a
Vi'YUVAW
(.1
I'll", iiio' ii'n*'1;' 1- u till-r.tU-I'l
1- V. ;iiUrs, tVom t!i'' pojni-
i>t Uic sunio iiuiiH, lull
li’li. itu, tias iiDt !)(.'( M prir.U il ill
fiii;-,;. •, I >'«-I i!>-l in t. i> m) olt'H
/ in r.uropc. Tli'.sc- li;ivc not
r ' I iinv of the «\r;iiTias, rn:i_v hr cnn-
ii.)W \vh:it tiic:ms tlir Ihr I'rft'.riii'fz
o Ill' ll li.i-- i-'> ottcii in-. l ihiii’ r}».'s. '{tii'y will
lii.il Ik rc t!u- (>rij’''iiKil *
ri SI (1, ;iml consiikrtd :i spvi inu n ot tins f;i-
\ or u- bnuii h of fonipn^ition .iiiioni;-tln‘ (a r-
jiKiiis, will iHit, u I- tliiiik, 1>'. U t'iiu il too loiij^
ov.M, for a 1 c\^.| :i r. ..f tiu Urrihlr
:iMil stijx rnaliiral,” s\illi :i sinking' moral, is not
unsuilalili- liir :i Satiiv»lay ivc, (sptrially in
V, soiiii^tN Mill clunk, as t!u' ]ir( scni.
\(ilionul (iitzillc.
iJvr r,-c;.u-/ni/T;nr, T/.r Ma,(ic Balls.
I roni the (.crnian of A. Apcl.
lllai k '-pints anil white,
V.luc .'spirit.-, anil p’fv,
Min;,^U-, minj^lf, inini^lc,
Vou tliat miiijrU' luuy.
(loar wife,” said rKTiiram.
‘‘ I.lSTl-.N
•lie [(wcslcr ol'Linck-.iliiiyii. to liis jjood
r.iiihful Aiitu': “lisU'ii, ! bcscech you
oi.c iiK^metit. Vou know I have ever
'Ji.iic my utmost to niLiUc you liappy, and
ill Mill l uMlinuc to do so ; hut this pi'o
jiH l is out ol'tiic qutslioit. 1 iutioal you
do not cncoui aj^e the 5-^ii i any larliicr in
the notion ; settle tlie matlci- decidedly ai
once, and she will only drop a lew silent
tears, and then resip;n hcrst irio iny w isli
OS ; l)ut by iliese silly delays nothing
i-atioiial tau be enbcletl.
“ JJut, dearest IiusIkuu!,” objected the
coaxiiii-- wile,.“may not Caiheiine l)e as
happy with Williatn the clerk as with
llobcrt the game-kecper ? Indeed, you
do not know him: he is clever, so good,
4SJ kind—”
“ liut no marksman,” interrupted the
foresler. “The situation whieh I hold
here has been possessed by niy I'aniily for
more ihati two liutidred }ears, and has
always descetided down in a siraii^jht line
iVom lather to son. ' If, instead of this
gill, Anne, you had broufjht me a boy
all would have been well $ he would have
liad h)v situation, and the wench, if she
]»ad been in existence, inij^ht have chosen
I'or lier bridegroom iiim whom she loved
l)csi ; now the thijig is impossible. My
con-iii-law, nuist also be my successor,
and must therel'orc be a marksman. I
shall have, in the lirst place, some trouble
to ol)iuin theti’ial /‘or him ; and in uie se
conJ, if he should not exceed, truly, I
.shall have thrown n\y girl away : so
tlever jju'itsman she siiall have. lJut
oI)serve, if you do not like him, I do not
exactly insist ujjon Kobert: 5ind ai^ither
acTnr clover leihnv lor the 1 will re
sign my '.iiuaii )ii to liini, and we shall
j)ass the rest ot'our lives IVce iVom anxiety
and happily with our children. But
hush !—not another wi>rd I—1 beseech
you let me hear 110 more of the steward's
clerk ”
Mother Ajuic was silenced ; slie would
fain iiavc said a few more words iu fa
vour of poor \\ illiam, but the foresler,
who was well ac(|uaiuted wuh the power
of female jjersuasioii, g'u\e hei iio further
oj)j)Ortunil) ; lie took his gun, whisticd
his dog, and strode away Kj the Ibrest.—
The next mo'iient, I he fair (nrled head
of Calheritu', 'her' fav.;e radiant with
sniiles, was popped in at the door—“Is
ull righ', dear mother ?” said shv'. “Alas I
no, iny c.iild ; do not rejoice loo soon
replied the sorrowing Amu-. Your fa-
liier s]}caks kiiuily, l)ut lie iias di lennin-
ed lo give you to nobody but a luiiUsnian:
c.iid I ktiow he will not ( haiigehis mind.”
