”& " it entered his soul—he found the more conspicuousdo to sit down and weep un- liimself. The iron climbeda pinnacle, only to be ' was not a man . hm he His bitter thoughts lashed him SHOCKING TRKGEDY AT BURNLEY. s I - (Prom Magritte/tester ,Guordian,Nou. _ g . .flThe town'iand'neighbou'rhood‘of Burnley,‘.‘i'n this county, were,.on Sunday evening last, thrown,” into a slate of great excitement and, confusion, by',a:report that ' anjoflicer of the 69th Rifles,_a private soldier, and a fe- servant about the mess house, had lll been ‘stabbgd Ewan/31,,Pjpggsrz-ang’l.‘ of their wounds. The ~si~ loway; Lochmaben, in Annandalo, Bruces; Butel, the property of the we a castle of great strength and extent, dné . I the kingdom, by which the Earls of Many, he so much influence in an age of war and or leton, also of great extent, and Possemg‘ a race of the De Vauz ; Selkirk, at that um of Aymer de Valence, Earl of Pembrok. , well, a castle at various times the pm” fards, Morays, and Douglasses. Innum ,. the girl (fogfthough married some years ago, she had not completed her twenty first:yoar,) took a walk .to- gathe“»-1 yards “‘6 tow" 3' 3th if is said: “1’”: during d his ‘Virfbrtification. this ‘Morris reproachedherafith suffering the at- '61' f . tentiohiis of Lieut. O’Grady, and threatened that he would into ury. be the death of them both. On dieir return to the , , barracks, Morris waited at dinner in themess room as usual; but, when asked by the mess woman, the mother ofthe deceased girl, to com supper, as heghad been scorn ; “ ’Tis not in words to tell the power, The despotism that from that hour Passwx held o’er him. He becmae fierce and almost savage in bish'languagt: and deportmeiit. He could not command is tempe ~J sinsation‘exeitedwas‘ bush and it was found that ., r... , . . .2 . ' he beat of his ,1 and smaller strengths, “0"! the seam '. , ‘t’fiiigréafiment ’the report was true, for none of the, accustomed to, I he rep I éifiave no even while he addrelssed ‘thfle his Home eff]; whose power was almos, km‘gly’ d6 .s. . . ,viéflezihdlriduals.nwvéqu beyond an early hour the fol: walked out ~ he . r as: know-n ll chafed blond preyet upm : mummy of re_ towers ofthe retainer or vassal, wnhtbq far from relenting, lost no Opt _ hiraxii‘ffgufhb blow he had given, and thr'iivililig lb: Tori?- ority of“ his order” illlto the te‘eth :prtgisié ale 3’ i arit whose eevation ie , . orgoIpt 1ils said that Mr. Canning intended to have closed the session with a furious explosion of.his wrath against the House of Lords; an intention which all the entrea- ties of his friends would hardly have prevenled him carrying into effect, had not-the accident which léaptpiexg: ed to the speaker at the critical moment rendiere {gelled possible for him to‘occupy the chair duriugzlt Gltlgthi‘ ()1 I speech. The sessro’nitherefbr’e, closed tvrtiog foain portunity of venting his burning heart; but is r I: could not bear the agitation which he suffered—lie sari \ His old friends were gonhe, forlhe hla'd ' ' ,stecm' those who calledt etnse ves .Is ' I knew: he could “Oi, 70.0I1fifioe if], and, In vpere supported 1n 3 stylef-yf “1'39 andd 3:. this unhappy condition, George Canningdied—the last ht,“ The produce of nah: s :m H ofthe rhetoricians.” ‘ herds of swine, his flocks o catthe, 18,] There mav be some poetry in this. but it is a passage breweries, his “Allis anal “inalftlllllg “(algegk of power, arid’ might have been all true. It 28 true to gardens, orcharhs, tan ilrtlai: age,“ nature. Many a great man has been goaded toideath, all lentltheirri; es gmain1 and few ofthem sleep soundly. (‘fWhl'lme kmg ‘5 an “5:3 S, .W The writer ofthese lines received a letter from a mem- summons to surround the‘ angel; 0 , ber of congress, a few year-s ago, just after