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HomeMy WebLinkAboutHuron Signal, 1849-09-27, Page 1. -411011411, TEN SHILLINGS t IN AAAAA CO. "TIM GREATEST POSSIBLE GOOD TO THE OREAT1I T popguns NQMBa ,u f TWELVE: AND SIX PENCE AT Tara BED Or TU* TRAM% VOLUME 1I. (.ODFRTCH, HURON DISTRICT, (C. W.) THURSDAY, SEPI'EMIiER 27, 1849. NUMBER XXXIV. siarb9. DR. P. A. McDOUGALL, CAN be consulted at all hour., at the British hotel. (LssciaTia'a•) Goderich, Sept. 19th. 1848. 93- ALEXANER WILKINSON, Provincial Land Surveyor, OFFICE AT GODERICH, HURON DISTRICT. Nov. 21, 9. 43 J. K. GO OD I N G, AUC'T'ION EEK, W'LI. ahead SALES anv part of the District, on reaa enable Terms. Ap- ply a the Bevis,. Hotel. Guderich, March 91h 1849. er-Sn I. LEWIS, BARRit'f'rER, swi.1('ITon, &C., Jute, 1848. GODERICIL JOHN J. E. LINTON, • N O T A R Y PUBLIC, Co)nnlissioner Queen's Bench, ANL) CONVEYANCER, STRATFORD. Stokes, CHEMIST and DNIG GIST WEST -STREET, GODERICH:'■ Marsh 8, 1 149. %v-yn ALEXANDER MITCHELL, AUCTIONEER. BELL'S CORNERS, SOUTH EASTl1OPE. March, 99, 1849. v2 -n8 A. NASMYTH, FASHIONABLE TAILOR: W1111971.117f'i1sB9's G*WERICU. Soderiek, April 12. 1849. 9s=n)Otf DANIEL GORDON, CABINET MAKER: 171rs. doers East of the Canada C.'sl tfice, Wt.pr-sTI(I;t,r, GODERiCi. Anrost t'Yth, 1849. eJ:-nt110 bat. JOHN. HYDE,. froox room .� taLCtJL'/IlUA'L :L'lAlJ1 STRATI'ORRD. 3•13 31, no. Ba9 2v -o26 • 1,500,000 ACRES OF LAND FOR S.%LE IN CANADA WEST. HE CANADA COMPANY have for disposal, about 1,500,000 ACRES OF' L.ANDdisp.rsed throughout moat of ,fie Townships in Upper Cssada-neavt 300.- 000 .lire. ere situated intbe Henn Trot&` well known ■s ono of the moot fertile parts of the Province -,t has treb,ed its papula-' tion in five years, and now Contains up- wards of 20,000 inhabitants. The LANDS ere offered by way a f. E A S E , for Ten fears, or for Sale, C .1 S H D 0 fl' V -the plan . f one fifth Cash, and the balance is Jnstal• merits being done uw.'y with. The Kent.. payable 1st February each year, are about the Interest at Six I'cr Cent.upon the price of the Land. Upon most of the Lots, when LEASED, NOMONEY i8 REQUIRED DOWN -whilst upon the others, according to locality, one, two, or three years Rent, mixt be paid in advance. -but these payments will free the Settler from further calla until 2nd, 3rd or 4th yea of his term of Lease. The right to PURCHASE the FREE- HOLD -during the term, is secured to the Leasee at a fixed sem named in Lease, and an allowance is made according to antici- pated payment. Lista of Linde, and any further informs. tion can be obtained, (by application, If by letter post -pard) al the Conrany'sOrncES, Toro•lo and Goderid ; of K. Biausaii, Esq., .Asphodel, Colborne District ; Dr. ALLie°, Guelph, or J. C. W. Door, Esq., Stratford, Huron District. Goderich, March 11, 1848. 7 TEAS ! ! TEAS ! ! ! ertH E Subscriber to eternise his tweet austere 1 tbask. to his friends, mid Me p.bl,e, for Mew moat hber.l petrew.re beg leer. In te- form them Chet he ha. jest IMPORTED. ehnee Lot of TEAR. Ate., waist. he '•Rin foe Sale kw CASH. BUTTER. W O 0 L. TIMOTHY SEED. WHEAT, or say other kiwi of Pr'edaee, lower Moe eery offered bevy before. OHIO WHISKEY!! Aad mitt SALT ler Sale, cheap ter Cash. CHRISTOPHER CRAB&. Oei4erieb, Nay 10th 1849. 9,-.18 FARMER'S INN STRATFORD. It`d. DOROTHY DOUGLAS. wide* of the Tate Thomas Douglas, of the Farmer'. Inn, Soelford, begs to re urn lei thanks to the Inhabitants of Stratford, tied the public generally, for the very literal support which they reeei=ed during the .,bort time they hate been to Stratford. Mr.. Douglas begs t, intimate that rhe tntrn&r carting en the bueinc.r. as hereto fore .l the Old Stan.!, in her aw n none, an.' hnlwr by rtri.•t attention 10 the c fust .1 her gue.i., and noderet.' charges, to merit a share of the pehl.c patronage, Stratford, 11 et August, 1819. 