The people's advocate. (Montrose, Pa.) 1846-1848, June 10, 1847, Image 1

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'• Clue hiller Fill C'ent„tt. if scot paid with I'i tippr
41 , - -ved . 'Rafter, the e xpothi n •of ~,,. , . .:,, : : ,:3. , . -..., .
,1 2 . - :,:: ~ , ; `,.F . ', VRY ‘ bIFFEIttNtE ' OP' OPildONlg , koT .. A: blii'ilit.SlCE 4.: . .o.it,m - cip i , -.4,. .EFFIR,RiioN . ~....„.., L. . , .
'At; 'Attu, dif delayed until l iyhe year two dollars will fie exacted. -1•1't
Disco thrualices option* with the rubb54,,,,...
, res are paid. •
; Letre to the Publishers on business with! the of
fice rafts be post-paid to insure ratentioa. ,
p o
A bream otSumnser.
CIL
/land a s the ireatb of Jime
I, The s outhwest breezes play;
Ai rl d, through its-hate the winter noon
Seems warm as simmer's day.
The snow-plumed ilng - ,el of the north
Has dropped his icy Spear;
Aisitt.the mossy midi looks Tot*
f itgaha the streams gush clear.
,
fizz his hill-sid e, cell forsakes—
l'he muskrat leaves his nook, -
Tt.: bluebird in the meadow brakes
singing Avid' thp brook.
"Bear up, 0 Mother Nature !" cry ,
Bird, breeze and streandet free,
`' Our winter Cokes prophesy
Of summer days to thee !"
. '
S,•in those winters of the soul, -
y bitter blasts and drear
O'6iswept from memory's frozen pole,
liVill sunny days appear.
vicing hope and Faith, they show
.i.h
c soul its livingl powers,
d how beneath tfre Winter's snow
F..ie gems of summer flowers!
Tke night is mother of the Jay;
The winter of the.ispting,
illed even upon old
ccay
s . ,
The greenest mos cling. -
llehind the cloud th starlight lurks,
Through showers he sunbeams fall
F.r God, who love all his works,
' as left his hope ith all!
gll (cfafll).
HELEN WALKER.
.FROX SHARPE', XaGAZINT.
he regretted that no fuller account
preserved of the net of mind 7
)fist ,
ha bee:
`vering courage by which Helen
a simple Scotch maiden, saved het
m a shameful and unmerited
oluntarily encountering untold dif
nd dangers rather than speak the
of untruth, by which she might so
red, pe
Walker,
sister f
death ; •
fealties
one scot
ve gained the same end . ..
Cline, all that could be learnt of her
astly ii
An nt
e, came many years after to the
ofa lady,- who had the• penent-:
ce to perceive how well fitted was"
story for the powers of the greatest.
If this or any other age.' She wrote.
advento
)tnowied!
bon at of
4 ;lel) a
imoveligt
bur of Wlrviertr, at fir.t '
rating the gal and eireilinstaficelii
[which she had le.irat it. Subse-,
b the an
he, recot
th ro u zh
er name was made known to him
oldie, of Graigmair, near Dumfries:
ed as warmly as she expected into
ty and merits of her history ; and
after the world was at once benefit
rhaps the most interesting of his
"The Heart of Mid Lothian,"
I I ,
this incident faring the ground
elen Walker herself sUggested
.quenly
as Mrs.
"He ewe'
the bead
dot loned
yed by p;
rumanc•:
!E.f n hie
. ork.
the benit
: Subs•
that can
account
bilge the
who - ,
hest qua
with \re,
inay lay;
ammo ti
Mace fall
did character of Jessie Deani.
vent inquiries have - added little
be depended upon to the original
but we have greatly to acknowl
kiud and willing exertions of a
near connection with Mrs. Goldie
ifies her for the task, to furnish tis
• fresh, circumstance which time
• brought to light, correcting at the
e the • Misstatements which others
n into from the wish to amplify and
in insufficient data.
Walker was the daughter of a
mer of Dalw bairn, in the pariA of
in the county of Dumfries, where;
death of her father, she centinued
supporting' her .widowed ;wither
• u unremittinglabor and privationN
eath of her remaining parent; she
• ith charge of her Oistef Isabella;
',tower than herself and whoth she
!
maintained by her own Ozer.
enlarge
,1
Helen!
' t
hall fa
iron gra,
after the
to rebide
y her
On the
arras left
;much yi
• ~educat.•
ttached to her, by so2nutty ties, it
tions.
is not easy to conceive her feeling s when
, she• found that this sister must he tried, fur
child-mtirder, and that she herself Sias called
ii
- upon to 've evidence against het% in 111114
moment o f shame and anguish sheiras told
by the c unsel for the prisoner •ihat, if she
*old de -lare that her sister had made
,any,
;preparat opts, _however 'slight, or bud given
;her any 'floatation an the subject, 'such" a
statemect would save , her sister' s life, asimbe
was the principal witness against her: flat
en's answer was, "It is impossible to swear
,to a falsehood whatever may be the coat&
qaence4 I will give my oath according -tat
riny con science." -
. The trial came on, and Isabella Walker
'was feud guilty and condemned.. In re
=moving her from the bari - she war' heard to
;say to her sister,--" 4 /oh,- lijelly r ye 'Uri
;been the cause of mysleath tr—when Heler
‘‘ Ye ken big,' 4--speak the truth.. 9.
nd six, weeks rust,elapse between
nee and the execution, and,- of this,
interval Helen , knew: - how - to niiiil
Whetherthe*hernelindlienl+4
ally einisidered, or, was.the in*,.-
a bold and vigorous wind• inothe,
her greatest anguish at her sister'i
,we .eannnt tell; , but the vett:day
ndetunation she found strengthfie
and thought. Afer*st step ,Tai:.
titian drairn.up,niating the pecul' , ,
inininaW of her sister's case; • she
'wed = a sum of money'aiiishiiic'
anemia ; and that sanws..,Vnghi,setj
r journey .. hare:footed and, alptte;,l
it&tittie - reached 'London . lit "kttaktil, ,
rfortaid - ithe- 4bOre-ilistatieo , o
, : .
