. • •,.. . - : , - 5 - :.,, .; ''. :.;-!:"•'", ' ';;;:7" , . " 5 ''.7.' ;;'.. A '.. . _ r , .. .....„ _,. .NI ,Lt., I r r _ . ... _ . SAXIIEL WRIGHT, Editor and Proprietor. VOLUME XXVIII, NUMBER 52.] PUBLISHED EVERY SITURDIY MORNING Office in Northern Central Railroad Cern pony's Building, north-west corner Front and Fininut etrecte. 'Terms of Subscription 4 /One - Copy per annum,if paid in advance, 46 66 if not paid within three months (corn commencement ofthe year, 2 00 9. Cleats a ,040.p.3r.. No subscription received fora less time than six •enontha; and no paper will be discontinued until all itarrearagea are paid, unless at the option of the pub •tlsber. Irratoney may be remitted by mail at the publish giOr's risk. Rates of Advertising. I square [0 hues] one week, • three weeks, each 4uhsequentinsertion, ID " [l2Lines] one week. 50 tl.ree weeks, L 00 each subsequentinsertion, 25 LtifgeradverticementA in proportion. A I Weal discount will be mode to quarterly, half yearly or yearlyathrertliters,who are strietlyeonfined to their Ittiodne4F. oftry. A Good Time Going! DY OLIVEILIVENIMLL 110LMS9 Ekave singer of the coming timd, Sweet minstrel of the joyous present, Crowned with the noblest wreath of rhyme, The holly-leaf of Ayrshire's peasant, Good-bye! Good-bye!—Our hearts and hands, Our lips in hottest Saxon phrases, Cry, God be with bite till he stands His feet among the English daisies! 'Tie here we part;—for other eyes The busy deck, the fluttering streamer; The dripping arms that plunge and rise, The waves in foam, the Whip in tremor, The kerchiefs waving . from the pier, The cloudy pillar gliding o'er him, The deep blue desert lone and drear, With heaven above and home before him! llis lion:el—the Western giant miles, And twtrls the spotty globe, to find it . ;— This little speck the British Isles! 'Tie but a freckle, never mind ill— laughs, and all his prairies roll, Each gurgling cataract roars and chuckles, And ridges stretched from pole to pole Heave till they crack their iron knuckles'. BM Memory blushes at the sneer, And Banos turns with frown defiant, And Freedom leaning on her spear. Laughs louder than the laughing giant; "An islet is a world," she said, -When glory with its dust Mtn blended, And Britain keeps her noble dead Till earth and seas and skies are rended:" Beneath each swinging forest bough Some arm as stout in death reposes,— Prom wave-washed foot to Heaven-kissed brow Her valor's life-blood runs in roses; Nay. let our brothers of the West Write smiling in their florid pages, Site half hoe soil has walked the rest Jo poet's, heroes, martyrs, sagas! Hugged in the clinging billow's clasp, From sea weed fringe to mountain heather, The British oak with rooted grasp Her slender handful holds together;— With cliffs of white and bowers of green. And Ocean narrowing to caress her, And hills and threaded strenms between,— Our little mother isle, God bless her! In carth's broad temple where we stand, Fanned by the eastern gales that brought us, Wu hold the Missal in our hand, Bright with the lines our mother taught us; Where'er its blazoned page betrays The glistening links of gilded fetters, Behold the half turned leaf displays Her rubric stained in crimson letters: Enough! To speed a parting friend 'Tis vain alike to speak and listen;— Yet stay,—these feeble accents blend With rays of light from eyes that glisten. Good-bye! once more,—ond kindly tell In words of peace the young world's story,— And any besides,—we love too well, Our mothers' soil, our father's glory! {Adam* Menth/y. grEttrtinuo. Lost Alice. CHAPTER I. Why did I marry her? I often asked myself the question, in the days that suc ceeded our honeymoon. By right, I should have married no ono. Yet I loved her, as I love her still. She was, perhaps, the strangest character of her age. In her girlhood, I could not comprehend her; and I often think, as I /Mae my eyes to her grave, quiet face, as she sits opposite to me at dinner, that I du not comprehend her yet. There are many thoughts working in her brain, of which I know nothing; and flashes of feeling look out at her eyes now and then, and go back again, as captives might steal a glimpse of the outer world through their prison bars, and turn to their brick-walled solitude once more. She is my wife. I have her, and hold her as needier can. She boars my name and sits at the head of my table; she rides be side me in my carriage, or takes my arm as we walk; and yet I know and feel all the time that the darlirz of my