HomeMy WebLinkAboutHuron Signal, 1852-08-05, Page 1i1 !UON MCT1V
f
la Preened Probabcal Amory 27iterstior
Ifir GEO. lb JOHN COX.
Offiar, Ad* Square, Galeria.
II/• Book aid Job Pietist eramted it
neelsome eimi thapalek.
Tones des Horses Stgural.-TEN
ei1It14,114GSgbeemmiee if paid strictly th
aivaece, or miel Six Peace with
the espiraties of the year.
No paper eseesitheed rad &reeds era
paid ep, orate the publisher thinks i&
advantage to 40 SO.
Any todivided ist the country becoming
reeponeible for sis etheeribers, shall re-
ceive a briefed' copy mire.
' All letters addressed to the Editor
must be poet -paid, or they will not be taken
out of the post °dice.
Ter HU cf," Aikerissiag.-Siz lines and
under, first eusertion, .E0 2 6
Each subsequent insertion, 0 0 74
Tea lines anti under, 6rst inser., 0 3 4
Each subsequeet insertion' 0 Q 10
Over tea lines, first in. per line, 0 0 4
Each subsequent insertion, 0 0
lir A liberal discount wade to those who
advertise by the year.
DR. P. A. lilcDOUGALL,
CA N be cnnsulted at all hew., at
Mr. Le' Tor re's Boarding flow,
( formerly the British Hotrl.)
Goderic h. April Wit, 1832. *5
IRA LEWIS.
TIARRISTE7?, SOLICITOR, kr. West-
" etre-% Goderieh.
June 180. Svn2.1
TEN SIIILLINQ�
1111 AAAAA CI.
VOLUME V,
ea
iejel1
"rag ORRATBST POSSIELZ GOOD TO Tell °nitres? POSSIIIIILL
seer '',.telefisT,• ie‘ii"Ta,7,711;
AIM*
Signal.
D1410.1, COUNTY OF HURON, (C. W.) THURSDAY, AUGUST 5, 1852.
TWELVE ANT) RIX PE 14, CE
AT TES inn o* TVS III•11.
041••••••••••••••••••
NUMBER XXVIII.
Poetry.
LINES BY MILTON IN HIS OLD AGE.
1 am old sad blind!
Men p0101 11 me as libitum by Gas from, -
Afflicted and deserted of �y mend -
Yet 1 am rot cast down.
I am weaL, vet etrorig-
I mariner not that 1 no keret see -
Poor, old, tied belplese, 1 the more billoag,
Father Supreme ! to
0 merciful Ore !
'When men are farthest then Thou art most
t ear -
When friend', plea he, my weakrises shun,
Thy chariot 1 hear.
..Thy glorines fare
I. leaning towards me -and its holy light
Shines in npon tny loor!yi Cwelling-place
And there 11E0 more night.
Oh air beaded knee
1 reenenize Thy ;impose clearly shown -
My yrnionThrar haat dimmed that 1 may rice
Thyself -Thyself alone.
DANIEL HOME LIZARS, I have nanglit to fear -
A TTORN EY AT LAW, ind-Conreyar- This darkness is tee. shadow of Thy wing-
-Li& ern. Solicitor in Chnrcerv, &Ix. has hia &Death it 1 ani almost vatted -here
office as formerly in Stratford. Cite come no et thirg.
Stratford, 2nd Jae. 1830. 2vn49 Oh ! 1 neem to plant
Trembe:ting, where fortar mortal nier bath
DANIEL GORDON. been,
(1 A BIN ET MAKER, Three do or. Fest n Wtersed. in the ratliaece of Thy sinless
the Canada Companli yoffice, West-
:no
street. Goderich. Which eye bath -beet, peen.
v 2vef.:0 ,
Visions come end eo-
A ngust 27th. 1849.
JCIIIN 1. E. LINTON, -Shapes of reeplendent beauty rimed me
NOTARY rutin,. Cramnieeleiter Q.D., . - thr6or
and CeereeencriPuntrwe4' -
From aueel hp. I .'em to hear the flew
4°
Of soft sad body erag.. •
• • te ILLIAal gr•Mh . ..,
11°ITSEAND SIGN PA:NTED• lee. Ti to nothing era, .
1...ghthemee-street, Gratelebscite Whoa baleen se epeeist on my sightieee
• Oeteber-15, 1849. ' - • skyey--
.-- • When wri frem Panda» refresh my brow,
STOKES. That earh is dark.... lies.
ert,11.7.11IST AN!) intuck;:sT, v. e.,- 1 .-
'''er •treet, Geslionch. Is a edge clime
lel, 18.:e. • 20-2 My being We with rapthre--warea of
- • thoorht
HURON HOTEL., . 110,1 loupeo my epire....atratos iroblirne
BY JAMES GENTLES, Goilerich.- Break neer me olootritt.
Attentive Hostlere always on hand. '.
Go,fertch, Sept. 12, 1150. r3 -n30• . Give ase raw my lyre!
I feel the 'imageofi gue
ilt retin,
RC
TRAHAN AND BROTHER. w,abia, aiy .....,00„„ ,,,,,,,,bo, g,ni
Bwri-ister avid dIrterniee et Laic, 4-c;. Lit he nostril of mune . .