Caiherlnc wept, and declar»Hl she would
ioi uie \hati wed any other tliun hi r
oui; iiliaiii. Her inollier wept, fretUil,
'ii oUU d by lurn-i : till at li ii..',th il
finally deieiTniiied lo nialu; atiutliei
aluu'k upon liu- totij^ii lieail ot
oid l)ertram; and, in L'.ie»niidst of a de
llbeialioii rLspecling tl,(- inanner in
’..irK.li liiis was lo bo etlerU u. llie rejrcl
t(l Imvlm- eiilered tiie aparlnuMit.
hen William had lii'ard the of
the I I i.ci ’s objection—“ K tb .a all, ni\
('atii'. i .11' said lie, pressing tl.i- we» jj-
ing !'.:i to liis bovfjiii : “then l.i'(‘|) up
vour (ieai'esl. lor I v. ill myself iie-
coine a forc'-.it r. ! am not unaciiiKiinled
■with wtjodi iafl. for I was. when a ifuy,
j.la- e! under tin ' in; jf my nni.le tm'
cliitf i ores tor o!' I'in-Uibui li, in 01 der to
h ui'ii ii, and only at i:,i' furii. st recjuesi
iii\ utr' Ie the .s'.evvaid, 1 rxc.hanged
the sh'^'/litig-pniich for lli'- w ruing-dosk.
Of wlial use,” coniiiiued I'.ie lover,
“wouid !iis sitiialioi) and iiiu' Iioiise be
»o me, ii I uu!i' ’ car.-y my Cuiiivnne
w.
grar.d
there as tl.o misi.re6s of it. If you are
not more ambitious tlfan your mother,
leai’est, and 'William the i^ame-keejjer
ill be as dear to you as William the
steward, I will becomc a woodsman dt-
jctly ; for the merry life of a forester is
more delightful to me thantl'.e constrain
ed iiabits of the town.”
“() clear, dear William,” said Catlic-
all the dark clouds (*f sorrow
swo(‘ping rapidly over her countenatice,
and leaving only a few drops of glillcr-
ing sunny rain, sparkling in her sweet
blue eyes.—“ () beloved William! if
you will iiuleed do this, all may yet be
well : hasten to tlie hn est, sock my (athei,
and speak to him ere he have time to
his word to Uobert.” “Away,
rtplietl William, “ Kj the forest; 1 w ill
seek him out, and oiler niy services as
^ame-kceper : fear nothing, Catherine ;
give me a gun, aiul now lor the hunts
man’s salute.”
What success he had in liis undertak
ing wa.s soon visible to tlie anxious eye
of Catherine, on her father’s return with
him from the forest. “A clcvcr lad, that
William,” said the old man, ‘‘who would
have expected such a shot in atownsmaiir
I’ll speak lo the steward myself lo-mor-
r(jw ; it would l)e a thousand ^>ities such
a marksman should not stick lo the noble
huntsman cratt. 11a 1 ha I he will be
come a second Kuno. liut do you know
who Kuno was?” demanded he of Wil
liam.
The latter replied in the negative.
“Lo you there now I” ejaculaleil lier-
tramj “ I thought I had tolil you long
since. He was my ancestor, the first
who possessed this siluation. He was
originally a poor Iiorse boy in the train
of the kuight of \N ippach ; but he w'as
clever, obliging, grew a favourite, and
attended his mastei- every where, to tour
naments aiul hunting parties. One.e his
knight accompanied the dukeon a grand
hunting match, at which all the nobles
attended. The hounds chased a huge
stag towards them, upon whose back, to
their great astonishment, sat lied a hu
man I)eing, shriekitig aloud in a most
fi'ightful manner. There existed at thal
period, among the feudal lords, an inhu
man cusiom of tying unhappy wretches
who incurred their displeasure (perhaps
by slight transgressions against the hunt
ing laws) upon stags, and then drivii.g
them into the forest to perish iuisera!)ly
by hunger. The duke Was excessively
enraged at this sight, and oflercd itn-
metise rewards to any one who would
shoot the stag ; but clogged his benefac
tions with death to the marksman, should
his erring bullet touch the victim, whose
life he was desirous to preserve, in or
der lo ascertain the nature of his olVeiu e.
