Harrison press-journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1899-1905, August 02, 1900, Image 3
T5he Bondman a 5 By HALL CAINC. "r' 5 CHAPTER nr. It was In the winter season In that tern land of the north, when night and day ao closely commingle that the dark new seems never to lift. And In the silence of that long night Rachel lay In her little hut. sinking rapidly and much alone. Jason came to her from time to time. In his great sea stockings and big gloves, and with the odor of the brine In his long red hair. By her bed- aide he would stand for half an hour In silence, with eyes full of wonder ment; for life like that of an untamed colt was In his own warm limbs, and death was very strange to him. A sud den hemorrhage brought the end, and one day darker than the rent, when Jason hastened home from the boats, the pain and panting of death were there before him. His mother's pallid face lay on her arm, her great dark eyes were glazed already, she was breathing hard and every breath was a spasm. Jason ran for the priest the same that had named him In his bap tism. The good old man came hobbling along, book In hand, and seeing how life flickered he would have sent for the Rovernor, but Kachel forbade him. He read to her, he sang for her In his crazy cracked voice, he shrived her, and then all being over, as far as human efforts could avail, he at himself down on chest, spread his print handkerchief over his knee, took out his snuffbox and waited. Jasun stood with his back to the glow of the peat fire, and his face hard et In the gloom. Never a word came from him, never a sigh, never a tear. Only with the strange light In his wild eyes he looked on and listened. Rachel stirred, and called to him. "Are you there, Jason?" she said feebly, and he stepped to her side. "Closer," she whispered; and he took her cold hand In both his hands, and then her dim eyes knew where to look for his face. "Goodbye, my brave lad," she said "I do not fear to leave you. You are strong, you are brave, and the world is kind to them that can fight It. Only to the weak Is It cruel only to th weak and the timid only to women oniy to helpless women Sold Into the slavery of heartless men." And then she told him everything her love, her loyalty, her life. In twen ty little words she told the story. "I gave him all all. I took a father's urse for him. He struck me he left roe he forgot me with another woman listen listen closer still still closer," he whispered, eagerly, and then she poke, the words that lie at the heart of this history. "You will be a salfor and sail to many lands. If you should ever meet your father, remember what your mother has borne from him. If you should never meet him, but should meet his on, remember what your mother has suffered at the hands of his father. Can you hear me7 Is my speech too thick?. Have you understood me?" Jason's parched throat was choking, and he did not answer. "My brave boy, farewell." she said. 'Goodbye," she murmured again, more faintly, and after that there was a lull A pause, a sigh, a long-drawn breath, another sign, and then over his big brown hands her pallid face fell for -ward, and the end was come. For some minutes Jason stood there till In the same Impassive silence. Never a tear yet In his great eyes, now wilder than they were; never a cry from his dry throat, now surging hot and athlrst; never a sound In his ears, ave a dull hum of words like the plash of a breaker that was coming coming coming from afar. She was gone who had been everything to him. She had sunk like a wave, and the waves of the ocean were pressing on behind her. She was lost, and the tides of life were flowing as before. The old pastor shuffled to his feet, mopping- his moist eyes with his red handkerchief. "Come away, my son." he said, and tapped Jason on the shoul der. -Not yet," the lad answered hoarsely. And then he turned with a dazed look and said, like one who speaks In his leep, "My father has killed my moth er." "No, no, don't say that," said the firlest. "Yes, yes," said the lad more louJIy, -not In a day, or an hour, or a moment, lut In twenty long years." "Hush, hush, my son," the old priest murmured. Hut Jason did not hear him. "Now listen" he cried.' "and hear my vow." And still he held the cold hand In his hands, and still the ashy face rested on them. "I will hunt the world over until I find that man, and when I have found him I will him." What am you saying?" cried the priest. Hut Jason went on with an awful sol emnity. "If he should die, and we .hould never meet, I will hunt the Vorld over until I And his son, and when I have found him I will kill him for hi fathers sake." "Bllenre, silencer' cried the priest. "Bo blp n Ond!" ssll Jason. "My my son, eengeance Is Ills. SjVhat M that we should presume to itr Jason ward nothing, 'but the frost of lift! first winter that had bound Aip fell btart, 4tf nine Mm, Minding him, choking him, aeemed all at once to break. He pushed the cold face gently back on to the pillow, and fell over It with sobs that shook the bed. They burled the daughter of the gov ernor In the acre allotted to the dead poor