112 
-THE GARDENERS 
~~, tune te*chf h y his master, 
leah fatty acer uunsaiy. He 
— -bird ‘and the clear 
€, or a red-bird, 
morti ified 
idity. He repea 
ough wr considerable 
peri 10F 
l thes 
CHRONICLE. 
[NP 4 
| retarn ned, and thereby being convinced that Miss Coutts’ feelings 
towards him were ae canes he had een led to the adop- 
tion of the course he had pu 
ag . 
had a honour to wear, ye 
inf rio and bi 
silent, while he seems to erste in their aes by re- 
aietee: og exertions. Both in his native and do! —— 
eated s 1 till 
as so 
the ‘moon rises in silent mai ajesty, he begins his delghtol 
oo ‘and serenades us the livelong night with a full d 
i He 
had an interview with Miss Coutts on that day. He was 
anxious to explain the reason why ad not caused that lady to 
t occasion. He had not 
ring with his inimitable me lody.— I. R, 
Du wks r eared arti, tific — rind reference he artic 
um ave “sein favour “i 
rh ca nis ielauidanie esa ndent :—‘‘ In your 
bento paper a Feb. 6, I cn @ amongst the articles 
under the head o ‘ Misce la’ * the : singular process of 
hatching aquatic virds. t 
most troublesome om me the system may, I 
ink, avoided, viz.,‘the turning of the eggs every 
st, and as yet vw = ga ct ae 
Bir $s ‘0 va- 
ies of gallinaceous birds, apparently aware rm the 
poses tribe, one found at the Swan River, and the other 
at the Sydney side of New Holland; both these birds lay 
form- 
ing an accumulated stock, sometimes cet a bushel, 
hi tii the 
heat of which hatches the eggs i an as the 
eect _ — hatches coals of crocod selina: an turtles ; 
a ve _ I am about ive sie from the ee 
° Aus trali ian i ts intr eir e eggs can never be 
2 
pace to the ook Ss eggs ean on ao all eggs ert 
hatchet, oo warmth being thus equalised 2 all round the 
eggs ? ‘onstant Reader. 
eat 7 leichones —A Lyons is journal publishes 
letter from M. Val almore, ‘an artist at Brussels, stating that 
head of the Laocoon. This fine e group, when first dis- 
covered in ae Aa was ; without the head | of the father, and 
an arm of one of the sons. The 
celebrated artist, who copied it from an anti ique e bas- 
the original was found b 
relief. 
some Venetian connoisseurs, and was ultimately sold to 
the grandfather of the Prince for about 160,000f., and 
brought apoleon, during the Con- 
sulate, had the group transported into France, he knew 
that the real head was in sion of t eae and 
offered him its in gold for it. This w refused, 
Orie his desires, the ‘Duke @’Aremberg sent this 
ten years, —s was — back again into Brussels when 
Belgium 
seem to flash from the marble. A cast from the head 
on the statue is placed by the side of the original, and the 
pas between the tw: rf is at once evident. 
emasonry.—It appears that a masonic anes Ss has 
nie a found i in.a stone wall at Ghuznee. It is merely es 
i an r it, tl 
. ; the campaign in aaa a strong resem- 
Jews, was very prevalent among the Affghans ; at Canda- 
har, oe acknowledge ged direct descent, a mage called 
es “the children of the Jews.” It is expected 
ps many aii might be traced. 
La 
v Excareqver.—Dunn v. Alezander. 
Coy e. —This was an 
scthaad rhecoaaie by Me, fa n, Whose name has been repeatedly 
before the public in connexion with t of rdett Cout! 
agai Mr. der, a gentleman of fortune, residing i 
Regent’s-park, an alleged assault and false imprisonment, 
under the Metropolitan Police Act. fendant pleaded “ Not 
Guilty.” Accord? the nti sta nt, he had 
for m refecr i: ts address 
to Miss Coutt arrowgate. In one of letters he had 
told that lady, that unless they were returned he should Opt 
means person to see her. The letters not being r , he 
had nate b: s was Oo see 
wrong in having arrived at that conclusion, 
but it was maisly owing to the fact of the ¢ letters not not having been 
mo. 
