Miners recorder and spy in the west. (Auraria, Lumpkin County, Georgia) 18??-????, April 19, 1834, Image 1

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VOL 11. a & ajgjfe An Independent Republican Newspaper, Published at Auraria, Lumpkin County, Georgia, devoted to the preservation of the Union, and Sovereignty of the States. The sycophant of no Party—the slanderer of no Individual—the friend of Jacßson. ► rvntiSHED evert faturday Monxixd, By JI. H. GATHKIGiIT. Terms—Three Dollars per annum when paid in ad vance or nt four dollars, if not paid until the end of •.lie year. No paper will bo discontinued, but at the option of '•the Editor, to any subscriber in arrears. Advertisements and Job Work will be executed at the customary prices. Communications to the Editors must be post’naiuto entitle them to attention. No subscription received for less than a year. R EXECUTORS AND ADMINISTRATORS’ DUTY Notice to Debtors ami Creditors to be publishep I six weeks.—Prince’s Digest, page 157. All intended Sales of goods and chatties, belonging to testators or intestates goods and chatties, shall be published in two or more public places in the parish fcoiztdt/J where such effects are to be sold, and in the gazette, at least forty days before the day of such in tended sale.— ibid 151. All sales to be between the hours of ten and four o’clock, and if continued from day to day. notice to bo given thereof on the first day of sale. — ibhl 167. •Sales ot real properly to be on the first Tuesday in the mouth, nt the place of public sales,after sixty days publication.—l7l. Application for Letters of Dismission published six months.— ibid 168. ESTRAYS. To be advertised by the Clerk of the Inferior Court SHERIFFS That advertise with us are notified that to make •heir sales legal, those for April must appear on the first day of March. t For May, by the fifth of April. For June, by the third day of May. For July, by the thirty-first day of May. For August, by the fifth day of July. For September, by the second day of Angus;. For October by the sixth day of September. For November, by the fourth day of October. For December, by the first day of November “ persons indebted to the Intelligence! are notified that we will receive in payment. Bills of any denomi nation on any ofthe solvent Banks of this State. Apropos a.t s /’or/>u6/u/tiug a new weekly Newspaper, at Auraria Georgia, to be entitled TUB MINERS RECOBBER AXD SPY IN THE WEST. In the publication of this Paper, th ? Editor will from ime to time, furnish the public with all the informa tion be may be enabled to procure, in relation to the progress of the Mines- In addition to which, he will • hurtly be furnished with n series ot Essays, written by l.iterarv Gentlemen, who have taken n Geological view of this country, in which will In- shewn the com plete arrangement ofthe different Strata of earthsnnd rocks, forming this interesting section <>l country. and in what kind Gold is most usually found. 1 lie Edi tor will endeavor at all titnes to prm ti c from Mine ralogists. literary men and practical observers, such information, as will keep up a Constant investigation ol the various minerals found in this country. In the way of Miscellaneous matter, he will make the best selections in his power both of a domestic ah foreign nature A« regards the political course of this paper, the Editor will endeavor to pursue a liberal course keep ing at nli limes his columns open to the discussion o political subjects, which are or may be of interest to the country. In relation to bis own political opinions, hr con aiders th- m to be such ns have been maintaine.i in the South-Tit Stales, from the adoption id the Federal Constitution down to the present time. He believes that Federal encroachments, should be guarded ng-iinst with vlgilence nn«l repelled with promptness Yet. however, in contending for the Rights ot the State*, hr rnnnot go totheextraordinary and danger ous extent ol some of the politicians in a sister Mate ; because he believes it would ultimately end tn the de struction ofthe