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sequently, it had descended to his niece, and through her was now legally the property of Roswell. The young man was not altogether free from scruples about using money that had been originally taken as booty by pirates, and his conscientious wife had still greater objections. After conferring together on the subject, however, and seeing the impossibility of restoring the gold to those from whom it had been forced in the first place, the doubloons were distributed among the families of those who had lost their lives at Sealer's Land. The shares did not amount to much, it is true; but they did good, and cheered the hearts of two or three widows and dependent sisters.

Nor did Roswell Gardiner's care for their welfare stop here. He had the Sea Lion put in good order, removed her decks, raised upon her, and put her in her original condition, and sent her to Sealer's Land, again, under the orders of Hazard, who was instructed to take in all the oil and skins that had been left behind, and to fill up, if he could, without risking too much by delay. All this was successfully done, the schooner coming back, after a very short voyage, and quite full. The money made by this highly successful adventure, had the effect to console several of those who had great cause to regret their previous losses.

As to Roswell and Mary. they had much reason to be content with their lot. The deacon's means were found to be much more considerable than had been supposea. When all was brought into a snug state, Roswell found that his wife was worth more than thirty thousand dollars, a sum which constituted wealth on Oyster Pond in that day. We have, however, already hinted that the simplicity, and we fear with it the happiness, of the place has departed. A railroad terminates within a short distance of the deacon's old residence, bringing with it the clatter, ambition, and rivalry of such a mode of travelling. What is even worse, the venerable and expressive name of "Oyster Pond," one that conveys in its very sound the idea of savoury dishes, and an abundance of a certain and a very agreeable sort, has been changed to “Orient,” Heaven save the mark! Long Island has, hitherto, been famous, in the history of New York, for the homely piquancy of its names, which usually conveyed a graphic idea of the place indicated. It is true "Jerusalem" cannot boast of its Solomon's Temple, nor “Babylon" of its Hanging Gardens; but, by common consent, it is understood that these two names and some halfa-dozen more of the same quality, are to be taken by their opposites.

Roswell Gardiner did not let Stimson pass out of his sight, as is customary with seamen when they quit a vessel. He made him master of a sloop that plied between New York and Southold, in which employment the good old man fulfilled his time, leaving

to a widowed sister who dwelt with him the means of a comfortable livelihood for life.

The only bit of management of which Mary could be accused, was practised by her shortly after Stimson's death, and some six or eight years after her own marriage. One of her schoolfriends, and a relative, had married a person who dwelt" west of the bridge," as it is the custom to say of all the counties that lie west of Cayuga Lake. This person, whose name was Hight, had mills, and made large quantities of that excellent flour, that is getting to enjoy its merited reputation even in the old world. He was disposed to form a partnership with Roswell, who sold his property, and migrated to the great west, as the country "west of the bridge" was then termed, though it is now necessary to go a thousand miles farther, in order to reach what is termed "the western country." Mary had an important agency in bringing about this migration. She had seen certain longings after the ocean, and seals, and whales, in her husband; and did not consider him safe as long as he could scent the odours of a salt marsh. There is a delight in this fragrance that none can appreciate as thoroughly as those who have enjoyed it in youth: it remains as long as human senses retain their faculties. An increasing family, however, and El Dorado of the west, which, in that day, produced wheat, were inducements for a removal there, and, aided by Mary's gentle management, produced the desired effect; and for more than twenty years Roswell Gardiner has been a very successful miller, on a large scale, in one of the western counties of what is called "the Empire State." We do not think the sobriquets of this country very happy, in general, but shall quarrel less with this, than with the phrase of " commercial emporium," which is much as if one should say 2 townish town."

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Roswell Gardiner has never wavered in his faith, from the time when his feelings were awakened by the just view of his own insignificance, as compared to the power of God! He then learned the first great lesson in religious belief, that of humility; without which no man can be truly penitent, or truly a Christian. He no longer thought of measuring the Deity with his narrow faculties, or of setting up his blind conclusions, in the face of positive revelations. He saw that all must be accepted, or none; and there was too much evidence, too much inherent truth, a morality too divine, to allow a mind like his to reject the gospel altogether. With Mary at his side, he has continued to worship the Trinity, accepting its mysteries in an humble reliance on the words of inspired men.

THE ENI

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Guy Fawkes.
Jack Sheppard.
James the Second.
Lancashire Witches.
Mervyn Clitheroe.
Miser's Daughter.
Old St. Paul's.
Ovingdean Grange.
Rookwood.
Spendthrift.
Star Chamber.
St. James's.
Tower of London.
Windsor Castle.

(See pages 3, 20, 23.)

ARTHUR, W. S. Nothing but Money. BURY, Lady Charlotte. The Divorced.

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Last of the Mohicans.

Lionel Lincoln; or, The Leaguer of Boston.

Mark's Reef; or, The Crater. Miles Wallingford; or, Lucy Hardinge.

Ned Myers; or, Life before

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GEORGE ROUTLEDGE & SONS'

ROUTLEDGE'S SHILLING NOVELS, continued.

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The following are the Tales with
Sequels.

a. The Three Musketeers.
b. Twenty Years After.
c. Vicomte de Bragelonne.
2 vols., 5s.

a. Memoirs of a Physician.
2 vols.

b. Queen's Necklace.

c. Taking the Bastile, 2 vols.
d. Countess de Charny.
a. Two Dianas.

b. Page of the Duke of Savoy.

a. Marguerite de Valois, 25. b. Chicot, the Jester.

c. The Forty-five Guardsmen.

a. The Conspirators.
b. The Regent's Daughter.

Each of the following is Complete in

Ascanio.

One Volume.

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GERSTAECKER, F.

The Haunted House.

A Sailor's Adventures.
Pirates of the Mississippi.

GREY, Mrs.

The Young Prima Donna.
The Little Wife.
The Duke.

GRIFFIN, Gerald.
Colleen Bawn.
Munster Festival.
Rivals.

HANNAY, James.
King Dobbs.
HAWTHORNE, Nathaniel.
Scarlet Letter.

House of the Seven Gables. Mosses from an Old Manse. JEPHSON, J. M.

Through the Key-hole. KINGSTON, W. H. G.

The Albatross.

LYTTON, Lord. IS.

Kenelm Chillingly.
The Parisians.

2 vols.

Falkland and Zicci.

Pelham.

Paul Clifford.

Eugene Aram.

Last Days of Pompeii.
Rienzi.

Leila, and the Pilgrias of the
Rhine.

Last of the Barons.

Ernest Maltravers.

Godolphin.

Disowned.

Devereux.

Others to follow.

MACKAY, Dr. Charles.

Longbeard.

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