• • , I - • • ' - • • -- • ":„ (; . 4 f•%." • 1 11 ~ _ • _ • =•,•-•X. _ . II 3AMUEL WRIGHT, Editor and Proprietor. VOLUME XXIX, NUMBER 43.] PUBLISE.ED EVERY SA.TERDAY 1110RIYI1G Office in Carpel Hall, South-west corner of Front and Locust alrects. Terms of Subscription. r e Copy perannum.a f paid to advance, • if not paid within three montheromcotnatencetnentol the year, 2 00 -a C:Nzamtisi Et, CS.oazr3r. No solineripiion received for a ienn time than nix ,:oetb4; and no paper will lie ti1.00111111111i . 1.1 uuul all pu:dolnlessot (Le option of the pub- fErAlencyinmy tie , emitced ti.vina:l anhepublish er's risk. Rates of Advertising i square[Giines)ohe week, . 4 three weeks each-üb=equentinsertion, 10 [l2:inec2otte week. f 0 three weeks, I. CO It each aub+egaentinsertton. 25 _ . , LnrgeratlverCkenient , to proportion A libertaldi6count will be ir:ttle to quarterly,ltraf ,artriy ory , tarly td vertisers,who urr strut tlyconfinett their business. Rutty. Gcetho's Angler The water (named, the water swelled, The Angler sal at rest, And calmly viewed the line be held; Cold a• the wave hpt brearr. And us lie •its and as he porea, • The wave divides on high, And from its azure bosom soars A nymph with dewy eye. She sant() him, she spoke to hint, " Why lurest thou my brood, With hums wart and human guile, "From out their native flood "Did•t thou but know what joys attend "My little fish below, "E'en as thou art thou wouldst descend, '•And heal thy bo=om's woe. "Doth not the sun the wave embrace, "The moon, too, kiss she=en "Doll, not her billow-brenthtnr, face, "Return more, sweet to Mee , " Doth woo the not the deep, deep sly, IThe mild 'Ruined blue, "both tempt the not thy mirrored eye, "Here in th' eternal dew 'The water loomed, the water swelled, Beneath his nuked feet; Soft longings ner his bosom tb tilled, As if Ilk love did greet— She spoke to him, she , ung, to him, Then was he lost I weep, She drew hint half, half •oak he in, And never more was Seen. gEtEtißlt,s. From Frazer's Magazine Lost at Cards. It is more than twenty years since I was at school with Laurence Mounljoy, but I re member him well. The life of most men. we will hope is brighter at it close than at itsbeginning,—emerging from theg,rossness and cruelty of the school-boy, and the pas sions of youth into the light of reason and knowledge ; but that of him I speak of was far otherwise. He was indeed, a glorious boy, with spirits inexhaustible as long as his pocket money lasted, and both over ready to be employed in the entertainment of his friends. Laurence Mountjoy was good at most things is the sporting way, but he was best .ofall at raffles. lie would haverattled his teeth if ho could have got anybody to put in fur them, and actually did take a ticket cheer fully on one occasion for the chance of the reversion of another boy's boots. Whenev er a pack of cards was confiscated, whenever dice—of home manufacture, and cut out (fur silence sake) of india•ruber—were forfeited, Laurence was sure to bo their owner. Ile bet upon the number of stripes that would be given him, and on what crop of blisters the cane would raise upon his hands, and he invented a hundred games with slate and pencil, paper and pen, for school-times. Ile came to school one winter evening, at the commencement of the half-year in a Han som cab from London with another boy.— They had bought a great Roman Catholic taper, and held it by turns between their knees (although it struck them some how as an impiety,) and played cribbage all the way. A terrible voice cried down unto them on a sudden, " two for his heels," for Laur ence's adversary had omitted to mark the knave, and the cabman had become so inter ested as a spectator through the little hole at the top, that he couldn't help rectifying the error. It terrified them imtnensly at the time, but Mountjoy never took it (as the other did) as a warning. But "we all have our weak points" we said, and his is the rleasuro he takes in _losing his own money, or winning other peoples' to spend it on them again ; and for my part, when I loft school, there was none whose companionship I was so loath to part with as that of Mountjoy. I was his senior by a year or two, end when he came up to Cambridge, I was with ::n c law terms of my degree, so we wore not 'much together. Ile was grown very grace ful angi handsome; and the qualities which 'had been ignored at school, Were at the uni versity gladly recognized. It would have been impossible, among the freshmen, to :have picked out one more popular, and deservedly so, than he. lie did not read very much, but ho talked of reading as though he would be Senior Wrangler. lle was a fluent speaker at the " Union," a tol erable musician, a good pool player, a pass able poet, and in short promised to be one of those Admirable (university) Crichtons who from time to time glance meteor-like athwart the academic course, and then dis appear wholly, and are lost in the darkness of the outward world. I left soon after for the Inner Temple, and while I ate my terms, made flying visits 00 W and then to Cambridge. During one of these, when I had been two years n grad uate, I gare a supper-party at the "Bull." Mountjoy was late; and so we sat down without him, and we talked over the absent man. 41.3 the mode ie. I thought there could be no harm in a playful kick at such a fa7orite, and