... , .„.....,,i ii „. : ::, ,, ,.• -- ' ~,,,, ..:":;11'
in London,
~., ‘ seadellee
, l e rA y" . ,
4 iiirl;Oßki,',l4 4r V,,, ,)e ' , Wi4l "l
non - iii'.4eorattuilehoition ' . 7nriin
iip; in her taruitiplaid; , tea - C - drii<
,litintiJO Wita,94;„,*,s,-.' ,l " . wk. t
4 4 ifildiiiiise; fkiid.p*, PAid liok . ',
reigni. ''Sfia'iiihicibiriiiirthiliii
-7
"Z a tiser iv o uini g ei t s :
,- , 744,Amet titiVailue;: ,If
J ,
= replied,
In Scot!
the sent .1
precious
herself.
and
ration • 1
moment
reomacl
of the
exertion
to get
liar circ
then ho
;fur her
out on
and in
:having •
'foot.
Arriv
once to
introdu,
kind, w
ing her
inOm
'self
,to ~
bad
. ,_ ,
.
" ..
'NT, L' , ll - '''''::: ,'''-:- ' .': .'. ' .' - - MONTROSE, - - A .- JU E'o,' NG .: i , ''
,•-0,.i, ..- - •,,•• • „-,....
f . : . 1-; '; I:: , . ..i . . • .1. • -- ", g . • : , . . '., ~ •I' 11., ,: ,-. . :; ;-,.. ...• , . 1 . 1 . ~ 1. '+ -- '-' . i.... , : - ....; 1I.: : •: . ~.,_. ••, :r ;; • • , f. :,,...1
,host critical;moment, which, if lost, weuld
iake 'may the only . chance. for her sister's'
life." Thets# India haie been a most , ciin.
iincing air ttr:trinlitind sincerity about her,
Fir the dokelpterested himself nt once in her
6. flus e, and immediately procured the par
don she fiet4loned For, with which Helen re
4:rued tO itliiinfries on foot, just in time to
onve herAiisties life.. • - •
ITTIEM
laab la, cr ,T !by - Walker, thus saved
from the fate„*ltich impended over her, was
evtnituallY martial by Waugh, the man who
lindwrongedAter, and lived happily - frur the
rent part nth 'century, in-or near Whitely)...
nn E unifonnly acknowledging the extraar
ilmory.ateciion to Which she owed her pres
ervation: Wpm , have been previous to her
Marriage that the followingincident happen
ed. A gentiman who chanced to he trav
elling in the north of England, on coming
tira atter, inn,' was shown into the parlor
by n femaleiervant, who after calitithisiy
shutting ti.e,49or Sir, I ant Nelly
Walker's silaer," thus shOwine• her hope
'AA ilie' fame her sisiees heroism had
reached,fartkeillhan her own celebrity ufi n
filr different nature ; or perhaps, removed
at she Tres fOtit the home and scenes ofher
youth, she sight of a face once so familliar
1 td heronay.liave impelled, her to seek the
cemsolatirin of naming her sister to one proh
ably.acquainted with the circumstances of
her history, and that of her-sister's share
I them.
The mnnner in which Sir Walter Scat;
became acquainted with Helen Walker's
history has already been alluded to. In the
notes of the Abbotsford edition of his novels
he acknowledgess his oblig ation on this point
to Mrs. Goldie, "an amiable and ingenious
lady, whose ,Wit arid power of r e marking
andjudginglhniacter still survive ip the
memory of her friends." Her cornniunicii
cation to ItimZwat, in these wads: •
"-I had taken for summer lodgings a cat
tage near did pia; abbey of Lincluden. It
bad formerly been inhabited by a lady who
found pleastire in embelishing cottages
which she found, perhaps homely and porn.
enough. Mine possessed many marks Of
taste and; elegittice„•untistial in this species
of habitation Scotland, where a cottage
is literally %slim its name declares. Froin
my cottage dnor I had a partial view i)f The
old abbey be);Lire- mentioned ; Paine of the
hiffliest arches were seen over;, and some
through the trees scattered along a lane
which led down to the min.., and the Strange
fantastic shades of almost all those old ash
es accorded Winidelfully will With - the bad•
nig they at once shitted and ornamented. 4-
j The abbey lOW, from my door, wits allmoSt
on aleveLwith ilia cottage ,_but taming
to the end ei i ihe Wm . it. was - distiovered to
be on a perpenilictilar bank, at the foot Of
which ran the' Pleat' waters of the Cinder?,
wheat they imikten to join the sweeping Nitli,
'
Whose flistant rearing swells and fa's:.
. •
L ,
As my kitchen and parlor were not very
ffir distant, 1 il.iiie day went in to purchase
some chickeMi (rola a person I heard offer
ing them for ".ale. , It was a little, rather
stout looking woman, who seemed to be he
tweet' seventy and eighty years of age : she
was- almost cnversid with -tartan plaid, liCr
cap had over it, a !thick silk hood, tied under
the a piece of, dress sill much in use
among eltle4 women of that rank in Scot
land ; her eyes were dark and remarkablv
lively and intelliffent. I entered into con
versation'with b e er,, and began by asking
her how she .Maintained ; herself, &e. She
said that in winter she footed stockings ; that
is, knit feet to country people's stockings,
whiCh bears about Ie same relation to.stock
ing knitting as cobbling does to shoe making,,
and.is of course leis profitable and less dig
nified; she likewise taught a-few children
to read ;,
l, and in summer she ' whiles reared
1
a whee ,chickens! ;
• 1 said I could venture to guess from be
face she hadL never been married. She
laughed heartily at this, and said, ' I moan
bite the queerest face that ever wasseeu, that
ye could gues i ft that. Now, do tell me mad
am, how ye cutne,ni think so V I told lair
it was from her 'cheerful disengaged counte
nance. She 'Wad i' Mem, have ye na fir
more reason tqlbe-happy than me, wi' in
gude hushauk, and a fine family o' bairne,
and plenty o'„'Overything 1 For me k uhi
the puirest ofe puir bodies, and, can hardy
contrive 'to - keep myself alive in a' the wee hit
a' I bag tell't)i.. After sortie more convel ,
sation, During' which I was more and a*
pleased withthe old wornan's , seusilile 'coil.