Startled by the conditions, not one of the
train attempted the rescue of the i)oor
wretch, till Kuno, pitying his fate, slej^p-
ed forward and Ijoldly olVerod hisbervices.
The duke liaving accepted ilieiii he took
his rille, loaded it in (iod’s name, and
earnestly recomnuMuling the hall lo all
the saints ami angels in heaven, lireil
sieadily into the buslr.'s iu which he be
lieved the stag had taken refuge. His
aim was tnu'; liie animal instantly sprung
out, plun/ed !o the earth, and expired ;
!)U( the |)oor culprit escaped unhiirl, ex
cept that bis hands and face were miser
ably lorn !iy tlie briers. Tin’ duke ke))i
hi'j word well, and gave to Kuno, and his
doscendaijts forever this situation of
Ibresler. But envy naturally follow s mer
it. and my gooil ancestor \vas not long
iu makini;’ the discove.'v. 'I'herc were
many of tiie duke’s peojilc who had an
eye lo this sifualion, either for them
selves or some cousin or dear frieiul, and
these persuadt’d their m. -.ter that Kuno's
woiuleifnl success was enlirely owing to
sorc.ery ; upon v. iii> h, ihouijh they could
not turn him oiil of his post, they o!)laiii-
eil an order that everyone of his dt.'sceu
(K.nts should undi’i go a trial of his skill
iii'ibre ho could !)»• a'. ceplecl : but wiiich,
boui'ver, the cl.iff forester of the dis-
iritt. 1)1 f.)i-c whom the essay is mude,
can render ..s easy or diflicull as he plea
ses. I w\.s obliged to shool a ring out
of ihe beak cf a wooden bird, w hich w as
swuii'v Ijackwaid and i'orwards; nut 1 did
not fall, any more than my Ibrefathei-s;
and he w lio intends lo succeed me, and
wed my C.ilherini', must be at least as
good a marksman.”
\'>'il!ian', who hud lis'-eiicd very attcti-
lively, was ckliguled wiiii thiS i>iocc ot
family history ? he seized the old nran's
hand, and joyously pi’omised to become,
under his direction, the very first of
marksmen ; such as even j;randfather
Kuno himself should have no-cause to
blush for.
Scarcely had fourleen happy days pass
ed over his head, ere W illiam was set
tled’ as game-keeper in the forester’s
house ; aild Bertram, who became fotider
of him every day, gave his lormal con
sent to hiy engagement with (^atherine.
Il was, however, decreed that their be-
trollirnent should be kept secret until the
day of the marksman’s trial, when the
forester expected to give a greater degree
of splendour to his family lestival by the
presence of the duke’s commissary. Ihe
bridegroom sw am in an ocean ot delight,
and so entirely forgot himsell aiul the
whoh; world in the sweet opening heav
en of love, that Bei-tram frecpienlly in
sisted, lhat he had not been able to hit a
single mark since he had aimed so sue-
-:essfully at Catherine.
And so it really was. From the day
of his hapjiy betrolhmcnt, William had
encountered nothing but disasters while
shooting. At one time his gun missed
lire ; at another, w hen he aimed at a deer
he lodged the contents of his rille iti the
trunk of a tree: when he came home,
and emptied' his shooting-j)ouch, he
found, instead of partridges, rooks and
crtjws, and in lieu of hares, dead cats.—
The fcresler at Unglh grew seriously an
gry, and reproved him harshly lor his
carelessness ; even Catherine be}>;an to
iremblc for the success of the master-
shot.
William redoubled his diligcncc, hut
to no purpose j the nearer the approach
of the important day, the more alarming
grew his misfortunes, every shot missed.
At length he was almost afraid to lire a
gun, lest he should do some mischiel’, for
he had already lamed a cow’, and almost
killed the cowherd.
“ 1 insist upon it,” said the game-kcep-
er Rudolph, one evening to the party, “I
insist upon it some wizard has bew itch
ed William, for such things could
uot happen naturally ; therefore lot us
endeavour to loosen the charm ”
•• Supersliiious slulT !” interni[)ted Bor-
uam angrily ; an honest woodsman
should not even think of such trash. Do
you forget the three things which a fores
ler ought to Iiave and with wliicli he will
always be succcssful in spile of sorcery.'