past has fled from me forever, and that it is only the ghost of the gay Alice, whom I won in all the bloom of her bright youth, that lingers near me now. She was not a child when I marrried her, though she was very young. I mean that life had taught her lessons which are gener ally given only to the gray-haired, and had laid burdens upon Ler which belong of right to the old. She had been an unloved child, and at the age of sixteen sho was left to herself, and entirely dependent on her own exertions. Friends and family she had none, so she was accustomed, laughingly to say, but I have since found that her sisters were living, and in happy homes, even at the time when she accepted that awful trust of herself, and went out in the great world to fulfil it. Of this part of her life she never speaks; but one who knew her then has told rue ranch. It was a time of struggle and pain, as well it might have been. Fresh Srcern the life of a large boarding school, she was little fitted for the bustle of a great sel fish city; and tears come to my eyes as I think, with a kind of wonder, on the child who pushed her way through difficulties at which strong men have quailed, and made herself a name, and a position and a home. She was a writer—at first a drudge for the weekly press, poorly paid, and unappreci ated. By-and-by brighter days dawned, and the wolf went away from the door. She was admired, read, sought after, and—above all—paid. Even then she could not use the wisdom she had purchased at so dear a rate. She held her heart in her hand, and it was wrung and tortured every day. "I may as well stop breathing as stop loving,"she would say, with a happy smile. "Don't talk to me about my folly. Let me go on with my toys; and if they break in my hand you cannnot help it, and I shall not come to you for sympathy." She was not beautiful; but something— whether it was her bright happy face, or the restless gaiety of her manner—bewitched people, and made them like her. Men did the maddest things imaginable for her sake; and not only young men, in whom folly Wit , pardonable, but those who should have been wise to be caught by the sparkle of her smile, or the gay ringing of her laugh. She did not trust them; her early life had taught her better; but I think the liked them for a while, till some fancy came, and then the danced past them, and was gone. It was in the country that I met her first: and there she was more herself than in the city. We were distant relatives, though we had never seen each other, and the fates sent me to spend my summer vacation with my mother's aunt, in a country village, where she was already domesticated. had I known this, 1 should have kept my dis tance; for it was only a fourteenth or fif teenth cousinship that lay between us, and I had a kind of horror of her—l hardly knew why. I was a steady-going, quiet sort of lawyer, and hated to have my short holiday of rest and quiet broken in upon by a fine lady. I said as much to my aunt, in return for her announcement of "Alice Kent is here," with which she greeted me. She looked over her spectacles in quiet won der, as I gave her a slight sketch of the lady's city life, as I had had it from the lips of "Mrs. Grundy" herself. "Well—live and learn, they say. But who ever would think it was our Alice you are talking of, Frank! However, I'll soy no more about her! You'll have plenty of time to get acquainted with her, in the month you mean to pass here. And we are glad to sco you, and your bed-room is ready—the one you used to like." I took up my hat, and strolled away to have a look at the farm. By-and-by, I got over the orchard wall, and crossed the brook, and the high road, and went out into the grove behind the house, whose farthest trees were growing on the side of the hill which looked so blue and distant from my chamber window. It was an old favorite place of mine. A broad wagon-track led through the woods, out to a clearing on the other side, where was a little sheet of water, called The Fairy's Looking Glass, and beautiful view of a lovely country, with the steep green hills lying down in the distance, wrapped in a soft fleecy mantle of cloud and haze. I could think of nothing when I stood there, on a fine sunshiny day, but the lung gaze of Bunyan's Pilgrim through the shepherd's glass, at the beautiful city to wards which he was journeying. And it seemed sometimes as if I could wander "over the hills and far away," nod lose my self in one of the fair valleys at the foot of those hills, and be content never to come out and face the weary world any more. I walked slowly through the woods, with the sunshine falling through the young beeches in chequered radiance on my path, drawing in long breaths of the fresh air, and feeling a tingling in my veins and a glow at my heart, as if the blood were flowing newly there, until I came to the little circu lar grove of pines and hemlocks that led out upon The Fairy's Looking-Glass.