government and all its rights His opinions however he considers as nothing more than the opinions of any other individual, he will therefore endeavor to net the part of n faithful Jour nalist without being subservient to the views ot any party, leaving bis paper ofM-n to the investigation of truth, aud all interesting subjects by all. The first number ot this paper will appear in a few weeks. Terms—Three dollars per annum payable in ad vance er Four DOLLARS at the expiartion of the year. Advertising at the usual rates. Editors of other papers are requested to give the above a few insertion* MILTON H. G ATI! RIGHT, feb 22 51 Prospectus OF THE WESTERN tIERILD Published at .Auraria. Lumpkin County Ga., BY HOLT A. JONES Tuts Gazetll. .i«>m, --ven I. .-sierred by pur chase to the undersigned, will in future be conducted by them conjointly as Editors and Proprietors. Th* reasons which have impelled them to an undertak- I in- at once so laborious and responaihle. as the con ■ duct of a public Journal, in connection with th- ir pro I fessional avocations, may be read in the present low ering aspect of the political horizon, produced b. i the fearful prevalence ot the doctrines at the I’rv'i I dents ill-starred Proclamation —doctrines at war win j the genius and spirit of our Government—in their i nature, foreign to its theory—in their tendency, de-1 structive to its character as a confederated republic I bv overturning the rights and sovrieign’y of th States which compose it. and in their final end am., effect, baleful to the liberties ofthe people. To contribute sHir feeble aid in the great work oi | producing a conformity in the practices of the Feder-1 at Government, to its’tnie and original theory—-e ' restraining its action within its original, and w ell de fined Constitutional limits; in one .cord, to dethrone *. the misrule of revised Federalism, and to restore th< supremacy of the rejected Repuldicsni-.ru of *9S—L b-jiM up true and jenutae State rights dec’-me MINERS fjK ItEUORI>EE SPY IN THE WEST. “let there Re harmony in things ESSENTIA I. L S»ERALITT in things not essential-charity is all.” AURARIA, LUMPKIN COUNTY, GEORGIA, APRIL 19, 1834. in its primitive purity, strength and beauty, untram melled with the conditions, restrictions, limitations and refinements of the political weather-cocks of the present day—these may be numbered among the ob jects, to the accomplishment of which, our humble exertions shall be devoted, with a zeal and we trust, a sincerity not unbecoming their importance. Nurtured and brought upas we have been, in the admonition of the Republican State Rights doctrine —in a contest in w hich their preservation is sought on the one hand by the lovers of Constitutional Lib erty, and threatened on the other by the renewed as saults of re-anitnated Federalism, it may be easily conjectured on which side we are to be found. We aspire to belong to the Republican State Rights Party, professing such principles as sustained the Fathers of that faith in ’9B and ’99—as bore that parly in Geor gia triumphant, through the political conflicts of'2s and 26. and to which it has not proved recreant in ’32 and’33 VVe claim to be disciples of the School of Jefferson, as taught in the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions. But professions of repuhlicrnisra have become mere cant, when every party lays claims to that title, from the Union L/emocratic Republican par ity of Georgia, tip to the great National Republican ■party of the Union, and hack to the remnant ot the party which rejoiced in the subsequent election ot a Sedition law Judge, as the triumph of the democratic Republican party of New England! Equally vague is the pretence to belong to the State Rights Parly, since many of those who profess to be State Rights adher ents, deny to the States all other rights, but those of remonstrance and submission. Still more uncertain • s the profession of belonging to the Jeffersonian 'School, since many who pretend to be followers of that i’atriot, publish to the world, the. preposterous, the humiliating