versation, en 4 the naivete of her reinarles,
she rose to go away, when I asked h6r
'name.. Her countenance suddenly clonde,i,
and she said 'gravely., rather coloring,
name is Helen Walker; and your bashful
ken* wed -ebtiut me.' .
In . ' he evening I ,related how much I ha r d
beenlesised'.:' -4 and enquired what was ett
-?'' - 'ofthe'
Odd initryla'llie history poor we
nt
man. • Mr. --t-- ettidi--‘ There were per- 1
haps' - wintle'remarkahle People 'than HO- 1
.en Walker e,: f i n d he gave the- historywhich
has already:ler! nerrate.d here."... -,.
..
' - The write continues. .. I WAS so strong
ly
imireiitedWthiiniiiritive; that I -`deter
mined iniiiiiiliitely ,'Io --- firinieeute 'my itc!.
quaintaneef4 , Mcielf - Walker t' Inn as 'I
:5 T4 1,5..t0 leuvajhr f .pl i taptry -next -day; 1 was
ntif . 4lo to deter it • tuttil,..,my return ,i n Ole .
stirtilg; lB teti •ite . Wilk 'Walk I 'took , *.r . .1 t o.
ifilin'Walk`os eiittikei!Whadr died ! ii
44koitilme , -bfpre., ,,, li*: - 00tiviit exoefiiC,:'
'MA 4 endeavored to obiakiriOnniliecoisitiO,
ilfo2 •fricylAn : old,,Woman . .; who inhabited„
lie other part of her . , cottcege l , ~.f . s ,taj,ttirid,
if itet6ijevif' spoke orbit' pisittiefory, hair
jotiiiieY=Cti f LiMdanc : "&e. ''-i Ph; -iiii - ild ' ink .
!ow said f " Helen was it,';witifj ,7 lii4yrettid
,Ve..bieltt*4l l .lr4 ll o-'neetiOrOsakedintyth - fig
0PR1*••, 2 4 , 1 1 , 4 AT tirP*4. :,the-e!ecinir*WW - ..
'ln ihoii..,tri,4 ll ,e.!*fr Aile4ifed*,!lii4e47 7 „
1 e,.1 tt.) iiitteflikiliTreol;iiiii rails my
1
Hilt e#ii . iii-vi jakie;"4ll.li'cialle claw ' 1
i4 l icirpnedesiefilithdicimoth herbieiriiiiii , r
;' - ,lll4'iliOan,kWas leinaMed iwthe-,iiiiiii
I), 401:40 1 *.A 1 .4.#9F-Or WlMeSTOrith*
date • . it,tre.l .; •. .. i-,••••• • '-z - '.. 1 .''
1* -.1 - t hto , •" ' ' ' 4- §iiiiiitel4t. Oit:
ioa k .
Auc tszlim
. t.
1 ' •liki r" --4 11 8.4 'INN '
1
Walker lies butied. , in - • the chnrch . yerd:'of'
Irongray, about:six miles from Dumfries: I -
once purposed - thatit Small monument should
have `been erected:'to commemorate so 're.-=
markable a character; hut tioW I leave it'
to your to perpetuate her meniory_ in a more
durable manner. , "
Mrs. Goldie endeavored to collect further
particulars of Helen Walker, particularly
her journey to London, but this she found:
Impossible, as the natural dignity of her
character, and a bight sense of family respect
ability, had made her so indissolubly con
nect her sister's disgrace With her own exer
tions; that none of her neighbors dame even
question her upon the subject. One old
woman, a distant relation of Helen's and
who was living in 1,829, says she worked
in the harvest with lier,-but she never ven
tured to ask her about her sister's trial, or.
her journey to London. " Helen," she
said, " was n lofty` body, and, used a high
'style o' language." The same old woman
says, "that every year Helen received a
Cheese from her sister, - who lived at White
haven, and that she always sent a liberal
portion to herself or her father's family."
The old person here spoken of must have
been a mere Child to our heroine, who' died
in 1791, al the age,of 81...0r 82 and this
difference of ago may account. for any re
serve in speaking on such a subject, making.
it appear natural and proper; and not the
result of any "loftiness" of character. •
All recollections of her are connected with
constant and (levant reading (tithe Bible.—
A stnallstand, with a large open Bible, in
variably oceupied one corner of her room ;
and she was constantly observed stealing a
ghince, reading a text or chapter, ns her av
ocations pe i rmitted'her, time, and it was her
habit when it thundered, to take her work
and her Bible to the front of the cottage, al;
lodging that the Almighty could smite in the
city as well as the 'field
'An extract from the recent letter says, on
the subject °four lietvine—c? I think I neglect
ed to specify to you that Eiden Walker lived
in one Of those couhges at the Chedar Mills
which you and your sister so Much admired;
aim! the Mr. Walker who, es 'he said him
self, • laid her head' in the grave,' lived in
that two storied house standing •high on the
opposite bank. Ile is since dead, or I
might have got_the particulars from him
that we wanted ; lie is a respectable far
mer."
The metnorial which Mrs. Goldte wished
to be raised over her grave has since been
erected (dike expense of Sir Walter Scott.
The inscription is as follows :
This stotie was erected
by the author of Waverly
co rtiefinranarY nT
IiELEI3 WALKER,
who died in the,vear of Gad NIDCC XICI.