— Something stirred as I pierced my way through the branches, and I heard a low growl. .1 SO ESA A girl was half sitting, half-lying in the sunshine beside the little lake, throwing pebbles into the water, and watching the ripples that spread and widened to the uthor shore. A great black Newfoundland dug was standing between me and her, showing a formidable row of strong white teeth, and looking me threateningly in the face. She started, and looked sharply round, and saw me standing in the little grove with the dog between us. She burst out laughing. I felt that it was cutting rather a ridicu lous figure, but I put a bold face upon the matter, and asked coolly, "Are you Alice Kent?" "People call me so." "Then I suppose I may call you cousin, for I am Frank Atherton!" "Cousin Frank! We have been expecting you this week. When did you come?" "Just novr." She made room for me beside her. We talked long about our family, our mutual friends, and the old homestead of the Ath ertons, which she had seen, though I had not. She told me about the house, and our cousins who were then living there, and I sat listening, looking now and then at her, as she sat with the sunshine falling round her, and the great dog lying at her feet. I wondered, almost as my aunt had done, if "NO ENTERTAINMENT IS SO CHEAP AS READING, NOR ANT PLEASURE SO LASTING." COLUMBIA, PENNSYLVANIA, SATURDAY MORNING, JULY 3, 1858. this was indeed the Alice Kent of whom I had heard so much. She was dressed plainly, very plainly, in a kind of gray ma terial, that fell around her in light soft fold's. A knot of plain blue ribbon fastened her linen collar, and a gipsey hat lying beside her, was trimmed with the same color.— Her watch chain, like a. thread of gold, and a diamond ring, were the only ornaments she wore. Yet I had never seen a dress 1 liked so well. She was tall (too tall, I should have said, had she been any one else; fur, when we were standing, her head was almost level with mine) and slender, and quick and agile in all her movements. Her brown hair was soft and pretty, but she wore it carelessly pushed away from her forehead, not arranged with that nicety I should have expected in a city belle. Her features were irregular, full of life and spirit, but decidedly plain; her complexion fair, her mouth rasher large, frank and smiling; her eyebrows arched, as if they were asking questions; and her eyes large, and of a soft dark gray, very pleasant to look into, very puzzling too, as I found afterwards to my eta,t. Those eyes were the only beauty she possessed, and she unconsciously made the most of them. Had she been a Carmelite nun, she would have talked with them: she could not have helped it. When they laughed, it seemed their normal state—the bright beaming glance they gave; but, when they darkened suddenly and grew softer and deeper, and looked up into the face of any unfortunate with an expression peculiar to themselves, heaven help him! Though I had known her only five min utes, I felt this, when I chanced to look up and meet a curious glance she had fixed on me. She had ceased to talk, and was sitting with her lips half apart, and a lovely color mantling her check, studying my face in tently, when our eyes met. There was an electric kind of shock in the gaze. I saw the color deepen and go up to-her forehead, and a shiver ran over me from head to foot. It was dangerous for me to watch that blush, but I did; and I longed to know its cause, and wondered what thought had brought it. "Fred, bring me my hat," she said to her dog, affecting to yawn. "It is time for us to go home to supper, I suppose. Are you hungry, cousin Frank?" "Yes—no," I answered, with my thoughts still rushing on that blush. She laughed good naturedly, and took the hat from the Newfoundland, who had brought it in his mouth. "How fond you are of that great dog," I said, as we rose from our seat beneath the tree. "Fond of hi.n?" She stooped down over him with a sudden impetuous movement, took his head between her two hands, and kissed the beauty spot on his forehead.