{ title: 'Oxford times. volume (Oxford, N.Y.) 1838-1914, September 18, 1850, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031464/1850-09-18/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031464/1850-09-18/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031464/1850-09-18/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn83031464/1850-09-18/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
Image provided by: Fenimore Art Museum
_ of the \ thunder of the pafe-th- ' t bit ww gfififi‘ ; gmlmffiu. WED h j P stfigwfint: i - rim\; y‘pé gpr alorestb bymail} at gt 50 H sentiyfnalloritaken tthe office 7 - > No'paper discontinued (unless at the option of the ESvpays, sy|: beqritiors. supplied at $1.25 in adva ig, [TF : WWW-gégwLi‘ml'gmm’ . {boval didécunetinda totTdbs, plied (t Adoante, n> cose 694 wna w cies pa Conn gar T CTrgu Thai®® wilh be detiWerdd to Is ~> (~' head» }) : or tena WEDNEs ~* yee ~~ p som ed at fhe usual rates, , SBJ 7 0 \5% mobb PRINT E achi eer. WEDNESDAY, SERTEMBER 18, 1950. . . No. 82. \\«OnRHT Of THE iHgUizc ior of his tribe: tat his necnle hi fog: TT tt than fist |- adt to bod ont A“ Empgdtfi’ro siijugériiefigg his peopl&tfnt him like tion, broken in qpi-thlmld diapers\? of bustan lenacigurbmiyeQadduhe'inigled brash of the chifdren ahot in their bln'ifii'g' indgesyine gée mtg:gfiagm‘ggghfitfifi’hgdgrflkmEfifimn- befuetrand v‘r\ i $1112“; Let my brother aid mast soof have' Tiled préy 16 his 'Invet- swaiip, seeming jrpervioue»to the eye. yield- respected, and no sek gniitled ig, meroy-the y s you blow out your lamp; Fuetrand givi-his blood (or the blooi he Leratefoes; had\ not his-good fortand thrown edalahoriouvyaégage to tHe place of sufaty. new. bain. infant in its tree-rocked cradle. and 'Then he stretghes his wings and lighty on your nose And n to dis url your repose y ' And liflgfcan‘m £3 y ‘lffiwilh gimiet or blade, , Ba willitry.the.cffest: hig sweet serenade. filglmyflgzfi'nrnl. Ha} draft Ive swore 'That the locusts of Egypt were not half the bore 'Of thesd lodge in the night, gilmmu glug You a eong hefore takipg a bitt. ny sold wintegr=the north; wind may THTeBlng the Win; tHawléet andthe show. ~* bwouldsenwelppme$t, . Patrick to\this our Tair ef thu s ell Dd non if in killing these wipg'd.fevila ho would Mini us: ite v. fier o> Ond of thase fovely days in 'the latter end ffeculia¢ to the climate of Amer- Nol dhat they tive dbtdined the hame of In- oil rapidly dractiig to ite con- sunt fn hour bigh, whatis With more thin meridian npléaitor, over a wide éxparse of country still | in its peiméval garb: of\ wilderness ; thougli-furthier down th#' ' valley, on whore slope the mellow light still {ingered, the occasional crash of 'a fulling tree, the ede\ totd the vicinity of a settlement. 'The stream, which Wohad its course in many a ;| great brave-he has taken the iédlgbflfimi'gfi- hry whtrion colons: yac) ciyguitous reach through the lonely glen.- tite8 plancing in'bright edges over the nuked | véaku whiitety decked ftw. careent, -and there | epreqilliglite stognitat moisture nuiong falter | cradkw'atil' tangled eaplinge of the houry ce- aisertiltltto pxidterds could be traced ouly by ste tied been'early epprediated by the pilgrim fa- thark$\Wwhoy while seouing « cefage from the bigoted rutét, lind not learned to neglia'lhe‘borfiform of the body, In minie- wring to the cFiividge of the spirit. Olfflli‘d‘fi‘bfirhlqbulfi of a gigantic tree, Trow be'place by some adtumnal gost, ay de'the crune which patiently watchéd its fidny prey from a neighboring dPitblited grantib.- sat the proud form 'af thesred lwater, - The ornumental wam- puts ithe armlets gltiering arouad his tawny limbs, the sculp-fringed leggins «ifl the 'highly valhed guar which lay within Fifi] PHE SPRL £7 ~ - parents z cap s umgmmmummmaamnrtmd Ayam enct : same tire hmlflpfiefiw‘oult deve C8 Pbrering them inthe heacy cants of the fugi- durtag the- severe exertionyzn2.miles praosed point, gave <hat to which -the Laditin. led bis tid really bard, no less than the fraltless pro- portions, «ad princely bearings of the Indian, proclaimed fii u chief dmong his people- awaiting the auppronch ofis de¥eby- the path which his soa- todtommminided, theré wits a turKing sparkle dtfis'taltd eye which portended the light- uftip of hiv huger; « quiet dignity ofthis ex- Phssibh . ald it narive grace in his