offered to wager that he was detained by cards. "I would not like to be his adversary," said one. DM "Nor I his partner," said another, " lest uld Ilornie fly away with the two of us with pardonable freedom, for he has the devil's own luck." " Yes and the devil's own play, too," said a third, sulkily. "It does'nt keep him from the duns at all events," added the man nest to me: "I darn say there is some pertinacious lunatic waiting for him upon his staircase now, who keeps him late." Much distressed by this news, I requested in a low voice to be informed further. I learnt that Mountjoy was not so popular as he used to be ; associated with a bad set, to whom it was supposed he bad lost consid erable sums ; was certainly in temporary difficulties, and very much changed in man ners and appearances. His face was pale and haggard in the extreme, his eyes—now brighter than ever—were set in deep black circles, and his clothes hung loose upon his limbs: he welcomed me however, with all his old cordiality, and threw about the ar rows of his wit as usual ; they were more barbed than'they were wont to be, the sheet lightning had become forked. *0 39 He said many things of a savage sort, and drank off_glass after glass of wine very rap idly ; some of the rest were not more back ward either in retort or drinking, and oc casion soon arose when in my capacity as host I was obliged to interfere. " He said I was a greater fool than I look ed."—" Who said so?"—" So you are?"— " Shame, shamel"—" Here's a lark I" were expressions that burst forth from every side, until "Chair, chair,"—"Silence for the Lord Chief Justice," and "Here's an opinion for nothing," quelled them upon the hommo pathic system of counter-irritation, and ob tained for me a hearing. nm sure Mountjoy will appologizo for that remark of his," I said : "we are all college friends, and most of us old school fellows, and we are not come here to pick quarrell, but chicken bones." "Hecalled me—he called me," hiccuped one, "a gr-greater fool than I looked." "My deny fellow," said Mountjoy,- hold ing his hand across the table in a most af fectionate manner, "I retract the observa tion altogether ; you arc not such a fool ns you look, as everybody knows." The offended party endeavored to explain that he was perfectly satisfied ; we broke up amidst shouts of laughter, and in high good humor. " I have left a few men nt my rooms to night," said Mountjoy, " and if you will join them in a game at vingtel-un, come at once before gates shut. I was anxious to see the kind of company he kept, and adjourned accordingly to his college rooms. Six or seven were sitting round his table playing as he entered, whom he had left (with some unselfishness, I am sure,) to sup with me; they had been eating nothing although food was piled in plenty on a piano in the corner, but a number of empty bottles proved their thirst. They did not interrupt their game for a moment, but one of them moved his chair to give us room. " Eleven; now then for a ten l" roared the dealer. " Fifteen—curse my luck—and mine overdrawn by Jove." A peal of joy rose from the rest. " You onl . pay me a skive, though," said one mournfully; firer fur me," said another, and " you pay me twelve pounds, six on each card,"added a third. They were playing then a good deal too high for me, and as I thought forMouut joy also. I declined, therefore, joining the party, but stood with my back to the fire, watch ing the game. Vingt-et-un, like other matters, which de pend mostly on luck, is a considerable trial fur the temper, and the present company did not seem to have much patience to spare ; they were more or less in wino, too, and ex hibited a great contrast in their manner to the quiet and friendly fashion in which cards are (and should be) usually played at col lege. The chief cause of this was, that they were playing for higher stakes than they could well afford,—that is to say gambling. The eternal "make your game," and 'I double you,'were the only words that Mount joy spoke, as dealer, but he spoke them like a curse. Despite the heat of the room and his intense excitement, his face shone, be neath the bright light of two or three lamps as white ns alabaster, and his thin *hand shook over the pack like a lily on the dan cing Cam ; ho kept the deal for a short time only, and lost heavily even then, and when he was player he clutched at the cards, be fore they reached him, like a drowning man. I shaded my face with my hand, . for I was deeply pained, and watched him intent ly.; ho had usually "stood " upon his two first cards withont drawing another, brit he seemed suddenly to change his plan, 'drew' again and again. " Nino—sixteen ; surely you must bo over," said the dealer." "No," said Mountjoy, "thank you, I stand." Now, on that occasion I happened to see that Laurence was over (being twentyln-00 and that he received the stakes instead of "'NO ENTERTAINMENT IS SO CHEAP AS READING, NOR AN PLEASURE SO LASTING:' COLUMBIA, PENNSYLVANIA, SATURDAY MORNING, MAY (I 1 , 1859. paying them. My blood rushed to my head, and I heard my heart beat for a moment at the sight, but I drove the idea of its being intended from me, and watched in hopes that it would not be so again_ No, thank Heaven, he is " over" this time, and throws up his cards with a sigh ; and now he wins, and now—as I live, ho is "content" at