A WE VOL. XVI. 1 PU Tens hips Veo. t, & 4 S Ge Gian | 7 1 eV, at an l ae Notice to the Tenants on the above named fowuships, and all persous desirous ot Murchasing Wilderness Land thereon, pus Commissioner of Public Lands will ut :& ef ioWing piaces, on thie Mave rece t of all amonuts hereiba ' ' ’ p hese of Pablic Lands, and fur the eule Wilderness Land Ou Tharaday, the 3ist day of October next, at 9 am » Friday and Saterday, the Ist and 2nd duvs Nowe er.at Mr. dehnu reaton s, Tiguish, jot 1, for the Tenants on Lots I and 2 On Tuesday e 0th dav of November, at 9, a @i-; und mo W ineaday, the Oth day of Nevewber at Mr. David Hanters, Alberton, Lot 4, tor the Tenants ou L, ta d and o On Friday, the Right day of November, at ', a m.; and ea Saturday, the Sth dav of Novemlx ut Mr. McNaag'i s, Western Road, for the Tenants on Lote 6, S aud Ll- Oa Tuesday, the Twelfth day of November, at 9 « m,; and on Wednesday, the bith dav of Nevember, at Mr. Allen's, Weilingtou, Lot Lo, for the Tenants on Lots 14 and lo On Friday, the loth dav of November, at \. a m , and on Satarday, the 16th day of November, at Mr. Carrathers Kensington, Lot 19, fer the Tenants ou Lots 20, 27 aud north portion of Lot 21 On Monday, the Eighteenth day of November, at I2.a m.; and ou Taesday, the [9th day of Nove be u tv. «a. a. at Me ibagualls, Princetown Koad tat 22, for the Tenants va the south portion of Lot ~t NOTICE.—Those Tenants who have not accept ed the previsions of the Land Parechase Act. and have omitted te pay their rent, are hereby fivully notified, that anless payment is made to the Com missioner at the time aud piace above panied, dis- trasats will be tasued for CASCUMPrU POINT. The Commiesioner of Public Lands will submit to pudlie competition, on Tuesday, tae 3th day of November, at 12, a m, at Mr. David Hunter's, Alberton, certain tracts or portions of Land, being a part ot Caseumpee Point, a plan of which may be | seep at my Office, Colonial Building. JOHN ALDOUS, Commissioner. Land Office VALUABLE BUILDING LOTS ! fgxO be sold by PUBLIU AUCTION, atthe COLONIAL BULLDING in Charlotte. | FRIDAY, the Yoth CGetober next, at! rwo VALUABLE BUILDING LOTS. frouting 40 feet each on Dorchester Street, and extending back Si feet, being part of Town Vet No.7. iu the second haadred in Charlottetown These Lets adjoin the property formerly owned by Mr. Win. MeKay on the East, and the dwel ling house and premises now in of | Mrs MePuee on the West, and from their central and eligible p >sitiow, are ammeng the most desirable | lor ifs receveryv With Sept., 1867, town, on 12 a‘cleck, noor possessio mesiuese purposes in the City Teams oF SalLe—A deposit of 25 per cent. to be paid down, and the balance to be secure: by mortgage ou the premises, payable by 3 aunual justulmerts= with imterest For particulara as to title, &e, apply to the Hes Joax LoxawonktH, Attorney for the owners dehn Barelli aud Joseph F. Barelli, of Lon on, | ‘ Esyuires | WILLIAM DODD, | Charlottetown, Sept. 23.1867 Auctioneer. | Prince Edward Isiand. | IN CHANCERY. | Re Mark Nathaniel Wright, George | Dudley Wright, Margaret Theododia Wright. Matilda Aun Wright. Martha Maria Wright, and Isabel Christiana Wright. Infants, by Betsy M. Wright. | their Guardian. LT pursuance of a Decretal Order, m ade | by His Honor the Master of the Rolls, in his | cause, bearing date the 20th day of Auyust last, | there will be scid by PUBLIC AUCTION, ov the Premises, at l’unk Kiver, in Prince County,in (nis} Island. on WEDNESDAY, the sixth day of NOVEMBER next, at the hour of 120 clock, voon, | all that valuable Freeiold Fara, or tract of Li nd, | sitewateon Township Ne 26, containing 12 acres,a | little more or less, with the Messuage, Baiidings and appurtenances to the sume belony ng, of whict George M. Wright, the father of the | above usmed infanis, lately died seized and pos- | The Farm and Premises above mentioned are | Situated ou the Main Read, between Somerset (formeriy Seauth-west settlement) aud cog png ed Sedeque ; huving a frontage of 125 chains on the suid Koad, and being 10 ciaizs in breadth, a } ttle | more or less i The land is of superior quality, about sixty acres of whieh are cleared and in a good state for eulti- | vation, the residue being covered with « fine growth | of bard and eoft wood. The principal Dwelliug | House, a ij storey building, is 36 by 28 feet, with | a kitchen iu the rear 25 by 18 feet; coutiguons to! white are Wood House, Carriage House Stables, | Workshop -nd Baru, the latter 4o by 40 feet. The i Mills. comprisiug « very superior Grist Mill with | 3 paire rauners), Shingle, saw and Carding Mills, | are propelled by a powerful stream; aud their sitantion for business purposes is considered te be} unequalled in the Isiaud. The property wilt be oilered in three separate lots or sections. One lot | comprising the Mills, with a Cottage 20 by 18 feet, | and a Workshop 15 by 15 feet, for the use of 2| Miller, with 235 acres of Land attached. The eeeond lot wili comprise the Farm proper, co! sist- ing of aboet 75 acres, with the Dwelling House aud other Buildings above described; and the remaining 25 acres, being the northeru section of the treet, and ull cleared, will form the third let. | Shouid intenjing purchasers prefer it, the whole property wiil be sold in one Lot Teaxs—Ten per cent. of the purchase money to | he paid down at the time of sale, and the residue ot one-third of the purchase woney, 24) per cent, upon the eterution of the Deeds ‘he remaining two- | toirds to be secured by Mortgage on the premises, in manner wore definitely to be expressed in the conditions of dale. Dated at Charlottetown, this 10th day of Sep | tember, 1867. | | | J. LONGWORTH, Master in Chancery- Hedyson. Solicitor [nep Ie] JOHN BELL, | MANUFACTURER of Clothing in alt its branches, thaukful to his frends and patrons for past favors, begs leave to inferm them and the public yeuerally, that he is stil to be fuand at his Old Stand on QUEEN STREET, and te prepared to nake up all kinds of garmeuts,eutrust @itohim in the latest style aud improvement of fasuion. Terms Cash. Fatrance at the Side Door. _ Queen Street, July 9, 1866. FRESH GROUND RICE, — Ye Sale by ‘ Jan. 7, 1807 Wa. R. WATSON. ete maaan = Fishermen's Outfits. HE SUBSCRIBER is prepared to furnish Promptiy to FISHERMEN, Prices, all the OUTFITS necessary to prosecute al! the diferent branches of FISHING earried ou about Prines Edward Leland, aud as the adjaveut Waters, such as Salt, Flour, Barres, Bread, Pogies, Deana, Clame, Peas, Mackere! Hooks, Butter, Cod do Pork, Mackerel Lines, Beet. Cod do Lard, Mackere! Jigs, Tea, Cod Leads, Coffee, Cotton Duck, Sugar, Deo Sail Twine, Molasses, Bait Knives, Spices, Splitting Knives, Pickles, Jig Kasps, Lanterns, Bait Heavers, Boiled Oil, Clam Choppers, Kerosene Oil, Oil Clothes, Vinegar, Seu’ Westers, &e, ke, &e. He ales possesses excellent facilities fer I SPECTING aud PACKING MACKEREL and other Fist. L Cc. HALL. Charlottetown, May 20, 1967. EKLY JOURNAL ‘“*This is true Liberty, when MFreeborn Men, having to advise the Public, may speak tree.’’