he took his these castles, also, were p ace tie in de' _ ,1 seat for the first time as a member. “If,” said he, “ I cottages belonging to the servants an ._t_ could reconcile it with my views ofduty, I should resign dams ofthe baron, to his armoure‘ris,~t» at once and come home to the bosom ofthose Ilove.” masons, falconers, forest-keeper‘s, an pt But he remained at his post, and the turmoils of party ministerefl to his necessities, hire com pr 1‘, broke him down, and he came home for a Visit ofa week, sures. It happened, too, not un'reaunt y,~ ' and died in the Bottom of those he loved. oftlie'security which the VlGlllllX’ eu , It ma "spoil the effect of Blackwood’s account of the sured, the free farmers or Opulen cause 0, Cauning’s .death, but as facts are better than mote times requestedpermis fiction, ft is well to add the following from history: tions and booths near its wal d . d “ Fourteen days before Mr. Caniiing’s death, Mr. small Thiiwhs whitish: filial 'isah 3 Gallatin spent, six hours ivirh him, two before dinner, ‘39 Pl“ 159° owe l e Ono”) 0 0““ :0 talking about political affairs and much of Mr. Can- be“ a“ ' ning’s own situation amid conflicting parties. Mr. Galla- tin told him he could not live amid so much business; to be Secretary for Foreign Affairs in fact, First Lord ofthe Treasury in fact and name, and not only prime Minister, but sole Minister. Mr. Canning explained that Lord Dudley only took the place of Secretary for Foreign Affairs to oblige him, and pro tempura; but that he had been induced to come, out ofthat office, with all the details of which he,ivhs_acniiainted, and to take the Treasury, by havng rec'éijveda letter from an ancient friend of Mr. Fox, who told him that Mr. Fox always regretted he had not taken that, as therelies the patron- age; ‘and,’ said Mr. Canning, ‘although I might have put a friend there, it is very different to my asking a favour or a favour being asked ofme; and I am deter- miried,’_said be, moving his hand with a most emphatic gesture of ambition, ‘ to hold the reins while I li've.’ He lived' fourteen day, He told Mr. Gallatin he had not been free from great pain since the Duke of York’s funeral, when they kept him in the cold damp vault two hours, nor slept a whole night since Lord Liverpool’s Titties. "Such is worldly honour, and the best thing the world’s possession does for us i” . , V . ., . 80,6,ock, we“, . wt Ila . We esterde sent a reporter over to makg,.O'G-i'gly, on quitting t ameps your“, at h ‘lifies (in, the spyot the insult of which we now layI’to hi, a-parlmempand iris supposed, that thelgirl ' readers; ". 4,4. \ had’gonejihither to wait for him,‘and had then told um ofthe threats of Morris to take his life and herIownt. £4 ’ ‘- 1" it v It is con'ectused thfifh‘upof n this intimation, dell - , . x . ll occu ied b bothcavalry , l _, i h , , h we . a ’ x. dAaie Ezevlireiftatliiese aria) statidned there two 0 Grady Immedlntely Morris s pgantrykgnshifuhi 0,3,6 "Queen,s Bays, orSecond Dragoan as will be seen by the pi“, adjoins his I , roo , hi; '6’ iiotiii’s'inar the cavalry part of the barrackS; ‘Vhethef to demand that Morris shoul , ,elIVer. 31PM) Nth“ ' f" (f: iiiirtgrs are tenanted by two companies of SW0"! and “heifer he was a thle ‘ a " {83:39 :5 K gaysrniflgs under the command of Major Cockbum, or to order him into custody, or remonstrate Wit Im, f gm] , imam tamed Windsor about two months ago, not known, though it may appear by the evidentéefit‘)e Sevres qh d Myers are at Bolton under the Mrs. Hadden, the mess-woman, who was present a lighfit‘sgg [eg- uh Made“ _The ’recem death rencontre, and is the only individual who can throw any cimtfdn Col gmbuiiable H Molyneux, ofthis light on the commencement ofthe transaction. th‘is fa irritant: moist be him recollection ' of our' readers. as it may. It Would seem, that, a," on as Limit? rzphy Ti!