twenty-five, and again receives, instead of pays ; not twice nor thrice this happens, but twenty times, he is cheating whenever there is an occasion to cheat. The night—or rather the day—wears en, and still the players sit unweariedly ; their lips are parched, their eyes are heated, and they can scarce take up their cards; but not till dawn breaks in through the thin cur tains and athwart the dying lamps, does any one leave his seat ; then two of them depart for morning chapel—for this is an opportu• nity to attend morning prayers that rarely occurs to them,—and the rest drop off their percheJ presently, like moulting birds, and I am left alone with him who was,my friend, who cheats his friends and. his compan ions. " What cursed luck I've had," said be, "twenty pounds ready, and fifty pounds worth of autographs gone besides ; but, Lord love you, I've had worse luck than that, and shall have again ; and ill don't mind it, Irby should you old chap? Don't look so confoundedly virtuous, he added, angrily,( for I was looking .411 I felt) you've done the same before now." "Never the same Mr. Mountjoy," I re plied. "What do you mean ;" said he, hastily, but without remarking on the way I had addressed him ; "you've never gambled— do you mean to say that? I like your impu dence." "Gambled perhaps," I answered, "but never cheated sir." At that word his wan cheeks burnt like two living coals, and he dropped into an arm chair besides me without a word, while a sort of convulsion teemed to pr.ss over his whole face, and his breath came and went with difficulty. "Mountjoy," I said with pity, and some terror, "be a man ; you were drunk and did not know what you did ; you lost com mand over yourself, or you never could have done such a fuel thing." I saw with joy tears gathering in his eyes, and with my face averted from him, ap tasaled to his old nature as well ns I was able. I told him what a hold lie had once on all our hearts, and how men were turn ing their backs upon him now; I bade him judge how his whole self was changed by his own altered features, and the strange companions he had chosen. ll° only an swered by a silent passion ortears. I was obliged to put t•o bins some bitter questions fur the sake of that I had in view. "Does any one know of this betides your self, Laurence?" lle shook his head. "Is this the first time in all your life that you ever did this thing?" "The first—the first," he moaned. I thought, and I think still, that this was true; that he had cheated through a sort of despair of fortune, and in a frenzy rathm than in a preconceived and customary plan. "Have you a Bible in the room,.Lau ranee? Go , ,d, I have it hero. Now swear to me that you will not touch dice or card again. while you are at the university; swear I say," for I saw he was about to refuse; "or for your own sake as well as that of others, I will proclaim what I have seen this night to the whole oollege." Laurence Mountioy took the oath and kept it; for he left Cambridge that very day and never returned to it, and went I krlow not whither, but on a way far apart from mine for years, and only across, the mem ory of my brightest college days, and es pecially over their scenes of pleasure and excitement, this shadow fell dark and cold. When I had been at the Bar but ten or eleven years, my opinion (however, strange itmayseem) seas demanded upon a question of marriage settlements. The circumstance however, I do not deny, was due to my ac quaintance with one of the contracting par ties, and not to my professional reputation for I had known Lucy Weynall from child hood, and her father had been my father's friend. Lucy was not quite pretty, but had a thousand charming graces of vivacity and expression worth all the prettiness in the world: she sang. she drew, she talked three three or four tongues—and not to be omit ted by a lawyer in estimating oven a young lady's assets--she had eight thousand pounds in the funds. I had thought more than once, but in an ex park sort of a way, of an alliance with this desirable young person myself; but she had caught me when I was first 'called,'practising beforea looking glee in my wig and gown, at her father's country-house, 'and she never forgot it; whenever afterwards I strove to be tender, she would :give her imitation of my looks and gestures on that particular occasion, and I, knowing how little laughter is akin to love, soon stifled my flame with Coke and Littleton. Still, however, I was very anx ious for her happiness, and it was with the utmost astonishment that I discovered the fortunate suitor to be one Captain Laurence Mountjoy. Mr. Weynall, it sormed, wns not altogeth er satisfied with him or his prospects, but Lucy had set her heart on him, and it was at her own disposal. To my half-joking questions about her lover, she gave me such replies as convinced me that in manners and attractions at least, he was the same who had charmed us all in youth; "but he looks so pale and thin at times," she said, "that I can scarcely Lear to look at him." An early day was appointed fur me to meet the Captain at Thorney grove—her father's house—and I was impatient until it came. If he blushes or looks confused at seeing me thought I, it will be a god sign; that sad business at college will still hauntshis mem ory,and prove him not to be inured to shame; it was his first and last