notion, that the labours of his whole life were intended to prove that the States have only the right of petitioning for a redress of grievances--©! remonstrating against unconstitutional Federal Legis lation, and finally “when all other remedies fait” of - protesting !! ! To prove that our profes sions are not of this character, let thn columnsol the Herald oe our witness. The ears ofthe people have of late been drummed almost to deafness with the continued and popular cry of Union! Union 11 Union !!! VVe too profess, not emptily, to love aud venerate the Union, and to beas highly sensible of its incalculable value and im, portance, as those who are most loud and boistersous jin their clamours. But we seek to have a. Union, in j truth and indeed; a Un-on of States in its pristine j beauty and simplicity; in its original bealihftil vigour [ anti purity We would besparedto pan-' of viewing ! our own native Georgia, in whose bosom we have J been cherished; upon the frilits of whose soil we have j tifc.'n reared; in whose bomiliful institutions, we have been educated ; a mere speck upon the map of a great i consolidated empire, stripped of her ancient rights, I and disrobed of her prcmeval sovereignty, by the a gent she had helped to create; proud as we are, and as we have reason to be of her name aud of her peo ple-ardent as are our affections for her, sooner let it be written that “she was, but is no more.” We would have her as ofrightshe should tie. asovereign member—an integral’part of a great contededated Re public. which shall continue the pride ofthe world— the hope of Freedom-whose living principle shall manifest itself, n<H in the pomp and splendour of an immense and ail controlling central power; but in the happiness and prosperity ot every one., even the least ot its mertibers. It shall be our purpose to make the Hera d wor thy the perusal of all classes of readers- -ot those who delight in the pleasure of romance aud the ‘ Uu-ic of Poetry”—of those who prefer to pursue the. drlightlul paths of historic or of scientific research.--of those whose business it is to delve in “mother earth," in pursuit of her glitteiiugtre.asu-es. as well as of those who are connected, either through choice, ofnece ssi tv. with the agitating, political contro verc.ies ot tne day. Iflhe increase of patr-nage which we seek, w ill justify the measure, the Herald will be enlarged so soon as the malerals for that -nrnose. can be pro cured. The terms of its publication remain unchanged, be ing S3OO per annum in advance, or S4OO, at the end of the year. Our press nnd matei’als are ot that description, that will enable us toexijciit- with neatness and despatch all Joliand Advertising busiiH -s with which we may be favored. HINES HOLT Jim’r. \\ li.l.iAM E. JONES, PROSP E C T U S or the COMPLETE PEiiloub AL L.BBARY. Forty-eight pages weekly —nearly uv<-tliousai I five hundred octavo pages in a yter, for live d-.Hars, lur I iiisliiug annually select readii g equal to fiity volumes | of coiumon size. The Library will contain n-aiiy all the new works -of merit as they appear, viz : V--vag-s mid Travels ; j History ; iii.rgnq-hy I rfelect Mem >ir s ; the approved j European Annals; Adventures; Tales at unexcen- I tionabie character, «ki. &c i l ire Complete Periodical Lit-rary. will be found I iudispensible to all lovers ot good reading in town or i country. Every number will contain forty-eight pa l ges, in a size expressly adapted tor binding when the I' book is completed; printed with type so large as not to fatiguethe weakest eye. Its immense size will en able the Editor to crowd any common sized bookin two numtiers, treq-ieutly into one New works will tt is be tie-patched as they arrive from Europe, and saiit off to its patrons The subscriber in Missouri will be brought a* it were to the very fountain ot lite rature. Works printed in this Library will Le furnish ! *d to him. when without it, he would be wholly un»- I ble to procure them A book that will cost us six ■ dollars to import, can be re-printed and distributedto j