“ 1.! 0b! m der and suicide occurred with," ,he had made known to Morris why.._e.had sought im. 3 , , hon a 3ft Chad building in we barrack yard, latter, snatching up the carving mfe, had commence mm ouse’a e a the bloody work which has terminated so fatally. After stabbing Lieutenant O'Grady, while in the pantry, ' The oficers dine in the mess room at 7 o’clock : and. on sand” evening 1”" ihey ii“ 6508‘” -‘32§",h:,hi01: Morris seems to have rushed-past the wounded officer to i " forum“? gm“? Lk'emenean:neor $213,331,: ,ha, a, which his apartment, where he knew or probably suspectedhthe y ’ an n . . I . er‘ .i'lbom “gnu: 0'23,de arm, dinner. About ha“- an hour girl to be. She,-hearing the alarm given by her mo“SPd o getter Y _ C kb am, several “he, officers was about making her escape, when, as is supp . . flflFIthflsi_Mal°’ 0° gm’ ,ounded ,0 see; she was overtaken by the murderer at the door, Where 7,, being Sl’lii m the room-‘th were 2,5 a he Sm "eh he stabbed her repeatedly in the back and side, a la go W“ , Llehl OG'hd)’ "{5h “"9 i. . Mfr!" it," ’,,alvh~or,_Mgo’”is splash of blood being visible on thenvall near the llntel fit . eg‘mwagds ‘38 Wibfihfi, excrzfimlf “Idle “Lea'rm up of the door, between the doors of the two rooms. Such, a ‘ . e ien , ' ,. . . , :xrleiau'tiizd from loss of blooril ;’ for his dress was “s? have, "0 flow”! ‘31": imam 10 he the Q'lhmi’hl has or i by this time drenched in blood from a large wound on t 'zvflfllngev‘: (ea-s the left sign. He was placed upon the hearth; and we must 6,658 my . ’ while the‘otficers were crowding around him, loud wimam Shaw , egreams were heard from the direction of ktlhe unfoyltti; Wimam Smdgrllh. lady, was “fa large and some_ 3:9“? "13"" .hl’hnmenlr “I‘d hmf‘lor COT. ,{ggnfrggl :1 what distinguishe Irish family, being the nephew of from thii'oom’ figsfigfirmég $331; woman whose thelate Lord Chief Baron ofthe Irish Exchequer (Bargn . 53W 1 t u r a . ‘ lffemwas tfie second sacrificed by the murderer, in his OGfady’) who! “_ '8'3',’ “"b ‘3‘58‘1 {0 life Peerage- V ‘ the title ofVisc ntGuillamore, and died in April, l840. The young officer who has now come to an untimely fury, lying in thelobby. He also saw the murderer, end, was cousin 5 the present Lord Guillamore. , Mr. whose name is Robert Morris, brandishing a large carv- ing knife, apparently the weapon With ,which he had O,Gmdy,s fame} was, on; I the nine sons of Darby O’Grady, Esq., of Mount spect, county Limerick. stabbed both the officer and the female. —Major (50c:- bflmnwnh ’1 "mt, or'ntercelxlngu;v:a;:: rzngfizr :h: We believe the. ceased's widowed mother at present flightt 2hii‘rfngeubf‘fhzrhigd’snfioif; mid in {mm of the resides at Dublin orI Kingstong and,I ifreprért bedcor- m,“ , . ’ - rect, thiswill be tie secon time sie is come to hh'id'hgi "graft? “'9 hbnak dam “i 3h:nlgbbzénfinmigs mourn over the premature death ofa son. A brother he "E’d ,h I 6"” i ,8 £3," ordched ’me baci’doof of the deceased, we are told, was shot in a duel, some a?” gym)“ pa 9% d ‘me fiuildin ma, way and’ years ago, With allapt. Smith—an affair which at the may); :gMirrtiseiLffmrdfler “remied on his’bwk time caused constgerable sensation in Dublin, where en on . . , . . , . . ' - . . . it occurred. Looking at the fate of two fine young men hm? ‘Pl’atemly 19,84: fruin serif-"ma‘meddmygdifizfll 5:]: by hostile wounds, there would seem something striking- .kmre' WhICh.was y'ngAfinht eugmém (1:865 mus, hwe ly remarkable in the family mottpa, ‘ Vulncratus mm “ace ("om in fee" t ese mo y ' victus.’