carringe. whith berpoke him worthy of the pre-emi tened he held dover fils tribe, no lees by vir- tib of fis own high deeds and haoghty dar ing. than at hereditary domfnion. | Suddenly ae Qioogh his car had caught some diktint ahand-this aye lightened. as with ex- purded-nodtrll. and head erort, he listened in eilence for a tepeti f in of the noise which 'frad awakened his suspicion ;-the 'alfWhplitg of dried bushés wae now distinctly heard, the thick throbbing of some exhausted atiffiel and erd Tong the bard trump of a dgfih‘nd runner. - With a caution of move- melit.yuequalled by the agility of the. wild deer, the Indian rose to his feet; -not a ras- tat the'herbilge not a quiver of the folinge whiléh waved 06, every (side, had betrayed the motion ; and so statate-like was his up. right figure, that, to a cursory glance, it coald scirtelysmive been distinguished from the ddéétranks by which he was surrounded.- T ig‘gfievidemly aware of the exnct nature of the approaching intrusion, and seemingly \giving! film knnwl'edge, his hand fil‘fl‘ Wh “w lock of the wenpon, which d 713150!an of his' arta, and a mo- nan wafluve brought it to bear with an (oat Mity O1 single foemen as onavailing as it treaded, had a moment a red feaves ol the dense au- ver g fag: es nee of the :.°- ») 5 43 B ¥ esled the antran gd, antl. tiging nup, dest eat rolled in large d: ops e « he., The ev r hfi’fi‘ifiifi’v’r‘e’é‘agwd' ; his buffydeket was soil- ed and torn by his rapid passage through the 13 the biackened brash agd briera of the n {ked ii na'o dla'of is gic f dfuim that must have rendered the | 'I backed by a PHawad regicides The Parhancton hasapilt?~ - Not so. Sactiem,' interrupted the other, with-&n eagerness far differentifrom the dgli- berate and almost ' scornful, manger of the chieftuin--' in frir combat-in selFpreserva- top have iFelain the persecuter of my father's housed It was my life or hisyand' praise be to the God of-Battles, that gave étrength' to my.arms.-the''curoni and: sell-secking op- pressor ot hispeoplé has beer rent fo his'jast acébunt by the band of him whom be mude him upon the of thefdble..Bachers eof “(he Nutrugnnsamrqvho, .bySLyDSuspicioys of fraud, and too pawerful for, open hostility Kauted ant feasted.\ with his tribes, afound j settlements, whith Wuref‘énl red:men fromthe hore? of the salt .and. the graves, of their fathdre. ..The shadag of night had already ¢lgsgd in. Whed the great chief the Narmngansel stood before the ° hollow btone? It was a wild And fommditicepotin which, gecording to the'sim- - - «« Flt is very. good -my white + brother 16 a lat; madg.ope,), she / hollow, stone'. orming the pornt which, they, mgt., The Fight Tiro'éfi‘fis\? noidfi‘fiffigfirfg torrent, geayfixx‘g u © Whileitie: was- yet speukin®! h faint shout ectoed from the distant forest, and again the youth was starting on his hopeless race, when the red warrior again urfieeled the movements 1 of the other rivulet was of a fur more gloomy | by a touch of his powerful arm. 'eepeqt; fis dark and turbid waters crept a- * The deer'-he said-leaps very far, yet “U\E- thick with decayed vegetation in u cur the dogs of the hunters overtuke him ;-but irem scarcely perceptible-soaking. its way\ the cunning fox escapes the suare !-Is my jhrough mutied weeds and fallen trees, the | brother a bird to Ay through the brush, and I haunt of aquatic birds and loathsome reptilé; leave no trail behind, or are his enemies blind | between the uniting stream the gray cr'ug that l'hPy should not follow it? See? and rose tall and towering towards the heaven.- he pointed to- the deep tnotprin's on the bank One seathed und etorm bleached oak. spring- al the muddy rivalét«-' the women of the pule ing from a fiesure of the rized rock. shot its blogs might run, where the young brave of ) gigantic stein almost horizontally from the their tribes hind gore before my broth- | fice ol the clilf bearing in its lifgtess branch- ec travel in a blind path, und the eyes of those 1:59 the iinmemorial nest of thir bald Leaded that chase him shall be in a-cloud. Let him eagle. the featherd tyraatof the tins atlan tike the. mocdasine 6f Muintonimoh, and go | tis wilderness. Beneuth thie Sheher of the ap the windings of the 'ercoked river? (iH lmusgy tronk, end: almost\ contented by it. lay the Iwo waters make one; let him. lie in the she narrow enirapce-of the deep-cavern thit thoilow etone,' and after the san is'gong, the | lind given the rack the appellation by which Nurtaganset will meet him in coutigil!' (it was knowo among the tribes of the Atlantic ‘MmflMwH—J—NNM parsec Loc di tive, when tho cry of the pursuer rose #0'uwny with miugfgs, gota single sob hgtoken: clearly on the air, that it-seemed but a few | eg fatigue, nor did a drop of moisture hang rods distant from the spot 'on which they gpon his shaven brow. © Not so the pulefuce stood. 