(ion111iC11 C. W.
JOHN STRACHA.N &twister and Atter- •'
.ey at Law, Notary Public and C 'peel- I AGRIU.ULTURE..
sneer. i .
ALEX AN DER WOOD SiTtatCH AN. ; • UrHarr or aa°•=4:4111°°°'W° are
Attorney at Law, Solicitor in Chan:.',testified to percale* .tbe increase of putt.tc
nary, Conveyoneer. . armee against thethothe than idle practice
Godetich, 17th November, I r..". I . of eirmsteg bfrie "/or ' sport:Yet. we
' thick the adeeeate fer birds 'do net npoolly
MISS E. SLIARLAN, . . Ilr ee'-e.. --61% Th -g ;get gi giteLded 10
(From Arawritester. England.) • .. -the rattwilai the rade, the throat,. aad I be
tremerone classes of sparrows. buntings and
„ MILLINER AND DRESS MAKER. warbler,, Which far overhaianee the .light
West STKPE.T. Gonia Lu. injory they may cerniett by the innumerable
(2 doors East of the Canada C. Oro) la"eaa daarrele•I be them • But we are
abrry to fee the king -bird, blackbird, crow.
WHERE she inteoda to carry en the and the ow. and b.„‘„k,„. laced wal,„,„t the
• • obese lifelines,. Dresses aside in the
very latest fathom*. boundary of mercy. The kig-bird, if be
Jure 240, 1852. 102' . „ eat. bee., destroy', vast numbers of ed.
5 '-'"' fltes; the b!aeltiord and crow are croally
A. NASMYTH. orefui in -another tiirvelloo, while every far
mer troy, hi- pimple preventive, sore his
FASHIONABLE TAILOR. en* door ,„„ fre-,m their de „datio„. Te„caec
Street Goderich.
ate incomparably greeter than the few
and mire devoured by The owls and hawks,.
West of W. E. Grace's Store, West 1
Feb. 19, 1362. v5-114
ettiekros they may choi ce to light upon. If
beauty is any protection, what individual
WANTED. • turtorg the whole feathered tribe possesses
TWO geed 11001' and SHOE Makere;-the sof: and beautilut pinit.a..0 of the owl,
who will find comment employment Or t've pyraetry and noble beorirg of the
mid good ware,, by apply's, at the Shop hawk? 1t is time, then, Viet pre jollies had
of the •ulisertbsr, W rot -etre.% Gnderteh, riven woo to justice and homanity. We
BUSTARD GREEN. know of Mit on. exception among the bird*.
Sept. 9th. 1851. Tbni i. the efirrre or cedar bird. We
have foiled it impassable to wive err cher.
vIvirDEIR Et)T-P.11,
inept
WEST STREET, GODI:111C11, *there do not merely devour certain
(Seer the Morkat Square.) portion nf toe crop and leave the re.'.-.
Tbey Tone pore... and mntilits, till 00-
(100»
MESSRS. JOHN & ROBT. DONOGH. th0„g i„ let Lout
(319•00 VattAectri.non'H":171e171:1 •171r times, to' 'take in not" a fine ernP n(ParlY rear. by
Troveiler• and
cb•rire of Team.. their depiisestions. and a neighbour, nearly
Goderieb, Dee. 6, 1850. 43-tf his entire stipplr of ...teeth cherriep, consist
leg by estimate, it twenty bombe'''. Vari-
ous remedies have been tried. Flags or
ethos of murdon hong in the tree. will repel
.Om, hullo for a time, but cedar birds are
wet
.1 10 number. Covering with nets is
costly and entess the covering is atom:,
the birds wi i I break through. The 'Limn -
. ion of fragments of looking glass, so
WASHINGTON
Farmers' Mutual Insurance Co.,
CaPrrat. $1,000,000.
ZRA HOPKINB, Hamiltee, Arent for
the C,ntintioe of Waterloo and Huron.
August 27, 1850. 3.15 strongly and repeatedly recommended `ty
horticultural journals. we have found about
MR. JOHN MACARA. se efficient so to try to frighten a loconto
BARRISTER,. Solicitor in Client -ere, 1" withan"rnSre"; or as the "eare-crow
Atterney-at-Low, Corieeyaae,,,. 1,.covered with old clothes, the bird. building
fie.. Office : Ontarin Betiding,. Kote-St. a nee: in ono ef the peekets. The only re-
Triosite the Gore Bank. and the Bank nf eyed, to shooting. which ifireadtly polluted
British N.,(, America. 1-1•MIL1on. 4 10 , for a few day., wet drive away entirely the
' whole flock of cedar Meths. If any of our
MR. T. N. MOLESWOHTH, reader' have Oiscovered a better remedy.
it would prose tartest relive to the public
nIVIL ENGINEER and Provincial Land (1. made known . -415. Critirater.
Surveyor, Gerlerieb. -
April 30, 1851. .4n11 TER PoT•rolt TA A sarca XTRD.-The peb.
lie are indebted to Mr E. 11. thirby. of Sa•
him, for porno IC (*renting experiment. in the
DR. HYNDMAN.
