"UBI MEL, IBI MUSCA.” No. 3-NEW SERIES.] Every purchaser of this number of MONSIEUR TOBY. (For the FLY.) (Continued from p. 6.) SATURDAY, JANUARY 20. [TWOPENCE. "THE FLY," is entitled to an exquisitely-executed Lithographic PRINT of "The Beau WINDOW," which is presented gratuitously.-[A similar print with every number.] One remarkable thing was, that little Toby had no sea qualms. He swallowed a small glass of eau-de vie, made a wry face for fun, or for novelty's sake, and entered without ceremony on his functions as a cabin-boy. Fortune smiled upon him even upon the "lap of ocean." From the first day that he inhaled the sea breeze, he might be called the ocean's child: from that moment he was a cabin-boy. Smile not, gentle reader, at the notion. Is it nothing to be installed cabin-boy, at ten years of age, in a ship of the line, equipped against the English, and that too without going through the intermediate grades, that most miserable state of Salamander amongst the rest, which so much shocked my lady friends in times past? The same day four stripes of the boatswain's cat corrected the first and last offence that Toby was ever guilty of. Here was the entire of his naval education. All this, it may be supposed, set to sleep his musical predilection. The duties on hand took the lead of those of the head and heart. Still he looked out for his chance; and when it did arrive, with a sagacity beyond his years, he judged his time, and took the ball at the hop. One day, all the officers happening to be upon deck, and Toby alone in the cabin, -the temptation was strong, I must allow,and the desire that was now awakened at the sight of a flute and violin laying on the table, with the recollections of his early boyhood and composition all rushing to his mind at once, were irresistible; so placing his trembling hands on both the instruments, he in turn breathed forth some melodious and thril ling sounds from the one, while from the at leisure sundry gulps of ocean's "neat and extra particular.' He at last owed his safety to a friendly hen-coop, to which, with the enthusiasm of his nature, he most ardently and desperately clung. Happy, thrice happy chicken-coop! Toby escaped shipwreck only to fall into the overture of a revolution: and what a revolution! Grand Dieu! If he asked where the music of it was to be got, they struck up the Marseillaise. If he spoke about singing, they sang him the Marseillaise. The Marseillaise was in every body's mouth, if not in every one's heart. She sounded the charge to the battalions of the frontier; she was to be heard squeaking in all the streets of Paris, through all the pipes and barrelled organs Toby did not easily of that great city. get over this: all his ideas were confused, and he sighed deeply for his berth on board the good ship Alerte. Happily he owed to experience and his maritime life an in-bred philosophy that no misfortune could disturb. He had a sovereign contempt for all notions non-practical. Like Buonaparte he looked only to facts. He was wholly incapable of any enthusiasm, even in music, unless it was in some improvisation, or before a grand maestro: so neither in politics would he take up a cause unless it was active and well-knit, and then he was at any party's disposal, no matter what. He was like marble in all changes for social compacts; and Louis the Sixteenth, Robespierre, the cinq cents, the Directory, the Consulate, and the Empire received equally the tribute and flourish of the French horn of M. Toby. In a word, like the great Shakspeare, "he was for all time;" musician of the old guard and the new, even when the guard no longer existed. Nevertheless, we must not forget that he has been a musician in all classes, everywhere, and in all places. Music has been the life of his exist[ence: he made it so on shipboard, at the play John Cunningham, Printer, Crown-court Fleet-street. house, and in the field of battle. He was in has succeeded the delightful compositions of Berlin, at Vienna, Moscow; wherever, in Martin; the voices of Mesdames Emma or short, the imperial cannon growled. In no Justine to that of Madame Boulanger. Who part has the music of M. Toby been missing, knows how long we shall see him at the Luxwhether in victory or discomfiture. He has embourg, or who may say that the last sounds been with the conquerors in all the great ca- of his bass viol will not expire at the Petitpitals of Europe; at the head of our armies Lazary, or at a theatre of the Marionettes? his horn has never ceased to blazon forth the Heaven help him! Long may we see the notes or clang of victory. If, as a solitary ex- old musician, so worn by age, and service, ception, we omit the name of Waterloo, we and with wounds, leaning and taking rest, his may over and above add this to the well-eye half closed upon his instrument; and may earned reputation of our hero. The cold, the Theatre of the Luxembourg be at once and the rigorous season which cost us 300,000 his plain of Waterloo, and his Isle of St. soldiers in Russia, was never able to seal up Helena. the lips of M. Toby. We are free to confess that a vast chasm in the life of the now ancient M. Toby remains unfilled up-a history, no doubt, containing much incident and anecdote is still left, unsaid, unsung, in story or in song. Frenchman though he was, to the allies he bartered his musical inspiration, his flute, his violin, and his noble horn; in return for which he paid his devoirs to their ale and porter, and without remorse sometimes would he chink the foreign ducats in his waistcoat pockets. Proh pudor! M. Toby. Time speeds on with an eagle's wing. The old man has no longer that sacred flame which once lighted up his soul, and in any other man than Toby would have made his name famous. At one time, mistrustful of himself, he became careless-a free and easy boon companion: more than ever he led a vagabond and artiste mode of life; but often was he heard to say, "There was still time to amend this." But, as the poet says "Unhappy he who does this aim adjourn, so years rolled on, and few were the hours in