'Now let thepale-face go.' he entd, who leaned, overdone with fmigue. and pointing with his musket to the source of the weighed down with anxiety. againat the ap siream. . [pointed ; so utter was the eahaustion nt'lnsl * They will slay thee, Sachem, cried the frame and the despondeney of his apiri1, that astonished youth-even if 1 escape, thee | he searcely raised lils hend (0 receive the dig- will they alnughter for the deed? nifed salutation of his preseever-* My hroth- *Leuthe pule-ture go!\ was the chim G- | op is welcowe'-uttered ag carelessly as. tho' ply. though the fiefce gleam of scorn and hnte ag hour of pleasure, instead of chase for life that Bushed across his dark fentores belied /and beath, had intervened aiuce their Inst the quiet tone in which he spoke, * Misntoni- meeting=-' my brother is very welcome-*hia moh is a great chiel-bhis heart is very hard, l people were hot aginst lim, bat he hus sav- aad the graes grows not under his leet? ed his scalp.? A shout, yet nearer than the lust, aed the ''Thanks to thee. Sachem, thanks to thee! approuching tread of armed men. operated But flow didat thou esenpe them, they most | more powerfolly on the mind of the y9998 nave beeu cless upon thy heels hy their cla European thao all the argoments of hit (6d | pop,\ ully. With regruited strength and Nopa word did the stérn warrior speak iy, ted vpirlila. he durted awny on the Indicated reply. for many minutes; be had seated bim- course. find was intercepted from the view 9! self beside the junction of the walters, and the Sachem by the first winding of the £98- was inhaling the emoke through the hallow | ged dute, before he dreamed of consulting 107 grem of his tomabawk, as if the question had his own eufety, Aastily, but deliberntely , ceecaped his ears, Alter a long interval-- covering the prince Gym“ on the pluce |i Gy !'-he said-' your young man are bous- where they bad held th€ir brief couference. | org-they talk with many tongues. but their with dry brosh and withered leaves- just as the foremost enemy was rustling in the oppor site brake-the latlian bounded off, leaving n track as obvious us possible, to the lesa per- feet vision of the © Yengeese with »peed but little inferior ta that of the hunted stag, and ere long hai léft the hue and ery of the pursuit fan do the rear. Alter an hour of flight, sustained with un exhapsied power, the warrior puvsed, where the luxuriant vegetation and fat loam of the forest -in which his louded feet sunk almost unkle deep-wersoxchanged for 'a tract of hard and hongry ennd, bearing a granted pine, winch indieated hy their mengre {nlin ge he poverty of the soil from whieh they eprong Halting a few seconds to mark the progress uf the chaee, he drew | the deceitful buskine limb are stower than the eluggish tortw.se. Minntonimoh is a mighty chief. he leaves the Yenegeese behind him, as the elk. outatripe the logy bear? 'Cuq 1 then rest in eafety here.' usked the weary fagitive, 'or must I y yer lurther Into the wilderness, before'l find an ark of refuge for my feet! The great father of the paleface.' replied the chief, after the customary pruse~ ho that dwells beyond the shores of the sult Inke. is very angry with his young warrior !- when the sun is above the treetope his runuere will be in the woode ? - This learful intelligence wns delhvored wih perfect nonchalance. yet, when the etoie of the wilderness beheld the head ol his guest sing upon his breast in hopelers anguizh. he resomed hia discourse. :L ple phrassology of the oatives; ' the two -wa- Fonce been clothed with the dark vendure of | | persion ; in. different diresuoge they strick illlly. which flanted hy thousands on the lignid have cunceived a possibility of these oases .of the awamp, suve lor the dark Cranes | ' mile distant from the solid shore, was set so r kegping\ tha caups0\of the stream for' more than .