subjects falling around hint without hardly comprehending his situation. * The litter on which he rode, heaved to rind fro, as the mighty press swayed backwards and forwards; and he gazed on the overwhelming ruin,like some forlorn mariner, who, tossed . about in his bark by the furl. 0113 elements, sees the lightning flash and hears the thunder bursting around him, with the con• scionaness that ho can do nothing to avert his tate. At length, weary with the work of destruction, the Spaniards, as the shades of evening grew deeper, felt afraid that the royal prize might, after all, elude them ; and some of the cavaliers made a desperate attempt to end the affray at once by taking Atahu. alpa's life. But Pizarro who was nearest his per. son, called out with stentorian voice, 'Let no one, who values his life, strike at the ince: . and, stretch. ing nut his arm to shield him, ho received a wound on his hand from ono of Ilia own men—tire only wound received by a Spaniard in the action. "The struggle now became fiercer than ever round the royal litter. It reeled more and more, and at length several of the nobles who supported it baying been slain, it was overturned, and the In. &in prince would have come with violence to the ground, had not his fall been broken by the efforts of Pizarro and some nther of the cavaliers who caught him in their arms. The imperial boric was instantly snatched from his temples by a soldier named Estete, and the unhappy monarch, strongly secured, was removed to a neighboring building, where he was carefully guarded." In delineation of the character of the hero of the conquest, it seems to ns that groat judgement is shown. Neither the lights nor the shades are too broadly or deeply drawn. What allied hint to Cor. ter, and what widely separates them, in his patient endurance; his incredible presoverance, his freedom from bigotry, his insatiable avarice, Iris reckless perfidy, and his indomitable cruelty, is patiently and well set forth. We have neither a perfect hero, . nor an absolute monster, but undoubtedly 4 most extraordinary man. Ile is at tha same time one of those men, of whose ignorance of the intellectual ado, and utter inability to read or to writs, we can hear without regret or surprise.