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mingled with the roar and chafe of the waters of the sea. Shortly after, they saw the huntsman, still closely pressed by the stranger. The next moment, dogs, horses, and riders were lost to view, behind a curve of the tortuous and stony course of the ravine, all hurrying onward and downward, with whirlwind speed, as if to bury themselves in the waves of the ocean.

Our adventurers, persevering in their descent, suddenly turned a projecting rock, and came in view of a strip of strand, running promontory-like, into the sea: this they soon gained. Daniel, the huntsman, lay on this back upon it; his horse not to be seen. His dogs were squatted around him, each holding a fragment of bone between his teeth. The stranger sat still in his saddle, as if intensely oberving the prostrate man. The woman who had appeared to Squire Hogan on the cliffs brow stood on a rock amid the shallow breakers which rippled over the edge of the neck of strand.

As the explorers approached this group, the unknown horseman glanced towards them, took off his cap, waved it, and said, "Let no man claim Catherine Hogan's hand till I come to woo it. I have hunted for her; won her; and she is mine.'

Those of Catherine's lovers who heard this speech were not chickenhearted fellows. They resolved to ascertain who was the dictatorial speaker. Their friend, Squire Hogan, appeared in view, having nearly completed, at his cautious leisure, the descent to the sea's level, after them; and they first approached him, momentarily turning their backs on the object of their interest, for the purpose of consulting and enlisting him in a common plan of operations. After some discourse with the good Squire, and when he and they would have confronted the unknown horseman, no human form but that of sulky Daniel was visible on the patch of strand; and there he lay, stretched at his length, and still apparently insensible.

To him their attention became directed. They found him covered with blood, and seemingly a corpse. His dogs continued to couch around him, holding bones between their grinning teeth; and they snarled fiercely when the new comers approached them.

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"and not one of the dogs but holds a human bone between his jaws!"

The prostrate huntsman opened his eyes, and glared fearfully around him. "What has happened to you, Daniel?" questioned the Squire.

Daniel's head turned in the direction of the voice, and he seemed to recognise the speaker.

"Is he gone?" he asked faintly. "Is who gone? for whom do you inquire?"

"The masther's sperit -the sperit of the murthered man-the man that I murthered and buried in this sand, twenty years ago!"

Amid exclamations of surprise and horror from all who heard him, the huntsman gained, for a moment, more perfect power of observation. He looked from one to another of the group around him; then most ghastlily at the dogs; and then, closing his eyes, and shuddering, continued to speak in snatches.

"Ay, and it was a cruel murther. I have never slept a night's sleep since I did it. And every dog of the pack brought me one of his bones to-day. I will hide it no longer. I will own it to the world, and suffer for it. His sperit drove me before him to the spot where I had buried his broken body, afther I had tumbled him over the cliff-yes, buried it, as deep as I could dig. Twenty years passed away, and he came to chase me to his unblessed grave; and at the sight of it, my horse tossed me out of my saddle, and my own accursed bones are broken this day, and so I have half my punishment. Did I see the witch near me, here, a while ago I did; an' the wathers o' the sey gave her up, alive, to be a witness against me. For, when I was burying him, this day twenty years, I spied her watching me; and I ran afther her, and saized her, and pitched her far into the waves; but now she is come to hang me. Let her. I will tell all-all-of my own accord; I will; and swing high for the deed."

He was conveyed to the Squire's house; and in his presence, and that of other magistrates, made a more ample confession. He had been tempted to commit the murder under the following circumstances:

The mother of his old master received under her protection a friendless and "By the blessed light!" exclaimed a pennyless orphan girl of low birth. the Squire, "this is part of a man's The young huntsman loved her to disskull that Ranger has his teeth traction; and his ardours were seemthrough !" ingly returned, until the Squire, then a "It is," answered Harry Walshe; minor, became his successful rival, se

ducing, under a promise of marriage at his mother's death, his fickle mistress. Rage, hatred, loathing took possession of Daniel's heart; he could have beaten out the brains of his young master with the loaded end of his hunting whip; and his amiable feelings were not added to, when, upon a day that he was expostulating, alone, with the estranged object of his affections, the Squire suddenly rushed upon him, snatched that identical whip from his hands, and energetically laid it across his own shoulders.