@ mile, ofwhich each step was fraught with incredbing toile, they reached the margin of a vai sheet black noracs, 6c- cupying the whote Botton of a yast basin be- tween the dense. and laogled mountain, by which It wgeenviroped. . Thousands of neres Jay Aooded. before:theiréyes in the dark and stagnupt water ;-though tho floating trunks and scattered remaiog of Innuaterable giant trees, showed: that the drowned - morasé had the cedar. till the outlet -of its springs had.| teen-choked, and, it“; moistyre,. which had [cateredfl'llldl'j'gtswf ; leaves and cupdike blossoms, of the winter surface. - Far in the middle of the quagmire: loomed a few - @evtered. islands -if those might be called | iélands, . which showed 'no solid sarface or laftier soil than the exrround- ing marsh-of white and saplees cedars. which, though life had long departed from their coots, retained the seinblance. if not the nature of trees; and stood the skeleton of their ancignt loveliness, in bare and blasted. deformity ubove the poisoned waters, which had destroyed | their viud - No hu- man eye cauld have discerned a path through the deep golf of floating mnirey no mind could which flipped from stump to stamp, or the ducks which wheeled inweremining . Bucks a- Efpr rusting suppliunt | A gigantic oak, the only tree which flourished in close vicinity to that luatheonte pool,.afrded a key to the laby- its shadows Iny a amall expanse | of clear deep water, pervious to the limbs of the awimimer.and into this, followed by bis European friend. the warrior plunged in si- lenee, holding his horn and rifle high above his head. he sifagglted to the opposite margin where a single tyfi af rushes furnished a glue t0 his further progress. | From hence a dan gerovs und invisible puth formed parily by nature, though improved by art, led the ex: plorer to the central tuft of cedars, by the irunks of fallen trees, here moored benenth ; the slimy surface. and there, at rare intervals floating ou the bosom of the marsh. - Never, save at the deadest hour of night, did the Ba- chem, to whom mlone, with his Immedinu' successor the heredicary secret wis confided, venture to his solitary fortress, and then nev- er, suve in moments of the utmoet peril and necessuy. | Oue step from bis periloos causeway must have precipitaied the wretch who mule it, into in whyse too tenations to allow the practice of' the swimmer's art and t06 unviable for the trend of man yet guided by a Tew well musked posiuons above the li- quid stratund, the practiced loot might travel in perfect safety to its isolated refuge. 'The spot. at which they at leagth arrived a full mickly with the white and witherad suplings ol the auctent foreat, that it was no casy mat- ter to penetrate to its secluded centre. There the expense of almost endlese bthor, a solid door of trunke had 'beén consiructed, and covered with soil brought from the distant shore, affording a safe though anrrow retrent from the uimost ingenaity of mortal malice ;- und here, in perfect enfety, did De Rocey lin- | a “maybe edge of the syword--gave, tokens h rd ; torrent. 1 rbé’ehniefilii'a source of | sources, but unquenched in their-high souled from rack toFook-down tha side 'of 6 -m6dt- | desolation 'to the nbblest ecions of the forest. | gallantry, to herd for a season witfiithe wolf (a’in. from which itaevered the caverned miase The only signe of vegetable lifo, that remain- | and the serpent. till the sun of their tribe of gravite, thit named the pluce ; the course jed on -this once feriile tract, were the broad | should rise again in ite meridian glory. expedition. had come to seek the. al\} the Vengeese to hunt the hapless rior wm uae dry Lip dujiteb date f hoary locke of the superanuaced hero. djomed of thé tander mercy of thise who should have Jearned their own experience in lga! bigoried oppression, which had driven them fromm the sgat of their childhood to sesk their God In thé wilderness. | In dne of these uomerciful affrays, so aneriy had the Narra- gansets, been deléated, by iha.unibn of civil- ized craelty with barbarous. cunning, that the last warriors. and the great chief of the tribe, were forced to seek their anfery in dis- jojo the. paihlees forest, .bro@mfn-their te- :and the reflect | red torrenc leaped. with iba apted'and brillin- stare & T J ahine-dappled the diotgy ad feslsofyivid lightatreamed opwarde «centre-of \the mushy» K-Ildllm’find‘k Bachemle ista stopd/wrappediin 6“ ik (6° 'gron of living:fired-from \tron ey of lightoing; till the éddar one clusturedimase of fret gleam.Badburst ron filg fof thermost. fidious sounds! Fing\apon'\ sileht night.. The bppaling®dotég \P (lo death halloo -were mingled with dfher fones, which -the awe strock puritafiic tdo\ plainly cognized for ihawuicaid(”tfiavmngcébiékifiiglfi' Shriek dpon shridk/theycplerced -- heart and paralyzed ptéeydhands til tig Wet sparks shot into alr and-imptnettatile\da ness'fell upon the scent ofthat sour Fefi fling tragedy. - While the of \tha Syfectafigs, yet gaged by .theglure, sought is vi M’Qfiifilfi etrate the-gloom. and while\ their Sary\ pgule were sunk imdoperttitious terror; a'dry from \the Sentry, who was posted at the wellkhastn tree. followed by the terrific cadence \of D \Benlp whoop. aonounced thatanother of thetr namber had perished, and «tish the worker af wil.this_roin was at large, subartabil-od--_ danoted. unappensed ! - Without it motiéent'g ipaase, they brokeup -from their blobkiide: abd Aed in fedr~ aud 'durfkoees.-to> thelr distint homes, Bearing, in every wind, the otignish» ed cries of their Jost leader, or the iffumiph- aot yells oi his tormentmg. conqueror) | 'The Sachem of The Nactugntsets went forth, he rallied his scattered Followers, shouted. bis Never had the noble Indinu and he whortrrwar- whoop throogh the trembling.. territories he had so generously preserved met sgmin. after they had parted on the margin ol the Suchem's swamp; but the mind ot the red warrior was goaded to the last exiremity of scom and fury. when he learned that 'Be brave,\ who, but for his protection woald nev- er have worn a heard. had commanded the young. men of Yengeese in their mst fatal-ouset, Things were in this state. when. on the afrernoon of a December day. a Pequod runner reached the settlement atbne, ol his pute invaders, and when he fell, it wit by the hand of his hereditary foe.the wild Mo- bican, -and in a spot which, as the Suchen plain. has obtained an imatortallty of a far lees hidious churacter than that, 'which still haunts the onfurgotten scene of * the Necra- gunset's vengeance ? > General Taylor at the GreatBattle of Bus- na Vista. The extrnordinary | modesty --of General and af most breathless with fatigue and fierce anexiety.,. He had traced the great chief of\! the Nurmagansets-nlons to the edgo-af the | morass, und his owo tribe being oo a distant | from his. lair, . Ignorant of the predige ®pot \trg precinctsinust be concealed the object vf his biiter animosity ; 'and, as he. called for the succor of the puritass, he bonsted, with tri- umph and ferocity - that ha would submit to perish by their bands, unless he glfould defiver the mighty Maintonimoth a captive, ora carpes, ere night should. fall. All lecliogs of gratitude und honor merged in the desire of glory.-euger to se care so dangerous a foe to white assendency, and, yielding. perhaps, to the dangerous soph» istry which had led some of his secie to pro- uounce ali promises made to the heathen noll and unbinding.-Ds, Rovey commanded an instant muster of all capable of bearing armat that they might seize the prisuner, whom the Lord had delivered into their hands,\ and set forth at the head of a powerful array to hunt the footsteps of a single fugiuve. and that fugitive the preserver of his own exis- {ence. | Taylor, 6u8 the fact that. sfter All. lis mihd did aot tthe pleasure in the recollertion of the scenes of war, led hin to be rather reluctant to taik much about bis battles; bet the Hon, .L. W. Upham says tha: he heard fron} th&'olid Geueral's own lips a minate and graphic a count of his experiences throughoot the \en el she-bnule af,. Brews Vint li #2. U] J.. Chat - whule.of the second day he-fully expedited d,, dig; that he bore, gach moment, the thought thatit might be bis last-that on oo other sintiler occasion of his life did he carry with him sucha feeling. - He showed ne wherechis clothes were perforated by. bally. - The 'out wide edge of his cont steove, fust below the | shoulder of his right arm, was cut a¥#oy; ad wiso the liven. and the Axnnel onder and the skin was blackened aud borat but not tora, and two bullets perforated each severn times we fulde of his cont as it Bapped fons® at lis right side, within an inch of his. person| and