subscribers, owing to our |-ecaliar facilities, fol about I twenty or thirty cents, with the important addition of i its being fresh and new. We will give t early two thousand five hundred pa annually, equal to titty common sized book- ' — Iverj work published in the Library will be complete in -tseif. A T-tle Pag- 1 will be given in each voiurr.e, I so '.hat the subscriber, if be pleases.mav sell or give it away with- ut injury to any of the others ; or it may I be boHtid up at the pleasure ofthe subscriber. This work presents an extraordinary feature, tin I known to ary other periodical in the country. The ' Mibacription price may be considered a mere loan tor the year, as the work at the year’s enJ. will sell for ! cost, and in many parts of the United St-tes it wilt I bring double its original cost to the -übscri >er. i The works published in the Complete Periodical ’ Library, will beet th* highest character, both as re ! g.trd» the author and hi- subject New works ot ap- I proved merit, will be sent on’ to the Editor by every | arrival from Europe, giving fam an unlimited field to I select from, while care will be taken to reave his j publication equal to any thing of the kind published j in America The first number will be isssrdl on the Sth of May ■next, and regularly e-ery Wednesday thereafter, se l cured in handsome printed covers and on fine white pener, at $5 per annum, payable in adv ante. Clubx AND remitting S2O, vvill be supplied with five copies for thatsutn ; agents at the same rate. Address T K. GREENBANK. No. 9. Franklin Place, Phila. N. B. The usual exchange to Editors who advertise University of Georgia, f a ■ HE next College session wili commence on the 16th January, 1834. For admission into tfie Freshman Class, a candidate must have a correct ! knowledge ®f Cicero’s O'atrnns. Virgil, John and Acts in the Greek Testament, Graeca Minora or Ja cob’s Greek Reader, English Grammer, and Geog raphy, and be well acquainted with Arithmatic. STUDIES OF THE FRESHMAN CLASS. Ist Term, to iVor.—Livy. Grsca Majora, Ist vol commenced, and the French Language. <2d Term, from Jan. to April—\Ary, Graeca, Majo ra, Ist vol. and French id Term. April to Aug —Livy and Graeca Majora, Ist Vol. concluded, French continued, and Day’s, Al gebra, through Ratio and Proportion. STUDIES OF THE SOPHOMORE CLASS. Lsf Term, Aug. to iVor —Hbrscc and Graeca Ma iora, 2d vol. commenced. Algebra concluded, and three books of Geometry, (Playfair s Euclid,) 2d Term. Jan. to April.—Graeca Majora, 2d vm continued; Horace and Geometry concluded, and Jamieson’s Rhetoric. 3d Term, April to Jag.—Graeca Majors. *d vol. concluded; Modern Languages, Plain Trigonometry, Mensuration, Surveying, Botany, and lylersHis- The present Junior Class have studied in addition to the above, the first book of Cicero de Oratore, the first book of Homer’s Iliad, Blair’s Lectures, and Olmsteads Mechanic’s in part. Though the classes regularly attend to French ut rinethe Freshman and Sophomore years, yet it is no made an indispensable requisite for admission into any of the classes. Provision is made for those who en ter without a knowledge of French, to study that language, for which there is no additional charge ot tuition. r . . Those who desire it will have opportunity ot study ing Hebrew. Spanish, German, and Italian withoti anv additional charges. f Phe rates of tuition are S3B per annum, payable halfyearly in advance. Board can be obtained in respectable families at from sßto $lO per month. By order of the faculty, # WM. L. MITCHELL. Sec ry. November 16, 1833—42. NOTICE. A LL persons who are indebted to the Magistrates •U. and Constables of this district for costs, on Notes and Accounts, placed in their hands for collection are requested to come forward and settle the same, o u r w!se executions will be issued, indiscnmmatclv against all who disregard this notice, within one month. JAMES CANTRELL, j. r. TAMES PRATER. J. r. HEDGEM AN GREEN, l. c. ABEL GINNING 1.AM.1. c. Anri? ■). —7 ' "notice. , -W wj U.L he « o-j to the highest bider at I oadir;’- v’ ? i-'--rd 