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a prey to the flames.

After they had subsided, Gill went in search of Craine, whom he found burned to a cinder. The proprietor of the heath has been apprehended.

A Shot at his Sweetheart was fired by John Humble Sharpe, a young man of 21, who was tried for it at the Norfolk Circuit on the 9th. The accused, a young carpenter, had courted and had been accepted by the prosecutrix, Sarah Lingwood. She, however, listened to other vows; the lover grew jealous, and was at length rejected. In the night after he had received his dismissal, the family of the girl's uncle with whom she lived were alarmed by the report of a gun. On examining her bedroom it was discovered that a bullet had been fired through the window, had crossed the girl's bed, close to the bottom where she lay, grazed a dress that was lying on the bed-clothes, and struck a chest of drawers beyond. Suspicion having fallen on the prisoner, he was apprehended. The prisoner's counsel admitted the fact, but denied the intent. The prisoner had, he said, no desire to harm the girl, whom he tenderly loved, but only to alarm her and induce her to return to him. The jury, after long deliberation, acquitted the prisoner.

Several shocking instances of Agrarian Crime have been mentioned in the Irish papers. At Glasslough, in the county of Monaghan, a shot was fired into the bed-room window of Mr. John Robertson, land steward to C. P. Leslie, Esq., on the night of the 10th. Arthur O'Donnel, Esq., of Pickwick Cottage, in Clare, was murdered near his own house, on the night of the 11th. He was attacked by a party of men and killed with a hatchet. The supposition was that this deed was committed by recipients of relief whom Mr. O'Donnel was wont to strike off the lists at the weekly revision by the board of the Kilrush union, of which he was one. A man was arrested on strong suspicion. There was another murder in Clare. The herdsman of Mr. Scanlon, of Fortune in that county, went out to look after some sheep, the property of his master, when he was attacked by some persons who had been lurking about the wood, and his throat cut.

Two evidences of the Low Price of Labor were brought before the magistrates. One at Bow-street on the 10th, when W. Gronnow, a journeyman shoemaker, was charged with pawning eight pairs of ladies' shoes intrusted to him for making up. He pleaded extreme distress, and said he intended to redeem the shoes that week. The prisoner's employer owned that the man was entitled to no more than 4s. 8d. for making and preparing the eight pairs of shoes. "Why," said the magistrate, "that price is only sevenpence a pair for the workman. I am not surprised to hear of so many persons pawning their employers' property, when they are paid so badly." The prisoner was fined 2s. and ordered to pay the money he had received upon the shoes within fourteen days; in default, to be imprisoned fourteen days. Being unable to pay the money, he was locked up.

On the previous day a man named Savage, a slop shirt seller, was summoned at Guildhall for 9d., the balance due to Mrs. Wallis for making three cotton shirts. When delivered, Savage found fault with them, and deferred payment. Eventually 1s. 3d. was paid instead of 2s. The alderman said he was surprised at any tradesman who only paid 8d. for making a shirt, deducting 3d. from so small a remuneration; it was disgraceful. He then ordered the money to be paid, with expenses.

Alexander Levey, a goldsmith, was tried at the Central Criminal Court on the 10th, for the Murder of his Wife. They were a quarrelsome pair: one day, while the husband, with a knife in his hand, was cooking a sweetbread, the wife came in, and, in answer to his inquiry where she had been, said she had been to a magistrate for a warrant against him. On this, with a violent exclamation, he stabbed her in the throat; she ran out of the house, while he continued eating with the knife with which he stabbed her, saying, however, he hoped she was not much hurt. She died in consequence of the wound. The defense was, that the blow had been given in the heat of passion, and the prisoner was found guilty of manslaughter only. He was sentenced to fifteen years' transportation.

