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practised annually by those who attended corporate bodies in surveying the bounds of parishes; but from the many accidents that usually attended that game, it is now scarcely ever practised. Silver prizes used to be awarded to the victor in the games.

Cornish Wrestling and the Hug. The mode of wrestling in Cornwall is very different from that of Devonshire, the former is famous in the "hug," the latter in kicking shins. No kicks are allowed in Cornwall, unless the players who are in the ring mutually agree to it. A hat is thrown in as a challenge, which being accepted by another, the combatants strip and put on a coarse loose kind of jacket, of which they take hold, and of nothing else: the play then commences. To constitute a fair fall, both shoulders must touch the ground, at, or nearly, the same moment. To guard against foul play, to decide on the falls, and manage the affairs of the day, four or six sticklers (as the umpires are called) are chosen, to whom all these matters are left.

In the "Cornish hug," Mr. Polwhele perceived the Greek palæstral attitudes finely revived; two Cornishmen in the act of wrestling, bear a close resemblance to the figures on old gems and coins.

The athletic exercise of wrestling thrives in the eastern part of Cornwall, particularly about Saint Austle and Saint Columb. At the latter place resides Polkinhorne, the champion of Cornwall, and by many considered to be entitled to the championship of the four western counties. He keeps a respectable inn there, is a very good-looking, thick-set manstill he does not look the man he is" he has that within him that surpasses show." A contest between him and Cann, the Devonshire champion, was expected to take place in the course of this summer; much "chaffing" passed between them for some time in the country papers, but it appears to be "no go;" no fault of the Cornish hero, "who was eager for the fray"-the Devonshire lad showed the "white feather" it is acknowledged by all. Polkinhorne has not practised wrestling for several years past; while Cann has carried off the prize at every place in Devon that he "showed" at. They certainly are both "good ones." Parkins, a friend of the Cornish hero, is a famous hand at these games; and so was James Warren, of Redruth, till disabled in Feb

ruary, 1825, by over exertion on board the Cambria brig, bound for Mexico-the vessel that saved the crew and passengers of the Kent East Indiaman. He has been in a very ill state of health ever since; the East India Company and others have voted him remuneration, and many of the sufferers have acknowledged their debt of gratitude to him for saving their lives.

With a view of maintaining the superiority in amusements in which the Cornish delight, John Knill, Esq. of great eminence at St. Ives, bequeathed the income of an estate to trustees, that the same might be distributed in a variety of prizes, to those who should excel in racing, rowing, and wrestling. These games he directed should be held every fifth year for ever, around a mausoleum which he erected in 1782, on a high rock near the town of St. Ives.

The first celebration took place in July, 1801, when, according to the will of the founder, a band of virgins, all dressed in white, with four matrons, and a company of musicians, commenced the ceremony by walking in pairs to the summit of the hill, where they danced, and chanted a hymn composed for the purpose round the mausoleum, in imitation of druids around the cromlechs of the departed brave. Ten guineas were expended in a dinner at the town, of which six of the principal inhabitants partook. Some idea of the joyous scene may be conceived by reading an account of an eyewitness.

"Early in the morning the roads from Helston, Truro, and Penzance were lined with horses and vehicles of every description, while thousands of travellers on foot poured in from all quarters till noon, when the assembly formed. The wrestlers entered the ring; the troop of virgins, dressed in white, advanced with solemn step to the notes of harmony; the spectators ranged themselves along the hills; at length the mayor of St. Ives appeared in his robes of state. The signal was given; the flags were displayed in waving splendour from the towers of the castle; the sight was grand. Here the wrestlers exerted their sinewy strength; there the rowers in their various dresses of blue, white, and red, urged the gilded prows of their boats through the sparkling wavesthe dashing of oars-the songs of the virgins-all joined to enliven the picture. The ladies and gentlemen of Penzance returned to an elegant dinner at the Union

hotel, and a splendid ball concluded the evening entertainments."

These games were again celebrated in 1806, 1811, 1816, and 1821, with increased fervour and renewed admiration. The following chorus was sung by the

virgins :

Quit the bustle of the bay,
Hasten, virgins, come away;
Hasten to the mountain's brow
Leave, oh! leave St. Ives below;
Haste to breathe a purer air,
Virgins fair, and pure as fair.
Quit St. Ives and all her treasures,
Fly her soft voluptuous pleasures;
Fly her sons, and all the wiles
Lurking in their wanton smiles
Fly her splendid midnight-halls,
Fly the revels of her balls;
Fly, oh! fly the chosen seat,
Where vanity and fashion meet.

