sr 14, 1858.] THE GARDENERS’ CHRONICLE NEWSPAPER. 
Ave’ 
march on Cawnpore. A ray of ho; ee 
wating ts to 
a Shab throug am 77 the arane of being thus relieved pc 
the general’s daughter, were before me. In a fé with me. Theam of Gen. Havelock gave means ine 
Mbituary. stood that she had ‘been “dealt with in a om os Sensing T approach of of Gen. Havelock gare me some 
self—i.e., thrown into the r by the men who per- | Siege, and oh! ow often dia t mention dur tg tre whe 
haps thought she was not worth, a bullet — that being the | little band of Pope bt thea prayers for 
ooting crows she would soon sink to the bottom of the | Whelming foree—‘ The wayol eh tan jile against an over- 
in proceeding esaa ar agitation and fea so great that | is in the t Hi: in Sea, and Mis 
we had res rae = pre to offer other. We had hough thou sayest thou canst not see H oe 
-= ~ ee ee I should suppose, | before Him, thereforetrastthouin Him’ Grates! ti 
t Drumlanrig, spe} when z party of ‘the iney surprised u a = a d in | around me because Gen. Havelock had twi was sting 
the pocrage of Scotland, and | different direction: ess seen of Miss Wheclers ew nothing | Cawnpore, but they miscalculated his ce to fall back upon 
indi orn in 1818, and till very ately. ushed and dragged alu + subjected Sept. he and aa utram fought their wa; fato th a e 
a was È in vine 3 Zon indignity ;Ossasonaly ally J felt the thrust of a bayonet, | ie mutineers retreated hastily in every direction. peyi 
în 1844, ane in, : uch treatment with uplifted ; little British heats ing ra aoe 
of Cader ‘Sir William y eeraa Bart. As hands, and appealing to their feelings as inon; I was tradi: on | infantry and artillery, samen bet man: banbu ak ree Son 
er cite Beye ted r for Dumfries- my head, and was made to understand, in language too plain alry, intimidated their enemies, wi an: disper cae 
a rina Per to to repre a r pe — — g to live; but before being put to death that | numero; fact, countless. All that the Bore very 
en his would be made to feel some portion of the degradation their | Could do now was to occupy loopholed ho: riin ead 
jerd-peutenan! ent brethren felt at Meerut when oo and disgraced before the | rison, and keep up an in KAri pa me Wont round the gar- 
o other sons “op Seber ir troops. After a:walk of about four hours I was brought to a | elapsed thus, and reports were rife that the Co morse 
tive. Hoaccepted th e appoi Pe place about four miles fróni: Cawnpore, very near Bithoor, | of t A Sir Colin Campbell, Sem b 
aed 1g Househo 1d in 1853, receiv- | Whe men of the mutineers were encamped. I was almost | effectually to relieve the garrison, anil the “way 4 
honour of a Privy Councillor, ina ieee pr: nudity, for my clothes had been torn ‘to pieces | afterwards achieved his purpose has been he ay wiih a 
| hen i had been dragged along by the men, and I had the e oray The Begum, with whom I rer 
n Sunday ortification of being made a spectacle before these heartless a grim and suspicious woman, pri sheen nome 
iy and ewe Nomen $ su of hands oe eo ve ; er annoyed, acted with prompt cruelty. She understood: well her 
upon my stupi rele | position, and on rumours 
hae formed round m =F I sunk on the ground sd pea in dvi | he er troops by the pees ‘rritable 40 mre e a 
; H in my hands. Oh, the agony of those moments! At length I | On the approach of the in-Chicf her teoity 
daughters still | hearda omar spoaicing to agi persecutors in pred ps a concilia- Bers ntirely forsook = She treated me with bbe " 
= y ee ry Spare'the poor creature and ope _ assion on | abused mi ently, aung me Kafir, or paneinta a 
the Duchess . William Geor; e ha aay we. seems daad already,’ ooked up and | hypocrite, * slut, and a serpent who would yet sting her beno- 