1 -tmpk'.n co’tniv, Georgia, on Sat-i'T y ! lb,-Hurd davofM-y next, all ihe personal properivof I Mermn H. Snow, late of a aid county, decea“ed; con o-;tinn <-t House hold and kitchen firm'nre, a saddle Horse, a Gi« and harness -.nth other articles too lem ons to mention. Terms of sale made h ; o«n on the dav H 4 RVEV SMALL, Adm r. SUSAN XAH E.SNOW.Adinr’x. April sth, — 7—tds ~FOK SALE. FWIIJE "übscriber offers for sale .a Lot in the I S Town of Ed«hvv ah, with a House fifty by < Iwentv-four feet, nearly finished. This Lot is in an < 1 i i?ible part of the town, on the principal steet; the ! House is admirably calculated for a Store. A LSO, A Lot «epara’ed from the public square only by a lot ofsixtv fact. The Lot fronts --n both the principal streets running painW fhiongh tlie t<»wn. and con vonient to the p-iblicSprint’. On this lot there is a H-hi-o, twenty by twenty-four, intended f--r a Kitchen, ■i tjotnl srnokc-houst* and other improvements. Tkrms—Anver all of this propertv will be exthane ' p<] for \»*gro properly, nr f»fd<lon a credit of six monl Poss H-s-inn will be given -,f the Lot first mett'io----', ' immediately of the other in thirty dav s afier_its -al-. | ■’ HOWELL Ct'Bß. I April 5.—7 —ls. Tl’ Il MA V AV ALTJI A E T., JkTTOB.TJE'E’ AT Z.AW. HAS h ented himself at Cedar Town, Paulding conniv, and w ill attend to any business in the h e of ilia pn-feasion, that mav h--entrusted tohis care. Ad<b»—=, CedarTowit, Paulding County, Georgia. . April 12. —B—if.8—if. i STEPfIE.X DOOGLAS <R\NE, ATTORXEI AT LA AV. HAVING removed to Dahl- hnega, Lumpkin coun ty, now tenders his profi s-ional services to the ! public, and will pradu e in all the c--unttes of the Che ’ rok*eCircuit; ami Carroll,Cainplreil, DeKa'b, Hall and • counties. Having been engaged far three years in gold mining, I ho will (assisted l»v Mr. Georges. Moody, from North Carolina) oct as agent in the examination, and -ale of 1 gold lots. Letters upon either branch of ’he above business, i addressed to me, will be promptly and lu-'.hfitlly alttn i ded to. i April s.—7—ts. NOTICE. ■" hereby farwnrn all persons from tradingfor a Note ■, of Hand given by me to James Burn*, some tune the )a-t of May or first of June, 1833, for ninety-five dollars, on demand. lam deter mined not to pay 6, as the said note was illegally obtain-d. ' WILLIAM WHITAKER. April s.—7—ts. FOR SALE, / C 4 OLD LOT No. four hundred end eighty W third district of the third section of originr-Hy Cherokee enuntv. Pumpkin Vine creek run-through , this Lot near its centre. It i* ««ud to contain Gold. Applx to N. H- JUHAN Acex-r. i I Feb 22—k— at Milledgdtille. I ATTORNEY AT LAW. Cherokee Court House, Georgia, IS now prepared to attend to any professional busi siness entrusted to him. He tenders his thanks to those persons w ho have, so liberally patronized him in the Courts where lie has practiced. Communications to ensure attention, must come post-pdid- April 5.-7—ts. JOHN HENRY LUMPKIN. ATTORNEY AT LAIV HAVING determined on a permanent location a Livingston, in Floydcounty, respectfully ten ders his professional services to his fellow-citizens.— He will attend the Courts in the several counties o. the Cherokee Circuit;and all Executions arid other business confided to him by Merchants and per sons at a distance, will receive his prohlpt and undi vided attention; and for reference he most respectiul tv refers his fellow citizens to Gen. Thomas Glascock, of Aagusta, Col. Hunter and Col. Fannin, of Savan nah. March 8 r 56 CASH FOR CARPENTERS? WILL be let to the lowest bidder in the town of Elijay, Gilmer county, on the first Tuesday in June next} the building ofa Wooden Jail in said town, a plan ofwhich may be seen at the Clerk’s office ol the Court of Ordinary. The payments to be made far the work, and the necessary obligation from the undertak er for its faithful execution, will be made known on the da v of letting. CORNELIUS COOPER, J. L c. RALPH SMITH, j. i. c. B. M. GRIFFETH, J. i. p. April 12.8 —t<l. All persons indebted to the estate of Morgan li. Snow deceased, are requested to come forward, and make pavment immediately, or tbeii notes & accounts will be placed in the hands of an officer tor collection. Also all persons haviag demands against t.ie estate of Morgan H. Snow deceased are requested, to present them to us, according to the node pointed out m the staiuie, in such cases made and provided. Also, all persons indebteb to the late firm of Snow & Tatum, will take notice that, the same must be set tled with us. IIARVY SM ALL Admr. SUSANNAH E. SNOW Admix. April 12 9-ts.? etv THS WIFE. “ She Jlwng her white arms round him—tnouart all That this poor !