---Euripides. s » ! Mills,|~ 1867. Liverpool House. 1867. The Subscriber } AS RECEIVED by Ship L. C. Owen from Livervoot, Lotus from Lonpon, | aud Empress from GLASGOW, his Spring Importation CHARLOTTETOWN, PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND. MONDAY, OCTOBER i, 1867. ‘ST, DUNSTAN’S COLLEGE.) Under the patronage of His Lordship tT’ QD ’ ‘ > the Bishop of Charlottetown. | I R A k A L G A R ° TEXHIS LNSTITUTLON is situated on} LORD NELSON’S VICTORY AND DEATH _LITERATURE. OF POLITICS, LITERATURE AND NEWS. { NO. 49 | B cs ee ee ee Tr we erry, ' | with the most considerate respect. He wished ** These are the only favours { ask of my | retreat towards Cadiz. The lee line, there- | hut Sir Robert being eager for his justification, nAnnannn | him to sharein the glory of the coming battle, | king and country, at thie moment when [am fore, was first engaged, May God bless | perate; he had resolved to fight against the | going to fight their battle. Villeneuve was des- | Nelson sent him home in his own ninety-gun| my king and country, and all those I hold | wish of the Syaniards, partly because he ‘ship, which could ill be spared. This was the Princetown Road, a mile and a quarte north of Charlottetown beautifal, healthy, and far distractions aud moral dangers of the city. removed from The halls and rooms of the building are spacious airy, and comfortable Phe College Grounds are large, affording ample British and Foreign Werchandize, 0 tor ganes and athletic exercises COMPRISING A SELECT AND VARIED ASSORT- MENT OF STAPLE FANCY Dry Goods, Suitable for the Season, AND among which may be enumerated— | a choice selection of Dress Materials; Ladies’ White and Colored Hats and Bonaets, in all the latest styles A select assortment of Shawls, in Black and Fancy Cashmere and [mwitation Paisley, Black Cashmere filled, Balers, Lace, Dissue, & Cc, &c. Ladies’ Sacques and Paletots. and Mantle Cloths in Variety, with Triumings of all descriptions; and the usual assortment of Cotten, Liven, woollea aud Silk Staple Goods, at very moderate Rates. ; Che Gentlemen’s Furnishing De- partment comprises a select assurtment of THE BEST [TOWN MADE CLOTHING: A choice selection of Feit, Cloth and Straw Hats and Caps; Glass, Collars, Neckties, Shirts, &e., &ce. Ladies’ 9 Gents’ and Children’s BOOTS AND SHOES, in all sizes and qualities, &c., &e. ALSO, Choice Congo TEA, Bright MOLASSES, Brown and Crushed SUGAR, New York SOLE LEATHER, BUCKELS, BROOMs, «&e., 8 at Wholesale end Retail. The above Goods having been purchased in selected the best markets and with yreat care, Are now offered to the public at the i very lowest prices for | | Cash. W. FULL. Charlottetown, June 3, 1867. HE Subseriber has lately received a! LARGE ASSORTMENT OF Dry Goods and Hardware, | whieh bave been bought at Auction, and will be sold very low. GEORGE HOWATT. Crapand, Angnet 22, 1867, NOTICE. Te EF Subseriber having been duly appoinr- ed Attorney for the Rev. MALACHIAS REYNOLDS Jate of Desable, during his temporary absence from this Island, requests all indebted to the said Mr. Keymolds to pay perseus r @ their | liabilities without delay. WM. CUNDALL. Ch'town, Sept. 9, 1867 ‘ . . Con<igaees, take Notice ! ERSONS residing outside of Charlotte- town, having GOODS to eome by the Steam ship “*Atwamena”’ or ** Commerce,” and desir- | ing them forwarded, must send to the SUBSCRIB ERS, or their own AGENTS in che City, the original INVOICE of the Goods, by which to | make the proper entries at the Custom House, for | duties to procure the Permits to deliver. i CARVELL BROS., Agents B.& C.8.8.C. | July 22, 1867 NEW HERRING! Fee Sale, 300 barrels Newfoundland | HERRING, (caught this season), jast arrived | ex schooner ** Lily of the Valley,’ aud for sale | cheap fur Cash or approved credit. A. McNEIL|, Auctioneer. Reading Room Building. Sep. 16. 1807 TOWNEND'S HATS AND CAPS. LARGE STOCK of the above, received ex * Lotus,” from LONDON, of the newest STYLES and SHAPES— Good Silk HATS, 7a 6d to 14s. Paris Velvet do, 208 276 Gd. Townend’s beat do, 326 6d. Boys & Gent's. FELT HATS, in great variety. A large Stock of Tweed and Cloth CAPS, And aleoin Ladies STRAW HATS. &c.&c. G. & 38. DAVIES. Charlottetown. June 7, 1367 NOTICs i hereby given that the SUM MEKSIDE BANK having assigned to us their interest in a Bill of Sale, given them by Messrs. PIDGEON & STEWART, of Cliften, New London, of their | Stock in Trade, Book Debts, Notes of Iland, &c All persons indebted to the said Estate of Pidgeor & Stewert are therefore requested to wake iun- wmeciate paywent to ue. CARVELL BROTHERS. Ch'town, June 24, 1567. \ KS W. W. IRVING will open, on MONDAY next, the 14th instant, in con- nection with ber Drawing and Paivting Classes, a School for instrnction in the different branches of a practical English Edueation. Teums Moderate. Apply at Mrs. Irving's Class Rooms, Prince Street, opposite the Weslyan Chapel. September 9, 1867. A CARD. \ RS E. COOMBS desires to intimate L tothe young Ladies of Charlottetown that jehe will open a Class to teach WAXWORK in | Flowers and Baskets. Residenee opposite the Catholic Cathedral. MKS. ELEANOR COOMBS. Charlottetown, Sept 9, 1867. 