This hunible individual
practised in real life
OM virtues
with which fiction has invested
the imaginary character of • '
DEANS.
refusing the slightest departure
from veracity,
even to save the life of her sister,
she nevertheless showed her
kindness and fortitude
in rescuing her
from the severity of the law
at the expense ,of personal exertions
which the time rendered as difficult .
as the motive was laudable.
Respect the grove of poverty,
when combined with the Jove of truth
and dear affection.
Jeanie Deans is iecompensed by her bi
ographer for the . titials through which he
leads her, with a o'll measure of earthly
comfort ; for few nbielists dare venture to
make - Virtue itsowr reward ;, yet the follow
ing reflection .shoWF. him to have felt how lit
tle the ordinary coOrse of Providence is in
accordance with man's natural wishes, and
his expectations of a splendid tempiwal re
ward of goodness " That a character so
distinguished forler, undaunted love of vir
tue lived and died in poverty, if not want,
serves only to show us how insignificant in
the sight of heaven.are our principal objects
of ambition upon earth."
CRUISE AFTER A PIRATE.
• We were lying at Norfolk in 18—, in the
schooner Porpoise; Captain, then Lieutett
aut
, Al—, cointnanding her. Orders
came to us suddenly and unexpectedly from
the Navy Departatent to fit out titr sett whh
nut delay, and to make sail.fur the Capide
Verde islands, nn search of a piratical schoO.;
ner which had.captured the American mers
chant brig Mexitain, •rubbed, and then set
her on fire. Otte tot the crew of the brig
concealed himself in the. hold at the moment
the pirates boarded heri•and there remained.
undiscovered while. his shipmates were - all
uturdered. The pirates stripped •the vessel
of everything valuable, and them set her
fire.. The. poor fellow who hod been hidden '
in the hold soon began to feel• the increas
ing warmth of the , Olitnate below, .and Caw ,
iiously crept from his hiding place. When
he. got tibove the-hutches he faiind the for-
Iward 'part of the ;velem! enveloped in. dames,-
widen were running up the spars and rig ;
ging, and rapidly-.extending. aft. lie catch
one,hurried *la nett. at the bloody figures , of,
the murdered; crestv then shuddering as , he
passed them, rushed;tolhe jolty boatiwhielt;
hung at the-stein i datrits. ,. . ,, It w a s kat '• il i a , ,
work ofti,momentiftiritint.to - nuuthi - davW I
fall and -lower herdown to theArater.hAtitnj .
titer instantiwitliont foisfor watei , andwitic
hut a singleintriliewastulone lit her on-the
hoind • Atlantic: lAitritlp. , :his-.sifigle , /Mr:Ai!:
sculled hilt , taiat:chinr Of the tintinsit br .. it.
usel ich
Fortunately leArailtut..d* , er;hyythe
-pirate din crowding *mill i•eu opposite'•
diveCtion4 'l , -Aisooti '-at•ltitAras tietid. i iithoi
brit, -poor . JoeivastAtorts until ' id;omiee
idler otastlalk blathwintozifte'initstr f 114
funeied bersawzdscertapedeettbsirtiarbtal= l
ielt:' , -" , efti-hilt: , l. , .niurdircid.'i - itinenindea: 4 .altio n ee
'--iiOmod the l . )opoin - deck; be sat'
tail'the OW4i
'fire**-4honill nCrhirivestel'iiwii 01-dio'
„iaitarJe4dge nitillitwitrsahsMeit M
eudthetievanishid i !fetim i e f ttkisseet ls f4T
I , Fer thtellOettiiii l Ptaefiio l o 64
. o)4itierilbiakk 4 tlll.ol
,
01* iiiol4lo 4001..
. .
„ . .
•intolerible feier i f thiOst, *hen - his wandet
I - ing - gliince'tell .- uppti,aliffieck in' the 1164 in
'At ftritt lie thought - it 'OS 'a' Cloud, huto
*kite.* it to 'he a snip, Her course lni 0
Itlicyrort 10s - track, And, his shalt hoitte o
iii' oar attracted the'aftention Of hell: C .e.,
She It - roiled JO. he an American; liOntetsta'
bound, anttliriived itt"the port of. Neer-ar
in safety. Poor Jack's story was toll t
-the - proper atithorities,? And he Was' seni i
,
-permits on heard Oureinft, to aid in rein •
tO ing•the pirate, shOnid we fall in with to .
• SiVe sailed in seven hours after our or Oa
arrived,- and after it 'than passage w,heivia
our crtift•proved-herself' as fist a . sitile
the fish-after *hieh 'slie. was named, wd.ini
riied nt Porto - •Gratid6, in the Itiland ofl S
Viacents.
,',Here we ttlatered ship, and then
stood nut rases on our cruise After the (41-
t'tiacer. ' .
.. .. ,
'On the third day . o4t, when we a-cretin*
flirlfrom Rana, we diScovered a' gait on itior
weather bow. She , was a 'fore-rind-aft
schooner, very rakish, And' seemed to be iia
' niag free, heading don toward us. tlik
vessel which took the! Mexican' was - a fit
toti-•sail schooner,
bow
a fore and rifle ,
, but we knew ease wa s to send &Own
square yards andfclintige`a two-ituisted frig,'
.1111 d accordingly hauled our course lon
I stranger; hoisting Pt4tognese colors atiou
,peak, *butting in our ports, and sholiiitii
bur very few men on'tleck, so as to try en
Fdisguise our schooner until she was within
gunshot. . t ,
,%.,
As the stranger neared us, our suspicams
became more and more excited. Our &pal
'as cleared for action. Through the OnsS, I
•the stranger sail showed a long hull, pint 1
ed. Mail, with the muzzles of eight gills 00 1
a-side, run out, her spars were taunt i And
'very heavy, and her _deck was full of Men.
