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The Largest Bird.

Temple, in his recent travels in Peru, states that he shot a condor, and from notes taken on the spot, gives us the following dimensions of its size: When the wings are spread, they measure forty feet in extent, from point to point, the feathers are twenty feet in length, and the quill part eight inches in circumference. This almost realizes the fabled rock of Sinbad, in the Arabian Nights, but its dimensions, as given, rests on good and very recent authority.

Sea Serpent.

From The Boston Sentinel.
A party of 80 or 100 ladies and gentlemen embarked yesterday morning on the steamer Connecticut, for the purpose of taking an excursion in the lower harbor, with the expectation of getting a view of his Serpentine Majesty. About 12 o’clock, when the steamboat was half way between Nahant and the Graves, the monster was seen approaching. A number of gentlemen took the small boat and made directly for it, but unfortunately did not run upon the animal as was intended, owing to a little mismanagement in rowing. The serpent came within an oar’s length of the boat, and without appearing at all alarmed or uneasy, took a slight curve towards the steamboat, passed under her stern within fifty or sixty feet, and then disappeared. We understand it was the opinion of those in the small boat that he might easily have been struck but unfortunately there was no harpoon on board. At this time his motion was not undulating, as has sometimes been stated, but rather like an eel or common water snake. It has been reported that there has been three or more of these strange creatures seen lately, one of which is supposed to be 150 feet in length. We would recommend some of our sporting friends, who are skilled in the management of a whale boat, and the use of the harpoon, to make an attempt upon the liberty of the marine monster, and there is but little doubt he might be taken.
The foregoing account is furnished by a gentleman who was one of the passengers and had a good opportunity to see the serpent from the small boat, and whose certificate bearings is also corroborated by several other gentlemen with whom we have conversed who were on board the steamer.
The excursion of yesterday has afforded a much better opportunity of seeing this strange animal than has occurred for years, and it is not inconsistent with the whole tenor of the statements that have been made at different times by great numbers of persons for the last fifteen years, since a monster of this description was first announced in our waters. It is admitted on all hands, that the appearance of a marine animal of this description would be a most extraordinary, occurrence.
But it may be said as an offset, that it would be still more extraordinary, if so many witnesses should be so grossly deceived, as would be the case if no such animal had appeared. One or the other of these extraordinary difficulties is presented for the belief of the public, and we are of the opinion that it would not require so great a stretch of credulity to believe in the existence of such an enormous Sea Serpent, as to believe that so many persons could be so greatly deceived. We learn that a gentleman fired at him with a musket from the steamer, but without effect.
The shot was given before he had approached so near the steamer, as he did a few minutes afterwards. The first thing that attracted the attention of those who were in the streamer, was a peculiar appearance in the water at a distance, supposed to be occasioned by a shoal of small fish that he was apparently pursuing. Three distinct appearances of this kind were observed at the same time afar off, and the steamer made for one of them in pursuit of which the serpent appeared to be. It is therefore inferred by some one of the passengers that there are three of the strange animals, as has been before stated.

Sea Serpents.

His most huge and mysterious fishship, the sea serpent, is rather late in his visit this year, and many people began to suspect he had deserted our shores altogether; but we have the assurance of four persons who were off the coast in a boat on the 27th ult. that they distinctly saw the celebrated marine monster for about 15 minutes, in a Southeasterly direction, two and a half miles from Nahant. He passed from the Northeast between them and the land circularly, to the Southward and Eastward. Many bunches on his back were seen, supposed about 40 in number. He moved spirally like land serpents, and raised his head, which was of the size of a barrel, four and a half feet above the water. It was nearly calm, and in going through the water, the object made a wake equal in length to a vessel of 3000 tons in rapid progress. Several of the visitors at Nahant are on watch daily; and due report will be made of his next appearance.
Con. Mirror.

Elephants.

Elephants are now used in Ceylon for plowing the rice fields, and in preparing new grounds for the cultivation of coffee, pepper, Etc. An elephant will perform the work in one day which twenty bullocks [oxen] were in the habit of performing before.

Sea Serpents.