3m {9 Also, a few private Boarders can be accom- g£.C eee | COPPER PAINT- FENUE SUBSCRIBER keeps constantly on | hand a supply of | Tar & Wonson’s Copper Pajat, | at reasonable an article whieh has given the greatest satixsfac- | ———— i tion te all who have used it. Jt possesses superior | qualities for effeetually preventing the accumula. | tion of all foul matter, such as Worms, Barnagles, | | Grass, d&e.. on the bettows of Vessels or Bouts, — when properly applied. | F, 1. C. HALL. Charlottetown, May 20. 1367. | Cotton Puck. AVING been appointed Agent for the sale of the celebrated | Russels Mills Cotton Duck, | purchasers. | I. C. HALL. Ch'tewn, May 20, 1867. ; 7 ~~ peaig LEASEHOLD INTEREST of Gfty twenty-three English ships to face thirty-| Pianoferte for Sale. i acres of excellent LAND en Donaldston yiree French, hie great heart and somantic VERY handsome and superior toned Estate, on Lot No. 35, and fronting on aeere chivalrous natare roused him to an act of the |< Cottage Cabinet 6] Octave PIANOFOTE, | Bay, together with ail the cenvenienees © utmost generosity. Sir Robert Calder bad to N.| Rosewood Case in excellent order, for sale. | Uriginw! cost, Forty guineas For particulars enquire of Mr. GEORGE | premises to DOUGLASS, Kent Street. Ch'town, March 25, 1867. NEW GOODS. | | Annual The course of studies embraces all the branches the study of necessaiy to prepare voung men for the learved professions or fit them for mereantile pursuits, sach as History, Geography, the English Freneh, Latin, and Greek Languages, Rhetoric Mathematics, Philosophy, Chemistry, &c. Music vocal aud imstrumental—is also tanght Phe Cellege possesses a large aud well selected Library, as wellas an extensive Philosoply Ap }; puratus In stitution, forming but one family with the students The Professors and Teachers reside in the and exercising a constant supervisiou, favorable to discipline, decorum aud good morals. Catholic students are earefully nnd frequently instructed in their holy religiou, which they are required to practise Phe wost svlicitous alleation is paid to the morals of all; and whilst withiu the College enclosure, they are constantly uuder the watchtul eve of one of the Teachers or Prefects Pertect discipline is strictly but kindly enforced Students wheu entering must produce satisfactory testimonials ef good character. The College is visited regularly once a week by a Pliysiciau. TERMS Pen Quakres oF Ll Werks. Board and Tuition, £6 0 0 Use of Library, ° “ ‘ 0 1 Physician's Fee, 6:3 ¢ Payweuts to be made half-yearly in advance. The College furnishes bed-steads and mattrusses ; the studeuts mast provide their own beds aud bedding. brushes, basins, towels, &e Phe Scholastic year commences on the first * Weduesday in September and ends about tue middle of July. | College on the first day of the opeuing of the classe s For tarther particulars apply to A. McDONALD St. Danstan’s College, Aug. 19, 1567. Students are requested to eculer the * The classes will be re-opened this year on the | tith september | HOOP SKIRTS. 6 DOZ KID FINISHED HOOP SKIRTS, pust opeued —VERY CHEAP. DAVIES & WEEKS. | Queen Street, Sept. 16, 1867 pat oin } Insurance! Insurance! FIRE & LIFE Royal Insurance Company, LIVERPOOL, G. B. Capital, $10,000,009. Income exceeds $5,000,000, and rapidly imereasing. Aygregate losses paid in Province of Nova Scotia during last 12 years, @ quarter of a million dollars. General Agent for Nova Seotia aud Prince Edward Island —HUGH HARTSHORNE, Esq, Halifax. ‘EXUE Subseriber having been authorized | to accept Risks for this Office, in all parts of Prince Edward Island, respectfully intimates that | he is prepared to receive proposals in both branehes from parties desiring Policies Phe well-known eharacter for promptness and liberality possessed by this Olfice is the best yaar antee to Lusurers | Rates moderate, aud every information furnished on application. The Company's blanks will be trausinitted on request ; and proposals may be sent, | post paid, to JOS. F. ELLIS, General Com. Merchant aud lasarauce Avent, Pictou, N.S. September 16, 1867. 6 mae ERSKIN’S BRAHEESUGAR POWDERS, A Tonic and Unfailing Remedy for Lumbago, Sciatica, As also for FACE-ACHE, TOOTH-ACHE, EAR-ACHE, COUGHS, and ail affections from Colds. (ew See Lancet, under Mevicat PaTRonaGe. WM. R. WATSON. City Drug Store, Victoria Building, } Queen Street, Sept. 16, 1307 CHARLOTTETOWN ACADEMY FOR YOUNG LADIES ‘iy ILL KE-OPEN AUGUST 19th. Terms, inclading Board and Tuition in Eng- | lish, Freneli and Music, Li2 10s per quarter, payable lin advance: Day pupils, Loper quarter. Vocal | Music, German and Drawing, extra. } During the Winter season the Young Ladies will jhave the privilege of attending weekly Lectures on various seientitic subjects, upon which they will afterwards be examined by the Lecturer) A yene- | ral examination takes place once a year, to which | parents and friends of the pupils are invited. A | quarter's notice required previous to the removal jofa pupil. In connection with the above, there is la Day School for younger Children. Terms, includ ing Enylish, Masie and French ,L3 10s per quarter, payableinadvance For further particulars, apply ite “the Principal, Mrs. MeDone ut, or to the Rev b Fitzgerald. Rector of Charlottetown, P E Island |} NB. Drawing, open to young Ladies who are not pupils in the | Academy lustriection in Music, £43 per quarter, for two lessons a week July 15, 1867. 3m Bristol Line to New. York, VIA BRISTOL, R. I. FARE: Cabin, $5; Deck, $4. (United States currency.) Cc leave the Depot of the Boston and Providence Railroad, Pleasant street, daily, Sundays excepted, At 5.30 P. M. For steamer PROVIDENCE, Capt. Benj. M | Simmons, on Mondays, Wedaesdays and fridays. For steamer BRISTOL, Capt. Benj. B. Bray | ten, on Tuesdays, Tuursdays and Saturdays. Passengers going by this line to Philadelphia, Jaltimore and Washington, can eonueet with the New Jersey and Camden aud Amboy Railroad. | ‘This line connects alse with the Athens line, | going to Saratoga and the West, laudiug at the i} same Pier in New York. Baggage checked through. | ‘Lickets. State Roomsand Berths can be secured lat the Agent’s office, Old State House, corner | Washington and State streets, and at the Boston aud Providence Railroad Depot. GEO. SHIVERICK, Passenger and Freight Agent. July 15, 1367. ow Valuable Freehold Property for Sale. pe Subseriber offers for sale that valuable property situated in Pownal Street, between the properties of the lute Hon. R. Hat ehinson and James D. Haszard, E-qr., baving 54 r| chivalry carried almost too far fur the national | dear ! they will, of course, be aply provided for. My relations it is needless to mention ; thought that Nelson had not arrived, and because he knew that Napoleon, furious at his The site is peculiarly the between England and France. cat for a mouse. reached him. Although only forty-six years of age, Ne!