The survivor of the brig as soon as hesnw
her figure head, (a Turk with a greeni tur—
bent) pronounced hen the same vessel stihicli
had captured the Mexican. ,!
She . % as now within a mile and a 1411 of
us, rapidly &ailing . into range, and we i feh i
•that a tierce and bloody struggle waft] nit
band. Our arms were in hand, omi:clea r s
sanded down,the.pott fires alight; elf 'Iola:.
ready, the crew bathing With itnpatiitice,
and our brave skipper walking up and down
••the quarter deck, calin and thotightfudii bin
firm as the bright sward in his hand. 1• - I
Suddenly there seemed tube a great onri
-motion on board the !stranger, she flattened
in her sheete- and 1104 d on a wind, head
ing in for the
; island's. She had evidently
d them:
iscovered our character. We .had
on . under short sail more corn plete
-IY,,tto deceive her, but now we saw it: wais
t ,.., e., 7 .."gar enti - v44 Fir the bittld or s the
-stranger &tamed a Speed which even [our
fancy clipper might flail to exceed. li
Aloft, topmen !” ; shouted Lieut. - .1;-1---i
-" lap aloft and loose top-gallant sails! 4nO
ther pull on the
,lee:lbraceS ;. haul oiit i the
b4wli nes ; keep her !full and , by, quarter
master! Run outtthe guns! Tel SI I.
Meade to try a shot With the long eightee i
'forward, and_ heave it ,across that rat Cal
, 1
fore foOt !" ! , i [ i
l'he•gun tens firedi and the shot fell hitit
I
little short". The pirate fired a weather
gan in defiance, and then out from ceaeli
mast head 'floated the red flag. She
,tad
I cast away deception„ and evidently dellend
ed.upon her speed to escape us. Weisualt
sats. men at work iti her rigging, and tit, alt
I inconceivably short time she had yard dross
ed.atid' top-sail and lip-gallant-sail set,l ,011
- th6 firSt . start we seemed to gain upotOter,
hut as she made More sail she evidently pu,t
I
I dle boot on the other lieg..
, g . Mr. Mende, we most cripple thatle, ra t
in her Spars or she 'Sill slip us," sai4.,:th ,
Lieutenant to our fit hilt than whom) I t imt
a nobler fellow ever trod a plank. , . •
" I'll try her, sir," was the reply, " 4tit'ift
is a king - range fur u ,: and :we pitch fo to
this head sea that it- invill -lie more a Matter
of chtincethan skill.7' - - t •
3 V .1
The young pfficei; carefully levelled ,lint
long gin', and : after ultnommit's steadyligM,
- ing, applied 'the mach, ,As the sinok e
cleared,, a huge rent Icould be seen iii .the
mainsail of the schooner,, This proved ; her
to be still in range, p_ind refelt sure tit. hen.
Tile wind Was::yery fieslt and we were both
on' the same tack, heiSling in for someenCky
islandi'iliat lay aiiiiie windward of ,B)-iivi t
Three l nore shots were unsuccessfullyred,
at the pirate: . ,
~ r • , ~ • :
. 1 ,
" We'lllry a brnaside," said our . b r!rtie
. .. . • . „..,
mander.'• "Stand - b ' the starboard
. gansj!
.• , -
,Quartermaster, lufrlier up, la, the
. will 1,
,!itedai fore • and aft li . , With the,, wealhert t
roll—fire
!" . i
c . For ii moment' oil l ittle, craft . tren)ble .
!'under the heavy disc, arge, and then ne the
.cloud of smoke !Hie Inntl left a clearjvieW
I; oftbeenemy; - our crew raised a . 'lank and
deafening cheer, etteh 'as nonehut A t i inei .
,-;
i lican sailors gan give-1n Melton: of viltiirY.
Botli topmasts 'of ; the' pirate had- goi(e . 'ht
:the board, . her crew. were aloft tirioi t
clear the•wreck: - • • ' --- - '.. ; '
" No more firing," cried Lieutenant
,DI:,, •
weve,gut her •tiove-; - -04:0F 'no' use to - '*uite ,
Uncle Sainte powder;" -:: ,:;.'-•- ,-
,' • • 'lit -.:
..Setireelyi were the*ords ;omit Of hiStrintith'
I - b*fisre we saw theAidtvis of time ;'
ra t e , : fi dt ,o ff , •beforei - .o . thei-oi'tidl thbat li e
.
( 1
broadside reageiffulktpon! 44,
.atida't's'itti , "
the siiiikesefilteigtitte.- - :'CViiiili!;tEhiii : et" I
die* Alitotigtr•iter - liiioti-‘itti4jrikiiakt e c * . '
li
~,the . iron: hail. '7 - FilrAl 7l titaineitt - tve 'se e eel
el .•
Ould. see t She Tally:'.ittittited niii'" - ld
o sne k, :• - 4ti.literallYtriddled'o . 4 iiiiihrt-"O
Preya!v i rtrai:ititie . ittlqthe alitigi"i: thi
,I,lniii . n;
10p-wait - gavot elinieNitiVrif te, ;hi - 6111 1 i) e l
jib-tality r shotiniiipotO three of fottolt ii:
i
shot werw again k ittlifof Ol t , hinftiok nxf,
kr ea ater 4 lo Otago itelerif liii'ltili!tle! . !
rie
:i li'-Wa• Vet4tieetttitiletitiriethelVvrei, ici*ef.
igitit•tutifilolitedi'setti 4 •lThtt '',ol,.ti',
i•
cdre%*****teigiii, iiiiitattis.4..'o4o.. hill`
lick
~. i i i iiii 4 , l 4 -` l uw.