QUICK'S TAVERN, Loadon Road. m enItiettion of ibis valuable esculent. Hip
May 1851. v4n12 Arexperiment was to plant potatoes in
hot bed no the i.e. of April. from whieh he
JAMES WOO/DS, took plane. 12 inches in length on the 25th
of the mime month. Therm plots lik.
A UCTIONEER, fe prepered to attend those of lettuce or cabbage. he est forth in
4•1`. Prbite Sales to •ny pert of the United dolls, about nine inches apart, and from
Counties, oa moderate terms.
Stratford, May 1830.(Waco obtained potato.. for the nee Ohio
ye -el it family no the 301b of Ione. The potatoes
from sehteh them, plants were taken, were
PETER DUCFIA N A N. TAILOR. riaatfaiiart aeg logo‘edei fa °Bed Plt170t ae7r'e: :It:
EwrEandeest.,...ce te B. 43-ceelltees Stows ewers to beer elf:ege. toe4 to Atm the
sreoemeti. Clothes Mode ry, whether mveraleets of plants might sot
be ebtoised from the same weed. 4. tried
• premed sapertiner.t and obtained four tit -
tweet ot vim. from the swum pot aloe*.
the 1,t, May 7t1t, the recited Mat 21.1. the
third JON lith, and the :worth Jose 20113;
sad from each he raised a erop,from the loft
II October. He Oinks that six adrenal
ItOCILIte. Wine Merehaets. Fruiterers 10S. p0101500 lapollytetbi:eit°bitagineeb" laseetrIbts". flit" thee
a" 04elee, Ne. 17; Nadas Street. ' athe the dente from the 'strati etheiT:1-
c. W.
February lath /soon aa tboy are seffleweitiv rooted ta tie
0-115 *oil to deed their Support from Itinnet.-
ROW LAND WILLIAMS, j We have heard of riming the pot%tee by
I planthig the eyrie; and this gentlemen re -
emigrant, le viewed to aimed Sales in mitts a eery Sim crisp r. itied Is this omalme..
111 rurt, "ml Matted Cosatess, ow the aloe toothier rairted from the ol1r°""' 1"'m
ea,tieerme4enteetimease: Apply at ih• FIT" b""e" II" he'lf"4" "11:91"dtbdua
roes. Ooduera. or in his Menai Zees frees pleat', treeeferred
N.le the well emptied eel. paillmiltele gloat
.--4446 "41 °thee property will be admustagos where early /MI potatoes an
'Need NM either by primate lie pebble dour* Sad potatoes are erste* mod her.-
Imam
INS.
14647. I It is worthy of the committable& dee ties
leate,
arijj reps red, rad eintieg done on the arbor -
test net ei.„and meet liberal terms
2041, 1861. v4a42
W. & R. SIMPSON,
(LATE HOPE RIRRELL k Co.,)
To Stet C Teed Ithe.-While
loekteis eves the Fa-mer's degastment, ls a
late member of your cheap ard valuable
setwspaper. I uw to enquiry as to the heat
seethed of killing Canada Oodles. 1 would
;afore your eoereepeadents mid OunICIOn•
readere that of they will cut them at the
right time, they will purely destroy then,.
Nitther • part.evlar time in tbe moon, nor
'he:I:gest day, have 'loyalty., to do with
11: t
ot them as sone ao they ars to
bloom, and not fiefore. There are only
about t or° days that Ibey are right. If they
are co' before they are in bloom, there wilt
be too mtteh strenr111 in the tome. Try it
all of you (bit have Canada thistle,.
New Mona or Pt cserro Arista Taxes.
A -horticulturist in Bohenna has a be. itiful
Numbest of the beet topple tree•, wh,ch
have neither .pning from reed% nor retorting.
The plan is, *0 take et•Ooto front the chino
ccat•.,rtn, iapert them to a votive., eel
emit in the ground, having put an
Inch or two of the .boot while it pushed out
roots, mid the shoot gradually spring., up.
and become. a beontiful tree., bearing the
beat fruit, without reqniring to be graf-
ted.
Ccanexe lat.e.e•-•-T•ke afrorrt joier,
1 Ih.. purse Dix ose., and heil down over •
etearmniek fire. Or take ef the knee of
common tad garden e AAAAA t. and one white
(via; part.; stir them gnaltr /MEP.
ther fele three hours, and tuvri thee irse mit_
ton. ',ere pi . In thee" days it will
concrete a�1 be a firm Jelly.
Literature.
VIZ LADY'S LEAP. - •
A LLCEND OW T82 WASS OT 241111 SOUS .
Even at this day; one of Coe wildest and
most purely pastoral districts in all Eng-
land is that region of the West Riding of
Yorkshire which ries between Lancashire
en the south and west, aad a part of West-
moreland on the north, and which is divid-
ed on the east, from the more populous por-
tions .4 110 fine couutry to which it be-
long!, by the water of the great northern
rirer tre, destined; after twice changing
its name, and swallowing up tributaries
mightier than itself, to fall into the North
"ea a, the-Ilusuler. To this day, in the
whole of that large tract, there is no large
town; nothing, indeed, that we should dignify
in the United States; by the title of a con-
siderable village.