The Squire's mother died. The Squire cast off his mistress, and married a wealthy wife. It was now the turn of the depraved, bad-hearted, and forsaken girl, to look for her revenge. Upon certain conditions, she offered herself, "soul and body," and without the trouble of a marriage, to her old lover. Daniel's eager passion for her, and his deep detestation of her undoer, had scarce abated. He felt sorely tempted, but hesitated. The girl threw herself in his way, from time to time; refired him; and in almost a year subsequent to the first attempt to make him a murderer, he was one, nay, a double one; for, a few days after he had dragged his master off his horse, and hurled him down the cliff, he placed in his tempter's arms, on the understanding that she was to destroy it, the only child of his victim. But, even in the disappointment of his feverish dream of passion, he had a foretaste of the punishment due to his crime. From the moment he committed to her the helpless infant, she so much detested, he had never seen the authoress of his ruin; and his belief was, that, after having murdered "the child of days," she had put an end to her own existence.

A few hours following his confession, the huntsman died.

Whether or no the gentle Catherine shared the popular belief that she had been hunted for, and won by, and was doomed to become a spectre's bride, is not clearly ascertainable. True it is, that her cheek faded, that her eye grew dull, and that the smile of contented pleasure forsook her moistly-red lip, now no longer red nor moist. But these changes may as well be accounted for on less supernatural grounds. Her military adorer still continued absent and silent; he who had so often vowed himself away into wordless sighs, nay, tears, under the big effort to define how much he loved her, and whose only hesitation to declare himself to her

father, had always assumed the shape of a fear of being regarded as a speculating fortune-hunter; when, at a glance, it could be ascertained that he was almost an unfriended adventurer, courting the hand of a wealthy heiress.

As to good Squire Hogan, he contrived, or, perhaps, rather tried to laugh at the whole thing; vainly calling it a very good hoax; "a choice one, by Jove!" just to save himself the trouble of trying to unravel it; or else to hide his half-felt ignorance on the subject. Meantime he got some cause to laugh a little less than usual. Ejectments were served upon his estate, in the name of the lost son of the man whom he had succeeded in it. And Squire Hogan only strove to laugh the more; and to affect that he considered the claim as an uncommonly good attempt at "a capital hoax!" practised upon him by some unknown persons whom, on some past occasion, he must have outwitted gloriously;" but it was a poor attempt at mirth, and he saw that Catherine, as well as himself, felt that it was.

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In fact, he spent many hours alone, mourning for his beloved child, and taxing his brains to shield her from probable and verging misfortune. And a brilliant thought came into his head.

Would it not be a happy, as well as an exceedingly clever thing, to dispose of Catherine, before the trial at law, grounded upon the ejectments, should commence, and while the matter was little suspected, to one or other of her ardent admirers at the club-dinner in Dublin; to, in fact Ned O'Brien, or George Dempsey, or Mick Driscoll; or, above all to Harry Walshe? And the wise father made the attempt, duly four times in succession; and learned, thereby, that the serving of the ejectments was more generally known than he had imagined.

Still he tried to laugh, however; until one morning, when his boisterousness ended in sudden tears, as he cast his head on Catherine's shoulder, and said:-"Oh, Kate, Kate! what is to become of you?-I think I can bear poverty, but you!"

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the persevering neglect of her lover, and her tenderly-beloved, upon no other grounds than those of her approaching poverty. Oh, that was a heart-cutting thought!

The day upon which the poor Squire must necessarily start from the country to attend the trial in Dublin, arrived; and he commenced his journey with another magnificent conception in his head; to eke out which, he carried in his pocket, without her knowledge, a miniature of his daughter Catherine. And with this miniature, and a note expressive of his willingness to compromise the matter by a marriage, he called on the new claimant for his squireship, the evening of his arrival in the metropolis. But, having retired to his own town-house long before he could have thought it possible that his note had received a leisurely reading, he received back the miniature with a technical epistle from his rival's attorney, stating that no compromise could be entered into; that the heir-at-law was determined to accept nothing which the law should not decide to be his right; and, adding that any attempts to see the young gentleman would prove unavailing, while they would be felt to be intrusive; inasmuch as, in cautious provision against a failure in his attempt to establish his claim, he had invariably concealed his person, even from his legal advisers.

This was the first really serious blow our Squire received. Hitherto he had courageously depended on his own innate cleverness to outwit the coming storm; now, within a few hours of the trial which was to determine his fate, he acknowledged himself without a resource or an expedient, beyond patience to attend to the grave proceeding, sit it out, and endeavour to comprehend it.

To beguile the remainder of his sad evening, after receiving the attorney's communication, he repaired to his clubroom. He found himself cut there. Is suing, in no pleasant mood, into the streets, he encountered, by lamp-light, an individual in a red coat, whom he had hitherto considered rather as a deferential hanger-on than as an acquaintance to boast of. Now, at least, by unbending himself, he need not fear a repulse; so he warmly stretched out both his hands, received a very distant bow of recognition, and was left alone under a lamp-post.

