CANADIAN GUIDE BOOK. 59 “ Jc suis un chien qui rongel’os, En Ie rongeaut je prends mon repos. Un terns viendra, qui n’est pas venu, Queje mordrai qui m’aura mordu.” Bigot readily understood this allegorical language, and easily found an instrument to avenge the insult. As Philibert was descending the Lower Town Hill, he received through his back the sword of an officer of the garrison as the reward of his verse. The assassin was permitted to leave the Colony unmolested, and was transferred to a regiment stationed in the East Indies, whither he was pursued by a brother of the deceased, who had first sought him in Canada, having arrived here to settle his brother’s affairs. The parties are said to have met in a public street of Pondicherry, where the assas sin, after a severe conflict, died by the sword of his antagonist, and met a more honourable fate than his crime deserved.—Among pub lic places in the Upper Town we may mention Durham Terrace, and the Esplanade, which is the chief theatre for military exercises. A little to the west of Hope-Gate stands the building once occupied by the brave Marquis de Montcalm, now divided into three private residences. It is only remarkable now as having been the residence of the French General whose fame has been perpetuated with that of his antagonist Wolfe. In St. Anne’s Street is St. Andrew’s Church in connexion with the Scotch Establishment. A regularly ordained clergyman of that Church is believed to have officiated to the Presbyterians of that persuasion since the conquest in 1759. It is ascertained that “ an apartment was assigned by the King’s Representative in the Jesuits’ College as a place of worship for the members of the Scotch Church” previously to 1767, and was occupied as such without interruption till 1807, when Colonel Brock, Commandant, requested the con gregation to remove on the shortest notice, as it was found neces sary to appropriate the apartment to the accommodation of the troops. In November the congregation removed to the lower room of the Court-House. In November of 1808, his Excellency, Gov ernor Craig, granted the lot of ground on which the present Church now stands. It was opened in November, 1810, by the late Rev.