~(Wounded, not conquere‘d.) The deceased was formerly a lieutenant in the 16th Lancers, and was been perpetrated withiovabouttwo minutes. It is impos- ivitli that gallant regiment in India. He appears to sible to describe the scene of horror and confusion, from the moment it was discovered that qut. O Grady have ,3,an ,he 60“, , mes on ,1", ms, October, 1834’ and at the time f_ ,i «th held ,he rank of first lieu- hnmen stabbed. People were rushing to the spot parts of the building; for it would seem that tenant I _~ “the mess woman, the mother of the deceased girl, was Robert “0",. ‘in the mess-waiters’ room when he stabbed the officer; was 28 or ‘29 ‘i ”‘ iekgnndyuiespfxiiurden followed by 1h. mma 5517533 I. i ., - “happy 3"! herse‘r’ and (“the pars?” Who 3 i but ’also employed, 5 we have state fly“ in "me m “line” me “'3‘” and sumlde' 0f the We believe he had been about eleven years in the regi- -mmd°mr' spread the alarm throughout the barfacks’ merit. He was considered a good} steady, trust-worthy “d ‘he Officers, quaners were 800" Ifowaed by mqmr' man; and nothing had been alleged against him, ex- ers‘ ‘ . , . ce tsome former 'uarrels with the girl, to whom he a - “ We now mmm to Lieut' O Grady' who’ during 1i"; pciired devoledly zilttached. It is said that Lieut O'Griitfy lane" pant mesa "agw occllnences’ had been place‘ once ordered him into confinement for some neglect of by“, [Fa-d!" 0mm” 0." me hearth mg’ and iii-tended duty or act of iiisubordiuation; but. what that was we .by‘ Mr. Cohen, the assistant surgeon of the regiment; couk’, no, ascenam / we pnnc'pal surgeon' Dr' Fraser’ bemg at thehead Isabella Hadden, as she was generally called, only completed her twentieth year on the Qist April last. “quarters at Bolton. The wounded officer exclaimed to male “mm hl‘mf‘om I have long exPeCied this from We learn that this wretched girl, the fatal cause of all this crime, had long been of indifferent character. that villain ;’ and immediately afterwards, he asked, ‘ is \Vhen only sixteen years of age,.she married a man th'at'poo; girl dead ’l’ Mr. Cohen told him she was not. ' i . ‘V ' ’ . I . , . . . fl . Takm 'qacer a hand’ Lieu" OGmdy said w hlm' named Patricio I‘erritt, a private in the 19th regiment, then stationed at Burnley barracks. She has for four pestness and emotion, ‘ Oh. this is a bad or five‘years liVed separate from her husband, who, we Any way to die but this !' Mr. Cohen then de‘l'ed h‘msc” (inlet; that perhaps all believe, is now with his regiment in Malta or Corfu: and she was employed by her mother, about the kitchen, would as be anticipated ; and he endea- vourved’ bywdmt‘iihEIlps orihe wounds tOgether’ and assisting in cooking, doc. She has left an infant, a daughter, about two years old: this child was placed corfiression, to the blood which was now pouring out at nurse in Burnley or the neighbourhood. and loop-holed windows, were scatt ‘ met in Scotland: and even in the .-. veller cannot explore the most unfreqh the remotest glens ofthe country, w.ng some grey relic of other days, remmdm chain of feudal despotism had there pie thousand links, and around which thet- those fine traditions, where fiction has lent, colours to history. . y' r In the vicinity ofthese strongholdsf tish barons of the thirteenth and fourteen held their residences, there was cleared much ground as was necessary for the- ‘V numerous train of vassals and,retainets,' what was termed the “ followincr’,’ of their n. erected in 1821, cover a nley, M‘ i" . it; at down exhausted. to ,tfi deceased persons, The unfortunate officer, as the army list gives the name, FONDNESS or FARM STgeii F03. _ , (From an English. Paper.) I In this country asrnall portion only of tho ral community have tried the efficacy ohm stock. In America, on the contrar. ,, mote and newly-settled districts, evf ' a cow or two and a few sheep, ‘ of his own interests, is iii the