In the yard of the cathedral of Reykjavik. The bells were ringing a choral peal between matin and morn ing service. Happy little girls in bright new gowns, with primrose on their breasts yellowing their round shins, went skipping In at the wide west doorway, chattering as they went like linnets In spring. It was Easter Day, nineteen years after Stephen Orry had fled from Iceland. Next morning Jason signed articles on the wharf to sail as seaman before the mast on an Irish schooner home ward bound for Belfast, with liberty to call at Whitehaven In Cumberland, and Ramsey In the Isle of Man. CHAPTER IV. AN ANGEL IN HOMESPUN. The little island In the middle of the Irish sea has through many centuries had its own language and laws, and Its own Judges and governors. Very, very long ago it had also its own kings; and one of the greatest of them was the Icelandic seadog who bought It with blood in 1077. More recently it has had Its own reigning lords, and one of the least of them was the Scottish noble man who sold it for gold In 1754. After that act of truck and trade the English crown held the right of appointing the governor general. It chose the eon of the Scottish nobleman. This was John, fourth duke of Athol, and he held his office fifty-five bad years. If the mem ory of old men can be trusted, he con trived to keep a swashbuckler court there, but Its festivities, like his own dignities, must have been maimed and lame. He did not care to see too much of it, and that he might be free to go where he would he appointed a deputy governor. Now when he looked about him for this deputy he found Just six and twen ty persons ready to fall at his feetj He might have had either of the Deem sters, but he selected neither; he might have had any of the twenty-four Keys, but he selected none. It was then that he heard of a plain farmer In the north of the Island, who was honored for his uprightness, beloved for his sim plicity, and revered for his piety. "The very man for me," thought the lord of the swashbucklers, and he straightway set off to see him. He found him living like a patriarch anions his people, surrounded by his sons, and proud of them that they were many and strong. His name was Adam Falrbrother. In his youth he had run away to sea, been taken prisoner by the Algerlnes, kept twenty-eight long months a slave In Barbssry, hsd escaped and returned home captain of a Ginea man. This had been all his education and all his history. He had left the Island a wild, headstrong, passionate lad; he had returned to It a sober, pa. tlent, gentle-hearted. Adam's house was Lague, a loose, straggling, featureless and Irresolute old fabric, on 500 hungry acres of the rocky headland of Maughold. When the duke rode up to It Adam himself was ringing the bell above the door that summoned his people to dinner. He was then In middle life, stout, yet flaccid and alack, with eyes and forehead of sweetest benevolence, mouth of sweet est tenderness, and hair already whiten ing over his ear and temple. "The face of an angel in homespun," thought the duke. Adam received hi visitor with the easy courtesy of an equal Srst offering his hand. The duke uhook hands with him. He held the stirrup while the duke alighted, took the horse to the stable, slackened its girths, and gave It a feed of oata, talking all the time. The duke stepped after him and listen, ed. Then he led the way to the house. The duke followed. They went into the living room an oblong kitchen with an oak table down the middle, and two row of benches from end to end. The farming people were trooping In. bring ing with them the odor of fresh peat and soli. Itowls of barley broth were being set in front of the big chair at the table end. Adam sat In this seat and motioned the duke to the bench at his right. The duke sat down. Then six words of grace and all were In their places Adam himself, his wife, a shrewd-faced body; his six sons, big and shambling, his men, bare-armed and quiet, his milds, with skirts tucked up, plump nd noisy, and the swash buckler duke, amused nd silent, glanc. Ing down the long lines of the strangest company with whom he had ever yet been asked to sit at dinner. Suet pud ding followed the broth, sheep' head and potatoes followed the pudding, then six words of thank and all rose and trooped away except the duke and Ad am. That good man had not altered the habit of hi life by so much as a plate of cheese for the fact that the "trd of Mann" had sat at meat with him. "The maner of a prince," thought the duke. They took the armchair at opposite tide of the Ingle. "You lok cosy In your retreat, Mr. Falrbrother," said the duke; "but alnce your day In Guinea, have you never dreamed of a position of more power, and perhap of more profit?" "AM tot power," answered Adam, "I have observed that th nam and the reality rarely go together." "The experience of a talesman," thought the duke. "As for profit," he continued, "I hi ve reflect d that money has never yet since the world began tempted a happy man." "The wisdom of a Judge," thought the duke. "And as for myself I am a complete ly happy one.'13 "With more than a