ee x ne ‘an African. There was som ething mild : Di compassionate factors, Her treatment of me at last became cruel. I tried to 
cA in his look. He relieved me in great measure from ae pha bear up with her ill humour as well as I could, for to have said 
— or pect! by porne a xed or chudder on + Ae to her would have been needless. Death, 1 knew fall 
os, N Wavessy, B.C. L. and M.A., of Lincoln ked me to accompany him. mediately fo! towed, on stared me in the face should my conduct be i 
‘Deford, barrister i "and pat a of Woodstock, ushered 1 into a tent, where k ra desi: red | by my benefactor m | hedha One morning pat entered my apartments m a frantic 
the Sth inst. after a short illness at Par! ent, | to take He made me understand that ha ae do all in “ree and comme arar. ì as usual calling me names, I thought 
He took his B.A. de in 1827, having A called | bis power have my hfe s I thanked him for his as one of h fits, but my oyes were opened when 
the previous year. nane wards è cted Fel llow kindness. After a while he procured me a suit of native ahem: id, ‘Your General is popreasking, but will find it no 
from 1929 to 183 as pro ‘ofessor of | clothes, which he said I should ten 2 “You are very unwell,’ | easy task to take Lucknow, e done all in our power 
inthe University. He had also held office of | he said, mete r eyes are bloodshot, and face mi ushed,’ | to strengthen our pom fo am, I am sure, very 
în law and modern history. By a: pias the | I knew that I had a strong fev ve pom me, and 1 felt exceedingly | pleased ‘to hear of his - can see it in your 
of Woodstock and one of the proctorships of the | weak. Ir rece ed that a little sleep would perha) eee me good, | countenance, Wretch, you shall die rather than 
Court in the University becomes v: og id my — a = the pepaes and fell fast asleep, | therefore advise you io prepare soma to-day, and make 
n waking I still felt'so weak that I could ha anit lift my head. | your peace wi with Allah, for to-mo noe am of day you shall 
‘will and seve codiéils of the Dowager Countess had a chu attic, or edna end oom: a little dhall served to | be shot. mt To red concatd in ino ae 
Mave been sworn under 70,000. The will of Sir me, mou could not eat. My sable benefactor I saw od COMPLETION DS TELEGRAPH. 
has been proved os Sere and i val a ee, baaknongerase maA ioe M ses Tr Dici “tel h to the Chanel Inlands st 
"eing sw undor TOUR employ, an arrived in Cawnpore as an avai nae laid, a 
bee 0,0001. ze one preicies 2 from Panny ol eg er shal of b ecessfully y s and com cations are now 
yza ana Sal me es whose lives mg on ween k ersey, 
ax ogg mney aren = werein a buildin Sint rime the Assembly going on P ” rae, n, Alde y . wate if 
y: How ished that my sister, at mong the |. LAGUE IN RIPOLL.—A quara tine been 
bent ase had yoo some time now with the akasi, and imposed z M lles, Malta, pg ai and the 
Aae brutally. How I survived my severe illness, a ng Levantine ‘ports in consegue e outbreak of 
GRAPH.— N h o proper nourish: Déat given to me or care taken of m laguè ry Bengasi in the re enc y of 
emnmeed the use and adjustment of the special in- | Souree of wonder to me now. Sinful as was the with, i tat of the 7.000 4 m be Tripoli, dè 
* ay night the officers ee and prayed for death, but Providence willed it otherwise. 000 persons biting zi 8000 
i 5 4 thi As I. understood the Hindostance oe ange — roughly I s1 £ p oaa aaa were Pree. "by the 
il currents from them at the managed r varar from the conversation of the wore -= epid emic, of whom 800 died, the garrison losing 30 men 
have since received | had c Pomme bad with news that tho: Briti tish of 200. 