Hither hasten; form the ring,
Round the tomb in chorus sing,

the representation, appeared in the "Times" the next morning:-"It is a dramatic resurrection of the story of 'The Fetches,' which is to be found in the 'Tales of the O'Hara Family,' and has been introduced to the stage by Mr. Benham, the author of those tales. Considering that it is exceedingly difficult, through the medium of a dramatic entertainment, to impress the minds of an audience with those supernatural imaginings, which each individual may indulge in while reading a volume of the mysterious and wonderful, we think Mr. Benham has manifested considerable adroitness in adapting his novel to the stage. We think, at the same time, that his abilities might have been much better employed. The perpetuation of the idea of such absurd phantasies as fetches and fairies-witches and wizards-is not merely ridiculous, but it is mischievous. There was scarcely a child (and we observed many present)

And on the loft mountain's brow, aptly dight, who last night witnessed the fetch' or

Just as we should be-all in white,
Leave all our baskets and our cares below.

The celebration of the foregoing game falls in this year, 1826. Should any thing particular transpire more than the foregoing, you shall hear from

July 20, 1826.

SAM SAM'S SON.

NATURALISTS' CALENDAR. Mean Temperature... 63 70.

July 25.

ST. JAMES.

This name in the calendar refers to St. James the Great, who was so called "either because he was much older than the other James, or because our Lord conferred upon him some peculiar honours and favours."* He was put to death under Herod.

"THE DEATH FETCH.'

A new piece under the title of "The Death Fetch, or the Student of Gottingen," was brought out on this day in 1826, at the English Opera-house, in the Strand. The following notice of its derivation, with remarks on the tendency of

• Mr. Audley.

double of the Gottingen student and his mistress, and who recollects the wild glare of Miss Kelly's eye, (fatuity itself, much less childhood, would have marked it,) that will not tremble and shudder when the servant withdraws the light from the resting-place of the infant. Such scenes cannot be useful to youth; and, leaving the skill of the actor out of the question, we know not how they can give pleasure to age. This theatre was ostensibly instituted as a sort of stay and support to legitimate English opera;' and we feel convinced that one well-written English opera, upon the model of the old school -that school so well described by general Burgoyne, in his preface to his own excellent work, 'The Lord of the Manor,' would do more credit to the proprietor of this theatre, and bring more money to his treasury, than a wilderness of Frankensteins and Fetches."

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Rightly ordered minds will assent to the observations in the "Times." Every correct thinker, too, is aware that from causes very easily to be discovered, but not necessary to trace, the "regular houses" must adopt degrading and mischievous representations or close their doors. Nor is any accession to our "stock plays" to be expected; for if perchance a piece of sterling merit were written, its author would be lamentably ignorant of "the business of the stage" were he to think

of " offering it." The "regular drama" is heather that thatched them; but they and on its last legs.

Leaving the fable of the play of the "Death Fetch" altogether, and merely taking its name for the purpose of acquainting the reader with the attributes of a "fetch," recourse is had in the outset to the "Tales of the O'Hara Family." The notions of such of the good people of Ireland, as believe at this time in that "airy thing," are set forth with great clearness by the author of that work, who is a gentleman of the sister kingdom with well-founded claims to distinction, as a man of genius and literary ability. The following is extracted preparatory, to other authorities regarding "fetches" in general.

A Tale of the O'Hara Family.

I was sauntering in hot summer weather by a little stream that now scarce strayed over its deep and rocky bed, often obliged to glance and twine round some large stone, or the trunk of a fallen tree, as if exerting a kind of animated ingenuity to escape and pursue its course. It ran through a valley, receding in almost uniform perspective as far as the eye could reach, and shut up at its extremity by a lofty hill, sweeping directly across it. The sides of the valley bore no traces of cultivation. Briers and furze scantily clothed them; while, here and there, a frittered rock protruded its bald forehead through the thin copse. No shadow broke or relieved the monotonous sheet of light that spread over every object. The spare grass and wild bushes had become parched under its influence; the earth, wherever it was seen bare, appeared dry and crumbling into dust; the rocks and stones were partially bleached white, or their few patches of moss burnt black or deep red. The whole effect was fiercely brilliant, and so unbroken, that a sparrow could not have hopped, or a grass-mouse raced across, even in the distance, without being immediately detected as an intrusion upon the scene.