2.c-nt9'1 TRAVELLER'S HOME. S'1'RASBURG, WATERLOO. • 98th February, 1,849. ?i IIE ntehnetlber hereby iutilyatee to bre trends..d the Travelling Pnbli� g•ne- ully. that be Lar removed Isom New Aber deco to the Village of S.re.burgh, •11nd a ill eowte bawd ja Host molt -1 o.twa house for- merly occupied by Mr. Janes, -where he. will be toady and able to esedbe•• to the• comfort of those who may heron him w ith their patronage. Aa %bile he return, thanks for pant favor., be Hopes, by strict at.Ientio■ to the wants and •a•i•hes of hie tuetou►ers, still to "ataerlt a tustiouaaee M their patronage. • Mottos ABEL. N. D. -Good STABLES and attentive Groom., e9 -4141.t TO BE -SOLI!, N excellent Farm, being Lot No. 12. Maitland Conte.sion, 'roa'n.hip of G'derirh, containing 100 acres -30 of which le cleared. The land is of a -superior quali- ty, and well watered. It signatrd a Malt - le nine toile, from the town of dieleuch on the Huron Road, and' at the• j•.netioo of .'x different real; • d aa et is in the center of a propuloos and prosperous locality, it it ex- cellently sdapted.for a Tavern rand pr s Store. Thus farm is well entitled to Iht: *Destine of *none desirous of an ,legible. annuities ities fou gutsiness, and will be *Id -un vers reasonable terms, For pertieutarr apply to Thomas Dark, Tareral-keepe^, Gudericb, or to the proprietor JONAS COPP. Village Herpwrbsy. Jane l6. 1849. vented - • NOTICE, • rTHEBubseribe•r having I.I:ksrn. for the ler of Twenty years, the Peorer- ty on the North sole of the Market Squere, at present exampled by Theodor* Rel , Esq. w'iebee it. intimate tr, these elle a 1eh to Aral -1 ., 1:i.tuill1.11: `trr- IfA'rlti)N for Bfla\1••ee". that he will LRA.E BUILDING SITES for any Term not exceedingTweoty Veen., ate. aiodrntc Rest per annum. HORACE HORTON. G'deri.h, March 28, 1848. 9s-net1 BlankDeeds and Memorial s, AND alt kind. of DIVISION COURT BLANKS, •aid BLANK PRO3IS SOUS NOTES; for sate at the Signal (Mice. Every deteription• of BOOK and 11)11 Printing executed with as tosses and duipalch, . LAND FOR SALE, - CHEAP FOR c & n 14'117;, ' 'IFT7W-SeaIrX pehnere i.( e18e7ll.ohnGt wLae.de . mbe Waw•seelo will be ,old for 1e.. lbs. 'be Gov. entrees' pro.. One half duet porch.e nine^y will he relieved dews, .nd'two yews will b. at. lowed f r rayons' of the nrorie&r.. lair -dine purchasers two apply t. lir. JOHN ALLAN, Tavern Ke.pn, Garferich. G«derich. 1311, July. 1949. STRATFORD HOTEL. (Lars Nov's.) TUE Sub.cri..vf mlorulr his friends and the Travelling I;nblw. that be has teamed the large BRICK TAVERN,. at the Es.l end of Stratford, (now the county town of Perth.) lately occupied by Mr. Blase May, _where he will be ready at all times to afi.rd the usual comfort end supplies end penmote the personal cnaveetesee Of hie gu•rst.. WINES and LIQUORS of the best de- rertpuun. A sleds Iln.tlet always in attendance. ALBERT G. HATCiI. Stratford. 1811. Jel,•, 5849. 4v -r.25 1 DMII,L PROPRIE'1`(i S. AYOUNG MAN wannog a sensitives se Slider -also a g .od Aecounta;t. Poi further par,rcnl.,re eptly by letter post paid to F. G., Tuckur.ruith, lluru• District, Canaria W.•.t. August 20-h, 1849. 2c-n29lf j BURLINGTON LAID= ACAIDIE 111 . rjtH ACADEMIC YEAR tis► 1843 err 60, will r'mmenee on Thwredap, fk !fourth deny of October, mad close ones a An' hnreday of July. Circulars giving fel information, may be obtained at the efliee el the Huron Signal. or by application to D. C. VAN NORMAN. Pr,scipol. Hemilten, 71h Aileen, 1140. 2--n211-7. FARM FOR SALE: ONLY FIEF Niles from CODE RICH. LOT No. NINE, m the 9th Concession, Townabip of Colborne, CONTAINING 100 ACRES, Fifteen of which are cleared, and under eul- tivatioo. The Laod 1. of exeellect gnahty, aid well watered. For further pan'enlars apply to JAMES CLARK. S'rlarestont, August 99, 1849. I, -s9100 CASH FOR WHEAT at the Goderteh �ff Mills. W. PiPER. Gudenrh, 30th March, 1849{ 2t-n8'f STR 4YED. CAME into the Enclosure of the auheeri be►, on or about the let day of Jen loot, • YEI..IJ V STEER, with a Who Faro, tieing Five years old. The owner o' the above Steer can take him away by pro stag property, mid payer expense•. JOHN CLF.NPENN iNG. 90th Lot, 61b and Gib Cos. Gedench, Sept. 11, 1149. 