"By Cork!" said the Squire, with a bitter laugh, "the puppy officer

thinks I am turned upside-down in the world already!"

The cause came on. Our good friend's eyes were rivetted on every person who uttered a word, upon one side or the other. The usual jollity of his counte nance changed into the most painful expression of anxiety; and when any thing witty was said by one of his Majesty's counsel, learned in the law, at which others laughed, his effort to second them was miserable to behold. And although it was a bitter cold day, the Squire constantly wiped the perspiration from his forehead and face; chewing between whiles, a scrap of a quill which he had almost unconsciously picked off his seat.

The depositions, on his death-bed, of Daniel the huntsman, were tendered against him. They established the fact of the wretched self-accuser having kidnapped the heir of his then master, and handed the infant to his partner in crime. And the first living witness who appeared on the table, was that witch, supposed to have been long dead, even by Daniel himself. She swore that she intended to destroy the babe; that, however, having got it into her arms, she relented of her purpose, and gave it, with a bribe, to a strange woman, in a distant district, to expose for her on the high road. Next came the woman alluded to, and she proved that she had followed the directions of her employer, and afterwards watched, unseen, until an elderly lady of her neighbourhood, passing by with a servant, picked up the little unfortunate. And, lastly, the aforesaid elderly lady, who, by the way, had endured some little scandal, at the time, for her act of Christian charity, corroborated this person's testimony; and further deposed that she had carefully brought up, on limited means, until the day she procured him a commission in his Majesty's service, the plaintiff in the case at issue. Not a tittle of evidence, in contradiction to that stated, was offered by the defendant; and the only link of the chain of proof submitted by the heir-at-law, which the Squire's counsel energetically sought to cut through, was that created by the first witness. On her cross-examination, it was ingeniously attempted to be impressed on the minds of the jury, that no reliance could be placed upon the oath of a depraved creature like her; that she had really made away with the infant, according to her original intention; and that the one she had offered for exposure, must have

in; and the person who had pocketed the watch came forward and explained himself-he was the steward to the lord of the manor, and present to claim his

been her own, the result of her acquaintance with the son of her benevolent and ill-requited protectress. But, without pausing upon details, we shall only say, that during the trial, sound confir-herriot." The sale proceeded and matory evidence of the truth of the miserable woman's assertion was supplied; and that, in fact, without hesitation, the jury found for the plaintiff. Squire Hogan's look of consternation, when he heard the verdict, was pitiable. For a moment he bent down his head and wiped his forehead with his moist handkerchief. Then, with a wretched leer, distorting his haggard countenance, he started up, and muttering indistinctly, bowed low to the judge, the jury, the bar, the public, all; as if he would humbly acknowledge the superiority of every human being. After this, forgetting his hat, he was hurrying away; some one placed it in his hand; he bowed lowly, and smiled again; and, finally, forgetting the necessity to remain uncovered, he pressed it hard over his eyes and left the court; carrying with him the sincere, and, in some instances, the tearful sympathy of the spectators.

To be concluded in our next.

Customs.

HARIOT, OR HERRIOT.

For the Olio.

This custom, derived from two Saxon words, is a claim made of the best beast a tenant has at the hour of his death, by the lord of the manor. It consists in an understood agreement between the parties, and is, consequently, exacted in the most exemplary way. In some instances, however, where the parties are not completely off-hand in making their claim, the survivors turn the tables upon them, to the disparagement of the manorial interest; for, whatever beast or implement the hand is laid on, or holds first, that identical beast or implement is the "herriot," which in value ought to be 301. An auctioneer, for instance, was selling off the effects of a deceased person, and the sale was proceeding with the usual plan; when, on a sudden, a person entered the room, and looking at a gold watch, caught it up and put it into his pocket. The auctioneer, stopping his own tonguewatch, which was going, going, going. for the last time, said, "Stop thief!" at the same time descending from the table on which he was mounted. The door was shut to keep all in who were

the matter was adjusted. On another occasion, a man entered the farm-yard at the decease of the owner of a fine stack of wheat, and claimed his herriot. The representative, who was with the claimant, asked him if he persisted in having the wheat. The claimant replied in the affirmative, and laid his hand on the outside of a sheaf. "Just so," said the representative, and, to the claimant's utter surprise, he was necessitated to be satisfied with his choice, by having the identical sheaf upon which he had laid his hand, but no more, for his herriot. On another occasion, a man entered the stable to make his claim for the lord of the manor: in his eagerness to possess the best horse on the premises of the deceased, he inquired of a carter, as he eyed a horse, "if this was the best horse?"-" For certain it be," said the carter, "excepting our young master's Dick, which be a desperate good one-and can't be matched in the country for his running tricks."