ment when he had been pons hg which he aviies, of ttierings such 
a sentence. All the witness could say was, that the expressions 
had been used upon that occasion by the Leper but at what 
ment or p the proceedings he did not remember.—A long 
ter was read, addressed by bao Larsen to Pty Coutts last 
ay, entreating her to appoint ate interview through the 
edi f of her pov ne are ett ‘outts then en- 
panied by her father (Sir F. ap ase a 
— him at Harrowgate can in the presence 
, to whom she had intimated that her first know- 
fren soft i ri preity hat very occasion. T bee letters 
— 
addressed to her a way or 
burnt. At 
, n who was a total 
n 3 had ve requested by her to 
take such steps as he! might deem expedient and proper, in order 
to rid her of the annoyances to which subjected by 
seca 
3 of her solicitor, and she 
ould have no objection to their production, provided that er 
pevecrn approved of such proceeding. She was not aware that h 
had told geal Bf one of his letters, that if she would only aie 
_ to of the transaction like a gentleman, 
stain rt id ail ore her pursuit of her,—Cross-examine 
Pollock: She had been indisposed for some tim 
indirectly, n him the slightest encouragement, although fo! 
e dd place. 
the day ref m articularly in the: eedings, 
was riding up Bond-street towards the Regent’s-park, when 
she observed the plaintiff going in a direction t ‘ds Piccadilly, 
and da Leng wo hate rised when, iy x she had 
alighted in the park, she saw him making his 
ay np to ageing ibonkine with the intention of speaking. She 
a short tim: up, and sai 
e pers sie Soliris = sebaaie fncdne predate entinees 
san went loa defen dant’s Rituse: She had been afraid to quit 
defendant’s va tilshe had been assured that plaintiff had gone 
ndeed, 
ve ralongtime she had not hee able to go out 
withont his ig or comi her, and has been obli to 
have the police in her hi pro be had not re- 
turned his letters, done so, she should, to a cer- 
tain extent, have been communication with a person 
er stranger to- fer. 'S 
—— as though neither they nor their a 
rally speaking, the letters she had read wo 
strong lspnninens. were very incohere 
made out by 
ve! all, with, he would humbiy ro epider smallest amount 
ages the coin of the realm would eage of, bo the rad 
'y of manifesting their disgus' id regret conduct hi 
had pursued hes pin: nt 
Lo binger, ing u erved that the plaintiff 
had introduced into the. prtrscy with te Teast necessity, the his- 
tory of his own conduct towards Miss Burdett Coutts, during the 
al: 
without th 
Tt was quite _ that he was labouring opts = aha 
with regard to that lady which he co uid hardly coi uld 
who was in possension.¢ 
ees. or 
exercise of her 
ings and ae if left free and unshackled, would lead her 
to accept his addresses. Nothing could be more pr or 
absurd certainly inclined to thisk that the best, if not 
It had been 
ta 
bably t the pl laintift nx 
srt convincing Miss Cont tts 
fi 
pose 
the condit a pobre ev i 
already. Most eae < ste hi 
object, he had taken a right to accomplis! e re- 
gretted extremely that the law or ‘England was in some respects 
defective. Bat the law of England was a law of liberty ; it had 
great respect fo! 
= in some ins aan it was gre to fail. -By the law of Eng- 
n the face of another, it was sng. 
ishab! 
payee him: cad 
finer deep peste His Lor: then adverteg 
o the fact, eae Mey eae a the plaintiff had doors as havin, ng 
tae acopy of one he we & oO Miss Coutts on the 1 8th of 
May, purported to make 9 ct lcm with that lady, — 
upon the original letter being produced in 
have been contained in it. ‘owards the latter part of the ¥ 
there was something which bore very muc hi pect 
threat. eq ion he should leave to the j ~ 
ish them to assess the 
the plaintiff had reacrsiry by i on ti 
Pe oes y, after a short abse! 
fen Lord Abinger : — rr iapioetE Spar verdict had be 
for the ‘plaintiff, what amount Me Sear would you havegiven> 
The Foreman of the Jury: One ing. 
LL’S.—Tuvr. 
TATTE a 
betting in the n was slack, but t far fro 
The afte: m unimport- 
ant, inasmuch as a ra dica 
ered agst C. 