9v-n$*tf poctri). LIVE AND LET LIVE. aT LLIL• COON. Methinks. we Anted Lees this engrave Where alt who •re ruining may read, Where In., *1 •o....1,. L1. n raven, ROAN .ager to ptonouuc•. soul to feed: F..r Inn 01,c, .he. Iloeeste dwindle In Iw„nm• that fatten on wralrh, While C,a('. with t ...sea&e 1 epuulle, 141,s winding in dagkn.,s and wsltb, 1' i• (air, we Mould a -k far oar limiter. The rernn.pen:.e f■tines chum., Ries, But pan... 'ere we toroth!, s neighbor, Fur Duty gays " Lee mod let live." Sham. to those eh., secure in their ehriviog, Yet fain would keep pnwrrt ne..down- Thome who like ant the c,uet of the sari nag grew in i loaf like their own. Sheen, to thee., who for e,.r ere c•aepies A' more ,Lan rine mortal reed hold, Whose he,r,•sgiag. ore cnihng snd,clarpiol Roe. d all that tae produce to told- 81'+me •o time: who, with eater graining, Am wilhnt intake bet net tie. While* wlfi•l.eer-coldly euchainieg-. Forgets it ahoald 'o Live sod let live." There is room in the world for more pleasure; Mute • wmild het burn to he jort, And rant when hie fellow-ma'a,mearars . Runs over wit,, tear -drops end dust, find wet as to help nee *nether, ' And howhn the !.hest Dues+... the milk td hie mother, And.pn.ade•h L.ve'►p*ll n'er his breast. AIM the mien ,het crone nudely May rinnhr Wallet Go.! will bogie. ;. •F..r Relitinn neer preaches. mon truly, Than when she .s." Live and let live." 11011E SICKNESS.-Faow rata G Thip' w►'s, why fig heart i. sad. Why p.- gas. aha• Finam, Whys ell around air t.:oh. ane glad My spirit pines for home. , •Ti. true the birds poor feel, their soap, 'Ts orae 'hie earth ie fair ; . Ba' sh r ills aching broom longs For that which -is not there. At morn the finwera peer forth perfume, Al eve they fa"l. away, Bo' in my father's men`(n• bloom Flowers that can ne'er decay. • This.. fairy blnwoms wilt not grow, Rare in their pe.. of birth; Th.c fad.. th•v wither hen h.low- They.wers set made fur..rtb. Where ie the man.ina 1 For above Th. pee. the eta', the skier; In realm. of endier htht end love, My father's mansion lice. Then ark ret al.y my hent i.e..), Why pensive thug 1 rn0m. When all mound are broke and glad? MI spirit pines for hem.. From the. Canadian Agriculturist. . THE INDIAN SUMMER., it to scarcely neet'.eary to enter info a full deseriptinn •of the peculiar appearance* which rhararlerise Oat va,yint portion of the year known in this-co'rntry by t .,erne of. Indian *simmer. Ohl mordent'. on there miners' hate had frequent opponent - toes of nb..rving tb. phenomenon in peefee- 'ion, while new comers. may prhhahly have bees fortunate enough, within the Isis few prem. to have nbeerved -two nr three day. M .*Biel, dlf .r.nl in eh/no-ter from all the feet elf the year. as clearly to entitle them to the shove app.11sli•tn. In torus Team this late 'ammeter, which perversity nec.rr.d about the beginning of Nevernher, slid ern geny after the cold had begun to set ian, seed for several days, or eves for two or thyro weeks: but at pre -eat, so tees* in our neighbourhood, we seldom ate morn than a day or two. and even then, the photwrer*srrs a an •light Iv developed, that it i. d'flieslt to determine whether it i.. a ruin Indian summer day, or nnly a warm minim nal one. A• 1 paid brf.ye, it is not neces- sary In dr.crtbe the peculiar appearance*, for they are prectselr similar. to throe that are nhrerved during the dry loge of Europe, with this a !dninn, that the weather is to all *prearanree much milder. 