It ahounda, however, in the roost !splen-
did scenery; it contains some of tbe loftiest
hills, as lagleborough. Whernside. and-
Pensingnet, and is watered by the loveliest
rivers, the Nid, the Wharte. the Eyre, and
many a tributary torrent, in all the sea-girt
island. Emphatically, it m a land of hills
and dales, or. an they are termed in the
r.orth country dialect, the fell. and the
gbylis. The population sparse, simple. hos-
pitable, and contented. arc -mattered,
through the narrow vales which intersect
the huge round topped heathery ridge?, in
hamlets small indeed, but picturesque and
happy earning enough to supply their few
and trivial wants by cultiratinr the narrow
verge of soft green meadow land, which
everywhere forms the bottom of the ;hyila;
and DastEring their flocks and berths of
Moorland sheep and kyloca, upon the heath
clad hills, on which endfarm poetesses a
free commonage.
In the time, however of the wars of the
Roses, during the fatal strife of the kind-
red houses of York and Lancalter, which
constitute the cruelest and bloodiest
page of Britain's hiitory, the Chylls-laad
Was a purely pastoral, a purely feudal re-
gion.
The great Earl of Warwick, from his
Castle of Middleham, a little way to the
eastward on tbe waters of the Ure, the
Prior of Bolton Abbey on the Wharfe,
and the Egremonts of Barden Teepee,
were all the great proprietor. throughout
that rugged country; trill so the
feudal rule of the good moats and popular
nobles prises on their vaisialn, that they may
be called the freest population in all Eng-
land; a few simple quiet -rents of the pro-
duce of their farrni; a few days of man -ser-
vice whea their lords waged war on the
wild beasts; which were thee plentifel in the
forest, or oe one another in the field of civil
strife, constituted the whole of their duties;
and these, in thole dark and Weeny der
were looked upon almost as privileges.
Every dale's-enan was m those days ea
archer, and, as such, a helmsman and a sol-
dier; and, to have been debarred fermi fol-
lowing his lord's hods& OE the fell, er
lord's beeper on the field, 10 weeld have
looted upoe sot as a privilege, bet as a
penalty and drograce.
The laltiody field of Toots* had brae
fraght about tee days, rat BM whole earth
of England wag filled with terror, lamest, -
tole, rad su1iSr. Some forty throned
NMI Intl their hanwea,ne that great
Aelii of ' gentle blood,' after which a bon"
of old Nonni' blood wee more rarefy 10 10
seen for half • century in Eagland at the
old laying the, thee • wolf .er it wad
boar.
Nsr bed the Ghylineen ramped their
there of the shingliter; nor were there
heed& homes eases from destitution,
which emote yet more !stingy the towers of
their farad liege lords.
Tbet .try, Ma the roil ef Ragland
blms, MOM fa Kle• sort aggro itself
few tbe men 01 (10 eastern fells had followed
the Bear and Lagged staff of Warwick,
the great king maker, to bloody triumph;
the westerlanders bad marched to horrible
defeat for the ill-fated cause of Lancaater,
under the Prier of Bolton's baiii(fS and the
Lady ol Barden's seneschal.
The days of chiralry were passed; the
spirit of chivalry bad died out, choked
by the fiercer fire of intestine warfare.
Edward, the Rergher Ring, as his er.ensies
were wont to tall him. although a leader
in the field and a soldier in the melee, had
little of the cavalier, lees of Uue gentle
kuigbt, iia his iron compositiau. None
knew more stoutly bow to fight, more king.
bow t.) conquer. Nnrie knew more bloodi-
ly brutally, how to gather in tie fruits ht
victory. o veneration for old age. nn
pity for green youth, no tenderises for sex,
no respect for valor, peer onee mimed his
heart of steel to remit the 'bloody sett:mike
of yet rietis. To be a capfire enemy was
to be butchered summarily upon the lief+
or reserved yet more pitilesaly for le
sealrold.
No wend', then, if, betweet mourning
for their dead and trembiing fer the:r 11r-
ing, the fogitire Laneastrianasheildereil
their wild gliylls at eery ki•t vr;n4I'Vtit
wh;stled thronh their mountain
reagni5ed by their ream into the fatal clang-
er the Yorkist trumpet.
The vassals, it is true, were se.7erell =-
lees taken under arras red handeil.toeeeine
the penalty of their faith to their feudal
lords; since loyalty or that niters. both side*
alike des:red to protnetr. and neither dared
in policy to imaish. The cottage. there-
fore. oftentimes afinrded to the lowly peas-
ant that sdielter erliirh the a'ilsee (111'! net
yield to its revered erier, nor the Norman
castle to its )r1Whty no'ule.
It was the tenth night ale: that tert:.•:e
defeat, and the Lady of Earden Toiler %at
timely by *le dim embers and er,a brae -
light of her mournruil he.; now striving to
draw consolation from the „pages of k -r 11.
tumnated mia-a!, now listen:ere,;.;lo-ni:ly to
the fierce gtmls of the autumn eirel, as it
roared apd wailed "hod her turrets: to the
ravin; of' the tortured \Vbirfs, a.,
flooded by *heti:wrests from the it
chafed and howled amen; the roeke, which
pent up its maddened w-aters in the iln'e he -
low. Almost she fancied now that she
could bear the war er:es and too trarvele
thg pattering arrow flielit nn read s4;rt and
steel helmet. the cries and eerses of the
tieeperate and the dying, in the voices of the
wint.tr tempest.