On the same day, Jane Kirtland was tried for the Manslaughter of her Husband. They lived at Shadwell, and were both addicted to drinking and quarreling, in both which they indulged. Kirtland having called his wife an opprobrious name she took up a chopper, and said that if he repeated the offensive expression, she would chop him. He immediately repeated it with a still more offensive addition, and at the same time thrust his fist in her face, when she struck him on the elbow with the chopper, and inflicted a wound of which he died a few days afterward. The prisoner, when called upon for her defense, burst into tears, and said that her husband was constantly drunk, and that he was in the habit of going out all day, and leaving her and her children in a destitute state, and when he came home he would abuse her and insult her in every possible way. In a moment of anger she struck him with a chopper, but she had no intention to do him any serious injury. The jury found the prisoner Guilty, but recommended her to mercy on account of the provocation she had received. She was sentenced to be kept to hard labor in the House of Correction for six months.

A coroner's inquest was held in Southwark on the same day, respecting the death of Mrs. Mary Carpenter, an Eccentric Old Lady, of eighty-two. She had been left, by a woman who attended her, cooking a chop for her dinner; and soon afterward the neighbors were alarmed by smoke coming from the house. On breaking into her room on an upper floor, the place was found to be on fire. The flames were got under, but the old lady was burnt almost to a cinder. Mrs. Carpenter was a very singular person; she used at one time to wear dresses so that they did not reach down to her

knees. Part of her leg was exposed, but the cence, he took the basin to Guy's Hospital,

other was encased with milk-white stockings, where it was found that the coffee must have tied up with scarlet garters, the ribbons extend- contained vitriol. The girl, who was said to ing to her feet, or flying about her person. In be of weak intellect, and stood sobbing at the this extraordinary dress she would sally forth to bar, being questioned, only shook her head, and market, followed by an immense crowd of men said she had nothing to say. At a subsequent and children. For some years past she discon-hearing the magistrate decided that there was tinued these perambulations, and lived entirely sufficient evidence for a committal. shot up in her house in Moss-alley, the windows of which she had bricked up, so that no light could enter from without. Though she had considerable freehold property, she had only an occasional female attendant, and would allow no other person, but the collector of her rents, to enter her preserve.

A man named William Bennison, a workınan in an iron-foundry, has been committed to prison at Leith on suspicion of having Poisoned his Wife. The circumstances of the case are extraordinary. The scene of the murder is an old-fashioned tiled house in Leith. Bennison and his wife occupied the second floor of a On the 12th, Mrs. Eleanor Dundas Percival, house, in which also resides Alexander Milne, a lady of thirty-five, destroyed herself by poison a cripple from his infancy, well known to the at the Hope Coffee-house, in Fetter-lane, where frequenters of Leith Walk, where he sits daily, she had taken temporary apartments. A Dis- in a small cart drawn by a dog. Mrs. Bennison, tressing History transpired at the inquest. She after, it is said, partaking of some gruel, became was the daughter of a Scotch clergyman, and very ill, and died on Monday, the 22d inst. lost the countenance of her family by marrying The dog which drew the cripple's cart died a Catholic, a captain in the navy; while her about the same time; suspicion was drawn husband suffered the same penalty for marrying upon the husband, and he was apprehended, a. Protestant. About a year ago he and their and the dog's body conveyed to Surgeon's Hall infant died in the West Indies; she afterward for examination. Some weeks before, Bennison became governess in the family of Sir Colin had purchased arsenic from a neighboring drugCampbell, governor of Barbadoes; her health gist, to kill rats, as he said. When suspected he failing, she returned to England in October last, called on the druggist, and requested him and his and had since been reduced to extreme distress. wife not to mention that he had purchased the Having been turned out of a West-end hotel, arsenic. He even pressed for a written denial of and had her effects detained on account of her the fact, adding that there might be arsenic found debt contracted there, she had been received into in his wife's stomach, but he did not put it there. the apartments in Fetter-lane, partly through On the Monday previous to her death it is said the compassion of a person who resided in the he enrolled her name in a benefit society, by While there, she had written to Miss which on her death he was entitled to a sum Burdett Coutts, and, a few days before her of £6. At the prisoner's examination before death, a gentleman had called on her from that the sheriff, the report of the chemists pronounced benevolent lady, who paid up the rent she owed, the contents of the dog's stomach to have been amounting to £2 14s., and left her 10s. On metallic poison. The accused was eventually the evening above-mentioned she went out, and committed for trial. The deceased and her returned with a phial in her hand containing husband were members of the Wesleyan body, morphia, which, it appeared, she swallowed on and bore an excellent character for piety. Bengoing to bed between five and six, as she was nison professed to be extremely zealous in beafterward found in a dying state, and the empty half of religion, and was in the habit of adminphial beside her. The verdict was temporary istering its consolations to such as would accept insanity. of them. His "gifts" of extempore prayer are said to be extensive.

house.