- son was already a shattered man. Fragile, thin, and sickly, weakened by ague in child- | hood, beaten down by fever in the East | Indies, almost killed by dysentery at Hondu- | ras, always sick at sea, an eye lost at Corsica, an arm at Cadiz, cut about the head at the ‘battle of the Nile, struck in the side ip another engagement, his cough dangerous, jhe searcely hoped to fight more than one | Yet his heart was sound as | more battle. | ever, and the unquenchable lion spirit glowed | within him, in spite of all vexatious dis- | | appointments, the French fair open sea-fizht, and all the mean Admi- ralty intrigues, shufiles, and ingratitudes. /** My own fleet,”* said the hero, in his own |fervid way, “is well offivered and well ; manned, weuld to God the ships were half as good!” The ships were, in fact, scarcely fit ‘| to sustain the alternate fretfulness and yio- | lence of that stormy winter in the Mediter- jranean. ** The French fleet,’ he wrote home, ‘‘ig in high feather, and as fine as paint can }make them; but our weather-beaten-ships, | 1 have no fear, will make their sides like a In 1803, Napoleon, having secured the | allainee of Spain, ran his sword through the Treaty of Amiens, and war then broke out Lord Neison was appointed commander of the Mediter- .' ranean fleet, and for fourteen months block- aded the harbour of Toulon, watelful as a On the l&th of January, while the English were anchored off Sardinia, the Freneh fleet slipped off to sea, but Nelson was upen their track the instant the news reluctance to a| good. On the 9th, Nelson had written to his favourite officer, the brave and simple-hearted Collingwood, enclosing him his plan of attack, wising to give full scope to his captain’s judgment in carrying out his intentions. * My dear Coll,’ he said, in his hearty way, |‘ we can have no little jealousies. We have only one great object im view, that of anni- hilating our enemies, and getting a glorious peac? for onr country. No man has more confidence in another than I have in you ; and no man will render your services more justice than your old friend, Netson ann Bronte’ The order of attack was grand in its sim- |plicity, The true sea-warrior instinct aod experience had struck out a plan as admir- able as if it had been forged out of the brain of Newton. The fleet was to move in two jlines, and like two swift sword-fish pierce into the enemy ; it was to be preceded by an advanced squadron of eight of the swiftest two-deckers. Collingwood was to chop the ‘enemy in two about the twelfth vertebra from the tail ship. Nelson himself was to give the eoup de grace at the centre—the | heart—whilst the advanced squadron was to jeut off about three oc four trom where he |would break through. In this way the as- | sailants would always be one-fourth superior to those portions they broke off. There was professional genius in these well-aimed | blows. Nothing was sham, mysterious, nor inflated about his directions. [is ‘* precise object” was a close and decisive action ; therefore, ** if signals were not seen or clearly understood, Blackwood and Hardy were the witnesses. |pyvor success with Sir Robert Calder, had | The wind was now from the west, light already sent M. Rosaly to supersede him. breezes with along heavy swell. Biaek wood, Lis crews were in a feverish clamour of bragg- | who came on board the Victory at about six '™& excitement, every one shouting at the lo’clock, fourd Nelson in govd spirits, but same time, a8 usual with the Gaul 6¢ mo- grave and calm, and not in thet glow and) ments of danger. : ; : | exultation which he had shown before Aboukir | Nelson's eyes brightened with delight and Copenhagen. He had already expressed when be saw € ollingwood in the Royal Sove- his belief that the French would make adead | 79”, 69 Straight as an arrow at the centre |set at the Victory. The French bad now of the enemey’s line, chop it through astern ‘tacked to the northward, and, to Nelson's of the Santa Anna, @ three decker (112), ‘great regret, formed their iine on the larboard then leoor fire and engage the vessel at the ‘tack, thereby bringing the shoals of Trafalgar | ™US2¢ of ber guns on the starboard side. ‘and St. Pedro under the British lee, and oaee he eried, * see how that noble | leaving the port of Cadiz open for themselves. fellow, Collingwood, carries bis ship into . : stion ** Nelaon at once give signal to prepare to 2°00 | anchor, and the necessity of this measure was | Collingwood at the same moment looked ‘strongly en his mind to the last. Ile told back exultingly at the Veetory, and said to his captain (Rotherham of the cocked bat): f y ‘ th F ) ‘idan eo a a ‘* Retherham, what would Nelson not give to +6 T enebii to-day," he said, “ to bleed the De here?” Only the day before, Nelson had leaptains of the frigates, as L shall keep you | reconciled Collingwood and Rotherham. ‘on board until the very last minute.“ Seying, ‘Look! yonder are the enemy, made them shake hands. ‘ ing i half,’’ ‘During the five hours and a hall, says, Villeneuve was watching the English ad- vance from amid a group of bis moustachioed Blackwood, o ee remained on ~~ the | | Victory, in which I was not ten minutes from | : ; ‘his side, he frequently asked me what I. and an mie the a a | should consider as a victory? The certainty | 88Y 804 Conldent as boys starting lor cricket. ‘of which he never for a moment seemed to) “ Nothing,’” he said, *‘ but victory ean ‘doubt, although from the situation of tie attend such gallant conduct.”’ At hall-past land he questioned the possibility of the sub. eleven the Freneh guns opened on the Royal sequent preservation of the prizes. My ans- | Sovereign; a8 the Victory came sweeping wer was,‘ Tbat considering the handsome |dowo, the French ships avead of her, and way in which the battle was offered to the | across her bows, at filty minutes past eleven enemy, their apparent determination for a | Legan to try the distance; they fired single fair trial of strength aod the proximity of the | guns. Perceiving a shot pass through her land, | thought if fourteen ships were cap-| aintop gallant-sail, they opened a feu d’- enfer, chiefly (as is their custom) at the plumb-padding, and some day we shall lay {"° captain would do wrong,”’ he said, ** if be French and German Classes | | salt upon their tails.’’ | The pursuit was tedious and baffling— between Biche and Sardinia, to Naples, then isl Hin | 4Utck to snap them off Egypt; then a sweep | turned to him, to transmit to the Patriotic jacross the channel between Sardinia and Barbary; next frigates discharged like rockets at Gibraltar and Lisbon; after this }a dash to Barbadoes, and back home again, fevered, chated, and vexed; then on to Cadiz, & SWeep acrose the Bay of Biseay, @ cruise | towards Ireland, a visit to Corawallis, at | Ushant, and lastly a desponding and angry }return to Portsmouth. The sailors, who loved ** Nel,’’ and vowed that he was “ brave } as a lion and gentle as a lamb,” shared in the regret and vexation of their commander. A | great opportunity of glory had been lost; | above all, a chance of thrashing the French ‘lL would not,’’ he once wrote to Mr. Elliot, the minister at Naples, ‘¢ upon any eonsider- }ation have a Frenchman in the fleet excepta | prisoner ; they are all alike. Not a French- man comes here. Forgive me, but my mother hated the French.’’ That was the clue to the prejudice which was part of Nelson's) | blood and of bis brain. Admiral Latouehe | had boasted that he had once chased Nelson ; ur hero kept the letter containing the boast, ind swore if heever took the writer, be should eat it. He was never cruel to Frenchmen, yet his advice to his midshipmen, to whow ) be was always gentle as a father, was: | ** Viate all Frenchmen as you do the devil ** Obey orders without questioning ; ** Treat every one, who hates your king, | |a8 your enemy.’* At Portsmouth, Nelson learned that Sir Robert Calder had fallen in with the French fleet off Finisterre, and had only scratched them when he ought to have ron his cutlass through their hearts. | Veetory unloaded. Nelson, embowered down | at ever-pleasant Merton, making hay, watch- jing sheep, catching trout in the winding Wandie, idolising Lady Hamilton, that beau- | tifal but wanton woman, forgot ambition, and grew more intent on rick awnings than Freneh jeanvas. One daybreak, Captain Blackwood | brought word that the French had refitted at Vigo and got into Cadiz. Nelson paced * the | quarter-deck” walk in the garden restlessly. —~ | Rheumatism of all kinds, Neuralgia, “4: pretended to be indifferent, and quoted a playlul proverb: ‘ Let the mon tradge it who's lost his badget.’’ He was happy, and | his health was better. ‘Ile wouldn't give | !Xpenee to call the king his uncle.’’ Lady Hamilton knew the heart of the brave man | she loved, and pressed him to go. The French fleet was his property ; it was the reward of | his two years’ watching. He would be /miserable if any one else had it. ‘4 Nelson, offer your services.’’ The tears came into | his eyes at her heroism. At balf-past ten | that night he etarted in a post-chaise for | London. His diary for that day lays bare his heart before us: | “Friday night (Sept. 13), at balf-past ten,” | he says, ** L drove from dear, dear Merton; |}where [ left all which I hold dear in this | world, to go to serve my king and country. | May the great God, whom I adore, enable me | to fulfil the expectations of my country! and. if it be His good pleasare that I should re- turn, my thanks will never cease being offered | up to the throne of His mercy. If it is His | good providence to cut short my days upon jearth, | bow with the greatest submission ; | relying that he will protect those so dear to 'me, whom I may leave behind! Lis wiil be |done. Amen! Amen! Amen!’’ | The probability of his death had entered his mind, that is evident ; presentiments are | never anything, alter all, but such probabi- | lities. | The embarkation of Nelson at Portsmouth was a scene worthy of Grecian history. Al- though he tried to steal secretly to his ship, | erowds collected, eager to see the face of the | hero they venerated. Many of the rugged sailors were ia tears; old men-of-war’s-men knelt and prayed God to bless him as he passed jto the bout. ‘They koew he was the sailor's | triend and father; they knew him to be as _ humane as he was fearless, unselfish, and | eager to pour out his blood tor England. No | basely earned money had defiled bis hands ; his heart was pure crystal; it had no flaw. | As Southey says finely, « Nelson had served ‘his country with all his beart, with all bis soul, and with all his strength, and therefore | they loved him as truly and fervently as he j had loved England.’’ That one-eyed, one- ; armed, shrunken invalid offcer, was still the | tower and the. bulwark of his native land. | On arriving at Cadiz, Nelson took all an old sportsman’s precaution, not to flurry the game /he had been so long stalking. The French |wanted encouraging. They were shy. The | | placed his ship alongside that of an enemy.” One of his last ordera was that the name and ‘family of every maa killed or wounded in ithe action should be, as soon as possible, re- | Fund, | About half-past nine on the morning of lthe 19th, the Mars, the nearest of the line of | Scout-ships, repeated the signal that the ene- ‘my was at last sailing out of port. The | wind was light, with partial breezes. /son instantly gave the signal for a chase in | the south-east quarter. About two, the re- peating ships announced the French fleet at 'sea. ‘The next day, seeing nothing, and the |wind blowing fresh from the south-west, | Nelson began to fear the French had run | back to shelter. A little before sunset, how- ever, Blackwood, in the Euryalus, reported |that the French were still pressing westward, jand that way Nelson had determined that | they should not go but over his sunken fleet. |Still, however, thinking they were inclined | to run for Cadiz, Nelson kept warily off that i night. | Atdaybreak, the French fleet of thirty- | three sail of the line, and seven large frigates, | formed a crescent, in close line of battie, off | Cape Trafalgar, near the southernmost point lof Andalusia. They were on the starboard ' | Nel- | tured it would be a glorious resalt.’ which he always replied, ‘I shall not, Blackwood, be satisfied with anything short ‘of twenty.’ A telegraphic signal bad been ‘made by him to denote that he intended to break through the rear of the enemy's line, to prevent their getting into Cadiz. | was walking with bim,” continues Blackwood, when he said, ‘I'll now arouse the fleet with a signal ;) and he asked if I did not think ‘there was one yet wanting. I answered that [ thought the whole of the fleet seemed very clearly to anderstand what they were about, and to vie with each other who should first get neareet the Victory or Royal Sovereign. These words were scarcely uttered, when tis last well known signal was made, * ENGLanp FXPECTS EVERY MAN WILL bo His Durty.’ The shout with which it was received through- out the fleet was truly sublime.’’ There has been a good deal of paltry dis- cussion as to whether Nelson wrote or only modified this signal. Ic matters little; he sanctioned it, and it was that sanction alone that gave it immortality. The snout that welcomed it was like a roll of thander, be- cause the signal seemed like a voice from England and from home. It was an omen of victory. About seven o'clock the French wore, and stood in a close line on the starboard tack ‘tack, abeut twelve miles to leeward, and standing te the south. Eighteen of the ene- my were French, and fifteen Spanish. Nel-| four frigates. The French vessels were larger and heavier than ours, and they had) on board four thousand ekilled troops, and | many dreaded and extremely skilful Tyrol- ese riflemen. Soon after daylight, Nelson was on deck, ‘eagerly eyeing the French erescent. He had | jon hié admiral’s frock-coat—his ‘* fighting | jcoat,’’ ae he called it—which he had worn | |in many victories; but he did not put on the | sword which his uncle, Captain Suckling, | jhad used, when, on that very day many |years before, he had beaten off a Freneh isquedron. Neleon had wished this day to be | the day of battle, and bad even half super- stitiously expected the coincidence. He wore, as usual, on his left breast, four stars | of various orders of knighthood, one of them | bearing the Grder of the Bath, which he |specially valued as the personal and free gift | lof the king. Dr. Scott, the chaplain, Mr. | |Seott, Lord Nelson’s publie secretary, and Mr. Beatty, the surgeon, trembleé when he thus made himself a conspicuous mark for the enemy by these decorations. ** Ia hon- or,’’ he exclaimed, on a former similar oc- casion, “[ gained them (the orders,) and jin honor T will die with them.’’ Other captains were more pradent, others equally | reckless, Captain Rotherbam, of the Royal Sovereign, bad been warned not to wear his large gold laced cocked hat. ‘‘ Let me alone,” said the old bull-dog, testily ; “I have al- ways fought in my cocked hat, and { always shall.’? And 8» in his cocked-hat he paced the deck and went into actiun. Collingwood, that brave Newcastle man, could be brave and prudent too. Ile ordered his lieutenant (Clavell) to pull off bis beots and put on silk stockings, as he himself had done. *¢ For,”’ said he, ** if we should get a shet in the leg, it would be more manageable for the sugeon,” | He was also very particular that his boat- /swaiu bent all the old sails, to save the new- er canvas. The blue liquid battle-plain was ready for the fight. ‘here was no need of digging graves in the vast cemetery. Europe and Africa were watching the combatants. Al- ready the shot wae piled, and the powder passed up from the magazines. The sailors stood laughing by their gune, thinking what @ fihe sight the captured French vessels would make at Spithead, The men that in half an hour would be stretched dead and mangled on the red and splintered planks, were busy getting | their tompions and fire-buckets and cartridges | ready, or lashing curlasses round the masts jready to hand. As the men were clearing ) Nelson's cabin and removing any bulkheads | that were still left, they had to displace the | picture of Lady Hamilton—that high-spirited jand beautiful woman, originally @ maid- | | tained go extraordinary a@ hold over Nelson's {mind—the admiral called out to the men, anxiously : | «+ Take care of my guardian angle!’ This picture (probably by Rouwney) was at /onee his idol and talisman. He aleo wore a | miniature of Lady Hamilton next his heart. | Nelson seldom began a battle without a |servant, then anartist’s model, who had ob- towards Cadiz, the sun full upon their sails, their three-deckers rising on the water like floating cities. About ten, Nelson became */son had twenty-seven sail of the line, and | anxious to close with the enemy. ‘They put a good face on it,’’ he said to Blackwood, ** but I'll give them such a dress- ing as they never had.’’ “ At this critical moment,” says Black- wood, “ I ventured to represent to bis lord- ship the value of such a life as bis, and par- ticularly in the present battle, aod I pro- posed hoisting his flag in the Euryalus, whence he could better see what was going on, as well as to what to order in case of necessity. But he would not hear of it, and gave as his reason the furce of example: and probably he was right. My next object, therefore, was to endeavor to induce his lordship to allow the Temeraire, Neptune, and Leviathan to lead into action before the Victory, which then was headmost. After much conversation, in which I ventured to give as the joint opinion of Captain Lardy and myself how advantageous it would be to the fleet for his lordship to keep as long as sented to allow the Jemeraire, which was then sailing abreast of the Victory, to go abead, and hailed Captain E. ilarvey, to say such were his intentions if the Temeraire could pass the Victory. Captain Harvey being rather out of hail, his lordship sent me to communicate his wishes, which L did, when, on returning to the Victory, | found bim doing all he could rather to increase than diminish sail, eo that the J'emeraire could not pass the Wictory; consequently, when they came within guo-shot of the ene- my, Captain Harvey, finding his effurte in- effectual, was obliged to take his station astern of the admiral.’ Nelson then went over the different decks, where the men stood grouped in eight round their favorite guns. He spoke to them in his own kind and pleasant way, and saw that the preparations were everywhere con- plete. As he ascended the quarter-deck ladder it was as if he ascended to a throne, and the men greeted him with three cheers, The French fleet, commanded by Admiral Villeneuve in the Bucentaur, ineluded Nel- son’s old antagonist, the Santisstma Trinidada of one hundred and twelve guns, one of one handred, eix of eighty-four and eighty, the rest being seventy-fours of a large ciuss, to- gether with seven frigates of heavy metal, torty-four and forty guns each, besides other swaller vessels. The Spaniards were com- manded by Admiral Gravina, who had under him Vice-Admiral Don J. d’Aliva and Rear- Adwiral Don B. M. Cisneros. Villeneuve had under him Kear-Admirale Damanvir and Moyon. Four thousand troops were embark- ed on board the fleet under the co:nnmand of General Contarino in the Bucentaur, amongst whom were several of the most skilful sharp- shooters that could be selected, and many | fyrolese riflemen. Various sorts of combus- tibles and fire balls were also embarked. The Spaniards appeared with their heads to the nortbward, and formed their line of battle with great closeness and correctness ; and as the mode of attack hy Nelson was unusual, so the structure of their line was new. It To | possible out of the battle, he at lenght con- | (of one hundred and forty guns), two vessels | vigging, to disuble her before she could 'grapple. Nelson instantly ordered Black- | wood and Captain Prowse, of the Sirius, to |go on board their ships, and tell all the line- _of-battle captains as they pussed to disregard | his plan of action if mm any other way they jcould get quicker and closer alongside an ‘enemy. ** lic then,’ Blackwood says, “again | desired me to go away ; and as we were stand. ing on the front of the poop, | took bis hand and said, * | trust,my lord, that on my retura to the Victory, which will be as soon as possible, I shail find your lordship well, and in possession of twenty prizes.’ Un which he made this reply: * God bless you, Blackwood; I shall never speak to you again.’”” The two columns, led on by their brave chiefs, coptinaed to advance, with light airs and all sails set, towards the.van and centre of the enemy, whose dine extended about N.N. E. and S. 8. W. Nelson gave orders to hoist several flags on the Victory, for fear that a single one might be shotaway. The French, strangely enough, showed no colours till late in the action, whan they required them as signals of striking. As usual, the English admiral had forbidden musketry in the tops, as he considered ita paltry mode of homieide,which might kill a commander, but could not decide a battle. He then ran straight on the bows of the Santissima Trinidada,1 monstrous four-decker, the ninth ship sn the van of the French double crescent line ; the Victory opened on her with her larboard gans at four minutes past twelve. Meanwhile, Collingwood, having poured a deadly dose of a broadside and @ balf (full measure) inte the stern of the Santa Anna, bad jammed into the French ship, #0 thatthe yarde of the two veesels were locked together. His hands were soon full, for the Fougueur came malignantly on his lee quarter, aot three more of the enemy's French ships soon bere on the bow of the Royal Sovereign, The Victory, silent and stern as if its crew were invulnerable, never fired a shot, but moved on, calm as Fate and irresistible as Death, till filty of her men were struck down, thirty wounded, and her maintopmast, with all her studding-sails and booms, shet away. Nel- sun said that, in all bie bavtlea, he bad never seen men so cool and resolute as his, At length the simple word was given, and the | Victory spoke at last, vomiting out spouts of fire, and beiching her winged thunder to the light and to the left. It was not possible to break the enemy's line without running on board one of their ships: Hardy informed the admiral of this, and asked him which be would prefer. Nel- son replied: ‘Take your choice, Hardy ; it does not signily much.’ The master was ordered to put the helm to port, and the Victory ran on board the Redvutadle, just as her tiller-ropes were shot away. The French ship reeeived her with a broadside: then in-_ stantly jet down her lower-deck ports, for fear of being boarded through them,and never afterwards fired a great gun during the ac- tion. Her tops, like those of all the enemy's ships, were filled with riflemen, A few minutes after this proof of distrust, Captain Harvey, in the Temeraire, also fell on board the Redoubtabie, and the Temeraire had also an enemy on her side, so that the four vessels now lay in a compact tier, tl.eir heads in one way as if in duck ; but Nelson soon pounded her antagonist deaf and dumb, pass- \ed astern of the Bucen/aur, bauled in on her \starboard side, pouring in a slaughtering | broadside in passing, then stood for that fuat- ‘ing mountain, the Santissima, playing her \larboard guns with incredible rapidity on both tue Bucentaur and the Santisecmu, whice the starboard guns of her middie and Jower decks were steadily devoted to that rather tough antagonist the Redoutable. It became necessary for the Victory to fire at the Re- doubtable with depressed guns, three shots each, and with reduced charges of powder, for fear of the shot passing through the Frenchman and injuring the Temerare. The guns of the lower deck touched the Redout- ' cble's side; so, for fear of the Frenchmau | catehing fire and destroying both vessels, the fireman of each gan stood ready with a bucket full of water, which he mmediately dashed inte the hole made by the Engissh shot. The remaining ships ef Nelson's column, after the Temeraire, which preased forward to his sup- port, were the Neptune, T. F. Freemantle ; Con- | querar, Tsract Pellew ; Leviathan, HW. Bovn- toun; Ajax, Lieutenant J. Puteid: Orion, Kd- formed a crescent convexing to lee ward, and | ward Codrington; Agamemnon, Sir Edward prayer, Le bad always a profound sense of Admiral Collingwood, in leading down to the Berry; Minotawr, ©. 