— "Fund of him, cousin Frank? Why, the dog is my idol! He is the only thing on earth who is or has been true to me, and the only thing—" She stopped short, and colored. "That you have been true to," I said, fin ishing the sentence for her. "So people say," she answered, with a laugh. "But look at him—look at those beautiful eyes, and tell me if any one could help loving him. My pour old Fred! Su honest in this weary world." She sighed, and patted his head again, and be stood wagging his tail nod looking up into her face with eyes that were, as she had said, beautiful, and, what was better far, brimful of love and honesty. "I doubt if you will keep pace with us," she said, after we had walked a few steps; "and Fred is longing fur a race; I always give him one through the woods. 'Would you mind?" "Oh dear, no!" The next moment she was off like the wind, and the dog tearing after her, barking till the woods rang again. I saw her that night no more. I= I was, as I have already said a grave, steady-going. lawyer, verging towards a re spectable middle age, with one or two gray hairs showing among my black locks. I had my dreams and fancies, and my hot, eager, generous youth, like most other men; and they had passed away. But one thing I had missed, (save in inydrenms,) and that was a woman's love. If I ever gave my visions a body and a name, they were totally unlike all the reali ties I had ever seen. The wife of my fire side reveries was a slight, delicate, gentle creature, with a pure pale face, sweet lips, the bluest and clearest of eyes, the softest and finest of golden hair, and a voice low and sweet, like themurmurings of an :Eon= harp. And she sat by my chair in silence, loving me always, but loving me bilently; and her name was Mary. I dare say, if I had met the original of this placid picture in life, I should have wooed and won her, and have been utterly miserable. So, as a matterof course, I fellinto danger now. When Alice Kent went singing and dancing through the house, leaving every door and window open as she -went, I used often to lay down my pen and look after her, and feel as if the sun shone brighter for her being there. When she raced through 'the grove or orchard with the great dog nt her heels, I smiled, and patted Fred on the head: when she rode past the house at a hand•gal lop on her gray pony, Fra Diavolo, and leaped him over the garden gate, and shook her whip saucily in my face, I laid aside my book to admire her riding, and never thought her unwomanly or ungraceful. We grew to be great friends—likebrother and sister, r used to say to myself. How that liking glided gradually into loving, I could not have told. I met her one day in the village street. I turned a corner, and came upon her suddenly. She was walking slowly along, with her dog beside her, and her eyes fixed upon the ground, looking graver and more thoughtful than I had ever seen her before. At sight of me her whole face brightenedsuddenly; yet she passed me with a slight nod and a. smile, and took her way towards home. Seeing that flash of light play over her grave face, and feeling the sudden bound with which my heartsprang up to meet it, I knew what we were to each other. It was late when I reached home, after a musing walk. The farmer and his wife had gone to bed, the children were at a merry making at the next house, and a solitary light burned from the parlor window, which was open. The full moon shone fairly in a sky without a cloud. I unfastened the gate and went in; and there in the open door sat Alice, with a light shawl thrown over her shoulders, her head resting on the shaggy coat of the Newfuundlanddog. Hisbeauti ful brown eyes watched meas I came up the path, bat be did not stir. I sat down nearher; but on thelower step, so that I could look up in her face. "Alice, you do not look well." "But I am. Quite well. I am going away to-morrow." "Quing away! Where?" "Home. Tu London. Well, what ails you, cousin Frank? Did you never hear of any one who went to London before?" "Yes; but why du you go?" "Why?" she opened her eyes and looked at me. "For many reasons. Firstly, I only came for six weeks, and I havestayed nearly three months; secondly, because I have busi ness which can be put off no longer; and thirdly, because my friends are wondering what un earth keeps me here so long (they will say soon it is you, Frank.) They vow they cannot do without me any longer, and it is pleasant to be missed, yea know." "And so you are going back to the old life, Alice? And