re'_‘ them salt, if it can be possibly spa household use. I mention this, "rt tions ofthe interior of that country if; 'scarce, and consequently dear, and always be spared for “ suiting the ca poorer classes ofthe settlers; but sin most unlimited progress efiiriternal irn , roads, &c.,) the facilities'fiir procuring article have been greatly increased, so th \ distant settlements you find the custom of g farm-stock almost universally prevailin - ‘ with which it is-devourcd by both catty. even by horses, is astonishing; while the ed overthem through their eagerness _ equally surprising. A flock of sheep or (I may instantly be, brought together, as ifb every corner ofan extensive pasture, pl‘OV, hear the voice ‘or see the person of him w pared with a small quantity of salt; for .t hint that there is salt about to be distributed- boundiug and scampering along as fast as, ‘ . carry them, though the common practice: the salt in smllyrude troughs, or upon plank ’ or flat stones, yet so anxious arerthese cre'ati at the salt that scarcely the shyest ofth it from the hand ofthe person that sup interesting sight to witness two or thre' come at the farmer’s call, bloating and r5 in sotriewhat inconveniently hemuiing him i v sure on all sides. With regard to cattle; It“ safe to venture into an open field with sal session; for so eager are they to obtain it. ‘ _ not even allow time for your depositing the places intended for‘it, or even upon ill“ nothing else be at hand. Huge oxen, with ‘1 able horns, are rather mugh companionsw closely around you : and it sometimes f you experience much difficulty in getting y, ble friends satisfied. Horses are under? THE ROYAL CAS'I'LES OF SCOTLAND. (From Tytler’s IIistol-y of Scotland.) On the Borders were the castles of Jedburgh, Rox- burgh, and Berwick, those of Dumfries, Kircudbright, Wigtown, Ayr, Tarbet, Dumbarton, and Stirling, formed a semicircle of fortresses which commanded .the impor— tant districts of Annandale, Galloway, Carrick, Kyle, Lanark, and the country round Stirling, containing the passes into the Highlands. Between Stirling, Perth, and the Tay, there was no royal Castle till we reach Dundee, where Fitz-Allan commanded; after which the castles of Forfar, Kiiicardine, and Aberdeen, pro- tected and kept under the counties of Perth, Angus, Kiiicardiiie, and Aberdeen; and travelling still further north, we find the castles of Cromrrrty or Crumbarthyn, Dingwall, Iiivcrness, Nairn, Forres, Elgii‘i, and Banff, which, when well garrisoned, were deemed suflicieiit to maintain the royal authority in those romote and un- settled districts. Such were the royal castles of Scor- land‘previous to the war of Liberty : but it was the po- licy of Bruce, as we have seen, to raze the fortresses of the kingdom, wherever they fell under his power; whilst, on the other hand, Edward, in his various campaigns, found it necessary to follow the same plan which had from the wound. Mr. O'Grady looked at him, speak- ing as if in pain, and with difiiculty said, ‘ Oh! it is of 'no use;I shall notlive many hours. This is the death of me.’ He was then placed on atable, conveyed to his own room, and laid upon the bed. By this time, Mr. White, a surgeon, in practice at Burnley (which is dis- 'TIlE CAUSE OF CANNING'S DEATH. The extract below, from Bloc/crowd’s Magazine for February, 1823, will be read with deep and melancholy interest, especially by those who remember the brilliant '. tent about a mile from the barracks,) arrived, and, with “the remainder of the night. , :Mr. Cohen, attended the unfortunate gentleman during He lingered till half past ten o’clock ouMonday morning, and then expired. Minister, whose genius adorned the country and his age. Canning died just after the'close ofthe Parlia- mentary