'I't. name Indian Summer, seems to have been given to this period, from eta betne the limo when the Indians were scco.tnmed to * tart nn their hunting expedition., and it usually fellows immediately after throe cold rafts which are commonly observed about the muddle nr end of Oetnber. The tempe- rature of the day appears weenier than might be expected et that season of the year, probably from tl.e stillness of the air, but it (snap dtr ring the night, sad the mean temperetnre of the tw.nty•tosrl bouts is therefore not abnormal. A somewhat similar phenomenon ii (re quietly and almost regularly observed is urns parte of &rope, -a* hoe been .hewn hy Dr. Mnhtrnan; It -ie, however, of mneh Amore drratten, and more vanahte-a ca- entnptsdte not to be *hindered at, when we .milder the exceedingly variable climate of lbw, enntinent. Varians theories have been prgpn..ed to explain this curios phenomenon, tett there doves not seer to be any rea.on for atrolpt- Ing to decreer a me re doff rent frim that which prnd,ese aimdar efl:•rts in R'irnpe, - tecordtng to wine, it srt•es from mother wind•, whin¢ ;melee. a cnprn.,a dere-tuition of moiet,re tall the shape of (nye, end thin i. *aid to roue Jho red cnlnnr of the st;n; her, aa Mal.lm•n ohservc., the air ie really lunch drier at that time than at almost any other w anele of the yew; and 1f the red coheir of the won ie to he e.crihed to the pretence of reticular moisture in the atmnsprrers. why ,n it lint weave dieing the early tenni/ ...,nth., when, as i■ well known, fogs .re extremely prevalent 1 By ebwervatlon it has hese found, that there is lees rsi. during November than is • anv other month; were the' phennmennn nwieg 10 wet fog.. we sheeted naturally ex peel a fret -pent recurrence of ram, while it is found that in general the smoky appear an -e of the sky is diminished after heavy .ho.•er•. 1t rertn. highly probable, that the Indian suo,mre, whish need formerly to prevail for two, three or even loot week., wag produced by the fires made by the Indene in' the fireits end peewee, in the same war as the dry fees of Europe are pro -Owe! by the burning of the moor.. It meat he remem- bered, that the phenomenon has eradua#lt deerear•'1 ss C.,II vation has pasted father. weetuar I, and this fact is •trnngly ennfir- matory 7f rho truth of the above expla'ia- tion. That dry fags •nmetimen exist nn this cenitner.t, is well known; for instance, in 1819, l ey kpread evert great pert of North Amerir,. in 1825. • fearful ennaagre'ion along the bank. of .the Miramichi, which extended over 8000 roman. miles, prndueed • dish iTiml; w•hn'h Pk diel, over ten ..• pi es. In a p" Itherl y direetine. These end other., lee nnm.ro'rs to- ir:eattnn, ace in-* e tanceaof tete absolute production of ,dry f.gs; and as we know that 'certain phe- rtomera are prgdnerd, in Europe by these enteric tn.Ya-pre'•i,ely similar phenomenon i. nbaerrc 1 here. we may fairly tnnclode that the canoe* ltca the same, eun•eially al+ we can reedilo•arcmtnt fns the decrease of its filtration by the greduxi retreat of the Indian., and a'dvanee of civilization towards th•i comet,' whereby these periodical fires beenm. fewer in number. In cnnclupinn, I will mention one fact 'which has beens'atet.l to me by an old set- tler, who ha• yften observed the folly- de- veloped'Indien summer, thet it was of com- mon observ..ttonythat clothes could not be hung out tn dry et that period on acconni of the number of blacki finating in the air. if the observation a realty a correct one (end -doubtless many of the readers of tb• Agricuhnri.t can speak elite enrreetnesa or incorrectnes.), the canoe ef- the phoneme - non will he at once apparent, as after every ,great ronR+trutton,'ami even in targe towns, the 'rain literal. down cursiderable tomato toss of carbon;.ceo,s panicles, whitlow/hen s:immine in a dry atmospbere are nsually deoosimated blacks. H. C. From the Tales allot Borden. THE LEGEND OF FAIR HELEN OF - KIR( ONKEL. turn lite yeomen. Three he understood not; end, unfortunately, he acted upon the prin- .iple that has driven many a fonI Inver to despair, that the muerte' who anpears to listen without di.pleas,sre is presumed to trice a tacit consent. They know little of the heart of tvvuman who trust their heppi- nese nr their lives to the frail bark of such • fond end dangerous delusion. A woman will ,el)nn, put an end to the.aJulation that •tipeeris her pride:hut the mud of Kirconnet, who had no pride to erat.