by-and-by I suppose you will marry?" I would not advise any man, be he old or young, in ease he does not think it wise or prudent to marry the woman he loves, to linger with her in the doorway of a silent farm house, and hold her hand, and look out upon a moonlight night. The touch of the small, slight fingers was playing the mischief with my good resoluti9ns, r..ud my wisdom (if I had any). "Alice," I said softly; and I almost start ed as she did, at the sound o I my own voice, it was so changed. "Alice, we have been very happy here." "Very." I took both her hands, and held them close in mine. But she would not look at me, though her face was turned that way. "There is a great difference between us, dear Alice. lam much older than you, and much graver. I have never loved any wo man but you in my life. while you have charmeda thousand hearts, and had a thous and fancies. If you were what the world thinks you, and what you try to make your self out to be, I should say no more than this—l love you. But I know you have a heart. I know you can love, if you will; and can be true, if yGu will. And so I be seech you to talk to me honestly, and tell me if you can love me, or if you do. lam not used to asking such questions of ladies, Alice, and I may seem rough and rude; but believe, me, when I say you have won my whole heart, and I cannot be happy with out you." "Yes, I believe yoa," the said. "But d o you trust me, and do you love me?" She might trifle with a trifler, but she was earnest enough with me. "I trust you, and I love you," she an swered, frankly. 'Arc you wondering why I can stand before you and speak so calmly? Because, I do not think I shall ever marry you. You do not love me as I have always said my husband should love me. lam wny ward and exacting, and I should weary your life out by constant craving for tenderness. I was made to be petted, Frank; and you, though a loving, are not Ln affectionate man. You would wish me Lathe bottom of the fled Sea before we had been married a month; and, because you could not get me there, you would go to work and break my heart, by way of amusement. I know it as well as if I had seen it all—even now." She looked at me, and all her woman's heart and nature were in her eyes. They spoke love, and passion, and deep tenderness —and all for me. Something leaped into life in my heart at that moment which I bad never felt before—something that made my affection of the last few hours seem cold and dead beside its fervid glow. I had her in my arms within the instant—close—close to my heart. "Alice! if ever man loved woman with heart and soul—madly and unreasonably if you will, but still truly and honestly—l love you, my darling." "But will it last? 0, Frank, will it last?" I bent down, and our lips met in a long. fond kiss. "You will be me wife, Alice?" She leaned her pretty bead against my arm, and her hand stole into mine again "Do you mean that for your answer? Am I to keep the hand, dear Alice, and calf it mine?" "If you will Francis." It was the first time she had ever given me that name. But she never called me by any other again until she ceased to love me: and it sounds sweetly in my memory now, and it will sound sweetly to my dying day. I= We were married not long after, and for six months we dwelt in a "Fool's Paradise." When I think, that but for, me it might have lasted to our dying day, I can only sigh, and take up the burden of my life with an aching heart. They had called Alice fickle—oh, how wrongly! No human being could be truer to another than she was to me. "I only wanted to find my master, Francis," she used to say, when I laughed ether about it. "I was looking for him through all those long years, and I began to think Ile would never come. But, from the first moment when I heard you speak, and met your eyes, I felt that he was near me. And I am glad to wear my master's chains," she added kissing my baud. And I am sure she was in earnest. I pleased her best when I treated her most like a child. She was no angel—a passionate, high-spirited creature. She rebelled a thous and times a day, although she delighted in my control. But it was pretty to see her, when she turned to leavethe room, with lire in her eyes, and a deep flush on her cheek —it was pretty to sec her with her hand upon the lock even, drop her proud head submissively, and waitwhen I said—" Stop! Shut the door, end listen to me." Yet it was dangerous. I, who had never been loved before, what could I do but become a tyrant, when a creature so noble as this bent down before me? She loved me. Every chord of her most sensitive heart thrilled rind trembled to my touch, and gave forth sweetest music; yet I was not satisfied. I tried the minor key.