>ea>t can cling to." I COL LI) have Rtermn’d misfortune’s tide, Ard borne the rich one’s sncfei ; Ibive brav’d the haughty glance of prloO. Nor shed a single tear; I could have smi’d on every bldw From Lifo’s full quiver llirown, \\ bile I mifilit gize on thee, and know I would not tie alone. I could—l think, I could, have brook’d E’en for a lime, that thou Upon niy fading face had look’d With less of love than now; ; For then, I should a< least have felt The sweet hope still mv own, To win thee back —and whilst tbou dwelt On earth, not been alone ! But thus tn see, from day to day, ’t hy b iahl’ning eye and cheek, And iiutch thv life sands waste away Unniiniher’d slowly, meek; — To meet thv smileot tenderness, And catch the treble tone Os kindness, ever breathed to bless, Amt feel, I'll be alone. To m ira thi st re ng th each hour decay, And l el thv hopes grow .-trotiffer, As tilled with heaven-ward Irus', they say, Earth may not claim thee longer: Nay,dearest ! ’listootnnch—this heart Must break when thou art gone; It must not be, we may not part, I c odd not live alone. A thrilling Pa^wa^e—the Dea Hi There is a powerful article in the last num ber of the American Mag izine, under the title ot “ Passages* in lhe Life of Mary Stuart.” Unable to find space for the whole of it m mtr columns, we cannot refrain from giving- the following extract, which, we priGeivp, basal ready won a compliment from lhe iNew York American. 'I tie til-fated Chasiclar, having lirsi confessed Ins love to lhe object of if, and bc< n indignantly dismt.-tsed, iba scene is thus conrinm-d. An hour In id s moi !•/ elapsed, before the hgh 8 were extinguished throughout the vault* ed halls of Holyrood; the guards were posted for the night, the officers had gone their rounds, the ladies ofthe myal circle were di<mi--*ed. and all was darkness and silence. In Mary’s chamber a single Limp wa- burning in a small recess, before a beautifully ex* coied piinling ot'ilye v rgin, but the light was not -off -u-nt to penetrate the obscurity which re'gned in the rp/anv angles and alcoves of that irregular a > irt /teent, although liie moonbeams were adirirttcd through the open t -semen’. Her garb of ceremony laid ah?, her lovely -hap*’ s jiitdy versed by a -ingle r he " ■*(»'>•- less linen, her auburn tresses !; >'-• mg f” '!< •> - strained luxuriance, almost to er feet i io had been a creature of perfect human bcoiiv when viewed in ab ’lie pomp f ' c r -y'!' png- • .dr . she now appeared a being of supernatural love liness. Her small white feet, unsandelled, glided over the rich carpet with a grace, which a slight degree of fancy might have deemed 'he motion peculiar to the inhabitants of anoth er world. For an instant t jere she turned to her repose, she leaned nghtnst the carved mul lions of the window, and gazed pensively, and, it might be. sadly, upon the garden, where she had so lately parted frotn the unhappy youth whose life was thus embittered by that very feeling which, above all others, should have been its consolation. Withdrawing her eyes from the moonlight scend, she knelt before the lamp and the shrine which it illuminated, and ber whispered orisons arose, pure as the source from which they flowed—the prayers of a weak and humble mortal, penitent for every trivial error, breathing all confidence to Him who can alone protect or pardon; the prayers ofa queen for her numerous children, and, last and holi est of all, a woman’s prayers for her unfonu nale admirer. Yes, she