Elias Lucas and Mary Reeder were executed at Cambridg on the th. Luca was the husband of the female convict's sister, whom they had poisoned. Morbid curiosity had at tracted from twenty to thirty thousand spectators. In the procession from the jail to the scaffold there was a great parade of county magistrates.

Louisa Hartley was charged at the Southwark Police Court, on the 16th, with an Attempt to poison her Father, who is a fellowship porter. On the previous morning she made the coffee for breakfast, on tasting it, it burnt Harley's mouth, and he charged the girl with having put poison in his cup, which she denied; he then tasted her coffee, and found it had no unpleasant flavor. His daughter then snatched away his cup, and threw the contents into a wash-hand basin. But in spite of her tears and protestations of inno

Two Men were shot at by a Gamekeeper lately in a wood belonging to Lord Wharncliffe, near Barnsley. The game on this estate is preserved by a solicitor, who resides near Wokefield, who employs Joseph Hunter as gamekeeper. Both the men were severely injured, and Cherry, one of them, sued Hunter as the author of the offense, in the Barnsley County Court, and the case was heard on the 19th instant. Cherry stated, that on the 23d February he went to see the Badsworth hounds meet at the village of Notton, and in coming down by the side of a wood he saw the defendant, who asked plaintiss and two others where the hounds were. Plaintiff told him they were in Notton-park. These men left Hunter, and walked down by the side of Noroyds-wood. They went through the wood, when one of the men who was with him

began cutting some sticks.

Plaintiff then saw | burning in the hold, when they were relieved from their perilous situation by the providential appearance of the Maria Christina, and taken on board. Previous to leaving the ill-fated brig, the hatches were opened, when the flames burst forth, and in thirty minutes afterward the mainmast fell over the side. The unfortunate crew were most kindly treated by Captain Voss. the master of the Maria Christina, who did every thing in his power for their relief.

Hunter, who was about twenty-five yards from them, coming toward them: the men began to run away, when plaintiff said to the other, "He's going to shoot us;" and before he had well delivered the words, he was shot in the arm and side, and could not run with the others. A surgeon proved that the wounds were severe and in a dangerous part of the body. The two men who were with the plaintiff corroborated his evidence. The judge said that defendant deserved to be sent to York for what he had done already. The damages might have been laid at £100 or £1000 had plaintiff been acting lawfully; but he thought plaintiff had acted with discretion in laying the damages at £10 for which he should give a verdict, and all the costs the law would allow.

A Miss Downie met, on the 4th, with an Extraordinary Death at Traquair-on-the-Tweed. She had suffered, since childhood, from severe pains in the head and deafness; her health had been gradually declining for the last three years, and in August last she was seized with most painful inflammation in the left ear, accompanied by occasional bleedings also from the ear. On the 20th of March an ordinary-sized metallic pin was extracted from the left ear, which was enveloped in a firm substance with numerous fibres attached to it; several hard bodies, in shape resembling the grains of buckwheat, but of various colors, were also taken out of the right ear. The poor girl endured the most intense pain, which she bore with Christian fortitude till death terminated her sufferings. It is believed the pin must have lodged in the head for nearly twenty years, as she never recollected of having put one in her ear, but she had a distinct remembrance of having, when a child, had a pin in her mouth, which she thought she had swallowed.