— Through herdeep affection for mel wounded her cruelly. 1 can see it now. Some wise idea found its way into my head and will.- pored that I was makinga child of any wife by my indulgent ways, and that her character would never develop its strength in so much sunshine. I acted upon that thruught, for getting how she had already been tried in the fiery furnace of affliction; and, quite unconscious that while she was getting back all the innocent gaiety of her childish years, the deep lessons of her womanhood were still lying beneath the sparkling surface of her playful ways. If, for a time, she had charmed me out of my graver self, I resolved to be charmed no more. I devoted myself again to my busi ness, heart andsoul, and sat poring for hours over law papers without speaking to her.— Yet she did not complain. So long as she was certain that Iloved her, she was content, and took up her pen again, and went on with the work our marriage had interrnpted. Her writing desk was in my study, by a window just opposite mine; and sometimes I would cease to hear the rapid movement of her pen, and, looking up, I would find her eyes fixed upon my face, while a happy smile was playing around her lips. One day that glance found me in a most un• ' reasonable mood. The sense of her love half pained me, and I said curtly; "It is bad taste, Alice, to look any one in that way." She dropped her pen, only too glad of an excuse to talk to me, and came and leaned over ray chair. "And why? when I love some one." This was a bad beginning, of the lessor.. I wanted to teach her, and I turned over my papers in silence. "Du I annoy you, Francis?" "Nut much." Her light hand vas playing with my hair, and her breath was warm on my cheek. I felt my wibdum vanishing, and tried to make up for its loss by an increased coldness of manner. "One kiss," she said. "Just one, and I'll go away." "What nonsense, Alice. What time have I to think of kisses now?" She stood up, and looked me in the face "Do I tease you Francis?" "Very much." She gave a little sigh—so faint that I could scarcely hear it—and left the room.— I had scared her gaiety for that morning. This Vas the first cloud in our sky. It seems strange, now, when I louk back upon it after the lapse of years, how per severingly I labored to destroy the fouuda am of peace and happiness on which 1 might have built my life. The remaining six mouths of that year were months of misery to me, and, I doubt not, to. Alice, for she grew thin and pale, and lost her gai ety. I had succeeded only too well in my plan, and she had learned to doubt my af fection for her. I felt this by the look in her eyes now and then, and by the way in which she seemed to cling to her dog, as if his fidelity and love were now her only hope. But I was too proud to own myself in the wrong, and the breath widened day by day. In the midst of all this estrangement the dog sickened. There was a week of mis giving on Alice's part, when she sat beside him with her books, or writing all the time —there was a day when both books and manuscript were put away, and she was bending over him, with her tears falling fast. as she tried to hush his moans, and looked into his fast-glazing eyes—and there was an hour of stillness, when she lay on the low couch, with her arms around hie neck, neither speaking nor stirring. And when $1,50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE; $2,00 IF NOT IN ADVANCE the poor creature's last breath was drawn, she bent over him with a passionate burst of grief, kissed the white spot upon hisfore head, and closed the soft, dark eyes, that even in death were turned towards her with a loving look. She did not come to me for sympathy.— She watched alone, while the gardener dug a grave and buried him beneath the study window. She never mentioned him to me, and never paid her daily visit to his grave till I was busy with my papers for the even ing. So the year, which had begun in love and happiness, came to its close. 1 sat in the study alone, one morning in file spring fallowing, looking over some deeds that had been long neglected, when I heard Alice singing in the balcony outside the window. It was the first time I had heard her sing since Fred's death, and I laid down my pen to listen. But hearing her coming through the hall, I took it up again, and affected to be very busy. It was a warm, bright, beautiful day, and she seemed to bring a burst of sunlight and happiness with her as she opened thedoor.