Judge' Integrity," thought the duke. At that the duke told the purpose of his visit. "And cow," he said, with uplifted hands, "don't say I've gone far to fare worse. The post I offer requires but one qualification In the man who fills It, yet no one about me possesses the simple gift. It needs an honest man and all the better If he' not a fool. Will you take it?" "No, laid Adam, short, and blunt. "The very man," thought the duke. Six months later the duke had his way. Adam Falrbrother of Lague was made governor of Mann (under the duke himself as governor general) at a sal ary of five hundred pounds a year. On the night of Midsummer Day, 1793, the town of Ramsey held high festival. The Royal George had dropped anchor In the bay, and the prince of Wales, attended by the duke of Athol, Captain Murray and Captain Cook, had come ashore to set the foot of an English prince for the first time on Manx soil. Before dusk, the royal ship had weigh ed aenhor again, but when night fell in the festivities had only begun. Guns were fired, bands of music passed thro' the town, and bonfires were lighted on the top of the Sky hill. The kitchens of the Inns were crowded, and t he streets wero thronged with country peo ple enveloped in dust. In the market place the girls were romping, the young men were drinking, the children shout ing at the top of their voices, the ped dlers edging their barrows through the crowd and crying their wares. Over all the tumult of exuberant voices, the Bhoutlng, the laughter, the merry shrieks, the gay banter, the barking of sheep-dogs, the snarling of mon grel setters, the streaming and smok ing of hawkers' torches across a thou sand faces, there was the steady peal of the bell of Ballure. In the midst of It all a trange man passed through the town. He was of colossal stature stalwart, straight and flaxen-haired, wearing a goatskin cap without brim, a gray woollen shirt open at the neck and belted with a leathern strap, breeches of untanned leather, long, thick stockings,, a second pair up to his ankles, and no shoes on his feet. His face tvas pale, his cheek bone? stood high, and his eyes were like the eyes of a cormorant. The pretty girls stopped hrdr chapter to look after him, but he strode on with long steps, and the people fell aside for him. At the door of the Saddle Inn he stood a moment, but voices came from with in and he passed on. Going by t he court house he came to the Plough tavern, and there he stopped again, paused a moment, then stepped In. After a time the children who had fol lowed at his heels separated, and the girls who had looked after him began to dance with arms akimbo, and skirts held up over their white ankles. He was forgotten. An hour later, four mpn, armed with cutlasses, and carrying ship's Irons, came hurrying fom the harbor. They were blue-jackets from the revenue-cutter lying in the bay, and they were in pursuit of a seaman who had escaped from the English brig at anchor out side. The runaway was a giant and a foreizner, and could not speak a word of English or Manx. Had anyone seen him? Yes, everyone. He had gone Into the Plough. To the Plough the bluejackets made their way. The good woman who kept It, Mother Beatty, had certainly eeen such a man. "Aw, yes, the poor craythur, he came, so he did," but never a word could he speak to her, and never a word could she speak to him, ao she gave him a bit of barley cake, and maybe a drop of something, and that was all. He was not in the house, then? "Och, let them look for themselves." The bluejackets searched the house, and came out as they had entered. Then they passed through every street, looked down ev ery alley, and went back to their ship empty-handed. When they were gone Mother Beatty came to the door and looked out. At the next Instant the hlg-llmbed stran ger stepped from behind her. "That way," sne wnispered, and she pointed to a dark alley opposite. The man watched the direction of her finger In the rtnrkness, doffed his cap, and strode away. The alley led him by many a turn to the foot of a hill. It was Ballure. Be hind him lay the town, with the throngs, the voices, and the bands of music. To his left was the fort, belch ing smoke and the roar of cannon. To his right were the bonfires nn the hill top, with little dark figures passing be fore them, and a glow above them em bracing a third of the sky. In front of him was the gloom and silence of the country. He walked nn; a ff-esh cool ness came to him out df the darkness, and over him a dull murmur hovered In the air. He was going towards Kirk Maughold. He pass-1 two or three little houses by the wayside, but most of them were dark. He came by a tavern, but the door was shut, and no one answered when he knocked. At length, by the turn of a byroad, he saw a light thro' the trees, and making towards It he found a long shambling house under a clump of elms. He was at Lague. The light he saw was from one win dow only, and he stepped up to It, A man wa sitting alone by the hearth, with th glow of a gentle On on hla faca a beautiful face, soft and sweet and tender. It was Adam falrbrother. The stranger stood for a moment In