Session of 1827; and though there are few who will, believe that his death was the result of mere chagrin, this graphic account of the influence of Lord been so successful in Wales,p.nd either to construct ad- ditional fortresses, for the purpose of overawing the coun- try, or to strengthen, by new fortifications, such baronial castles as be imagined best suited for his designs. In this manner the architecture of the strong Norman Cas- fiuence, although they seldom exhibit in so striking a manner. i a fine and noble animal, but when I first he was somewhat shy and intractate. If During some y'all! Whepithe, i" 1' girl was raised from the ground, it was found; ii 3:20 was bleeding profusely from several woundsiififliiited below the shoulder, on the left side and on the back. She was conveyed to one of the rooms ofher mother, at the other extremity of the building; andla medical man shortly afterwards attended her. She season be, along with two or three others out to grass, and notwithstanding the tarneness ofliis companions, it was Willi I difficulty that he was h’aliered when hill. ‘ large. Oats, Indian corn, and other , -tles, which had already been partially introduced by Scum—Norman barons, was more effectually taught bv their formidable enemy to the Scots,'who profited by the lesson, and turned it against himself. It not unfrequently happened that the siege of a baro- Grey’s phillippic will let the reader into a sad compre- hension ofthe pains qureatness. , “ It was not out of the quiver of the cit-Ministers that the shaft was taken, which was hurled with such calm about two hours and a half after the fatal dee ,Robert Morris was almost instantly raised, and carried to his room; he expired in two tor three minutes after- wards, havmg apparently stabbed himself with such des- peration as to inflict two or three mortal wounds, be- He never spoke after the‘ fatal acts above described. The sergeant-major sides‘others of a less serious nature. c appeared to suffer much pain ; and twice, in paroxysms of agony, she exclaimed,- ‘Oh Morris! Oh Morris l’ She survived only till eleven o’clock the same night, ds. ' and deadly strength against the ,new Premier, CAN- NING. Had the memorable speech, which held up Mr. Canning to such cold and bitter scorn, come from one of the Tories, it might have beenfimputed manger, to vexation, and a‘ desire for“ venge; but the blow came from a quarter where no 5 h artifice could be used to parryit. The new Premier had suffered the common fate of those who trust to intrigue and dexterity, rather thap to bold and manly sincerity; he had no real friends —no one to throw their shield over him in his hour of need, and save him from the i stern vengeance of his trial castle detained the whole English army for weeks and even -months before it; and although feeny gar nobility and their vassals, would be almost impossible They raised their formidable towers in every part ofthe kingdom, on its coasts and in its islands, on its peninsu- risoned, the simple strength of its walls resisted and sometimes defied the efforts of Edward’s strongest ma- chines and the most skilful engineers. To enumerate or to point out the situation of the baronial castles which at this early period formed the residences of the feudal were offered him in vain: but when , salt, he forthwith became tire slave of - talismanic power was wonderful, to: from1 . individual about the farm could at any“ captive provided half an ounce M33“ bribe. Indeed it was not necesttryi .i suffer himself to be taken ; on the Whig!