— Ucr own face, too, was radiant, and she looked like the Alice of the old farm-house, as she came on tiptoe and bent over my chair. "Well, what is it?" I asked, looking up. She laid a pretty little bouquet of violets, tied with blue ribbons, before me. "I have been to the conservatory, and have brought you the first flowers of the season, Francis. And something else, which, perhaps, you may not like so well." She bent over me as she spoke, and, lean ing her hand lightly on my shoulder kissed me twice. She had been chary of her ca resses for some time; and, when she did this of her own accord, I wheeled around in my chair and looked up at her. "You seem very happy to day, Alice." "It is somebody's birthday," she said, seating herself upon my knee, and looking into my eyes. "And I wish somebody very many returns:"—her voice faltered a little —"and if there has been any wrong feeling, Francis, for the last six months, we will bury it to-day, now and forever." She clung to me in silence, and hid her face upon my breast, I was moved, in spite of myself, and kissed the brown hair that was scattered over my shoulder, and said I was quite willing to forget everything, (as if I had anything to forget!) At which she looked up with a bright smile, and I dare say thought me very magnanimous. "And we Will make a new begining from this day, Francis." "If you will, my child." She caressed me again, after a queer lit tle fashion of her own, which always made me smile, and which consisted of a series of kisses bestowed systematically on differ ent parts of my face—four, I believe, being allotted to my forehead, two to each cheek, two to my chin, four to my lips and four to my eyes. She went through this ceremony with a pains-taking care, and then looked me in the face. All her love and tenderness seemed to come up before me in that moment, and efface the past and its un happiness. I held her closely to my heart. and her arms were around my neck. Will any one believe it? My wife bad scarcely gone five moments before the fancy canto to me that I had shown too plainly the power she had over me. For months I had been schooling myself into coldness and indifference, and at her very first warm kiss or smile I was completely coated. She had vexed and thwarted, and annoyed me much during thesemonths; it would not do to pardon her so fully and entirely before she had even asked my forgiveness. I took a sudden resolution; and, when she came back into the room, was buried in my pa pers once more. Poor child! She had had one half hour's sunshine, at least. "One moment," she said, taking the pen out of my band. "I bare a birthday gift for you. Do you want it?" "If you give it to me, certainly." "Then ask me for it." I said nothing. but took up my pen again Her countenance fell a little. "Would you like it?" she said, timidly. "There was a saint in old times," I said, quietly, going on with my papers, "a name sake of mine, by the tray—Saint Francis of Sales—who was accustomed to say, that one should never ask or refuse anything." "Well! But I'm not talking to Saint Francis; I am talking to you. Will you have my gift? Say yes—just to please me —just to make my happy day happier.' "Dun% be a child, Alice." "It is childish, I know; but indulge me this once. It is such a little thing, and. it will make me very happy." "I shall not refuse whatever you choose to give me. Only don't delay me long, fur I want to go on with these papers." The nest moment she threw the toy (a pretty little bronze inkstand made like a Cupid, with his quiver full of pens) at my feet, and turned away, grieved and angry. I stooped to pick up tho figure—it was bro ken in two. "Oh, you eau condescend to lift it from the ground:" she said, sarcastically. "Cpou my word, Alice, you are the most unreasonable of beings. However, the lit tle god of love can be easily mended." "Yeq." She placed the fragments ono upon the other, and looked at rue. "It can .be mended, but the accident must leave its trace, like all others. Oh, Fran cis!" she added, throwing herself down by [WHOLE NUMBER, 1,457 my chair; and lifting my hand to her Uri, "why do you try me Do you really love me?" "Alice," I said, impatiently, "do get T:1 p You tire me." She rose and turned very pale. "I will go, then. But first answer my question. Do you love me, Franci,?" 