the darkness, looking Into the quiet room. . Then he lapped on the window pane. On thla evening Governor Falrbrother was worn with toil and excitement. II had been Tynwald day, and while sit ting at St. John's he had been sum moned to Ramsey to receive the prince of Wales and the duke of Athol. The royal party had already landed when he arrived, but not a word of apology had he offered for the delayed recep tion. He had taken the prince to the top of Sky hill, talking as he went, an swering many questions and asking not a few, naming the mountains, running through the island's history, explaining the three legs of its coat of arms, glanc ing at Its ancient customs and giving a taste of its language. He had been simple, sincere and natural from first to last, and when the time had come for the prince to return to his ship he had presented his six sons to him with the quiet dignity of a patriarch, saying these were his gifts to his king that was to be. Then on the quay he ha doffered the prince his hand, hoping he might see him again before long; for he was a great lover of a happy face, and the prince, It was plain to see, was, like himself, a man of a cheerful spirit. But when the Royal George had sail ed out of the bay at the top of the tide, and the great folk who had held their breath In awe of so much majesty were preparing to celebrate the visit with the blazing of cannon and the beating of drums, Adam Falrbrother had silently slipped away. He lived at Government House, but had left his three elder boys at Lague, and thought this a happy chance of spending a night at home. Only his sons' housekeeper, a spinster aunt of his own, was there, and when she had given him a bite of sup per he had sent' her after the others to look at the sights of Ramsey. Then he had drawn up his chair before the fire, charged his long pipe, purred a song to himself, begun to smoke, to doze and to dream. His dreams that night had been wo ven with visions of his bad days in the slave factory at Barbary of his wreck and capture, of his cruel tortures be fore his neck was yet bowed to the yoke of bondage, of the whip, before he knew the language of his masters to obey It quickly, of the fetters on his hands, the weights on his legs, the col lar about his neck, of the raw flesh where the Iron had .torn the skin; and then of the dark wild night of his es cape, when he and three others, as luckless and miserable, had run a raft Into the sea, stripped off their shirts for a sail, and thrust their naked bodies together to keep them warm. Such was the gray silt that came up to him that night from the deposits of his memory. Hie Tynwaik, the prince. the duke, the guns, the music, the bon fires, were gone; bit by bit he pieced together the life he had lived in his youth, and at the thought 'of it, and that it was now over, he threw back his head and gave thanks that they were due. At that moment he heard a tap on the wlndowpane, and turning about he saw a man's haggard face peering in at him from the darkness. Then he rose Instantly, and threw open the door of the porch. "Come In," he called. I : i The man entered. He took one step into the house and stopped, seemed for a moment puzzled, dazed, sleepless, and then by a sudden Impulse stepped quietly forward, pulled up the sleeve of his shirt and held out him arm. Around his wrist there was a circular abrasure where the loop of a fetter had worn away the skin, leav ing the naked flesh raw and red. He had been In Irons. With a word of welcome the governor motioned the man to a seat. Some In articulate sounds the man made and waved his hand. He was a foreigner. What was his craft? A tiny model of a full-rigged ship stood on the top of a corner cupboard. Adam pointed to it, and the man gave a quick nod of assent. Ho was a seaman. Of what countryf "Shetlands?" asked the governor. The man shood his head. "Sweden? Norway?" "Issland." said the man. He was an Icelander. Two rude portraits hung on the wall, one of a fair boy, the other of a woman In the early bloom of womanhood Ad am' yung wife and first child. The governor pointed to the boy, and the man shook his head. He hud no family. The governor pointed to the woman, and the man hesitated, eeemed about to assent, nr,d thin, with the look ol one who tries to banish an unwelcome thought, shook his head again. He had no wife? What was his name? The governor took down from a shelf a bible covered In green cloth, and opened at the writing on the fly-leal between the rt and New Testaments. The writing r.in: "Adam Fait brother, son of Jo: Falrbrother, and Mar: hl wife, was born August the 1 1 th, 17r3 about 6 o'clock In the morning, hall flood, wind at southwest, and Christen ed August ISth." To this he pointed then to himself, and Anally to t h stranger. An abrupt change came c "el the Man' manner. He gtew sullen and gave no sign. But his eyes wandered Atth a fierce eagerness to the tabi.r wheie the remains of the governor's supper wt ie still lying. Adatt, rtiMV up a chair and motlo ied th strniiger to sit and eat. The m;m aV with frlgl'tful voracity, the persplr- Ration bienklng out In beads over bit