prayed for Chastelar, that strength might be given to him from on high to bear the crosses ofa miserable lite, and that by divine mercy the hopeless :c,x-e might be uprooted from Ins breast. The w- rds burst passionately from her lips; her whole form quivered with the excfess of her tmotibn, . and the big tears fell like ra n from her 'iphTi: d eyes. While she was yet in the Very fiord of passion, a sigh was breathed, so blearlv audi ble, that the conviction flashed like ligb. :ug on her soul, that this most set ret prayer ae listened to by other ears than those of heaven ly ministers. Terror, rente terror, took pos session of her mind, banishing by its supi riot violence everv less engrossing idea. She snatched the lamp from its m- ho—waved it slowlv around the chamber—and there in 'he most hallowed snot of her widowed chamber, a spy upon her unguarded momeri s, stood a dark figure. Even in that moment of astonish ment and fear, as if by instinct, the beautiful instinct of purely female modesty, she snatch ed a velvet mantle from the sent on which it had been cast aside, nnd veiled her person even before she Oh God! it is de CiiastelarJ* 4 ‘ Sweet Queen,’ —replied the intruder— “ bright, beautiful ruler of my destinies, par don— ’’ “What ho?”—she screamed in notes of dread intensity—“a moi a moi mes Frttncbis. My guards !—Seyton—Carmichael—Flernmg will ye leave your Queen alone ’ alone w -h treachery attd black dishonor!—Villain! Slave! —” she cried, turning her flashing eyes upon him, her whole f< rm swell ng as it were wth all the fury of injured innocence— ‘ dids- thou dare to think that Mary—Mary, the wile of Francis—the anointed Queen of Scoi'-r-d, would brook thine infamous addresses V.iy, kneel not, — or I spurn thee What ho! will no one aid in mine extremity—” “Fear nought iroin me—” faltered ho wretched (.'ha-tel.tr; but with a voice hk> tat of some inspired “Fear! tmnk'si thou that I could fear a "ng, an abject coward ihi g, In-’ Hire '!—n vr, h that would exult in the mfemy of one w i .>• he pretends to love ? Fear thee—by in v, os, J if I could have feared, < ontempl must have for [ bidden it.' 1 “Nay—MarV—hear me! hear me but ono word, if that worn cost my life—” Thv life—hini—t thou ten thousand lives, they would !><• but a feather to tiio scale against ■liy monstrous villany. “What ho!—’’again j she med, stamping with impotent anger a’ ! n [ de’ay of tier rtitehdaiits—“Treason! M v guards i —Treason!” Al leiigtb the passages rang w-ih the hurried footsteps of the startled inmates nf the palace—with torch, and spear, and bran dished blades, they rushed into the apartment P a g e i sentinel, and chamberlain, ladies, with dishevelled hair, and faces hlancljed with ter ror. The Queen stood erect in the centre of I the room, pointing with one white arm bare, to the shoulder towards the wretched culprit, who with folded arms and head erect awaited his doom in unresisting silence. His naked ra . pier, with winch nlone he might have foiled the j upiittd efToris of Ins enemies, lay at Ins f-c( bis brow was while as sc Ip Uivd mar' I « id Ino less rigid, but bis eye- glared wild >od ilm tips quivered i»s though he would have spoken. The Quern, still tiiriou»at the wrong f which be had done her fame, marked the ex i pirssuih “Silence !” she cried “ Degraded! I —would’st thou meanly beg thy forfeited life. ; W <*rt thou rnv father, thou sliould’st die to-mor ■ row !—Hem e with the villain!—Bid Maitland Jelemife the warrant Ourself—Ourself will sign it—away! Chastelnr dies at day break.” i is well—” replied be calmly—“ it is well l- | love the best pronounce my dm.m. and I die happy, since I die for Mary! iVould’st thou but pitv the offender, whilo thou dost doom the offence, do Chasfelar Aould not exchange h;s shortened span of life, at J vuleut dca'h. for the brightest crown of I lirurt* ndojß. My limbs may die—my love will live L>r ever! Lead on, minions—l am in .re id to die. than ve to slay !—Mary—- ■ mtitol VI try — tiiiiik!- think hereafter upon ffrtml.r!” The gjiards named onward— ImV ®f the NO. «K