(y, acted an many a single -hearted female has done end wt:1 .do, who received without a satisfaction that her honesty will not aI'ou• her to airtime. the fond speeches of an told friend, co;lchbd in terms ui an .Jos retire which re only her dee. The native sensibility of her stool •hock at the thnntht of first construing harshly her relation's professions of affec- tion, and then telling hire that he was not the indird,sl who was quelieed to win her heat. Yet, in jnatice to he(,,it requires to he stated, that see often communed with herself, in her solitary walks, on the neces- wity of checking her cousin's fond and un- fortunate delusion, lest evil might .nine out of pentlg.ea8 so nearly allied to good. This unfortunate connection between Blarkct 1loase and bis fair ronin, fated as it was to continue, mimed daily a more critical aspect. The young man. over- whelmed by a paeston that was ,daily and hourly (ed by the contemplation ri;'a to.nty and epi tales seldom before witnessed in a 8pnitish-maiden, was not only intoxicated by the violence of hie love, but aatir8od that hie .none, in return, loved him with an affection pnly mere chastely exprenseed,' though, of course, not len powerful Than his own. Iter parent., ton, whn had lent a fold and wanting ear In hie statements of their danghtee'a lore for him, had made rap their mind. upnn a point which presented all the anpearances of being sealed and set- tled by her- who And toe greatest interest in its truth.. She was always to he found by him m her solitary walks among- Kircon• nel.wor,d,. Their meetince were favored by their parents; their walks were uninter- rupted; the current of his passion flowed- without owedwithout check, and his expressions nnty .varied in, becoming 'mere animated, The absentee of a bards denial filled the meso ire of a deluding, blending hope; and while the eoartes of tbeir•tmo minds were in three• cannel Lee in pursuit of his genie; but it was soon to appear that dues, when pur-ped hy the gallant Fleming, teeming to think that, in the recorses of Kurconnel, they nnkt find thein in other coverts; at least it became certain that more of that kind of genre and before the hunter vier Kirconnet 1.1e, sfler the meeting we have described. Ibet ever were seen before by man or mai- den. Meanwhile, the image of the noble tenth, with his clear: intelligent eye: his ruing' and expanded forehead. from wbieh his Meek hair was 'Marled to a .ids, and mt... Ind with the !ung 11 ming lock* that reached. down to .is shoulder.; hie modesty; lila voice and ecneral bearing -were all busy with -the fancy of the mail of Kircounel.- Natntre's tahsm,n had been applied, and the chnrm had wrought se its big/feet and roost mvsl.i:nun power. Nor len had been the effect of -that fleet meeting on the nand of th . youthful heir of Kirkpatrick. They loved: and the does which aftcrwsrds brush. ed over.K'reannetLoo were only the scoots of the hunting. lover, who. while he cnold not.help the choice -of the flying wild:ng is 'taking that direction, eould not, of a con - 'variance, avoid a repeated iwfrvsioa on the wood bower p•ivaey of her who longed to see him with a heart tett palpitated at his looming as strongly'** did that of the eying deer. The rule* of breeding direct all Their forte agonal • first interview; against a