tact. H.vng -len, he grew drow. f.i'd to roddlng where he sat, In a inon.enl of i (.covered conscl iunvi pointed t (hi rM'Pf d head of a l,ors tli-r hung over the door. He wl-nd to i fp Ir, tM stable. The governor lit a lantern nn. lej the way to the stable loft. There th-t man stretched himself on the straw, and soon hi long and measured bieatti told that he slept. (To b continued.) FAME SCENES I INDIA. In Jeypore, India, "the Rose-Colored City," crowds of men are suffering In agony on the streets, their heads on the pavements, beside heaped-up bags of rice. In the midst of music and pro cessions. These men look like skeletons, over which a swarthy skin has been drawn, the Joints stad out with horrible prom iece, the rotulae ad the elbows form big lumps like knots on a branch, and the thighs, which have but one bone, are thinner than the lower part of the legs, which have two. Some are group ed together In families, other lie apart, abandoned; some, with arms outstretch ed, as on a cross, are in the agony of death; others still manage to remain squatted on their haunches, motionless and stupefied, with fever bright eyes and long teeth showing from under the tense Hps. In a corner an old woman, probably alone in the world, weeps si lently over some rags. Such Is the picture drawn by Pierre Lotl, author and captain in the French navy, of a scene outside the walls of beautiful Jeypore, where an Indian king and English governor resides, and where famine reigns supreme. Thus he continues: When at last, after passing through these double gates, the city is before you, It is a surprise and an enchant ment. Regular streets, nearly a mile in length, twice as broad as the Paris boulevards, and fringed by tall palaces whose facades have the infinite vari ety of oriental fantasy. Nowhere can be found a more extravagant superpo sition of colonnades, of festooned arch, of tower, balcony and lace-like mirador. Everything in the one tint of rose, and the least little molding, the least little arabesque picked out with a white flower. . . . But there are also wanderers of sorry men, like unto those creatures who lie outside the gates! Have such as these dared to enter the rose-colored city and drag their bones about here? Yae, and there are more of them than one would have thought at first glance. Those who totter along with haggard eyes are not the only ones on the sidewalks amid the dealers 'brilliant wares, are half concealed, horrible bun dles of rags and skeletons that force the passerby, to step aside lest he tread upon them. These phantoms are peasants from the surrounding plains. For years past, when there has been rain, they have struggled against the destruction of their land, and long suffering has pre pared them for this barrenness with out name. Now it is over. Their beasts have died for want of fodder, and the skin has been sold for next to nothing, As for the fields that were sown, they are now nothing but steppes of broken, burnt out ground In which nothing could germinate. Sold, too, in order to buy wherewith to eat, are the clothes with which they used to cover their nakedness, the silver rings they wore on arms and ankles. For years they have not had enough to cat, and now starvation has come with a vengeance, the hunger that tir tures, and very soon the villages were Hired with the stench of corpses. To eat! They wanted to eat, these people, and therefore they have coma to the city. It seemed to them that some one would have pity that they would not be allowed to die, for they had heard that grain and wheat had been garnered here as If for a siege, and that everybody within these walls had food. As a matetr of fact, the ox-drawn car, the trains of camels, are loaded with sacks of rice and barley, brought from afar by order of the king, and stored in granaries, or even piled up on the sidewalks in fear of the Invad ing famine that menace the beautiful rose-colored city from every side. But WHITE LEADERS OF SAVAGES. That highly civilised men should de ert their kind. Join savage races, and actually flght against their own coun trymen sounds almost Incredible. Yet there are many Instances of the kind, and In nine cases out of ten these de serters from civilization adopt all the worst traits of the people they Join, and often surpass them In cruelty and cun ning. In Cochin China, where the French have for nearly twenty years been car rying on a relentles swarfare against the bloodthirsty pirates who Infest the oasts, and especially the great rivers, the naval and military forces every iow and aealn discover that the pirate chiefs whom they succeed in capturing ire Europeans. One of these men had deserted from the French army, and had become one of the principal lieu tenants of the black flag or pirate force of the drended chief and mandarin, Doe Tlch. In the Poudan the Khalifa had a large number of Europeans under his colors, Including the ex-Prussian ser geant of artillery, Klott, and an ex Austrian officer, who now bears the name of Inger; while his principal lieu tenant, Osman Digna, was the son of a French shopkeeper, wa born In Rou en, and baptised In the magnificent ca thedral of that ancient capital of Nor mandy. Another case I that of Oliver Psln, one of the most prominent leader of the French Commune In 1S71. He was condemned to death for his participa tion In the Insurrection, but his sen tence was subsequently commuted to one of penal servitude in New Caledo this has to be bought and gold an ed to buy. 