114ekritifliliclOilisiellititilibneCkititilei oia*
'lli;ielitliftstiti tifoiteolVellii'ill 4 kil ie're --
. i.4 , oityllitig llOgettliietrglbe iota'. ityl
t• ' , .,..:14 , i 1 iittk ., likifitii ' . , 1 ":" 1 1 44 " 1 4 1 Vi l ..;
ilt,
I ' : **44oifiti:4 l o' • .11•••'' 1 ,F - 4 - )iltlqic . a i
t
lgsa l4e,ol:t,,Atit' da '',164 , - J. il l f, - . gut: e
never caught l anntlier,.g iiiiiii - 6 - o.th'eliii:rate.
I Softie •Of ent4thi'i - Waalif '6hake tlieir. heads
i
1 4 talk'qr . ling tfuteh'tien 60,Biiec -
'- o lt 'acts . - with lii'' il i. li'' " . ''' ''' i
eer c 1
~ , , , , ,A,
f p . ur,ic maje y,
the devil, wheli'iiiiniibi,aceuittit fur 'he
sudden disappctarance
.01` theriira;e; ' . hut"twe
'never saw bee 6i - 1 1 e 'tc,r .
n
a
tiTe weeks 'ye
cruised aliant„in those:, ,Wate knd . the
1
d
'made - sail for, ,n l'ensaco 1,, tlte.the Wad,
'St. Thoma s ad:the 9 t„allm a Channel
'—.Knickerboi4r. -4
• - '''; -' - '''l" • ,
• A DrtringßOPooinier. ,
I give the'folloWiagr I I y ts .whot it is
•
worth, premising, how yOillikt, ;from what
I know of Ilembo',andllie:
,fool-lijirdy dere
'devil feats stiinetimesPrecritt the sperm
whalelsiteryii,'l lielie, ,-;pt - it e . - 00.9*ItiO1
truth. AS may be belieiad; AeMbn, was :a
wild one'infter a 'fislil ' Ihdeed; all New
'Zealitnclers tire, It, Oeems to harmlnize
sweetly with ' their hinoo-thirstyi propensities.
At sea the belt English they speak -is 'the
South Sea-rniM's slogati in 'lowering away,
H A dead, wh, le or astOvehnati" : Gime : to
the marrow, t iese lents are Fenerally se
lected fur liar uoners, it [Kist iniwhich a ner
vous timid man would' he .outl, of his ele
ment. In datiti;rig, the4barpOoner of course
stands erect ak the head oftbe boat, one knee
braced againet it for *tenth But Bembo i
disdained' thi.s' Mid wti i tirWay.s pulled up to
his fish halanCilig hinalelf,:right on the gun
wale. But hi my' story. !plietorning, at
daybreak, he was np t p u a large lone
whale. lie darted hisiltotootr, missed, and
the fish sounded. Mier a 'while, the mon
ster rose again about `'' mile off, and they
Made after hint - . But le was friginetied,'or
" gallied," as it is callid ;lend noon mite,
and the boatWlis still i t chase. 'ln whaling,
as long as l
the fish is i sight, and no matter
Mat may haVe been reViousl . V undergone,
there is no giving tipe'eieept i when night
conies, and, now -a-dap, %then l whalers are
,0 hard to he 'got, frequently ,not then. At
last Bemho's Whale ups alongside for the
second time... Ile dared 'hoth harpoons; '
but, as sometimes haiipeni to the best, men,,
by some unaccountable chancel, once more ,
missed. 'Thnugh it iitwell)inown that such
failures i teill happen' . ilk tie*s,Aftey neverthe
, lees odcasion ihe'bitteliatOisoipOninttitent,to
I ,'n boat'serew l , keneratv ekpreSsed in curses
hinit 16tid and deep. TAO no wonder. Let
any man pal, with knight a ,a main, for
i
hours and hours togellier,lund F
.r a burning
sun, - and if it.do not take hiod a little pee-'
vish he is no Sailor. - kite tenons of the sea
-1 m,en...lnar.bnye maddened 4114. Mowree, ,
119tVie-vifoi6 110: 49,1M' Int 5 b.e. .13q.ukty,ht
up again than:, ciarpoelon iii Imilid,, iie, b - oun&
led on the whale's hitat mid fcr one dizzy
second was siren theri. The text all Was
foam and fitry„ l and bath were tit of sight:
the men sheered off,fitlingi - ng _overboard the
line as fast us' they enuld, while ahead noth
ing was seen butts r4l wltirlpin( of ,blood ,
and brine. ',Piesentlia :dark !object swam
oat, the line began ti)ffiaigiltea, then smoked'
around the loggerbe4, audAtitFli as thatiOt '
the boat sped
were
e - an itrroW th nigh the wa
ter. They - were 4'fitsi," :ti 'nil t e whale wits
running„. Where***4 I,lloWr 1 Hi brown,
hand - was' on the gnittittle,i and he Wile ha ul
ed aboard' in the veryjmidft. of ; he mad hub;
et l
tiles that burst under Ithe . l Ito. s. Such a
man, or devil, if you twill;; wa Di:mho.—
Ifecilfe'S'Ackeiturein Ai sciuth ,Feai.