toe Gond, thne.ga brought abort in the state way es the firer, they bave.no-efficaey; sad love, wtticl, defies the. whet* ends, roes et. eorciled difrereacea which be deepi.ed. A: - few - few meetings- revealed to each other that' fact, whieh,,enmehew or other, isdtecovered by nobody but lo';yrs, that one person has been istended from the beginning of the world to N formed for another. The heir of Kirkpatrick and tIm maid of Kirconnet exhibited to each other such a eruiilar:ty of thought, feeling, and sentiment, that lore seemed to have nothing more to do than to tie three' Ili-eade which n.tnre had not only si.un, but hung forth with a predisposed re- ciprocity of commu.ieation. The direevery t,fiat their thoughts bad taken the same mage. and trenched an .vial attitude of ele- vation, carried -with it that pleayant surprise that is •Tways favorable to the proeren of the tender passion: ■nd the delight of a new burn sympathy in sentenents that had Tong gratified only the heert fn which they none entirely oppoette-hie along the rope- were ct iceived, but saheb now were seen strewed volley of • requited affection, her. glowing in the eye* of another, was only in • channel that led to objocta too brilliant another form of that paeien itself. for hi. doll Pins to scan, and too subtia►e for'rhnugh Helm bad seen many indications Contiseed from our loss..- • hie unll►.tged fancy to reach -he -conceived 1 that might have ntiafied -her (d her meed And stirs it was that an one who ever theta mutual sympathy of congenial feeling had been directed to the sni'.jeet) that her aimed to ar•4rtire • 'lady's. love," made amitered hnt!r their hearts. father end mother were bent np,n a match he attempt s�ith more advpntnors on hi. 1t wag a; rhe. 'xtrancd.ntri state of II,. between Ler cause; of D14•ket Hou.e and tette than Wailer Bell .4 Blacket 11,'une. ,longe+t;c offers of Kucorn •I, that an ex - her. she ' 11 nev,r, either' from a want of The gas ln,.r -in the old romance, who Ironstone mei gave a new current to the c,.urwge or steady semester thought on Hue one.: with the. advantage of making leelings of the yrnrng maiden without heir r'hject, put 11 to hereof( what wag bet simply: love in • wood. and by the ride of %silver ing the effect of ehanaine that of-f,er lever- et -ream, he would non the heart. of Use nr of opes.ing the".yes of her father andp„eiuon ni each eirc,rn,sunee being twitted!' fairest woman of Christesdntn, theogh hi. mother to the true fret, that she Could lint true and ,rremedithle. She had hfrfbrto face were as black a. the Boot .1.ir.., Ind Inc. the man .t hey intended an her husband. And no greet need f• r secrecy, because Abe hoe lineae no better than the knanotbild'a, ;A (anent, high'•eptrlted youth, one of the did not love another; and her father, mother, 'evoke snore of baman eatnre than hie, per- Flemings of Kirkpatrick. had followed • eel Inver, hairier taken it for granted that haps, himself knew. ButKe -spoke sr doe aro t.i within a eery ',hart .pate of Kir she was faverahle to her cosine's suit, Roth - women, in the aggregate; and it Is enlikely emoted Muse. • . The timid creature hid ing of a definite nature had ever transpired that such • woman a. fair 1f..Ien of Kirenn. taken 1. the water, and, springing tial the to call for a demoo.tration, on her part. ss net had come under the trial of hie -n Molts' bank, fl•d„pact a bower in which an alternative of dishonesty- and double. - ..ha The truth of the statement fell to [fedora Was at the 'time sitting retinene Sir tleal;nx. Her situation was now changed, be tested by one whn, beeites the advan• Tnatam, then in the hands of every- young She now. loved. and loved ardently, another; toga' stated by the ran ',memen beoit lady i,p Scotland and England.