“ come voluntarily to his enslaver, and en . ‘ - him out of‘his salt. ' ‘i i ONE WAY TO GET Rum—A rummfll' ins, and in its lakes, upon the banks of its rivers, and on tlie'c'rests ofits mountains; and many of thoselinhabited by the higher'nobihty rivalled, and in their strength and extent sometimes surpassed, the fortresses bel the king. haughty enemy; Lord Grey sawhis opportunity, and smote him to the earth. The neWSpapers of the day gave no adequate idea ofthe wonderful effect of Lord Grey’s speech on the lltli of May." While he was speak- ing, and pouring forth invectives, which fell like a toy. melted up the knife, which is about a foot in length—— ing an old carver, much ground, and so thin, that the back had almost as sharp an edge as the true edge ; the point, too, was‘very sharp. The force with which this deadly weapon had beenused, in its too fatal success ally used to be,short of change, had't following expedient to “raise the wind}? ‘ ’ ‘ pint bottles exactly alike, one in each ' , ed the grogeiy, and called for a pint OPE” stirring to In the year 1309. when the military Etaléms , , , h _ , , _ . . of}; h d , was filled and handed to him when he V against three li,ves,.,wns. evident from the .blade being rent of bitterwater, full upon Canning’s devoted head ,h tucel (:1 tiligrsested fgomll‘lngland nearly the whole of pocket, at ,he same time tengn the ,m. , no he tf l h t tl t d h . r e roya 35 ,We in Adward the Second 4 3- q“. .n or seven mo 99.nex he poi" ' an i e the House or Peers' Whmh “as extremely ‘crowded earne tl to his ' -' l bfi’i ' wrumg "0 money- "Then I worft tr 5 Gills”! point being also turned, as ifit had come into cantact ‘ ’ S 5' P’m‘dpa “'5 "1 SCOtla “ i 'y t ~ hung with breathless attention upon his words- and when he had concluded, no man rose u i he had spoken, Mr. Canning’s ‘part the fearful castigation of their leader—and the Tories felt that anything more would be superfluous, minutes the House was empty—~men’s minds . . nd,/ directing them to maintain their ground to the last extremity aoainst the enemy; and it is singular that, with th - ‘ ption of Edinburgh, Stirling, Dunifries and Jedbifrgii the posts which they held, and which are enumeratedaiti In a few“=his order, are all of them private baronial caStles whose were too proprietors bad either been compelled by superidr force, my gin,” said the landlord. “If you 3" harm done,” added the other,'reluet8fl“yii’ tle of water from his pocket, and» MD!” was quickly emptied into the cask. J.’ much harm done to, landlord, that'ilik though rummey had. his battle Orgih: with some hard substance; probably'the resistance of agbone. ' the cause of this three-fold crime, though no- __ , be ascertained with certainty until after the ._ j the bodies, we have heard enough to leave ' _, , ,j’ o;:r£‘aqyrdoobt, that Morris Was actuated by jealousy. p to gainsa‘y what y stood aghast at- n y _, full of what they ,had heard to allow th t ‘ - - , ber of ‘ t ' ~— ' There, seems (to have been considerable intimacy be- themselves to the ordinary business of thiamflcbuzgdlahsd :iisiinilufiaiigsi’y selfiSh consmerauonsa to embrace the Eu. gun. pm S “fem, , n from the cash. ,. meet: Lieutenant OGrady and the girl;,and Morris it adjourned almost immediately, notwithstandng the a p i M was jealous, of this, and desirous that she should marry himself; strangely enough, for he was aware that she was already married: On Sunday afternow, Morris and In his letters are mentioned the castle of Kirkintull h between Dumbarton and Stirling; Dalswinton in (Creel, g loway,. a pricelpalv seat‘of the Comyns; Caerlaver 'V belonging to the Maxwells ; Thrieve Castle, ago in Ga] earlinessof the hour. The news-fled abo t it the wind, that Lord Grey had destroyed tlilrzisé‘giliniiis RLormrowx: Printed and published by Printers to theiHonorah the House of Ass 1 7' '7" Water Street-m in the Houseof Lords, and it soon reached the Premier . o t corner of Pownaliihé payable half yearly in advance.