-. i .1
1- : 1 •
A Wo:vntnroi." rtEnci , 4o:.-;--..Robert
Walke'r was barn in 709, itt a Plate called
1
Under Crag, in' theca ey dr Se nhwaite. He
became curate of Seat Wm ein iis:26‘h year,
and, continued curate until `th • . day' of his
-death, When' he .luill ainine I•: the great
age 0f93, His . ctiraiy Ivies o the yearly
value of £5 only ! and Ire! 'ha - no fortune
whateyer. He rnatrifid a !Wife
,in his 27tH
year
year who brought hail a ''.fert the" of ' . ..C40,
and in due time 6 fatlity of tw Ave chihlrea;
of 'whom eight. survlved.,i- 'l' le wonder of
his history is,,that he k,dueitcil all his chil
dren respectably, made one. of them n elm' ,
gyina n ; was liosPilable'to tall. and generous
.t 0 his poor neighbinii4 . ;' L nnil' at ilia death left
a suns of f .t2',000 . belinidS'lliim It is true
that' the ineinne of "lily c4.rile. 'vias b.T,,0e7
gr4es, increased 459. terAiiinu ' ; but Ada
%rabid not aceimin fr 4 thel'aiimitlatinn of
Isuali a sur9, we are k;cl . to Ina ire .- hoW fie
- could have triarmgeitil, with . so many claitns
upon `him,- end.' all ... iiis well 'a l tnitided to,-;--:
It. appears that 'he 'Wallas'iliert at 'various
`spun
as ' flobitisniC rtilim• biniself. He
With his ownlhatiis 'all the wool
Ineeded for the 'elOtlief . ot himself,, liiiiHirib
and his family; and rule;i t c Spit ning,,:iliii'gli
.s
ri
the children ofldi . Patislrinner spidling'and
reading, He risiistetfoihirt, in' ilrly , nirtf•
king aud'skieti-ilieeribi; kod. Orlire, nOt.
hd' as clerk ittitl' se.'iliteirier f iii : ter file penPle
who were not:initiate
hi
i e . s, nu wayste
ries of the''Peril '•11O - Ortil. - '-'iniiii . rivei:; a eau
,'
pl4'. of Acres ofiniii4 - WhiitlerShe • . `
tilth . ited,'..by,
!IFS' niiii hibiiiit 3 . ,;•aid4o Orli ssons . ;:keiit,
Inii* - 01.61 eiittiOt an d %rOnifd'n (.. linit.sotel ii .
tno4PikiiCt ti•:iiii! i i . ri - if4lok7l6'i in, '4lhii.o
" fieliok;vd . fiiit,6o4feith','if ilinilein;the`pik..:.
sofirigg. ‘Thri' liiiiiidetiferY'sCiiSibly . 'ilinilti
iizilies:Wheii:iii• hinrh4hiti,th:ti;niin ailiii,
1,
ilittriiiatinhi,il it / 6 . 4 1 661in inquirer')UfiCilii'
•liiiltiry . :vr St: iiiiirl:9t4og f'Snik . tli - Witrlir:,•:
Which was tali, f.'l44' ) Olii,oef-1 - ':'T i':'.%!0ii4e.....4!.
this ease ' itts. 'lltirieiil . itifi, 06 d'lifi*,pOs-`,
eitebil''hiunef r 'finiglipirEitiji CijUicif,; .- lii . t . '
wheii . lt,4iik . e, plifily:, - jiii4 c ,iih; n,i' : o,.toi - oo.:
Tiliiii*il'iiiii)i f;ilicrotWilfit4':l6ijitei!i4,lwe,.
hiiiiiiii"j:Th ':•'6lrtiiiV4r#6 , ' i nsii . *::liiii i i:k
Witold hilVe; - ...ifeilithiiYi!irwilli!io:ooloh,
ktifitii iiiiiii' di '710t3;*(4)*100:eiT00•4,!,.:
• iniikh'iheilto". intriptnhtfr±-04,Arackay t
00Ceikilitd; ''tit tfi Ot-PV44.. 4-- -
r. i
. 1 .2'.U3 -q ::. t , .... , .:
f.„..,4,,,... 4 ..,„..Ni„..„ ...,„...,..:„.._
.. larrienn" ,a/$4.." .- : 11 4_ , -
'heieit4infrt#ol!..ift*ihnfoliq -- .!
Fitiiiitiniie sitriiiO! : ,iiiiteiiiii..iii ..'
rii - ,kiiikttijakiwtwOliiitllo
ikad
~ ,...141,4,-0, Vi 4 . •irt . i'4Ytt - .4., ' r . .0vr,,.A • , ... ; ' , 44 -
1* ii"'""" — ' • ~...."--...•• : -• ' --- -
,-*llo' . oPiit . iiiiiir: k 111 P"
i ~,•.., li t i thi laft.4v, ...:41 , 4eir ti
0-ig.- I I
~..~_yx;r~rr..~.w:~~3az- a ..*iy~s::r, + ~aahclri..~- .;~~.0 ~,t : ~ix~<'
f'
Atthe um.
.1 fatitifOXILIIT Jotaantla.thOratoilil
fondforreahlitthectine#
yeenvAdierdeilreeetlytk the i.lebrAeg. of al
terakiiv64lo
Quartiiioohinoi,itith the iatia#,laivseati-
Half Ciptiima . -I do 8 tip
_Oue;colqran, (Id / 5- ( 4 )
ilaahtelle,,,.Cords, „do 40 op
ra
411 311 ;Otbei advertieethonti insertfid'et teeecnieble
4. • -
teK: l '
Adyertieements should be mirkei with the netii
i lr° l **narekliii4 : •
•
r.. `Y
=EI
I
=WM
;• ; ,-; L , •-! . i . r.".
- ' i l--
. -I t :
0
, ..,!;: ~5F17
"' , .i'' I.T' ".., ..., Ilitists' -de .6facere. 134 .."._ - ' Y,
The TOllo*kq ; jliied , i4ivierre'Eitfeit. 3 ;ss4 .
tnicteisi4hd Ain ',Col. flata.evislquiWairet-- -
tilei* expedient; avhei need: he, : ; a3l - . boraiki.
.actioo:--, -,•;. ~. ;:..,,.. ,-.-,3 i..,--.i.,,.4 - ,..,,-. , ...4 k ~, ~.
....„yr.ith the Rifies,ln.portien - 4thelit Areil-.
leryil , nnd one ;cam pany.of the'tilt:` , AtiftititO,
,this,dshing , ..offiette , had. itrthe'..marniog ili4 ..