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Well, then, my good fellow," said the claimant," shew me Dick, as you say he's such a good goer." The carter entered another stable, and the claimant followed him. Dick was, sure enough, a "real good one;" but the claimant was off his guard by Dick's cropping his ears, and inclining to take a bite, turning round in a sportive attitude"None of your nonsense with me, master Dick," said the claimant, inwardly pleased that he had escaped an unwelcome grip " I'll soon cure you of your vicious habits ;" and catching the halter, instead of laying his hand on Dick, he was obliged to walk away with the halter for his herriot, ready to suspend himself with it on the next tree he passed. The last instance which I mention was that of a steward and his friend arriving at an inn from a distance to claim herriot. The survivor was a comely young woman. The applicant an elderly but kind-hearted man. He laid his hand on her favourite market palfrey. She was so much grieved at the choice, that her pathetic appeals succeeded in the steward's paying the value of the herriot out of his own pocket. In short, he was in love with her at first sight. Nature had blest her with a pretty cast in her eye, a pair of rosy cheeks, an artless manner of expression and "a' that." The steward,

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A REAL JACK TAR.-A sailor, last Sunday, hailed the cad of an omnibus.

He was ushered inside with the utmost dispatch. But ere the vehicle had arrived at King's Cross, he cried, "Avast there!" and requested to be permitted, as he got out, to ride with the steersman (the driver). "De!" said Jack, as if recollecting himself, "it is too bad in me to have the effrontery to sail in the cabin with the Cap'n's friends I'm for the deck;" and throwing half a crown to the cad, he jumped outside, and literally crawled forward till he was seated triumphantly by the side of the driver, quite in his element. *

A BRAGGING DISTRICT. In the neighbourhood of Towcester and Brackley the name of Braggins is so general, that it catches the eye of the traveller in every turn. From Amos Braggins to Zachariah Braggins, every letter of the alphabet appears to be in requisition. Hence it is called the "Bragging District."

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THE JONES'S. So many travellers are engaged in their journey of the name of Jones, that with the commercial gentlemen they find it necessary to distinguish them by appellatives, such as Tall Jones-Gentleman JonesB-k-d Jones-Little Jack JonesFat Dick Jones-Shonny Shones, &c. RICE GLUE.-An elegant cement may be made from rice flour, which is at present used for that purpose in China and Japan. It is only necessary to mix the rice-flour intimately with cold water, and gently simmer it over a fire, when it readily forms a delicate and durable cement, not only answering all the purposes of common paste, but admirably adapted for joining together paper, cards, &c in forming the various beautiful and tasteful ornaments which aftords much employment and amusement to the ladies. When made of the con

sistence of plaster clay, models, busts, bas relievos, &c. may be formed of it, and the articles, when dry, are susceptible of high polish and very durable. ·

SINGULAR INSTINCT OF THE SERPENT. The beautiful Anaconda now exhibiting at Peale's Museum, is perhaps the most gentle of its tribe; and nightly excites great interest by the attachment it evinces to its master, which can only be exceeded by its deep sense of unmerited wrongs-Of this latter he has lately given a most striking proof. The other evening, a gentleman, either wantonly, or for want of thought, struck him with the ferule of his umbrella on the back, making some remarks at the time, and then proceeded to the other end of the room. The serpent became so agitated as to excite its keeper's attention, but still perfectly harmless; appearing to have more the appearance of terror than revenge. After a while the offending party returned, and was again making some remarks, when the anaconda recognising his voice, made a spring direct for his face, which, however, he happily missed, and was then as gentle as ever.

What makes the above the more remarkable is, that the animal was blind at the time, from some of the last years' skin obstructing its vision ;

so that it must have discovered its adversary solely by the sound of his voice.

New York Traveller.

THE WOODEN LEG.-A lady and her son were standing in the church of St. Eustache, when the latter, seeing a soldier who had suffered amputation, exclaimed, "Oh! mother, do you see that gentleman without a leg!"-" My son,' replied the mother, "do you not perceive that he wears it in his buttonhole?" The soldier was "decorated."

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THE SUBLIME.-Our German friends are in the habit of publicly announcing the demise of their near relatives with a tribute to their memory. In how poetical a fashion this is sometimes done, take the following,-which we have pilfered from a Rhenish paper, in proof:"The inmost feelings of my adored husband went to sleep, quietly and happily, on the 16th instant. The extent of my suffering none know better than myself; nor my present condition, nor the stagnation of business,-much less the dead weight, which altogether strains my loins. He, the dear departed, Frederick M-, was my husband, every inch of him; he was partner in all the afflic tions of life with myself; and I wish, therefore, every one as speedy and

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