Her tenants had retained home- Mne,
lested; their dead bad been bud in hnly
earth, within themhbey precincts, in the
of a happy heart inspiring it.
It was as beautiful a girl *s ever cheered
a widowed mother's solitude, not past her
eighteenth summer, and looking yet more
youthful than the was, from the extreme
brilliancy and brightness of her pure eotn-
plesion, the Runny lovelioess of her loag
golden tresses, and the expression of exqui-
site innocence and candor which lighted up
her large azure eyes. The Lady of Eerily!'
raised her eyes and fixed them on her
and a mournful fill);:, played orer her pallid
feature% as she looked upon her; joyous still
and radiant ii, the midst of peril and dis-
may.
Ever gay, ever joyoun, Elanor:
said, with a half reproachful gesture of the
bead;. and what can you find, in these dark
and dreadful slily., to light tip Oast merry
bearon in your rye, to kindle that gay smile
linen your ha I lise, youth youth! It is
stilt tbe pert of you to hape, as it is of age,
earl age to despair.'
t•Nay, mother dear; said the girl, in a
erbisper, when she stood close bride tee
foetstool, ha, -ng closed the door care-
fnily behind her,' but dieresis ramie forire
non; ro7 he tees retorned, aR ! rarely, too,
or, at least, sot badly wrenided, and is herd
b2r,lookinn;10 ws, as well be may, fcr su
eve •
Who ben Rama 1 Cylions &(8a mean
7- -- • • •
do ate*, mother r doe eacia:m-
,
ed her cheek Fella:fir the mninent with
Iles intensity ef her terlacg.' Whom skull!
I 1 mese Irietr.imelot 1'
ir'.me!' de Man:tower !' replied the
lady. I had mot thought of this. 11.
•.1m!! rot hate come. What shall we do
to 'aro liOn? 'Irber: a Yorkist force
even newit Lettie.' Thns far she had
sprdies mnsingly. as if in thisughtful ccri-
mope with herself; hut now her eye brigh-
tened; and she inquired graltly. -.1110 bow
tea yam know this? Where is Sir Amelot
14 he within the tower. Why eame bend
with • ids report to me, instead °fleecing you
sato ties peril?' •
- • • Ne. deafest within: replied the girl.
etheer7y,• My maiden, brought me the tid-.
irqs op. She was &we in the glen at sun-
set, ere the iternactunean; and,
be erawthel out from his hiding place, and
hode ber bring yea tidings that be was
di it in the caveni• tinder the first fall, and
that homes could take Lim there, for that
he only tenses its eetret. But he lathe
fold and wine-; . and' the means of pro-
enriag he prays yon scrod
him.'
And why. brought ale not the news to
reel Why did she tarry so long •nn the
way! 51. most have known this dicer 'eve
aot do sot I- You meet know what 1
swan.'
' Perfectly, dearest. Ilis manner, his
his voice, and his eyes told you what he
dreamed of, tad yours replied ni
But now to the point; does Marian knew,
or suspect aught, think you, ef these love
passages?'
I am certaia--no, as certaiu ai that I
lire.'
Send her to me at once. I mistrust her
sorely. There have been paesages, I knew,
between her and the page Damian; and he
sought leave of me as the eurfew rorg, to
go down to the Abbot's forester, h'ettil her
to me at once; and bid (leoffi-ey, the war-
der, take arms, with two of his best men,
and wait my call in the anteroom.'
Eleanor, not unwillirrg to esrnee farther
questioning, and to gain time to collect her
senses, hounded (rum the hall; and, siring
the lady's orders tn the warder, hurried", up
to her turret chamber, and !tent the girl
down to her mother's presence. Then fall-
ing on her knees by her own bedside. she
thaaked, from tire depths of her guileness
heart the Civer of all gond for the bled.
ing he had that night granted her, and pray-
ed, among fest flowing, tear drape, half of
joy, half of sorrow, for protection to bet
loved A owlet.
The interview between the dreaded lady,
add the girl, Marian, was but brief; for,
terrified already and is 18 commie" Ow
could no more endure the Ileitis piercing
eye and calm, hard, cutting question% than
the partridge ran the talons and the teak
of the keen goshawk. Within ten minute%
from entering the hall, the lady's voice was
beard,. Without there !' And, at the word
all steer from helm to ahoe, with bill and
bow and broadsword, the sheet retainers
eutered.
They found the lady. impassive as her
wont, writing upon a strip of rnrchment,
and the girl prostrate at her feet, io an agony
of tears and terror.
s Here, Jansen: said the lady, as elm
finished her writing.. bear me $h1, droll
forthwith to the sub-prinr of BOltoe; and,
hark you put this wench upon a palfrey. and
carry her down with you to the abbey.
leave her inimosping e( -the Father
Janitor. net done., await tlin rob -prior%
orders% rerform them. be they what
they may, aid that with all thie 'diligence.
Tush, wench!' the added; tears are vein,
no supplicating'. Nee should hate thraght
of these things ere ran thnogbt to drat in
trenenn. Lose no time, Jansen Imaor ansi
life depend upon your diligence and fealty.'