An Affecting Case occurred at the Mansion House on the 23d. William Powers, a boy, was brought up on the charge of picking a gentleman's pocket of a handkerchief. A little boy, who had seen the theft, was witness against him. The prisoner made a feeble attempt to represent the witness as an accomplice; but he soon abandoned it, and said, with tears, that he "did not believe the other boy to be a thief at all." The alderman, moved by his manner, asked him if he had parents? He said he had, but they were miserably poor. "My father was, when I last saw him, six months ago, going into the workhouse. What was I to do? I was partly brought up to the tailoring business, but I can get nothing to do at that. I am able to job THE POET BOWLES.-The canon's absence about, but still I am compelled to be idle. If I of mind was very great, and when his coachman had work, wouldn't I work! I'd be glad to drove him into Bath he had to practice all kinds. work hard for a living, instead of being obliged of cautions to keep him to time and place. The to thieve and tell lies for a bit of bread." Alder-poet once left our office in company with a wellman Carden—If I send you for a month to Bride- | known antiquary of our neighborhood, since dewell, and from thence into an industrial school, ceased, and who was as absent as Mr. Bowles will you stick honestly to labor? The prisoner himself. The servant of the latter came to our -Try me. You shall never see me here or in establishment to look for him, and, on learning any other disgraceful situation again. Alderman that he had gone away with the gentleman to Carden-I will try you. You shall go to Bride- whom we have referred, the man exclaimed, in well for a month, and to the School of Occupa- a tone of ludicrous distress, "What! those two tion afterward, where you will have an oppor- wandered away together? then they'll never be tunity of reforming. The wretched boy ex- found any more !," The act of composition was pressed himself in terms of gratitude to the alderman, and went away, as seemed to be the general impression in the justice-room, for the purpose of commencing a new life.

a slow and laborious operation with him. He altered and re-wrote his MS. until, sometimes, hardly any thing remained of the original, excepting the general conception. When we add that his handwriting was one of the worst that ever man wrote-insomuch that frequently he could not read that which he had written the day before

At

On the 5th a pilot-boat brought into Cowes the master of the Lincoln, sailing from Boston for California. He had reached the latitude of 4° N. and longitude 25° W., and when at 10°-we need not say that his printers had very 30 p.m. of March 2, during a heavy shower of raio, and without any menacing appearance in the air, the ship was Struck with Lightning, which shivered the mainmast, and darted into the hold. On opening the scuttle, volumes of smoke were emitted, and finding it impossible to extinguish the fire, the crew endeavored to stifle it by closing every aperture. In this state they remained for nearly four days, with the fire

tough work in getting his works into type.
the time when we printed for Mr. Bowles we
had one compositor in our office (his death is
recorded in our paper of to-day), who had a
sort of knack in making out the poet's hierogly
phics, and he was once actually sent for by Mr.
Bowles into Wiltshire to copy some MS. written
a year or two before, which the poet had himself
vainly endeavored to decipher.-Bath Chronicle

[graphic]

MR.

ARCHIBALD ALISON.

R. ARCHIBALD ALISON, author of the "History of Europe," is son of the author of the well-known "Essay on Taste." He holds the office of sheriff of Lanarkshire, and is much respected in the city of Glasgow, where his official duties compel him to reside Though educated for the profession of the law, and daily administering justice as the principal local judge of a populous district, Mr. Alison's tastes are entirely literary. Besides the "History of Europe," in 20 volumes-a work which, we believe, originated in the pages of a "Scottish Annual Regis ter," long since discontinued-Mr. Alison has written a "Life of Marlborough," and various economic and political pamphlets. He is also a frequent contributor to Blackwood's Magazine. It is, however, upon his "History of Europe" that his fame principally rests. If Mr. Alison be not the most successful of modern historians, we know not to whom, in preference to him, the palm can be conceded. His work is to be found in every library, and bids fair to rank hereafter as the most valuable production of the age in which he lived. This success is due, not only to the importance and interest of his theme, but to the skillful, eloquent, and generally correct manner in which he has treated it. He has, doubtless, been guilty of some errors of omission

as well as of commission, as we have heard of a literary amateur, whose chief amusement for some years past, has been to make out a list of his mistakes; but, after all deductions of this kind, enough of merit remains in the work to entitle its author to a place in the highest rank of contemporary authors.