about three inches apurt one the . other. - These statements he made in-conneis ion with un unewer in the negative to thy in- quiry whetherhe had ever been wounded. He then recuried to the subject of the batile, uacrated his movements during both the thiys and nights. the particulars of the critical tu- The wintry daylight was ~fuet waning and bisirly disposing his force in piquets round the entire ewanip, Edmund De Reosy led a band of getive and well armed followers | to that very pathway, which he had sworn, 2 mever by word or deed, by the breath of his lips! or the goidance of fis hand, to betray to mortal man' Not a sound was heard. as they proceeded on their torlsoins rout, but the | scream ol the wild. fowl, with ground as though about to alig t on their @rmied brows - When within about a hundred puees of the fortress. the path made a hall circuit aronud the isolated clump, exposed throughout its whole extent to the fire of the garrison ; but so litle had the intrudéra-cal culated to | resist n score, that it was with a leekng of wonder even more than fear, that they beheld ihe flash, and heard the sharp ger, furnished with food and raiment by his era, or sequestered glen, wae left uneenrched {rom his limbs, aod with unfultaring: breath gnd'a step that leftne trnce behind. he aped on his way to the appointed count th Edmund De Roory-the youth so generous- ly preserved by the friendship of the heroic Indian - wie the son of one of those self con stituted jndges, who pronounced sentence upon that fulse hoarted monarch, who, though perhape de€erving rather comemfp; {dr’hil‘ follies, thaw pbuifhfogitts, lor hie . uni!!! has Beek almowt dpwhilittody | prodédbeell\ bibi 10: Shorlyafier {ba -ohwortly son ofthat onworth véreign hed been cestored th ths dominted of his an- ceators, the vercran Defloosy was compelled 10 dy, io arder to eavishisdlife from the ven! geance of the youthful king; and ere many years bad elapsed, by the united mflaenece of his wealth and talents, had-become the patri- erchal refer ef-onccamong. the settle- ments which -were mtstarperiod Fast rising on:the * wild New & time:the yuuibfilzolonies were hot 'deetied weakness, in one whom. Le knew ul old to be a cunning huater, and an undaunted brave. 'My pale brother is very | ead ; he ls not a deer. to know tha paths in the forest. nor a pigeon, that his flight shall never tire. - But the great chief of the Narrugaunsets will hide nim ip a cunning [place, will the, great white father spall look plesegatly, on his young brave.\ ~Wilk chou indeed do this Sachati? cried ibe exgerdistenery will thou indeell concebl me uniil this tyranny be overpasi ? Then do: { promise to thee wealth. such as no warrior ; ot the | sytldernees has ever kuown belore. | fathers. + Artie gold ' 'GoP rétarned the other. namovern-by of- (ers ofall that the pade natives deeined most worthy of agceptance. | The Marraganset in a grégi thief-his wigwain is nevererapty - thd déer catinot d€cape fro the éodnd 6T his thadder--his youngemen are very brave and worthy: of» nqtice-or inférletétion} bat, | happy - Miaotasimoh la.rich-he is manery To To they 4 i p wh litmhmmmd be is copteni|, Butlet. the palelace promisa that he wil er show ] 1 rnot-warsent\ 10 préside ae that . bos npr an i the eodtiing plack of NianYontmoh to newetite} and to assertthe pratoga\ ZTJ£RW w.‘ crowm: magi fig of his color-let titt \put tis\ hakhd' vindictiemhimselfy thomimater wawndt lofg | heart an : Ehrlich-gin; E p S alienation from the land of his. fathers; aid tepproceeded to en- ite «of abs ar a +1 to thes, chief, by all mfiiu y Bopis “5&3?ng never or deed by thathreats of my tipese lbgifidimfi‘ whflgfimifiy thy I: avaistancewonld be pref to rartil man, A5: iexecotive 9. though ioly marvelling at euch display | of ! when © shall be restored to the home of my | reat) aprialted with F in} agility'df boghood{had ®rthanged*for :| tha fron -and to its . \ by the white scttlers, and their red allies - | In time the irritation passed a way. - the sa \ tellettes of the monarch were withdrawn from { a country odious to | their refined and courtly ( motions. -the - aettlements of | the puritains were left in a mensore to theif own control, moleated in the seat ol his farefathers. Years purséd way the power ofthe new settlers increase, and with their power their rpagity, and « their ~injustice. 