which might be traced any of those sparks of divine fire that seemed to burn so bright in childhood. Monsieur Toby, we have already said, followed music in the camp. Peace came, and with it more time and opportunity for its cultivation. The love of music had made him a constant visitor at the theatre. This led to several engagements. He was for twelve years first horn at the Opera Comique, and for two years held the same appointment at the Italiens. He was in vogue at the Opera Comique during its palmy days, in the time of Elleviou and Martin, when le Magnifique, les deux Jaloux, le Calife de Bagdad, le Prince de Catane, le Tableau parlant, Adolphe and Clara, were in the height of their prosperity, and when the opera critiques of Geoffrey raised to the skies the easy fluency and natural graces of Madame Boulanger. Happy Toby! Now, indeed, the horn to which his robust frame was wont to give force in other days has lost its power. That air of steady gravity and pendant lip, with certain follies and peccadilloes not worth mentioning, all have led to his dismissal; and M. T-, after the expedition to Algiers, finished his life and adventures (naval and military), and by les Folies Dramatiques, and the Luxembourg has also terminated his life of artiste. For him the buffoonery of Robert Macaire To be so raised in thoughts-and still so humble in condition! Alas! poor Toby! THE DEAD. He sleeps! yet how serene! How calm, how tranquil now; As if no care had ever been, To darken o'er that brow! He sleeps! and yet no dream Plays o'er that silenced brain; To light with its fantastic gleam The scenes of life again! He sleeps! and that fond eye, Will never break the mystic seal, F. E. A. a Time and Money Compared.—In losing few hours of the morning, we become careless of the rest of the day: it therefore runs out, and nothing is done. So it is with our money. Change a guinea, which one feels to be precious, and we are little regardful of the shillings and pence. timate the value of time like only fortune it is. No one can es those whose THE RUNAWAY. FROM AUDUBON'S BIOGRAPHY OF BIrds. (Continued from page 7.) Supper over, the fire was completely extinguished, and a small lighted pine-knot placed in a hollow calabash. Seeing that both the husband and wife were desirous of communicating something to me, I at once and fearlessly desired them to unburden their minds; when the Runaway told me a tale, of which the following is the substance: About eighteen months before, a planter, residing not very far off, having met with some losses, was obliged to expose his slaves at a public sale. The value of his negroes was well known, and on the appointed day the auctioneer laid them out in small lots, or offered them singly, in the manner which he judged most advantageous to their owner. The Runaway, who was well known as being the most valuable next to his wife, was put up by himself for sale, and brought an immoderate price. For his wife, who came next, and alone, eight hundred dollars were bidden and paid down. Then the children were exposed; and, on account of their breed, brought high prices. The rest of the slaves went off at rates corresponding to their qualifications. The Runaway chanced to be purchased by the overseer of the plantation; the wife was bought by an individual residing about a hundred miles off, and the children went to different places along the river. The heart of the husband and father failed him under this dire calamity. For a while he pined in deep sorrow under his new master; but hav ing marked down in his memory the names of the different persons who had purchased each dear portion of his family, he feigned illness-if indeed he whose affections had been so grievously blasted could be said to feign it-refrained from food for several days, felt himself disappointed in what he consiand was little regarded by the overseer, who dered a bargain. On a stormy night, when the elements raged with all the fury of a hurricane, the poor negro made his escape, and, being well acquainted with all the neighbouring swamp, at once made directly for the cane-brake, in the centre of which I found his camp. few nights afterwards he gained the abode of his wife, and the very next after their meeting he led her away. The children one after another he succeeded in stealing, until at last the whole objects of his love were under his care. The Canadian Massacre. Among the sufferers in the unfortunate civil war was an old Indian chief, called Pocahontas the Second; he had received no less than eighteen flesh wounds, and the surgeons deemed his recovery hopeless. The Indian, however, To provide for five individuals was no undertook his own cure and succeeded. It easy task in those wilds, which, after the first was supposed he had used some vegetable notice was given of the wonderful disappearpreparation obtained from the forest, when ance of this extraordinary family, were daily Mr. Turton gave the particulars as follows:- ransacked by armed planters. Necessity, it "To the Editor of the Montreal Albion. Sir, is said, will bring the wolf from the forest. According to your request I have no objection The Runaway seems to have well understood to state, that the Indian chief, 'Pocahontas' the maxim, for under night he approached has quite recovered during his stay in Quebec, his first master's plantation, where he had by the use of Holloway'a Ointment, which ever been treated with the greatest kindness. has healed the iufferer most effectually. I The house servants knew him too well not am, Sir, your's, &c. A true copy, counter-to aid him to the best of their power, and at signed, Durham.