hese messages p hat | the hands of these merciless men. On the morning of t $.—On the 1th ir Hit E House, Bridgewater, the 
w me Pa s-e 3 getting up, I found that our cam „A bs ey an meris aiseag a: a pom inst, at Berrington, be 
‘communicate more than the adjustmen te fh, = ge ro sae, ay ae the Na s- aa pei ee Ban Ropwey, of a son—4th inst, ats, f 
be pora a is! re marching on Cawnpore, a he ice Park, I Don, of a tr ro a ea inst, at “pind all F rig 
ati is that a Aaa som shortly be in a The vebals firs tat a place called Khaga, about five miles | Yorkshire, the Lady MIDDLETON, of a danghter—sth inst, at 
m Futtehpore, on Monday, the 12th of i nly ; then at renee | Dansfield, Bucks, the Hon. Mrs. Seort ioana, of a son—6th 
W. Stuart, asi 5th ; and ree at the bridge on the Pandee Nuddee, | inst, = Puckaster, Niton, Isle of Wight, the wife of Majore 
od stream. An order was issued by the Nana for the | General H. T. TUCKER, of ‘a daug 
men, children, and sick to be removed ‘halt wa; a Bast know, chain GES.—On ‘the 11th 41 inst, at ‘St. 
Viseount Grey De Wiron, eldest son nts Baad Cotte 
` Tvainiy hoped t1 blero Acne ia from nee p öf the 
‘ving ladies of the massacre at Cawnpore. A du of Wilton, to the dy Kurmaptra VEN, eldest 
epee and when {pmo sanie Irom tug Las’ ona ea, of th Earl and Goute "of Craven — 9th beng 
has been transmitted to the Governor- Dat ore I had accomplished 3 James's, Westminster, FREDERICK EDWARD row Esq., 
a n4 shoes. On the a T det re Seon = the w ery of she eldest son nD a b, of county of 
' mti mrs of age when I accompanied my sis r mà Wioklow, to Lady Ka SONBY, t duighter 
“sere gobs about six months before the nt uld ‘ of the late and sister to the present borough— 
a Su the Christi hat we were came o {0th eet et the Church of the Holy p Trinity, a Buckfastleigh, 
real i it was | South n, Freperiox Hexpricks, Bsq., of Kildare Terrace, 
better! cause. | Hyde Pa a ho Hossanen third surviving 
the A Aira ap cc ar aner im of ur aah 
mpany the fying enemy, a , President o! e n 
made a detour o. ofa agn portion of the North West Provinces | Governor of inst, at St. ee ee e e 
on foot, viz., Barei Robilcun ebanpore, | Epwarp HENRY Cooper, Lieut.-Colonel Grenadier Gu to 
of | and the Sarret near se | CHARLOTTE Manta, only daughter of Epwarp Mitis, Esq 
mutineers at Lucknow. On our arrival | 10th inst, at Melborne Port, Somerset, Groner SYDNEY 
who informed me that it Moulvie Srrope, Esq., of Newnham Park, Devon, to Mary Hurcwies, 
. ro. by hiş gods ai the Fyza ee ge ar A e daughcer of Sir Wriutam Coues Mepuyoorr, Bart. 
teci inci mera among DEATHS. 
“desi ov wean safely takon to Allaha- | 0 he ae ban the Moulvie would shelter and protect | Freperick RANKEN Fraser, youngest son of the late Captain 
d these was. 