Come, to your wiis, answer my (piery.”
that can I truly,” answered Rudolph ;
“ he shoula have great skill, a keen dog,
and a good gun.” “ Enough,” said Ber
tram ; “ with these three things every
charm may be loosened, or the owner of
them is a dunce and no shot.”
“ Under fa\ our, father Bertram,” said
William, “here is my gun ; what have
you to object against it r and as for my
skill, I do not like to praise myself, but
I ihink 1 am as fair a sportsman as any
in the country ; neverlnoiess, il seems as
if all my balls went crooked, or as if the
wiiid blew them away from the barrel of
IU) gun. (3idy tell tlie w hat I shall do.—
lam willing to do any tliin^r.” “It is
singular,” multeii'd the forester, who
di(i not know wlial else lo say.
“ lu lieve me, William,” again began
!lii(i»j!p!v, “it is nothing but wiial 1 lia\c
said. ' 'I'ry only one : go on a 1 riday, at
miih.ighi, to a cross-road, and make a
eircie rnund you with a ramrod, or wi:h
a bloody sword, w hich must be blesse*l
three tiiiu's wiih the, name of Sam-
niiel ” “Silence!” inlerriipted Bi‘r-
Iram angrily : “Know ye w ho^^e name
lhat is r he is one of the fiend’s dark le-
;.;i(jii. (iod protect us and every ('hris-
tian from him !” William crossed him
self devcniily, and would hear nothing
fui’lher, Mioiigh Rudolph still maintained
his o])iirn»n. He, j>assed the night in
( leaning his gun, amh-xamining minute
ly (‘very screw, resolving, at dawn of dav,
once more lo sally forth, and try his for-
tiHK' in the Ibrest. He did so, but alas!
in vain- Mi*-! hitfs tliirkened round him :
at ten paces disiance hi' iired three tinn's
at a deer : iwici- his gun missed lire, and
allhou|;h it went oil’ the third lime, yet
the slag bounded away unhurt in the
midst of the Ibrest. I'ldl of vexation he
rhrew himself under a tree, and eurseil
his fate, w hen suddenly a I'ustling was
heard amotig ihe bushes, and a (pieer-
looking sohli'r, w ith a wooden leg, came
ho[»]'ing oul from among them.
“Holloa ! hiintsmatt,” he began, laugh
ing at the disronsolate looking William,
“what is the mailer with you Are vou
love, or is your j)urse enii)ty,orhas
of
. >>
w hat be
himsell
any I’ody charmcd y-jur gunCome,
look sobl..uk; give me a p>pc
loijacco, and we’ll b^ive a chat log'- ^
William suiler’y' gave him
as!;ed, and the soldier threw
down in the grass l>y the side him.-
'I'he conversation naturally turned upon
woodcraft, and ^^•i^lam related his m.s-
fortunes lo him. “Let me see >ou
-mn,” said the soldier. ilham ga't
it. “It is assuredly bewitched,’ sai( he
of the wooden leg, the moment he had
taken it in his hand ; “you will not be a-
ble to fire a single shot with it; and it
they have done it according to rule, it
will be the satne with every gun you shall
lake into your hands.”
William was startled ; and cndevourcd
to raise objections against the stranger s
belief in wiiches, but the latter oflered to
give him a j)roof of the justice ol
pinions. “To us soldiers,” said he,
“there is no hing strange; and 1 could
tell -you many wonderful things, but
which would detain, us here till ’"S
But look here, for instance ; this is a ball
that is sure of hitting its mark, because
it possesses some particular yirvue : try
it; you won’t miss. ” W illiam loaded
his gun, and looked around for an object
10 aim at. A large bird ol prey hovered
high al)ovc the forest, like a niovingdol ,
—“Shoot lhat kite,” said the one leg
ged companion. William laughed at his
absurdity, for the Mrd was hovering at a
height which the eye iiself could scarcely
irach ; Laugh not, but fire,” said ihe
other, grimly i I will lay my wooden leg
that il^falls.” W’illiam fired, the black
dot sunk, and a huge kite fell l)leeding
to the ground. “ Vou would not be sur
prised at that,” said he of the wooden
log to the hunlsman, who was speechless
and staring with astouishmenl : “you
would not, I repeat, be surj)rised at that,
if vou were better actjuainlod wilii the
wonders (d your crafi. Lven the casting
of such balls as these is one of the least
important things in it; it merely requires
dexterity and courage, because it must
be done in the night. 1 w ill teach you for
nothing when we meet again, now 1 must
away, for the bell ha^i tolled seven. In
iht' mean time—here, try a lew of my
halls: still you look incredulous, well—till
we meet again.”—
The soldier gave William a handful of
balls and departed. Full of astonishment,
^nd still distrusting the evidence of his
senses, the latter tried another of the
balls, and again struck an almost unattain
able object: he loaded !-is gun in the
usual manner, and missed the
easiest !■ He darled forward to foliow'
the crippled soldier, but the latter was
no longer in the forest, and William was
obligid to remain satisfied with the
promise which he had given of meeting
him again hereafter.