. Another still more exciting 
Rosalie colt, on the outlay of a . 
backed for a small sum, and 
Car radoc acked on sir at 2 and his backer not ‘satisfied, 
The | offer was only 21 to * ‘The Knight of the beds g was 
in favour at 25 to 1, and the same odds, we suspect, wi have 
been taken about Marshal per EP sd have no o1 ober ges 
to point out. ee 
000 to 10 agst Mr. Batson’s tw: 4 lagst Duke ‘ellington 
16 to 1 - Eero sea beck (offers to take) 
13 to I 1000 to ir Hans (taken) 
20 to 1 Pale 1000 to 10 Ben Brace (taken) 
20 to 1 100 to I Mustapha Muley 
21 to 1 Pres Caradoc 600 on Cocpeitigesten Pala- 
25 to 1 Kt. of the Whistle (ta.) on (taken) 
AZETIE OF THE WEI EK. 
RAT IONS OF INSOLVENCY-—T. Ro 
DECLA: BER’ 
cornmiller—H. = gs , Common-hard, Portsea, ironmonger— 
W. HAnNaForp and N.  PReTresouN, Kingsbridge, D shire, 
cattle-dealers— on, King-street, Clerkenwell, timber- 
merchant.—J. Ru x er, Stockt ‘Tees.—J. MANN, 
ine-merchant, Blackman-street, South .—A. Haggis, wool. 
broker, Dursley, Gloucestershire. 
BANKR CY SUPERSEDED—C. J. Wrzxtnson, me — 
folk, merchant.—W. Conver, T. Ripspate, J. Spates 
PLeETON, B. Turner, E. Baitey, J. Mitnes, W. MAYMAN, a 
w, J: CASTLE, EB, s. oe math , J. Breary, J. De > 
merchant—J. O. York, Duke- 
—J. APPLETON, Hounslow, iinmigeeoe Coxes, Olney, Bucksy 
teadealer—C. J. Canrrar, Greenwich, —S. P. 
Kent, scriv 
iverpool, co! oun — ae = 
nshire, baker—J. Nar Man 
Zouiworox, Wallsall, Staffordshire, Bailder— 
street, Brighton, book: wie a SHARPE and R. Pansow, Brad- 
—W. ath. 
B sen - sghnaterer: Bat Od nsineos baker, nL South Shields, 
Durham.—S. WHITEHEAD, cattle-salesman, or m-Pri 
R. Wontner, woolle 
Wes ine- , Fr —R. Wooty 
butcher, big street, Southwark. 
SCOTCH SEQUESTRATIONS—J. Porriewet and Co Aber 
. — bye gts — ers—. a So amma jan., Perth, met 
hant—D. M, Caarc, Glasgow, 
Birtss.—On Siderday, ae ‘6th tats at Shelton, n 
ck the lady of R. Burton, jun., Esq., of a son.—On nest oe yee 
rete , Hii gate, of “ — and daughter. 
Mrs. J. A. Boul- 
-ho 
licence, at St. Georges, Hanover-square, by the C: 
r, the Visco Alford, eldest of the Earl Brownlow: 
argare the Mar- 
of Nostham nt cr 
seni C. Bailey, Esq., -» Of ‘Cees! house, to 
daughter of the late J. Jeffries, — = ra 
inst., at St. Helen’s Bisho a 
I mT G 24 Bars, of rarcodbridg®, hie 
Martha, eldest aren ot and T. G. 
snk Maria, second daughter of Mr. T. Sharpe of Bishops 
gate-s' Within, 
Dizp.—aAt Hac! nm the 2d inst., E. cm Gy 
f Mr. A. B: A Founte n-court, Aldermanbu: 
Chapel, Pentonville, London, d 16 ¥ od two mo: 
he Oth inst., at Whip's-cross, Walthamstow, Jane, f a 
daughter of the late P. Berthon, Esq., ton, aged 57- ss 
the 9th inst., at his house in Ashby-street, Northam ap ie 
Mr. R. Page, in his 6sth year,—On gth inst., in his Sgth ¥ pn 
C. Griffinhoofe, of Mentish-town.—On thi oe inst., Eliza, aa 
wife of Mr wiley, aos * hove Jane- —On t ace > 
wife of ry: uare- 
~ Print ted by Messrs. RRapBrRy and & Eva 
Fleet-street, in the Precinct of Whitefriars, ee ame Ci Fo ‘of 
don, and Published by themat the Ovvrcn, 3, Cuasuss-stSsst 
OVENT-GaRpgN, in the County of Middl where all Adv! tote 
‘isements and Communications are to be ad: to the Editer- 
Saturday, February 13. 
ee 
the personal liberty of the subject, and, there. 
‘ 