‘by surprise om ong, wel stare if I wrote to a ee oulvie, A SN tant tas she Fag bee 41—11th June, 
hace hough he had a fh png ntipa' at Broach (on march to Deesa, fever ysentery, Ensign 
5 204 Gont xi ine ge ea sts s tai sh, was still in every w: feats wed eli sage neg WARBURTON, H.M.’s 89th por youngestson of 
al ones managed to push on, ‘ant y” declared his intention of protecting | th v. Dr. We rbarton, Kill, Ireland, 9934 ‘at she 
The firing at first was thre ular, paia and. fia EAEE Om t believer of the Koran, h maal of hi . Marten’s Grove, Crayford, Kent, 
hizzing ea tudo Be them. Very different was the Captain econ CONSTABLE Jackson, of the Stud Department, 
I was on the deck ofi E m: vot . AS As the Moulvie reget te write | and the late 12th Regiment, B.N.1., of chronic dysentery, con- 
and amaze: mazemen as when bes § th dii n making hi m understan d | tracted whilst volunteering for the reliof of Arrah, under 
adaa eek of Bepoys mp deplorable co condition eco of dirty paper, in which | Lieut -Colonel Vincent Eyre, aged 81—30th ult, at Cowes, 
Was seized in an ae by th as so pan to scribble with a | Isle of Wight, from illness contracted during the operations 
fia eas ete -g case in a few words, | before Delhi, Li ro MAXIMILIAN GOODWIN GENESTE, 
and begging of him, né 
im possibl ible tH, K.C.B., Royal E eers, aged 71 
aE Tt aati native soldiers, vite: das foe ve Was a pote mole accidentally drown: ed while bathing in the 
extreme. The kind African, under wale advi sea at Nairn, N.B., Captain H. E. PATTULLO, of 
y 
: lin tohim, s 
ie tear atow in ti nanio of of bis ‘prophet, Ma Mahomed, to to Bngincors, aged 27 —1ith dost, at Worthi > Licut.-General 
Sir RLES FELIX ote 
that y 
m 
an rotection, Meredyth, Bart., 
me cantatie oe | ope fas or dic asin | ontario” Chit Justis 
l atid shoulders in the most t doliborate Cotia similar ae pacer 5 Dathe ae {ome pty then Lady Li fi 
was brought to t., aged 85—4th inst, at 
HEA 
patie Bogus Kaiserbagh. Bart. 
brief pass ora i the Maho- | residence of his nephew, the’ 
brea faith an vai tfal existence ; iara a 
feel Lepore think ret ex! = formerly Fellow 
Pan ne that ae a 
E downright 
and rply my tari 
ie He adi SH WOOLS—Loxpox, Ang. T3- 
ions of 
BR 
: agente DaF trade steady as to 
| ‘ and had mornings and evenings | The plentiful su re" of Wool epee 
| - banks, and my devoti are eet pie sae ae ENI of a Mag Jarge amount of business: being 
t: : ot ee fee! ransac’ 
as s My thoughts, pF ot x remo! mae of baine e CAA Sa ation ps | Soutn-down Hog- n eA E T o Tasot Woie 22 M w 
; at think s from a gun, but on Combing Skins" = 
eaty “unardaren.T staid. | I wast ne ote rotren e T ior Oe ately escaped, though at tue aaitbred ditto.. 1 eat Biante ead 
; Wa é ia time aroun ird of the order, Kant Pieoees . t i Ti Ai ingl W pis 
| He age Radat Coro bou Sires. — Thi continue to realise 
able. Met rowed, to live 
rapidly imp ray Heo tions, which a the 
Geeton 5 Sty th rapi was well aware that ~ “Bri a cos tg sepa te as) = a ans 
I 
mg in me of Lucknow, and e 
now: 
Would re ert jae paeron of d to punish the = "Bo nest a 
rat êa hypocrite. The ozim COVENT GARDEN, Aug 14 
sence alroxdy mentioned eg eto beia ti me toarrive from Franc 
$ aan which I was the ladies of the Fierro z3 1 aid tnat T thought ni ther hns o en this ae eae m A dano i poration < S 
hom Lexpected te ae E Mahomodan, 1 Huot be able to relieve the garrison, or oven | West india P Ce ah good in quality, feteh ‘onl 
nface and form of Miss Wheeler, (to t eee h Lucknow. Things pro Ari 