.ets,this Mexicans from two hall, ivlsielt:Wer .-'
:overlooked by their stroagyr-werk-Mt!...Ciiiii
,Gcird . ii, but which .were still- insPertant4: - ;::
Nhis • ,:bia been-effected with great , toss; ied •
so•minphad - been Idetttiled - Rilearr*eff'th!e- , _
I wattadedttind take, care of the dead.,% , thatliti
the afternoon- the Colonel found - hinitielf With
hutcalusere handful -Of men, - to protect , -Mid ~ ...*,*
sustain the- positioW be had.;" ---Won ftiritlf - " , 41, -• ',•,
n 0.4 .d,iffieulty. , About-2 O'clOok n - ilietif- '':
terucitm: the, Mex itans ' made a tremendous ..
demenstration as if to retake - the ileights.4-
Happening to be in. tvyal ley directly
:Cokilarney , htid . Cerro Gordo,'. whitheri,!i : a
fetitif.us had - gene,. -undercover of t lie triSps
and hrinthwood,it&obtain a good view of the --;
Mexicaril .on the hill, we-hild a ineSeti
i
.delle n t-opportunity of seeingth moewhO . le e
went', .4i:furious (slang of trinn Pets' first t'ol , - .
, flounced that the enmity. was in Monett, ihd
Lsoort.Wei could see aline& line al - Wan:hi' • ,
mureitingdaWn the steep hill side and* inn -
kitir, , :,directly to. the height, new octipied - •ly ,
CUL U. and -his:small but gallant hand. -1. -- . •
Whit:such tremendutts..furf did the tin- • *
. peterfi blow their iustrutnents i lliat one - : n- •
used to them • would irate thought :that. they
alone 'were-swffitsient, to drive - r everyrYanlee
.
. COM pletelf 'from the heroic irnd _sacred il
0
of Mexico. , . Onward, still they Came, • pd • ,
onward ;.,•-fouder, caw the Wasts*Trom he
trumpets no doubt to glie themselves courage,
as they.neared the -spot - where' they. knpw
they - would , meet with , war to the . - desithl.;-•
The position -was all itnportam to thenr,`44 - .
tkbosl. was_ on the way to attack it. 1 - 84 on
they reached a spot,tilmost within musliet
range; -tin& while they had halted a moment
to form to reover .their • wind, mid - eulk.ct .
and strengthen their nerves for the comi n g
struggle,. Col.; Harney -improved the occe
siou t.e.play off a ,regular trick- upon- .th'ilin.
:Histineit were vernally; concealed behind •
ther,bieWlef-the bill, -yet* beAdinsell was:, in •
the plain„view of. tlie-hostileliost; and now
ite; - : 4itittneticed a.:fisrangoe--: which :=woluld
.haeeteiived•furan army of;I I 20,000 mett,iiti.
. pointedf-every way with cenntoi, with-40- .-
alry; l With,mortarS and With all'-the applesn
' cestOf War. "Dent skint yet-f 'shouted-4*h?
his,,,litsle ~Ise- n d,L. and his , luzigs , are,:tibne
of the Weakest ; , "wait till. they - come:clotiteri,
Pont, draW-. a:. trigger, 1. , .- tell:. you4,4iiiihhs
• Charge those _cautions , there - - with .*Ygit _,
_tutd;Ott intisteri , oud-**4 4;11 , 1 o,l'o- 1 0;e* ' :
I
I doirc want one of them ' ever to ‘geb:::- At •
alive.!" •In this Strait! he went on-int, ' W
ing 111 e battle speech with a fete \ of the tr+g
, est . .4itid .. of . _adjectives that - I don't- care .Z . 7
about : repeating.;. The effectwas glorious.
Not is word of : the Orders; which might hive
,been heard mile, was lost upon_ the Mx-
icank,not.alharter ef that: distance off, - ;ind
.tiit'sotue.of thein 4triderstood' , Euglish, atut -at
'once-iitterprettslithespeech4 especiellyalkant
(I°ol4 iloading the can min with_grape7ind.
cttnisfer, to the Commanding offscer,le.vety.\
prudently wheeled his melt:. and .marched * `
hack the*ay he came without firing a ghts !
It is needless to Isny: -that Col. Harney tied
nothiagin* the shape oftt cannotrwithfim
—kTiveS the strongest kind:-: -"It1
uff
game,' . Ite.. was , playing ; -find.` the', sequel
showelltatihe won at ht. , - ;, .' :, _ _-: , --.
.': = OnOmore anecdote:which iscurrentalisut
town,;.and I.lusee done for to-day. : .inone:.*of _
the - religious" establishments of this car, tend
malt portion of it front whielt-iCii; 'said*. .
males.; are -most ...scrupulously,;.excludect; -a .
*number-amen . Wounded , have beenttak*,
a mong. them -an I rislun au, 'a Qatholie,- 'lto
base wife °him- same persuasion. , Theis er e *
I flexions fur her huidtind's wellteing,.:on: er
..
arrival after the regiment, sought hink
_.,itt,
, and jast-aitheliad- his. - Isii qua *
-es
and *us-about entering thetn,':she-Was*kci
,
dental : ly met by apricot. Ile - tit °nee, 04- -
ably ,sbocked ! at seeing_ ti , fe male. entering.
prhlsibited,grottisii, , ,l - placed lii&liand4coltly.
I - - ---
upon her shoulderc to arresCbeeproglss, •
pointing the other: ay,ejabitlatn4. 4 . -qinta*Sr”
.../itOitily,;” let us go4' The geod:Wcinietgrat is :
knowing*liim,. and. conceiving:his , intectittitt';
anythnig - hut honorable, fellqa antr*Letv.qhe
holy , : father - rk...Utosf'ztittitiekrifiti . thrOlOng
upon he spot; , tisiht both hands, and feet in
The strange encatinterond the moteife..erhOto .
' O.E - t6e;inerre -she itielted • and -*pentnielet
.
Such is-..th&story; but l which is= 'ffireil-::wn -
- • ouLtt iioischer: ....Years, &e: &c: e , .5: -.-,-; V.;
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