The bust of Mr. Alison, of which we present an engraving, was executed in the year 1846, and presented in marble to Mr. Alison by a body of his private friends in Glasgow, as a testimonial of their friendship to him as an individual; of their esteem and respect for him in his public capacity, as one of their local judges; and of their admiration of his writings. It is considered a very excellent likeness.

EB

ment to triumph over the deficiencies of nature and education. His self-sufliciency coupled with his provincialism seems to have prevented him from closely criticising his productions; so that he often published things that were prosaic as well as faulty in other respects.

THE CORN-LAW RHYMER. that, properly sung, might stir the Anglo-Saxon race throughout the world and give immorBENEZER ELLIOTT not only possessed tality to a poet. The provincial mind affected poetical spirit, or the apparent faculty of the mass of Elliott's poems even where the subproducing poetry, but he produced poems beau-ject was removed from his prejudices; for he tiful in description, touching in incident and | had no habitual elevation or refinement of taste: feeling, and kindly in sentiment, when he was it required a favorable theme or a happy mokept away from that bugbear of his imagination a landed gentleman. A man of acres, or any upholder of the corn-laws, was to him what brimstone and blue flames are to a certain species of devotee, or the giant oppressor of enchanted innocence to a mad knight-errant. In a squire or a farmer he could see no humanity; the agriculturist was an incarnate devil, bent upon raising the price of bread, reducing wages, checking trade, keeping the poor wretched and dirty, and rejoicing when fever followed famine, to sweep them off by thousands to an untimely grave. According to his creed, there was no folly, no fault, no idleness, no improvidence in the poor. Their very crimes were brought upon them by the gentry class. The squires, assisted a little by kings, ministers, and farmers, were the true origin of evil in this world of England, whatever might be the cause of it elsewhere. This rabid feeling was opposed to high poet-much of the characteristics of the poet. Much ical excellence. Temper and personal passion are fatal to art: "in the very torrent, tempest, and (I may say) whirlwind of your passion, you should acquire and beget a temperance that may give it smoothness." It is also fatal to more than art: where a person looks with the vulgar eyes that Ebenezer Elliott used on many Decasions, there can be neither truth nor justice. Even the satirist must observe a partial truth and a measure in expressing it, or he sinks down to the virulent lampooner.

The posthumous volumes before us naturally abound in the author's peculiarities; for the feelings of survivors are prone to err on the side of fullness, and the friends of the lately dead too often print indiscriminately. The consequence is, that the publication has an air of gatherings, and contains a variety of things that a critical stranger would wish away. It was proper, perhaps, to have given prose as a specimen of the author; and the review of his works by Southey, said to have been rejected by the Quarterly, is curious for its total disregard of the reviewer's own canons, since very little description is given of the poems, and not

of the poetry in these volumes would have been better unpublished. Here and there we find a touching little piece, or a bit of power; but the greater part is not only unpoetical but trivial, or merely personal in the expression of feeling. There is, moreover, a savageness of tone toward the agricultural interest, even after the corn-laws were abolished, that looks as like malignity as honest anger.-London Spectator.

Part of this violence must be placed to the MADAME GRANDIN, the widow of M. Victor natural disposition of the man, but part of it Grandin, representative of the Seine Inférieure, was owing to his narrow education; by which who died about seven or eight months since, we mean, not so much book-learning or reading, met with a melancholy end on the 6th, at her of which he had probably enough, but provincial residence at Elbeuf. She was confined to her and possibly low associates. Something, per-bed from illness, and the woman, who had been haps, should be ascribed to a self-sufficiency watching by her during the night, had left her rather morbid than proud; for we think Elliott but a short time, when the most piercing shrieks had a liking to be "head of the company," and that he resented any want of public notice as an affront, even when the parties could not know that he was entitled to notice.

These defects of character operated very mischievously upon his works. The temper marred his political poems; though the people, their condition, vices, and virtues, is a theme

were heard to proceed from her room. Her brother ran in alarm to her assistance, but, unfortunately, he was too late, the poor lady had expired, having been burned in her bed. It is supposed that in reaching to take something from the table, her night-dress came in contact with the lamp, and thus communicated to the bed.

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