'The dodian whahad been loved, na their protector, and respected as the orginal possesser of the soil, whs now déemed an intruder. where he once reighed supreate. - Now tredted with open vialedee of foes, or decrived by a show G treacherous amity go eugpected friends, Nar- mngagset tribes were cheated of their ancient dominions, or batchered in their blazing vil- lages. #? the optrit of 'the white governor was warlike, or patific, or croek - Nov tamely however, ~did the red warrior submit to the caprices of the Eoope- any therainihawk wa» unbuired and dgeply did the . pritéfacesufies by the indomitable: [ valor, an wop sgacity; f the, co cep po st hES flagged: of beHoog were already we fifge of greys the light 'The -and ero long the young De Roosy sat nn-_§ carnage in their ranks. erack of the Suchem's rifle, as the nenrest c engulphed his bleeding car- { gase. - Shou after shot rung from the ecathed ' cedars. at alow. bat reguins intervals, and at every discharge. De Rozey's band was thined ullso many had fallen, that the survivor's, | panic struck, turned to retreat from the single Ime, whose unseen arin had wrought such Snll though his best and bravest were picked off from behind him, | . the warlike figure of De Roosy, conspicuous. no fees by dts nervous symmetry, than its more éommplete décoptrements, was untouch- ed ;-bulletafier bullet find selected ite victim i with thitditable ncetrfaty, bat not one ha beeq nimed at the majebiic pereon of the lead- er. - Last in retrent, 84 hé had been the lore- most in advance. De Roogy turned. shot dashed down the soldiet immediately be hisfooting: and foodd 4'bloodiess tomb in those durk waterey-with n yell hat dardled his Jair. -l i rilxyfgifljng hia glittering a fad, Yt , clamore from beneath their very feet, and the ‘ heavy flapping of the cranes, which wheeled \ fore himi.-the next, Térrified and weary, lost , the boldget hearst, the , Sachoeorbonaded froto , ping . oloog;jhe slippery. cause | tg as though be trod on earth- sis wents when the fare of the day hang upoif | the services of Col. Bragg's pieces, and the facts conuected with the strange and insupli- cable flag that came to him from Santa Auta, La this conversation, from - which 1 derived these interesting iteros of information, Gen. Puylor described to me the anxious consalta- tion of the second gighy. of the batile. His officers came to him, one after another, ex- pressing a decided opinion that bis army was too much broken up to be brought wp to the etruggle. | Hie declured to thent his betiefthnt dreadially as his Corces had suffered, the ene» my had suffered worse; that retreat or any other alternative was entirely out of the ques» tou; that he had made his arrangements 'to i present still a formidable frout to the fue, and 'all that remained for them was to make 'up \ their minds to conquer or die together, if the | assault from their position be renewed with the returning. light. \ But,\ satd he, ;* gentlemen, it will not be renewed. P aur veyed the whole Geld as the sun went down; firm and faithful friend, while the woods were ) follower of De Roosy sprang high into the i and 1 believe we beaten the enemy.\ alive with his enemies; and not a sedret. cav- | nir. and plunged headlong ito the morass, ; When. the third day dawnes it was -disto. | vered that Santa Anna had. fled from B8 ground _ General Taylor instantly ordered train of wagons provided with medical an other means of relief. and accompanied by surgeons {rom his own ariny, to fellow an the track of the Mexicans, and adminisier to' this wants of the wounded and disabled whom ~ they had abandoned on their retrest, - Upom | eome one's expressing a doobt whether sach a use of the public etorés and wagoos, forthe . benefi of the eveiny, would be allowed ; Department, Tayfor cut the difficulty -ahptte : at once, by saying \ Theo I will: pay the bill?\: , -and to provide for the contingenty, hp.u@ii recied a separaie account to be kepwof alli { that was expended for the girgose. d _- -oum s @node oon 2st; ° p35\ The Lady who eam us a note or Sat» urday, saying that she had défermided' 19> | separate from her husband because Tie yoked w agly, anw raquesisme stam hat henda\ ven her a new bonget nod het ehe wesrit's mabe thinks he isa beaoig: will be applie® for eodong ma the ribbdi# brighu--Hesfon Posts | ap c oan toy (uk to ga .