The desertion and silence of the place, sympathized well with its lethargic features. Not a single cabin met my eye through the range of the valley; over head, indeed, the gables of one or two peeped down, half hidden by their sameness of colour with the weather-tanned recks on which they hung, or with the

their inmates were obviously unconnected with the solitude in which I stood, their the level country, and thence the paths fronts and windows being turned towards that led to them must also have diverged. No moving thing animated my now almost supernatural picture; no cow, horse, nor sheep, saunteringly grazed along the margin of my wizard stream. The very little birds flew over it, I conveniently one of them alighted on the shrivelled thought, with an agitated rapidity, or if spray, it was but to look round for a moment with a keen mistrustful eye; and the wild branch slightly fluttered by his then bound into its fields of air, leaving action. If a sound arose, it was but what its own whispering waters made; or the herdsboy's whistle faintly echoed from far-off fields and meadows; or the hoarse and lonesome caw of the rook, as he winged his heavy flight towards more fertile places.

Amid all this light and silence, a very aged woman, wildly habited, appeared, I know not how, before me. Her approach had not been heralded by any accompanying noise, by any rustle among the bushes, or by the sound of a footstep; my eyes were turned from the direction in which she became visible, but again unconsciously recurring to it, fixed on the startling figure.

She was low in stature, emaciated, and embrowned by age, sun, or toil, as it might be; her lank white hair hung thickly at either side of her face; a short red mantle fell loosely to her knees; under it a green petticoat descended to within some inches of her ankles; and her arms, neck, head, and feet, were bare. There she remained, at the distance of only about twenty yards, her small grey eyes vacantly set on mine; and her brows strenuously knit, but, as I thought, rather to shadow her sight from the sun, than with any expression of anger or agitation. Her look had no meaning in it; no passion, no subject. It communicated nothing with which my heart or thought held any sympathy; yet it was long, and deep, and unwincing. After standing for some time, as if spell-bound by her gaze, I felt conscious of becoming uneasy and superstitious in spite of myself; yet my sensation was rather caused by excitement than by fear, and saluting the strange visitant, I advanced towards her. She stood on a broad slab in the centre of the bed of the

stream, but which was now uncovered by the water. I had to step from stone to stone in my approach, and often wind round some unusually gigantic rock that impeded my direct course; one of them was, indeed, so large, that when I came up to it, my view of the old woman was completely impeded. This roused me more: I hastily turned the angle of the rock; looked again for her in the place she had stood-but she was gone.-My eye rapidly glanced round to detect the path she had taken. I could not see her.

Now I became more disturbed. I leaned my back against the rock, and for some moments gazed along the valley. In this situation, my eye was again challenged by her scarlet mantle glittering in the sunlight, at the distance of nearly a quarter of a mile from the spot where she first appeared. She was once more motionless, and evidently looked at me. I grew too nervous to remain stationary, and hurried after her up the stony bed of the stream.

A second time she disappeared; but when I gained her second resting-place, I saw her standing on the outline of the distant mountain, now dwindled almost to the size of a crow, yet, boldly relieved against the back-ground of white clouds, and still manifested to me by her bright red mantle. A noment, and she finally evaded my view, going off at the other side of the mountain. This was not to be borne: I followed, if not courageously, determinedly. By my watch, to which I had the curiosity and presence of mind to refer, it took me a quarter of an hour to win the summit of the hill; and she, an aged woman, feeble and worn, had traversed the same space in much less time. When I stood on the ridge of the hill, and looked abroad over a widely-spreading country, unsheltered by forest, thicket, or any other hiding-place, I beheld her

not.

Cabins, or, to use the more poetical name, authorized by the exquisite bard of "O'Connor's child," sheelings, were now abundantly strewed around me, and men, women, and children, at work in the fields, one and all assured me no such person had, that day, met their notice, and added, it was impossible she could have crossed without becoming visible to them. I never again beheld (excepting in my dreams) that mysterious visitant, nor have ever been able to ascertain who or what she was.

continued my walk, descending the breast
of the mountain which faced the valley,
but now avoiding the latter, and saunter-
ing against the thready current of the
stream, with no other feeling that I can
recollect, but an impatience to ascertain
its hidden source. It led me all round the
base of the hill. I had a book in my
pocket, with which I occasionally sat
down, in an inviting solitude; when tired
of it, I threw pebbles into the water, or
traced outlines on the clouds; and the day
insensibly lapsed, while I thus rioted in
the utter listlessness of, perhaps, a dis-
eased imagination.