The earliest account of a animal of this general description is furnished by Pantoppidan, Bishop of Bergen in Norway, and author of an old Natural History, in the first editions of which is a picture of the serpent. This gives him a mane-an appearance doubtless caused by his rapid motion through the water. He says, it lay on the water, when it was calm; and when it moved, parts of the back were to be seen in the line of the head. The color was dark brown, variegated with light spots or streaks. The animal appeared regularly for many years off the Manor of Norland, in July and August, where all the inhabitants were familiarly acquainted with him, though the Bishop doubted the whole story for a long time. he represented the length to have been 600 feet, and the size of two hogsheads!-a statement which furnishes rather curious food for discussion. It was at least an immense exaggeration of the ignorant peasant and fisherman.
The Bishop also cites a letter dated 1757, from a Captain in the Swedish Navy, DeMerry, relating to a snake seen by him near Holne, on a calm hot day in August, 1745-he fired at it, on which it immediately sunk. Observing the water to be red, he supposed he had wounded it. The head he relates was like that of a horse and of greyish color-the mouth was quite black and very large. He also mentions the bright mane. The eyes were black, and there were seven or eight thick folds, about six feet distance from one another. This letter was sworn to before the Bergen magistrate.
In 1804, Allen Bradford, Esq. then of Maine, addressed a letter to J. Q. Adams, the secretary of the American Academy, transmitting a document to show that a large sea serpent had been seen in and about Penobscot Bay. The Academy laid them aside, and they first appeared in Silliman’s Journal, in 1820. One was a letter from the Rev. Mr. Cummings, of Sullivan, Maine, dated August 1803. The animal was seen by Mr. Cummings, his wife, daughter, and another lady, as they were on their passage to Belfast, between Cape Rosoi and Long Island. In was in the month of July, the sea was calm; there was very little wind, and the first appearance of the serpent was near Long Island. Mr. C. supposed it to be a large shoal of fish, with a seal at one end of it; but he wondered why the seal should rise out of the water so much higher than usual; as he drew near they discovered the whole appearance to be an animal in the form of a serpent. He had not the horizontal but an ascending and descending serpentine motion. This account also refers to the description given by other persons of similar animals.
A letter of March, 1781, from Capt. Little of our Navy, to Mr. Bradford, states that in May, 1780, as he was lying in Broad Bay, [Penobscot] in a public armed ship, he discovered at sunrise, a large serpent, coming down the bay on the surface of the water. The cutter was manned and armed, he went himself in the boat; and when within 100 feet of the serpent, the mariners were ordered to fire on him; but before they could make ready, he plunged into the water. He was not less than 45 to 50 feet long; the largest diameter of his body was supposed to be 15 inches, and his head nearly the size of that of a man, he carried four or five feet out of water. He wore every appearance of a Black Snake. He was afterwards pursued, but they never came nearer to him than a quarter of a mile. A Mr. Joseph Kent, of Marshfield, says Capt. Little saw a like animal at the same place in the year 1751, which was longer and larger than the main Boom of his Sloop, of 85 tons. He observed him within ten or twelve yards of his vessel.
The declaration of Eleazer Crabtree, is then given, who lived at Fox Island, in the Bay of Penobscot, in the year 1777, and 78. He had frequently heard of a sea-monster frequenting the waters near the shore, and doubting the fact, he went one day on hearing from a neighbor that he was in the sea near his house. He saw a large animal in the form of a snake, lying almost motionless in the water, about 500 feet from the bank where he stood. His head was about four feet above the surface; he appeared a hundred feet long and he supposed him to be three feet in diameter. Many other inhabitants, upon whose veracity he could depend, had also declared to him that at other times they had seen such an animal.

Courage And Fidelity Of A Dog.

Some winters back, in a part of the vast forest that stretches along the Upper Norwegian frontier, were traveling two gentlemen-one a native the other an Englishman. They had gone on many weary miles through the waste of snow and forest, when climbing a steep ascent, some two hours’ from the place of their destination, they left the sledge and walked, thereby relieving the horse, and at the same time stretching their own cramped limbs. A large dog [a cross of the bull and mastiff, and English born] trotted slowly at their heels, and appeared to share with them the gloom which the monotonous gloom of a winter forest never fails to cast over even the most volatile disposition. Having attained the hilltop, the travelers, at the moment of re-entering the sledge perceived a wolf of gigantic size following in their track. They dragged the dog, whom was a great favorite, into the sledge with them, and put the horse to full speed. As, by inconceivable imprudence, they had ventured unarmed in the forest, their only chance of safely was flight, and while the descent was in their favor, they outstripped their pursuer; but the horse, though winged by fear, as his dropped ears and quivering limbs too plainly told, was already jaded: he soon slackened his speed, and faint and trembling he staggered feebly onward, his strength rapidly deserting him. Only one resource now remained, which was to slip the dog, who might possibly hold the wolf in check sufficient time to allow of their escape. However reluctant to consign the poor animal to certain death, self-preservation forced them to adopt this last and only expedient.
The wolf was within a few yards when they loosed him, and instantly the two had grappled, and rolled in the snow. As if he knew that life was at stake, the horse now sprung forward desperately, and never paused in his career, until he fell expiring in the courtyard of -, That night, while in ease and security the travelers were forgetting the danger, a faint moan was heard at the gate. It was the dog. Covered with blood and wounds, the faithful creature crawled to his master’s feet and expired. The woods were searched the next morning, and in the spot where the up-torn snow attested the length and fierceness of the conflict, the wolf was found dead. He was the largest seen in those parts within the memory of man.