'Tls true the king haa some of tt i tributed among the poor who dwwB his capital; but as for rellerlng mi wise the peasants who are djrtwc thousands In the surrounding; there is not enough to go around. the sight of such is avoided. fore, the peasants wander a boat the streets, hang around the places people are eating, in the hope few grains of rice might be throws to them, until the hour comes for than, to lay themselves down, no matter 1 on the pavement, to die. . . At one comer hard by a probably already full to overflowing there are a hundred sacks of grain to be unloaded from the camels that have brought there there, and three little skeleton children, from 6 to 10 years of age, all quite naked, have to be moved from the place where they are lying together and where they are la tha way. "They are three brothers,' a woman, standing by explains, "their parent who brought them here, are dead (of hunger Is understood), ao they remain, there; they have nobody to look after them." And she apparently thinks it qu!te natural! Yet she doesn't seem to be a cruel woman! Great heaven! what sort of people are those, who would not harm a bird for anything in the world, and who yet allow little children to die at thetf very door? ... Outside in the streets no one with muezzin songs calls the starving te give them food. The newcomes still roam about, extending their hands and slapping their empty stomachs if any one be looking. The others, who hsrvt lost all hope of succor, fall they list not where underfoot amid tha crowd and the horses. At the crossing of two avenues Ol the palace and the rose colored tem ples on one of the places filled Witt merchants, horsemen and women eiae In muslins and covered with golds, rings, a stranger has Just stopped hi, carriage, close to a sinister lot of starvelings who no longer care to wan der about, and he has bent over ta place pieces of money in their i hands. Then suddenly 'tis like the tion of a whole tribe of Heads are lifted pbove the rags which covered their faces, eyes stare, the skeleton forms rise to their What, alms! Somebody is giving It will be possible to get something tr eat! The dismal awakening extends; In a sudden train to other groups lying fur ther on, hidden behind the wayfarers, behind piles of stuffs, or bakers' ovens. And al lof them bestir themselves,rts and come forward, corpselike masks, whose shriveled lips expose their teeth to view, hollow eyes, with eyelashes? eaten away by flies, with empty sack pendant from the circles of the thorax, bundles of bones, which strike against one another with sounds like clashing bits of wood. And In a minute the stranger is surrounded with a frightful circle, is pressed upon, is clutched by grimy hands, with huge nails, which, seek to tear; the poor eyes ask pardon, look their thanks, supplicate. And then silently the whole crowd collapses. One of the specters, footer Ing In his weakness, had leaned gal nst his neighboring specter, who fcutteredr in his turn, and the fall was coausmn lcated from neighbor to neighbor, with out a cry, without an effort at ance all these exhausted bodies) ing over against the others and fkBing togcther, like unfortunate marionette. Ughtnlng struck a piano In Stir Jer sey, smashing the keys and melting-, tha wires. It wasn't Jersey lightning, bat the real stuff. nia. He succeeded In effecting hla es cape, made his way to Europe, and then to Khartoum, and offered his serv ices to the Mahdi. For many years he was in high favor with the prophet, bat finally Incurred his displeasure and was burled alive. Both in Egypt and Turkey there are quite a large number of pashas who are nothing more nor less than desert ers from more civilized countries. Thus Omar Pasha is an Austrian by birth and served In the Austrian army under the name of Mikall von Lottas. Old Cherlf Pasha, who was on numer ous occasions prime minister of Egypt, was a son of that French general, De Helves, who reorganized the army of Mehemrt All on a European footing, and embraced Mohammedanism with the object of increasing his Influence over his troops. One of the most In teresting renegades of this kind waa oid Sefer Pasha, whose real name waa Count Koscielcky, and who, while hold ing the rank of lieutenant colonel in the Prussian army, had the misfortune to kill In a duel hi commanding; onV cer. Count Klelst. This led '.ilm to expatriate Btmaeif. and, Joining the Turkish army, be dis tinguished himself during the Crtnmn war a a member of the staff of tin Turkish commander-in-chief. Osaar Pasha. Subsequently the count, wtm had meanwhile become a convert in Mohammedanism, under the nans of Befer Pasha, transferred hla to Khedive Ismail of Egypt. A njA.wiMi rxf tk. nM that without the liberal- use of the rvO. n m uaposoiDis w bsh dots