1. M. Mansfield; Spartrue, ‘eentre, had both the van and rear of the | Sir F. Laforey; Bruenma, Rear-Admiral Earl | Nelson kept bis arrival as secret as possible. , God's omnipotence and omniscience. He now |The Gibraltar Gazette did not publish the | retired to his cabin, and wrote a simple but number of vessels. He kept fifty miles off the fervid prayer. He annexed to this prayer in west of Cadiz, near Cape St. Mary ; for it has | his diary a sort of will—his last request to his ‘een often observed, rates won't bolt when | Country In case he fell, as he seems to have ‘terriers are too near the holes. He instantly lexpected to do. It was headed: “ October ‘seized all the Danish vessels carrying provi- | , 4 sions to Cadiz for the Freneh fleet. His final fleets of France and Spain, distant about teo . ° %” ‘stratagem was the bait that at last drew forth | miles. ; ; the enemy. He detached some vessels on an| Ue recommended Lady Hamilton to his knowing that fresh ships country for her great serviess to the mation. {the subseriber is prepared to reeeive orders for | lall the different Nuwbers, in quantities to suit) imaginary service, feet front by 100 feet back, with a Dwelling House oo ae ae daily arriving for him from : aining pine Rooms and Kitchen, and a commo- ; Bs Fire gene vith u Stable in the rear | England. Liis brought out Villeneuve at luis property forms an excellent Stand for any | fast, although he had jast declared ip a council kind of business, especially # Boarding House or of war that be would not stir from Cadiz till Tavern, and will be suld on reasobable terms. Please apply ou the preniises to the owner, | WILLIAM MURRAY. tf | English. 9, 1867. ee: “— meer eeeennnee—— | the Beet,’ as he always called them ; moreover, FOR SALE, By Private Bargain. |oa the other. Marsh Mud avd other Sea Manure. Apply for | | particulars to dohu A. MeDopell, Esqr., or on the | MICHARL McAULEY. | Donaldston, 9th Sept. 1867. Qu: ‘hia fleet was one-third stronger than the Nelson still wanted frigates, ‘the eyes of | | he dreaded the junction of the Carthagena | fleet on the one side, and of the Brest squadron Yet at this crisis, with only go back to England to be tried by court.) martial for bis behavior in the last action off last moments at inisterre: Sir Robert was one of Nelson's) praying over her as she lay asleep in her little | fow enemies, and he therefore treated him bed. ‘Tbe singular document ended thus : (1. For obtaining, in, 1796, the letter from the King of Spain to t.e King of Naples, an- ‘nouncing his intention of declaring war lagainet England, which bad given to Sir Jobn Jervis an opportunity of striking a first blow, which, however, he Gid mot do. 2 For using ber influence with the Queen of Naples to allow the fleet to be victualled at Syracuse, which enabled and destroy the Frene .the Nile. He also left to the his country his adopted daughter, Nelson Thompson, {and gloriously a greatiu nation—i. e. ministry—attended to hie last request.) This adopted daughter, really his own, was thn five years old, and Nelson's : | enemy abaft his beam. They were formed in |w double line this : 2 3 4 5 ' French and Spaniards alternately, and it was jastern of No. 4 (which maneeuvre they ex- “pected we ehould, as usual, pat into execu- ition), for No. 2 to make sail; that the British whip im hauling up should fall on voard of her, whilat No. 5 should bear ap ‘and take her, and No. 1 bring ber broadside | to bear on her Starbvard bow. Phis mance iyre only succeeded with the Tennant and Belle. rophon, which were among the ships that eutfered most. Sefore their Gira, therefure, |opened, every alternate ship was about a ‘cable's length to windward of her second it te return to Egypt ‘ahead and astern, formiog a kind of double. h feet at the battle of line, and appeared, when on their beams, to beneficence of | leave a very dittle interval between them, and Horatia this without erowding their ships. Admiral | Villeneuve was on board the Bucentaur. eighty guns, in the centre, and the Prince of Asturias bove Gravina’s flag in the rear. Collingwood jed our lee ling of thirteen ships. Merton had been passed in Nelson the weaker line of fourteen. Nelson Qaptain Adair was then divected by Nelson te lof ‘Northesk, Captain -Charles Bullen; Africa, Henry Digby. ‘Owing to the judicious mode of attack which Neleon hud adopted, his tast sailing ships, like sharpshooters in an army, had half joined the battle before the siow-sailing ones came | up fresh and vigorous to their support, and, as @ 21, 1805.—Then in eight of the combined; their intention, on our breaking the line | corps af reserve, helped the belter to determine | the day. | The I ‘ictory was fighting hard awida ceaseless \blage of flame. Luekily, the Freneh were not -sneh good seamen as Nelson, and, im conseq tence of keeping the wind nearly on their beam, ay in a deep trough of the sea, aad rolled se heavily \thet their broastdes sometimes few over and | gemetimes fell short of our ships. Stila raking fire swept the Vecrory’s decks, Mr. Scott, the admiral’s secretagy, was killed ‘hy ete of the frst cannon-balls, whilst in ecn- versation with Captain klardy, and near.to Lord Nelson. Captain Adair, of the Marines, who soon afterwards fell, immediately endeavared to remove the mangled body, but it had already at- tracted the netice of the adwiral. “ Js that poor Seott,” said be, “ whois gone?” Presently, witie Nelson was conversing with Captain Hardy on the quarter-deck, durivg the shower of musket-balls and raking fire that was “kept up by the enemy,a deuble-headed shot came acroas the poop and killed cight of the marines. steered two points more to the north than 4; se his men more around the ship, A few | 2 Pp eper | Collingwood, in order to cut off the enewy’s miuotes afterwards a sbot struck the ot te Oo bee Seems ‘ ws