The sturdy beechstan bowed, rad leadieg
the unhappy girl away, half retried ib the
arms of bis followers -for, ignorant what
fate awaited her, the was now Abet faint-
• -be left the -proud, tabs:passim ladY,
td her own melancholy meditations.
They were not long, boivever, for, light -
log a taper from her lantp, site opened a
private doorway el the farther esti of the
hall, and ascending a narrow staircase In an
upper story, soon stood. rnseen and imsus-
petted, at the doer of her daughters cham-
ber.'
Already had that fsir young Leta; felen
into a light and berry sleep of innocence
and peace ; trot need was that she should 4
be aroused ; and long and anxious was the
consultation'that ensued nn her awakening..
It had alreinly struck the first honr rlet
midniglit, and the bell. for prime were al-
ready pealing up the deep glen from Bo!.
ton's hoary towere, ere, with a heartfelt
blessing,. and a parting memento to he n-tir
with the lark or before him, the mother left •
her child to dream of future bliss alas! r
Un M itell with futere 7
Pedlar{ even then Ow had not left her.
but that a hoarse resounding challenge from
the- gate tower warned her that probably
her emissaries had retie -nett ; end, in instil
she had warre re -trimmed her lairth, pad re-
stinted her seat in the great 101, whore 04
late she had held vigil. oft, till well nigh
morning.. herons an esquire reverently nn-
tered to say tharthe warder craved a bear-
ing
of the lady.
The man had little to relate, howerer.
The sub-prioe, he said, lied sent the bailiff
for the forester, and lied queetinned him for
some time in private. when, with the Wehrle
word that ' it was trio late !' he had dis-
missed them. The girl, !Marian. he had
heard, was committed to tIse penitentiary
cell.
Yon have done well, Jepson; engrafted
the lady. "Bet ynu have more to do.-
Kesit wide% end ward yourself 10-oight
with half the gerrisoa in arra; stiffer no
owe to enter ow r out lege,* norm to -mor-
row, saving the Lady Eleanor, who will
go forth mounted at day break. If the
page Damian show honself before tbe gates,
head your own treaty bow end mat a clothe
yard arrow to 11. heart. For the rest if
any bend of rearaidifig Yerhiste *hew
thenewlee• on our aide the Wharf*, ring
beneforhe and firs listens till all the ems -
try is aroused, sod then np,in novo, sod
ery Fdreement for Loneester. and give an
loaner r
lower glee. Herself, die had seen their "u". „,.
dust consigned to data their ashes tido-
ashes: herwl;„ ube had had gi.ven tears to
their dead from those stern .yea, which re-
fu.ed to weep when her own lord fell seder
elde!d. as the phhase ran, NB knig,litly; her-
self, she bad consoled their witlowe with 'tier
with Lady, ' relapsing, into thonght. ' Bit that
sympathy, and ealved their wooed.
almost boy, that page. Damien! r doild her-
gc.id ; *04 anw !Zit eat alone.
pairinc. in th4 .,:000 twr widowed ban. I dnubt her Much Mance: Why shonld
Yet she feared nothin., thon.,ht of no- ahe have told 7" 1 134"" aha ha°w that
thing touchieg her own losses, her own sor-
rows. her overt safety; nave as her people,
decimated by the sword of York., was %lir-
rowing; save as her trustiest knights were
hunted by tbe hounds of 'Warwick; sere art
her king was again an exile afar from the
land of his fathers : tare as her own and
only daugeter was imperilled by her :orally.
For, though her Testate had returned. the
gray haired seneschal who led them to the
field, and who had fought beside her hus-
band's rein in Cnienne and Poiten, erns yet
a fugitive, wounded and weak, as tiding
had already veachecl her, not deriver to re-
turn to his own home, whither meet ter,
tainly be should be hunted --for the good
knight who bore her banner. Sir Arne:ot
de Nlanhower, was in like plight, and only
brele her trait that banner to bee heeping-,
for it was hound about hie hreest;tal brigh-
ter days 'should come, and it should
for Egrernent and Lancester- -for she hod
one fair daughter; the Gower of all the de.
leg and ears now she shuddered as she
!honest how the bloody and licentioue Ed-
ward might wreak hie cengeanee en her:elf
*pen that ennement and lovely child. She
doddered, bat she shrank not for ene *-
Meat from 'aer fealty; nor hesitated, erns
in her insneeat heart, front battling ret
'gem for T.ariea.eter. as anon at Henry's
banner therein be spread again to Britisb
breres
Whsle arse she satflier tall and s'aiely
figure clad in the darkest weeds. bending
She clared_getleave Lk: ewer -hoard
hefore my hour for retiring; and de -ed rot
seek your premeace. with whom she had -an
in perform, lest she should create sire
pic:on,'
If that were but the reason!' Raid the
you lore him. Nell r
Mother!' exclaimed the ag:tated girl,
with the conscious blond &thing" ' crimson
to her brow, her elitelte; her trek. 'No
o1*e-00 one knows that. I don't -I -don't
know, mother! What reran you. mother
mine? And ahe hnrsi into a flood of leave,
and mink into a chair, overpowered and ex-
hausted by the mere force of her feel -
'!‚he lady walked is-' slowly to her fhir
chid' side and laying hnth hr. withered
hands in the attitude of Isenediction nn that
lair, sunny head--
. re cemfortel, my own sweet rliiLL
• Weeinot; but little can you guess what a
mother know% or knows not, whose best
chairs happiness is staked. Eleannr, 1
ham' khown, have seen all this a year and
*met'
' You :-.1re reen--dere known all, with-
er!' etied.sbe, starting t s her feet, and ve-
in: tete ber *nether'. eyes with newer'
hope. • Then you do nnt--yon do --I mem
••••••thet 4theaKrove 1 Yon, dr! yoe pardon
• If I ;124 dimpprored, I 'had intereoseil
to revise For the rest, I :leaner, 1 trim
--have I eight to pardon r
' I do love him, neither.'