- She started and the necessity she felt of meeting thus .the euaaent of a fathe,, old fnend*hip, and a the'creatnre shot past: her, and, putting heir of Kirkpatrick in secret, brought est a lineage against stitch no exeeptton could her head Ivnidly fnrwtrd to get a better in full relief her secret sense of what were. Ire taken by lets admirers of graces and view of the fleet inhabitant of the forest, the views and- purposes of her father and gemology. Belt was aware of the adven. raw before her,witb cap in hand, bowing, mother, and all- tl,e responsibility of bet tetra he pnsee..ed; but he cook calculate in knightly guise, Adam Fleming of Kirk- negative cnnduc', as regarded the suit of the etreneth '4 these better than he could *rick. Neither of the two had before him else eouhf'never Inc.. -Burl, strong. as fathom the mvateries of wnmaw'r bear*•.- seen the other; but the fame of the ones it may seem, if she felt • difficulty in tor. Although the grease'► part of his time was noble mein, high mind, and martial virtue., rectingslser cou.in and disobeying her pa. peseed at Ktrennnel, where he -tool[ every and of the other's incomparable beauty and rents before the aceessios of her love, eke npporlunity of threading the maze. of Use 'elevation of sentiment, had reached reeip- felt that (Mollify rise to Ott impossibility oak woods, or intone bythe side of the meetly their willing ears. after -Diet itnpnttant • remit alter 14e. - SW -Knife web the object of hie aSectinns, it is "That it Freming of Kirkpatrick; said trembled oaths thought 'of her love heist the yooth, sti:I hewing humbly and ami:ing, cropped; one word of her eejerlion . of tbe- "should have had the hrldness to interpose suit of her OOOPIn- wnnld reach the ears of the image of his worthless perenn•hetween tier p41'ents; dissension would be thrown' the fangs *MI the heaven of the meditations Into -the templekof peace; her love would be of fair Helen of Kirconne', doth, by my discovered; her Inc.,, a man famous of arms, sword, requite an analogy. Shall I be still and as soder of the Juhfstones, the oppo. Buhler in • pardon'!" • nents of placket Hou.e: traced, rejected. The effect produced -en Helen's mind by and banished; and her heart finally turn and the noble .doure of the youth,- and the broken by the antigunt•t powers of Inc. romantic and playful tore he had giwep to and flute. She felt her own weakness, and his intrusion, was meek and heartfelt" Ii trembled at it, without coming to a resole. woe, beeides, si.nultaneoup with the memo. rine to make a di.cto are; w bile her over• ry of his spread fame; and. in an instant, whelming love carried her, on the moos. her face was in • glow of mined shame and light Mehl'', over Kirronnel Lee, to mart cenfu.inn, the cause, of which, perhaps. lee her faithful heir of Kirkpatrick,, in the ro. deeper than the locality of a mere festive mantic burying -ground already deseribed.- of snrpr'oe nr interruption. Thin cxfraimdnury place was that Reed "You have my full forgivencse, sir;"she neon by the laver. for their night mestines; replied, while het face glowed deeper in fur, in any other pert of the domains of Kir- e pite of her ef•'r't to appear nnaffocte.].' connel. they eneld ant have eeeapc.i the rye Iter soft mews, voice (.11 on the Per of of Market Iln;•e; oho, though he had no lett youth; but hoe kern, dark eye was tory sunpieion of a rival, was en Dates in search with the exam'tlation of chrome with which of the ohjeet of h.. engrnesing paaion that hie ear had been long familiar.. The hire% aMm eeetdewent mit nithuut being °beery - of a womas in a man's treemph; whatever ed 1:y the aver waking and vigilant st,rve,l- may he his aPqret rause, the man will eon• toner of dor. stns. ti favnral'ly to him•elt, in the face ofa Many tune* already had Helen waiter, till dental of hue .pnwrr; end PO far at least her upsepeimis parents reared to the rest he haw the, right, ,list Nat tire bowel( evi- ..f