A New Mode Of fishing.

Several years ago, a farmer in Scotland kept a gander, which not only had a great trick of wandering himself, but also delighted to lead forth the geese to play truant and stray among forbidden fields. Wishing to check this vagrant habit, the farmer one day seized the gander, just as he was about to spring into the water, and tying a large fish hook to his leg, to which was affixed a part of a dead frog, he suffered him to proceed on his voyage of discovery. As was expected, the bait was soon swallowed by a fish, and the progress of the gander was not only arrested, but he was forced to perform divers somersaults. For some time the struggle was most amusing, the fish pulling and the gander screaming with all his might, while the geese and goslings cackled out their sympathy for the afflicted captain. At length the gander proved victorious, and bearing away to the nearest shore, landed on the smooth green grass, one of the finest fish ever caught in the waters. This adventure is said to have cured the gander of his vagrant propensities, and he afterwards rarely ventured from his own puddle.

Cats.

A women residing in Plymouth, Mass. who was very partial to cats, purchased one some time since for its superior beauty, which, however, for some untold reason, she was desirous of destroying. To effect this, she immersed the cat in a bucket of water, with a weight around its neck, from which it soon escaped in its struggles, and flew at the woman in a most ferocious manner, scratching her so much that the wounds mortified, and she expired in a few days.

The “Whole Hog.”

It is mentioned in a late Philadelphia U. S. Gazette, that one of the men employed to clear the streets of swine, had taken a noble porker, but while engaged in tying the legs of the prisoner, the bristly-back animal seized the victor by the nose, and nearly destroyed that prominent member.

A Terrific Scene At A menagerie.

One of the elephants in Raymond & Waring’s extensive menagerie, exhibiting in Philadelphia, turned on his keeper on Wednesday, 22d. We find the following particulars in the Philadelphia papers!
As his keeper, Wm. Kelly, was preparing him for the afternoon performance, in consequence of being struck, he seized Mr. K. with his trunk and raising him into the air dashed him twice to the ground with the utmost violence, breaking his right leg and thigh in a most shocking manner, and causing many other serious injuries. The elephant then commenced a regular demolition of everything within his reach.
At this time the utmost terror and excitement prevailed. The furious animal seized with his trunk a large cage, containing two hyenas, a wolf, a jackal, and some 20 monkeys, carried it into the room and, after whirling it a moment in the air, dashed it into a thousand fragments upon the floor, scattering the animals and killing some of the smaller ones. Two elephant- dogs were then procured, but were both so maimed as to be entirely useless. They were accordingly removed, and preparations made for shooting the animal by order of the Mayor Swift, who immediately proceeded to the scene with a large body of police. A great crowd had by this time assembled, who, despite the danger, seemed anxious to rush in and witness the terrible scene.
In the meantime the elephant was doing great damage to all the fixtures of the establishment within reach, tearing down railing, demolishing the arena, and shivering everything like wood-work to atoms. Herr Driesbach used every effort to intimidate and subdue the animal by his well-known voice but in vain. Thirty or forty muskets had also been procured, and these were loaded and kept in readiness for use in the event of the animal’s escaping.
At length a strong rope was tied in a running noose, and the persons who had hold of the rope succeeded in catching him by one of the forelegs. But the animal, now more furious than ever, ran towards the boxes which descended from the front gallery to the arena, and, in endeavoring to ascend, crushed the steps to atoms with his immense weight, tearing up the benches on either side of him, hurling the pieces at the same time in every direction, and leaving the place a perfect wreck. Finding that it would not sustain his weight, he retreated into the arena, where after some trouble, a number of large hooks attached to ropes were very adroitly fastened into his ears, and he was then hauled up the recess before mentioned, where, by the self-possession and courage of Herr Driesbach, he was completely subdued.
Two six-pounders were placed, one in front and the other at the back of the menagerie, with a view to shoot the animal should he attempt to make his exit at either point.