(ireat joy it gave to the honest fores
ter when \Villiam returned, as before,
loaded with game from the forest. He
was now called upon to explain that cir
cumstance ; but not being prcparetl to
give a reason, and above all, dreailing
to say any thing upon the subject of his
infallible balK', attributed his ill luck
lo a fault iu his gun, w hich he luul only,
he [iretendcd, thal night discovered and
rectiliocl. “ Did 1 not tell you so wife,”
said liertram, laughing. “ Your demon
lodged in the barrel; and the.goiilin
which threw down father Kuno this
morning, sat grinning on ihe rusty nail.”
“ What say you of a goblin,” demanded
William; “and what hajjpened to fatlicr
Kuno?” “Simply this,” replied Ber
tram ; his portrait fell of it >elf from the
wall this morning, just as the bell lolled
seven ; and the silly woman settled it that
a go!)lin must l>e at the bottom of the
mischit'f and that we are haunted ac
cordingly.’*
“.\t seven, repeated William, “ at sev
en !” and he thought, with a strange iVel-
iiig f)f aiVright, of the soldier who parted
from him exactly at lhat moment. “Yes,
seven,” conlinuod Bertram, s;ill laugh
ing. “ I do n()l'wonder at your surprise:
it is not a. usual ghostly hour, but Anne
would have it so.” 'I'he latter shook her
head doulnfnily, and prayed thal all
mig'Uend well ; .William shivered frf>m
head lo Ibot, anfl would secretly have
vowed not. lo use the magic balls, but
lhat the thought of his ill luck haunted
him. “ Only one of them,” onlv one c>f
them for the mastev shot, aiul then I am
done with them forever.” But the for
ester urg'd him the next i.istant to ac
company him into the forest ; and as he
dared noi excite fresh suspicions of want
of skill, nor oiVetul iht; old man by refus-
iiii;, he was again compelled to make use
of his womlerous balls ; and in the course
ol a lew days he had so accustomvd him-
si'lf lo th(' Use of them, ?■: so enlirely recon-
conciled his conscience to their ifoul)tful
origin, lhat he saw nothing sinlul or even
objectionulde in the business. lie con
stantly traversed the forest, in the hope
of meeting the strange giver of the balls ;
lor the handlul had decreased to two,
and il he wished to make sure of the
master-shot, the utmost economy was
iH’cessary. One day he even refused to
acconijiany Bertram, for the n‘Xt was
to lie the day of trial, and the chief for
ester was (’Xpccted : il was possible he
•iiight re(juire other proofs than the mere
lormal essay, and William thus felt him-
s«dl secure. Bui in the evt iTnig, instead
)f the commissary, came the messenger
Irom the duke, with an order for a large
delivery ol game, and to announrc that
the visit of t!ie chief forester would l)e
W’illiam felt as if lie could have suni*
into the bosom of the earth, as he listened
to the message, and his excessive alarm
would have excited slrange suspicion, if
all present had not been ready to ascribe
it to the delay of his expected nuptiuij.
He w as now oI)liged to sacrifice at lejist
one of his balls, but he solemnly swore ’
that nothing sould rob him of tlie other
but the forester’s master-shot.