• And he knew% a 1'
. Ile mirlit here, srnleoLLerienes fer.ey-
be t I- I --Ots xis.. , yogi ski' net dream
that I ever told him r
Nor he you, Ideate r
• Had lee Mit whirrWred it writhed your
ibere the ',Where missal, lwe snow white .sectien, thin 1 W46 not 1,q1.41
loeloi straying disheveled neer her nerk alwl Then you hare toted, yoorselt Waved.
shotelders, her dark eyes feted nn vacaney, Ti i An, eletmer r
a light and joyless step came bounding down Mother, no! Can 7,1 thinh it er va t
Ow *tone turrets stairway, and pained for a she feel/timed, indigneatly, rad agaie the
moment at the door, an if in doebt whether crimaneerl.
it might eater. said he neve: whi.pere it,' reyth
But the lady hewed nr.st, heeded not. till " the 1" l'614."/Pre'4illt
a Ibitteriwg heed termed the peedrone Inek. then can 7"k." 11!'
and the feet foot eromed the threebohl ' Neter in verde, mother; het leis react -
write a stet so lighbose,as bid nue tidings bee -Iris l'elee--his elm Oh' mother, 41
- •-%411. ‘40 •
•
1-
The maa howled kow, 604 WWI
when a sign checked hire.
'Ilow guea the eight, James ' and
promises the morrow r
'Tbe storm bas rolled awry to the
lady; tliemeoouis u:sira
in : limalt win , be; amdfaii. ::46.
the orrbw.'
She wardbit
th hell' an liner, evertf the warder s' the
gate home, end the siiteoele aloe( the worts
three was not an rye open vet bra the weak
of Barden Tower.
Lone, ere the am was rp, leftwe'we. 5
light foot glided down the resale stet- : 1104
the dela-ire and cent,' L'eatior -irate
down into the castle half arrayed In
cap and riding skirt, with a 'here .• wie.,w •
over it. which, bad its folds Is n d , .!:-. •
weight hare revealed 0.i:sr • • iwrio ...
to a you've lady's ascribe* rJo.'le PA •
basket girl'-! round Ler slerdi r w-
15.. one side, and c,•tiMeri,slanceil
Merle fagon en the other. .
Njeelltall,'i sOLtEeer.dh::::.:::
no nye
den'e, who, forewarned io ii ly t
thir!dlit.et,;,weited Li r hat o : • her,add!esl,
midr .
at- the castle r ' . 1 her
without a word of lee.' --,_ 41mly
rode out, he quietly said- "
pi:title-tett:rile! 1..IwiwnrIelPderhemale"--.7
lloeine her head tn miser,'
1.1111.-
• horse the rt hi. and entienid .'
deep avid awful chnsm Ile -- •
ll tierce wan flIgioZ. twir.... :1.,.,4
CIOL:Zoke,ruaxtheioiroded wiiir .1),1".....'...... • i.;11.:
slicer lei14,-•es in itbitr carp •- • - . 17...;
ing wider yet, wee .'r' " - •.:-. :
and here, most lettere* 's•
between the diet.ery le•b-, • -1,11.
erastaatly overflowed. a li. ' -rid,
fel torrent jammed iriln a .., est •
ten feet in width. arre•r:- .,erstr 1, ..
e7soiegb0fribeibMeotrn:b rerSeoria'11::34.:0;:::,.. , :44ibe'llevre:.-...
that passed es callel. in , r• era ..•
a spot fatal to her rare, nr-',z . 1 --..-. go'; . ,
fearlessly along the di:Tete rt. -.... 0019,....
feellie Boy .of Egreinnet, , , - -ow I, t.
who anaineref7, *Ladles.' wire; se.:-.. the..
erably, ieW wee ever feend af7arisk; puled
back by his mike -twit greiloused, atter Lie_
owa &et font had erre...cif' arch -tem -
But not of tint she thought : her !wart
was heating with Inc hive, sad the kith
her hew rhe st,ailld salve het 1. var. thee
enteracts she haillewd hv t
r , . , , 'Awn the:
ner'lioes slit:id f end now the ta:i osia...• Res-
6nit raft er the !Bin. thutwie,r.i! ii.,..zo.w.i...W
betare her, ee the *tree thaw.. il Ierriltle...
stimendoes eat erre.er. I ^ . • . or 0 , glen -wai
Oat jerft IS file rn11440.3 It- '• !.: M04 es
fon rage gilt thea either fr,trin.,4, ions** Pratt -
stepped net feeler heneith the arch .4'
*prey, 111WL Iteci4 Iti;fore her eve*. tzar Mnie..,'
lot de ittnt- hooer. is vet iii- otter.