tIhe aged, and the aeon threw her sheet dense* In 'bid favor by An •ekao•vlyd 'stent „ 1 silver over Klrtunrel lice, at.), wrapped that he les. t itched the' fnttntaine of the up in a night-eloak, slipped not •t the etcher wlrket of t'•e writ Jeri sure, to seek, tinder the phad• s o1 the oaks, Death'. Maifeg, the appointed trysting place of tl,4* ardent lovers. Again, she 1 ae to see her .beloved heiro(Ktrkpatnek, end, at last, she had reyoleve to brei.k to hon the pain uL position in which she aplaced. by toe still existing belief of pa nts and Brie et Honore, that Rhe gas, lube its wedded wi . On thea nceeion, elle sat wistfully looking out al her thenbet window. Her father aid mother hod retired to their couch. - Everything was q'fet, the mind s'ili,d, trod On migty oaks whi.:.pered not the faiete.t .ieh to disturb the .ensitors ear of night. - Tim moon was already tip, and Rhe .'a• 00 the eve of wrapping bcr cloak round her, and creeping forth into the forest ehedt. when she observed the long shadow .1 • doubtful if he ever s.ertained, by the pees- ing fedientinns Che exhibited, that her thmights and feelings were- pitched meth heynnd the grade of (hoes which nature had awarded to himself, ,the saw and felt be+nue• in the scenery of Kirconnet, which. to her lover, were but en the "peer leaf." - Every object in nature -from the planet to- ile pistil, from the pinning levm of heaven to the ph...phone beatn on the margin of 04.1611e -had enure intelligence for her inq'tiring eye. Every power In operation arnnnd bi-.l'o,e the groat gea.ral sympa- thy of eatnre. hlghe.t ele.nent.r to the loves ofttthe little forest birds that sting their •In141-sung (a bet bower. -.had some charm to elevate. her tbnughts and sublime her eenttmeme. She; therefore, who could .wench for intelligence where others .•naw n..thtng but inert matter, or, at least, the nnintereettng indicatioai of every -day na tune, might probably have been an unfor- tunate object on whom nor paid romantic knight might try the eft -et of hs extraneous $hmood wale,, Ns se alarill . fittedofwfor beingand acted upor waon by taelu love mingles of her curtain of B ticket !I•'uae, who. coming for short of a kisow• ledge of the elevated senum.eta by which she Wks -Umpired, could neithel yield hyo than sympathy which • woman minion. as • sine q4,1100/1 of affection, nor stand the heart, Fleming WES POI. difrtrent from investigation of the shrewd wi.dnm nr the other mew; enol, Ihmlgh hemi l.' have been high psilovnphy of the heart of an el d wrong In Lu eoatructinn 1f the secret w• ma-'. While he simply so .d and need min usg Marmite which Baled tp the man?. .he ordinary word.. of love, aha anal,zm,'ling adornn'ent of beauty (hat was atmo,t and (trend that, where she "old,be Second the power of increase, he felt the ew onderstd, she never could disponiof $cr fell power of the effect he thought he h.4 atlt•ctii.n•, The mond of itelen had long leen made en on the eyeliner of her cousin'. suit •- fu had begun early; and the innumerable walks he h.1 enjoyed with her along the hanks of the R'rtie, had afforded hien a tn.. isand opportunities of declaring hos platoon. By t►* nat.trol tact of women. she had always contrived to evade the genre ,unn, and contented herself, even iR the motet of extravagant declaration.., with negative ineheerions of her inability to re- produced, in•!, conceiving Alms,. f favorably received, laid is his b. rt the germs of an affection that was to gdtern his deati:ty.- The forma of breeding, muse punctilious is those days of chiv•Iry than even now, for -- halls communication at that tins. and, Low- ing grarefelly as he drank up the rayof her hlu.hinc b.•suty, he tontine.' e.' awns after hie doge that had kept their coups in pito suit of the flying doe. This was the filet time that ever Helen had.een a stranger bnntsman riots Kir- e