Bertram, was outrageously angry whea
William returned from the ibrest wui^
only one stag; for the delivery oider
was considerable. He- was still more
angry the next day at noon, when Uu.
dolph returned loaded with an immense
cjuantity of game, and William reiurnedj
with none : he threatened to dismiss him-
and retract his promise respecting Cmh.
erine, if he did not bring down at least
two deer on the following day. Cathe
rine was in the greatest consternation,
and earnestly besought him to make use
of his utmost skill, and not let a thought
of her interrupt his duties while occupi.
ed in the forest. He departed—his heart
loaded with despair. Catherine, he saw
too plainly, w as lost to him forever ; and
nothing remained but the choice of the
manner in which he should destroy his
happiness. Whilst he stood lost in dm
agonizing anticiiialion of his impending
doom, a'herd of deer approached closc
to him. McchanicaUy he fell for his last
ball; it felt tremendously heavy in his
hand : he. was on the point of dropping
it back, resolving to preserve his treas
ure at every hazard, when suddenly he
saw—O sight of joy !—the one-legged
soldier approaching. Delightedly he let
the ball drop into the barrel, fired,
brought down a brace of deer, and hast
ened forward lo meet his friend ; but he
was gone ! William could not discover
him in the forest.
“Hark ye, William !” said the fores
ler to him in the evening, rousing him
from the torpor of grief into whu li lie
had fallen ; “ you must resent this atl.unt
as earnestly as myself; nobody shall dare
ulter falsehoods of our ancestor Kuiio,
nor accuse him as Rudolph is now do
ing.” “I insist,” continued he, turning
again- to the latter,” “ if good anp;elj
helped him, (which was very likely, lor
in the Old Testament we frequently read
of instances of their protection,) we ought
to be irraieful, and praise the wonderful
goodness of God. But nobody shall ac
cuse Kuno of practising the black art.
He died happily—ay, and holily, in lii?
bed, surrounded by children—which hu
who carries on a correspondence with
the evil one never docs. I saw a terrible
example of that myself, when I was a for
ester’s boy in Bohemia.”
“Let us hear how' it happened, (»ood
Bertram,” said all the listeners ; and the
forester nodded gravely, and continued.
“ I shiver when I think of il; but I wiil
tell you, nevertheless. When a young
man, practising with other youths under
the chief foresters, there used IVecjuontly
to join us, a town lad, a fine daring fel
low, S; being a great lover ol field sports,
came out to us as ofte i as he could, lie
would have made a good marksman, but
was too nighty and thougUtless, so that
he freciueully missed his maik. Once
when we ridiculed his awkwardness,’.vc
provoked liim into a rage, and he swort
by all lhat was. holy, he would soon firs
with a more certain aim than any game*
geeper in the country, and that no ani
mal sh(juld escape nim, either in t'lcair
or on the earth. But lie kejil his Vigh:
oath badly. A few days afterwards a.i
unkiunvn huntsman roused us early, anJ
told us that a man was lying in the ioal
and dying without assistance. It "a?
poor Sehmiil. He was coven-d by
w ounds and blood as if he had boon torn
by wild beasts : he could not speak, lor
he was (juile senseless, with scarcely any
ai)pcaraiice of life. He was convoyed tc
I’rague, and jnst before his death declared
that he had been out with an old mounted
hunlsman to a cross road, in order to caV-
the magic balls, which are surt* ol
ting ilK'ir mark ; but that making sonif
fault or omission, the demon had iroatft:
him so roughly lhat it w'ould cost Im'’
his life.”
“ Did he not explain ?” asked
shuddering.
“Surely,” replied the forester.
declared before a court of justice, tli-it
he went out to the cross-road with tin’
ganie-keeper ; lhat they made a iii'^'’
with a bloody sword, and alierwards
it round with skulls and i)one.s. f*'-
mountain hunter than gave his dircctiO'
to Schmid as to what he was to do •
was to begin when the clock struck elc'-
en to cast the balls, and neither to ca'-
more nor fewer than sixty-three ;
either above or under this number won
when the bell tolled midnigbt,
cause of his destruction : neither was
to speak a single word during his w'or'^
nor move from the circle, wdutc'f^^
might happen above, below', or aroun-
him. rullilliiig these conditions,
balls would be. sure of hitting, aiuU^
remaining three only would
Schmid had actually begun easting
balls when, according to what we
gather IVom him, lie w^s i)osel l>y
postponed for eight days long'.-r.
'I k dreadful apparitions, ih.at he,at Ic'V
shrieked and sprang out
falling senseless to the ground; '
whi'. i\ triince he did not recover ti^
der ihc hand of the i)hysiciaii in I’l '^o^*
fConcI'ulcd next wctk.)