Evening fell. I found myself, in its
deepest shades, once more on the side of
the mountain opposite that which turned
towards the valley. I sat upon a small
knoll, surrounded by curves and bumps,
wild and picturesque in their solitude. I
was listening to the shrill call of the plover,
which sounded far and faint along the
dreary hills, when a vivid glow of light-
ning, followed by a clattering thunder-
crash, roused me from my reverie. I
was glad to take shelter in one of the
cabins, which I have described as rather
numerously strewed in that direction.

The poor people received me with an Irish cead mille phalteagh—“ a hundred thousand welcomes"-and I soon sat in comfort by a blazing turf fire, with eggs, butter, and oaten bread, to serve my need as they might.

The family consisted of an old couple, joint proprietors of my house of refuge; a son and daughter, nearly full grown; and a pale, melancholy-looking girl of about twenty years of age, whom I afterwards understood to be niece to the old man, and since her father's death, under his protection. From my continued inquiries concerning my witch of the glen, our conversation turned on superstitions generally. With respect to the ancient lady herself, the first opinion seemed to be-"the Lord only knows what she was:"-but a neighbour coming in, and reporting the sudden illness of old Grace Morrissy, who inhabited a lone cabin on the edge of the hill, my anecdote instantly occurred to the auditory, one and all; and now, with alarmed and questioning eyes, fixed on each other, they concluded I had seen her "fetch:" and determined amongst themselves that she was to die before morning.

The "fetch" was not entirely new to After having spoken to the peasants, I me, but I had never before been afforded

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so good an opportunity of becoming acquainted with its exact nature and extent among the Irish peasantry. I asked questions, therefore, and gathered some-to me-valuable information.

In Ireland, a "fetch" is the supernatural fac-simile of some individual, which comes to ensure to its original a happy longevity, or immediate dissolution; if seen in the morning the one event is predicted; if in the evening, the other.

During the course of my questions, and of the tales and remarks to which they gave rise, I could observe that the pale, silent girl, listened to all that was said with a deep, assenting interest: or, sighing profoundly, contributed only a few melancholy words of confirmation. Once, when she sighed, the old man remarked "No blame to you, Moggy mavourneen, fur it's you that lives to know it well, God help you, this blessed night." To these words she replied with another long-drawn aspiration, a look upwards, and an agitation of feature, which roused my curiosity, if not my sympathy, in no ordinary degree. I hazarded queries, shaped with as much delicacy as I could, and soon learned that she had seen, before his death, the "fetch" of her beloved father. The poor girl was prevailed on to tell her own story; in substance as follows:

Her father had, for some days, been ill of a fever. On a particular evening, during his illness, she had to visit the house of an acquaintance at a little distance, and for this purpose, chose a short cut across some fields. Scarcely arrived at the stile that led from the first into the second field, she happened to look back, and beheld the figure of her father rapidly advancing in her footsteps. The girl's fear was, at first, only human; she imagined that, in a paroxysm, her father had broken from those who watched his feverish bed; but as she gazed, a consciousness crept through her, and the action of the vision served to heighten her dread. It shook its head and hand at her in an unnatural manner, as if commanding her to hasten on. She did so. On gaining the second stile, at the limit of the second field, she again summoned courage to look behind, and again saw the apparition standing on the first stile she had crossed, and repeating its terrible gesticulations. Now she ran wildly to the cottage of her friend, and only gained the threshold when she fainted. Having recovered,

and related what she saw, a strong party accompanied her by a winding way, back to her father's house, for they dared not take that one by which she had come. When they arrived, the old man was a corpse; and as her mother had watched the death-struggle during the girl's short absence, there could be no question of his not having left his bed in the interim.

The man who had come into us, and whom my humble host called "gossip," now took up the conversation, and related, with mystery and pathos, the appearance to himself of the "fetch" of an only child. He was a widower, though a young man, and he wept during the recital. I took a note of his simple narrative, nearly in his own words; and a rhyming friend has since translated them into metre.

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