-Quebec, August, 1838. the approach of each morning he returned to his camp The Runaways, after disclosing their secret to me, both rose from their seat, with eyes full of tears. "Good master, for God's sake do something for us and our children," they sobbed forth with one accord. Their little ones lay sound asleep in the fearlessness of their innocence. Who could have heard such a tale without emotion? I promised them my most cordial assistance. They both sat up that night to watch my repose, and I slept close to their urchins, as if on a bed of the softest down. Day broke so fair, so pure, and so gladdening, that I told them such heavenly appearances were ominous of good, and that I scarcely doubted of obtaining their full pardon. I desired them to take their children with them, and promised to accompany them to the plantation of their first master. They gladly obeyed. My Ibises were hung around their camp, and as a memento of my having been there, I notched several trees, after which I bade adieu, perhaps for the last time, to that cane-brake. We soon reached the plantation, the owner of which, with whom I was well acquainted, received me with all the generous kindness of a Louisiana planter. Ere an hour had elapsed, the Runaway and his family were looked upon as his own. He afterwards re-purchased them from their owners, and treated them with his former kindness; so that they were rendered as happy as slaves generally are in that country, and continued to cherish that attachment to each other which had led to their adven tures. Since this event happened, it has, I have been informed, been illegal to separate slave families without their consent. "WILL NOTHING LOVE ME?” BY THE AUTHOR OF "THE REFORMER." My dear reader, did you ever pass across that hospitable tract of land lying between the extreme end of Albemarle-street and Dover-street? If you have ever traversed the broad pavement of Piccadilly which connects these two points, you must have been made fully sensible of the extreme kindness of heart and boundless philanthropy with which the gentlemen in high low boots and low-crowned hats who frequent them are constantly entreating you to go to Brentford, or Richmond, or Ham, or Twickenham, or any It so happened that several of these wor- 66 Richmond, sir?-off in one minute." "No." Twickenham, sir?-going in no time." "No, no." Going to Brentford, sir?-last buss to- The tall gentleman in the shabby black chall-terrace, which, being a story higher, and having a door of still brighter green than any of its neighbours, was considered a place of much estimation by all the inhabitants of the courts, and the crescents, and the lanes, and the streets, in its vicinity. The gentleman in black knocked at the door of this stately tenement, a sort of genteel though rather tremulous knock: it was evident that he was rather doubtful of his reception. The summons was answered by a servant girl, whose style of habiliments betokened a sort of graceful disregard to the stiff proprieties of dress; the sound of her slipshod shoes falling musically on the ear at every footfall, her gown having resisted every solicitation to come to an amicable meeting behind, and her hair falling in a fringe of negligent tresses from beneath a cap about large enough to cover the head of an individual just introduced three weeks into the world, but placed on a pericranium of a peculiarly fine size. "Is Mr. Renchall at home?" said the gentleman in black. "No," said the dirty servant girl. The gentleman in black breathed again, but in a moment more he remembered that he ought to be disappointed. "Do you expect him in soon?" he asked, hoping to hear a repetition of the negative; but just at this juncture the parlour door opened, and a little girl, with her hair platted before and behind into four long tails, two turned up before, and two turned down behind, and all of them tied with pink ribbon, a braided frock slipping half way down her shoulders, and stopping midway in its descent, so as to make a liberal display of a pair of trousers copiously frilled, and terminations of yellow Margate shoes, put her head out of the parlour door, and at the top of a shrill voice announced that "pa would be home directly," and at the same monent was followed by the head of "ma" in a cap measured by her consequence, for it just so far overstepped the dimensions of the door as The gentleman in black read these words to oblige its wearer to incline the head which unconsciously as one who sees, but is not supported it gracefully sideways in her egress cognisant of what he looks upon; and yet the and ingress, and "ma" seeing that the genapparently insulated accident by which he tleman in black was really gentlemanly, and was pushed down these office steps, at the not at the moment discerning the shabbiness hazard of his ankles and the ruffling of his of his coat, asked him to walk into the partemper, proved the key-stone of his destiny.lour with great condescension, and with much The gentleman in black struggled up the suavity assured him that Mr. Renchall would steps, and out of the way of the zealous phi- be in directly. lanthropists who were formerly vulgularly Now, although the gentleman in black had known as cads, but who now, with reference come, we do not know how many miles, to to their powers as guides, are more worthily see the head of the establishment, he would recognised as conductors, and made his way willingly have given the reversion of some up towards a certain neighbourhood, lying, large property, or a year or two of life, or a we believe, somewhere about Pimlico; but joint from his body, or some such trifle of we dare not be too certain of the exact iden- that sort, to have escaped the honour of the tity of the spot, as we are not particularly audience, so that he could have satisfied his proud of our geopraphy. Howbeit, the sub-conscience that he had done every thing to ject of our biography, after sundry turnings obtain it. Howbeit, when the lady of the and twistings, and multiplied inquiries, at mansion invited him to enter, and when five last met with somebody, who knew somebody of the Misses Renchall, in replications of the else, who knew Renchall's terrace; and after same platted hair, and pink bows, and braidobtaining so much of authentic information, ed robes, and flounced trousers, and yellow the gentleman in black at last arrived at the Margate shoes, together with Master Rencitadel itself, being the centre house of Ren-chall, with a pair of eyes that could have |