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ly brought before me, in which my ever-indulgent father permitted me to accompany him, when I was yet but a child. As we drove through C----r, a village within three miles of Y----, he directed my attention to a remarkable _rising_, or _conical mound of earth_, on the top of the tower of C----r church. He then kindly explained the cause of this singular, and _distinguishing_ appearance, and told me the traditionary anecdote connected with it; which now, in my own words, I am going to communicate to my readers. It is generally supposed, that great grief makes the heart so selfishly absorbed in its own sufferings, as to render it regardless of the sufferings of others; but the conduct of her, who is the heroine of the following tale, will prove to this general rule an honourable exception. I know nothing of her birth, and parentage, nor am I acquainted even with her name--but I shall call her Birtha--the story goes, that she lived at C----r, a village three miles from Y---- in N----, and was betrothed to the mate of a trading vessel, with the expectation of marrying him, when he had gained money sufficient, by repeated voyages, to make their union consistent with prudence. In the meanwhile, there is reason to believe that Birtha was not idle, but contrived to earn money herself, in order to expedite the hour of her marriage; and at length, her lover (whom I shall call William) thought that there was no reason for him to continue his sea-faring life, but at the end of one voyage more, he should be able to marry the woman of his choice, and engage in some less dangerous employment, in his native village. Accordingly, the next time that he bade farewell to Birtha, the sorrow of their parting hour was soothed by William's declaring, that, as the next voyage would be his last, he should expect, when he returned, to find every thing ready for their marriage. This was a pleasant expectation, and Birtha eagerly prepared to fulfil it. By the time that Birtha was beginning to believe that William was on his voyage home, her neighbours would often help her to count the days which would probably elapse before the ship could arrive; but when they were not in her presence, some of the experienced amongst the men used to express a _hope_, the result of _fear_, that William would return time enough to avoid _certain winds_, which made one part of the navigation on that coast particularly dangerous. Birtha herself, had,
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