An inst.'s*, rad slip wap in he asna-en- •
othee aed 'silo Frill Inn ber'-ti t..tow that
short mehrece; ind with all tie- elmwserect -..
'''Iiih.l. tr;ii*of arr. ntiiwomerit'sdrebsTrf ierlriettillh 3:,11, 1.1".1ws 1.10(1:7s
the best we. potting net her I i;'•,. r., Mow
ing en bit it -donee, reemeetine her mother'o
k.n.,einds
eebeteiti'.i
.inaciwitherini::::n.in;:etaTus
ee,' enbrirttihei,; herir°r
i.dole,'.
4'lliere; ti.',! Nrt a word =fire: the
cried. 'Yam have toil the your secret ol.
reamer mew t halre ti, *reek eely, resi-.-Ift- •
0.313- to obey, if you are either a good keiglit,
fir e tree lover. ...‘hrrier;„ MY Wrni. inini girl,
her lett need yen to Jeer *ever theititin- sod'
te; .pt off ;a0 night for Settle, !er brie: the
vll'Eseaeera41:14:1wwa710..111:IPd:tteeit it by the storm ktel=
nedrb
the; they are not here elrezdy-!
yam. seal. then re race, like,tbe mole neer
ground, to Mullion, envier, lie linden there •
tilt night arid, trevelling 1, eight eilly, hin-
ing from deem till twilit...hi. mirk.. e-ur wire
thrnegli the fella to C.7.er55ae. Enter tint
eity boldly, for we shall be there before .
you with els seore or stoat spews or Lab -
caster. The wattles a the Nlarrhes . is -
forme. There li so force to eheek es.. for_ •
an hour to the northward. 'fl'ee will we
all tithe se ip Inc Plawilers, and tarry there
m peace 1111 better der* refer', for thipleue •
Eogiani. literi he provimon.s, wild, feel
lights m
a, money. Say, liegenum rail
you, idwomy14
rre:ttraidirligor1:. 42e .. .
• Avid butterfly 1 Critr Ire-seit are already
meddling! The Lady of 'lintel Tower
will takeleinzandi.inwle
eneelvne.et !"
vnrcr„..
4 What I Do Ton doubt the? For Car-
lisle and Flanders.'
derer
4. AA:h44..EnIte,ranr, when we be sale in Flan -
' Then, Amelot, you mast ask-'
• Whom -if you are obedient -Ilet pair .
F.leennr 1'
• 1 04 elselient.'
Oils more brief emheare. end he mine.,
her light burthen to her serldliel tetra eager
to prove his elmJirtice and coed faith, dia.
appeared behind the eaterset. and nimiged
fearleoely into the slivewe of shove how
mons! reveries, ethic h oretisteMeisig Vest PP..
rion. of conceits of stehtereineen reef%
wiedd lead him, miles awe?, to the rove of
hl ethers. .
Itad L. romaneil neu. miner. terg‘
er I*
had lingered mitt! it was too late-cr t'sd
She &rioted tlw emit she bad yet 1.-, reek
his had d;sei beim e 1te had turned is bin
heel, or he had not de.erviel to eon -are.
She had jirit revehe,1 trig !Mr,i'. whim
the temelerles etf Barden T:' -.a•,4
ferth its baffie error:lens, nni esso- g her
eyes down '1. r`r.T. hetweee hees..ei god
the imeent to the rattle, 'ho etw a lt-trit ad.
archery and veers hurrying op the pas*, led
by the treitor Darn, an.
A serwided e erner ni thlt eei lie•ow, awl
least nf all, Armor- 'herself ard ' ..-:
4
(h. steep eletralier oil wk.: ' 4,,,, .0.,..,,i4.
tested her (-ere them f. 014 r11,..O091.
hasAno4t.heort rnoi,o.n.f..;!,170, eiLtrelreae:..e.1 .),..,..... orpfb,.
'I'hyre• wort no reirwee op the if'en; em
tiria7.airle en e once/throe*. The thought
Iliesimil eve 1.I., like the eleetrie 8.4Arens.
the Steed* is b
a tier% who., arc ester lied penthed le -
' erme-- -life-tese
That 10414 a brave ilieeeht fne *i
bravo*
inan's mind. l'i lia• tlwa for • firs I err._ -
ran.* black wiiiiiiing waters 1
She retried e..... In think twh-e. With
a height eve, bet eheek tied lip 'oh** to
.ah'-., whisawring r'� e mot pr7m- to Doe,
she mimed her bowies hee4 faes-4 1. to
thephoddresvirelpof
tt.eshofite:41 4iimetralbrilx; t.r0011tat, tm,i .e$
:uPhrr:Pllehrrvailist".tered,siftetedtpr.4412abnelorarP ri,row"Itter"famblimatitall ..14-5.prarrs5rit rot
NwltIel.m61:447e:le
imion. the very beNstis saber
lie paireolved the hidisess whirl rii %kb work
.006.441.
•
•
ff"-
v. 4