1 felt anger and ohntinac•y in my heart— nothing else. Was she threatening me? "Did you love me when you married me, Francis?" "I did. But—" "But you do not love me now?" "Since you will have itjk I said. "021 , J on" "I do not love—not as you mean." There was a dead silence in the room a's the lying words left my lips, and she grew so white, and gave me such a look of an guish that I repented of my cruelty, and forgot my anger. "I do not mean that, Alice," I cried.— "You look ill and pale. Belieti•e me, I was only jez.ting." "I can bear it, Francis. There is noth ing on this earth that cannot be borne—in oue way or other." She turned and left the room, quietly and sadly. The sunshine faded just then, and only a white, pale light came through the window. Iso connected it with her sorrow that to this day I can never gee the golden radiance come and go across my path, without the same sharp, knife-like pang that I felt then, as the door closed behind her. CIIAPTIM IV Alice became weaker, and grew really ill. A tour on the continent was strongly re c )mmended by the doctors as the likeliest means of restoration. It was impossible for me to go; but some friends of ours, one Mr. and Mrs. Warrener. with a young daughter, were going to Italy for six months, and it was arranged that Alice should ac- company them. They remained abroad nine months in• stead of six. People wondered and joked about my wife's deserting me; but I only laughed, and said, I should soon go after her if she remained away much longer: and they thought we were still a model couple. But had they seen the sitting in my office, at night, over Alice's letters from abroad, they would have known what a gulf bad opened between us two. I read those letters over and over again, with aching throbs going through and through my heart, at every word. They were full of incident and in terest, and people called them beautiful, who had not seen the mixture of womanly passion and childlike playfulness in her character that I had seen, and which I was to see no more. At last she returned. I came borne tired enough, one evening, to find a letter lying on my table, informing me that she would cross to Diver on the morrow. I went down to Dover to meet her. Our estrange ment had worn deep into my heart. She had loved me once; she should levo me ME I was worn, haggard, I took a bath and made a careful toilet after my horrid jour ney. As I. was taking my last Icok in the glass, the hotel-waiter came to tell me they had arrived. I followed him, more nervous than I had ever been before in my life. IVarrener had grasped my hands as i opened the door and Mrs. Warrener—bless her kind heart! —burst out crying: "Oh, my dear Frank! I am no glad to see you. And wo have brought you your Alice home so well." Next moment she entered, a little King Charles's, spaniel frisking about her feet.— I had her in my arms ut once, but it was not until she kissed me that I knew how cold and pale she was. "Alice, arc you ill?" I asked, holding her away from me, and looking into her face. Her eyes met mine, but their old light was quite gone. "Not in the least ill, Frank," sho said, quietly. "But you must remember I have not seen you for nine months, and you startled me a little," My household fairy had fled, and I could only mourn that I should never look upon her sweet, young fare again. It was an other Alice, this. I had slain my own Al ice, and nothing could reanimate her. I was like ono in a dream all through the day, and, when we came home, I could not wake. I had made many changes in the house, and all for her. I took her through the rooms cn the day after our re turn, and showed her the improvements.-- She pleased with the furniture; she ad: 7 mired the pictures and the conservatory; and seemed delighted with the little gem of a boudoir which I had pleased myself by designing, enpressly for her. She thanked me, too. No longer ago theta a year, she would have danced through the room?, ut tering a thousand pretty little exclamations of wonder and delight, and I should base been smothered with kisses, and called a "dear old bear," or some such fit name in the end; all of which would have been very silly, but also very delightful. I think I bore it fora month; but one morning, as I sat at my solitary breakfast— for Alice took that meal in her room now— the bitter sense of wren; and unhappiness and desertion came over me so strongly that I went up to her room. "Are you blau , ?" I asked, as she laid down her pen and looked around.