and worst error per haps.. I arrived at Mr. Wcynall's, and found within doors only that gentleman himself. who bade me seek the young couple in the garden. They were walking together un der a trellis work of roses, and never heeded my footsteps. Ile had his arm around her waist, and was combatting, it seemed, souse opinion or scruple of hers, fur his musical tones, although I could not 'tear their sense, caught up and overpowered hers. On a sudden Lucy gave a little scream,and point ed to me, and I then knew that it was I who had been the subject of their debate. As they came forward, she endeavored to disentangle herself from hint, but he held her firmly as before. Mountjoy was altered much, both by year and climate; his com plexion was almost olive, and a heavy mous tache covered his lip. "What a time it is since are met," said he: "why, as hen was it that I saw you last?" "At Cambridge," I rerlied: "you must remember that, Mountjoy," (for I was not plea , ,ed with his coohiese and elfrontry.) "]ca," be said, "at Cambridge; to be sure it was; and we had some ridiculous quarrel about vingl-ctun." "Well, don't do it again, for that is just my age, and I don't want to be quarreled about," said Lucy: and the dinner-bell— tocsin of peace—began to sound. "Across the walnuts and the wino" I heard as much of the soldier's history as he chute to tell. lie spoke of his Indian wars, and show ed us quite a ladder of med al.. Ile poured out a river of anecdote, all of which he finished off by come moral or prudent reflection; lamented this man's passion fur play, another's thirst for excite- WClit, and a third's absurd extravagance; in fact. acted the pattern of a sen-in-law-to be to perfection. When the old gentleman had retired to rest, he wns more natural in his communications—he spoke of Indian intrigue+, and marriages "ou spec;" of the Colonel's fondness fur "brag;" of the ease with which Cheroot Races may be won by the crafty; of the "smashes" there had Leen in the regiment, and in fact exhibited all the repeduire of a fast military man:— a Litter wit overflowed his talk, and an ut ter disbelief in goodness and good men per vaded all;—"as one man of the world talking to another," such and such, he said, wet e the real truths—viz: just the sort of horri ble hopeless gospel, always heralded by that particular expression. And yet, when he drew himself up to his full height, and wished rue "Good-night," with his old bewitching smile, I pressed warmly his outstretched hand, and, long after the echoes of his springy footsteps had died away upon the oaken stairs, I sat over the fading embers, with my mind fuller of sorrow than roger because of him. I had the darkest forehuding about this marriage. I had little dualit but that he was a fallen star, who would NI lower yet, and draw down with him another, pure and bright, and dear to me, from its firmament; and yet I liked him still; what wonder, then, at her affection who knew his strength and not his weakness? flow often do we see men like these I thought,—men without a prayer, who have twenty pious lips to pray for them; without love—to call such—and yet so wildly adored; with one look of love they wipe away a hundred wrongs, and when they die their image is enshrined in many a heart, and not the less securely even al ibi:nigh those may have been broken. I had no right, without more evidence, to compare Laurence Mountjoy with such men as these but I did do so. It is not hard to find out in London what a man's life has been in India, but I did not consider myself justi fied in prying into the Captain's past ca reer. Their marriage took place at no dis tant period, and they went fur a tour upon the Continent. The childless old man, who had no rela tives, anti but a few friends, came then to visit me more often. Month after month passed by without any sign of their return, and Lney's letters grew more vague, and Laurence's quite silent as to their move ments. He wrote that he found living abroad more expensive than he thought, and generally requested to have more mo ney. Once even ho wrote to me a private epistle, "as ono man of the world writing to another," about the possibility of get ting at the eight thousand pounds, which, according to my own advice, had been, howover, put quite safely cut of the gallant Captain's reach. Then the correspondence of both of them altogether ceased. Poet after post had Mr. Weynall begged of them to let him' hear. I myself had nut been backward in appealing to Mrs. Mountjoy's filial feelings, or in pointing out:to hcr hus band the hazard of offending his father•in law. I then became convinced that he was preventing her IT force; and I proceeded to make inquiries about him. At the Horse Guards I found out that Captain Laurence Mountjoy had sold out of the army some mouths ago; learnt from the Military Secre tary, with whom I had an acquaintance, that his selling out had boon compulsory; some gambling transactions had come to light in the regiment since his return to England, "and," said the official, "they were some of the worst cases that ever came under my notice." My suspicions being thus realized, I of- fered to the almost frantic father to go in search of the lost sheep, or rather of the wolf and lamb so unfortunately paired. I would not take him with me, as he wag the last man in the world fitted to rope with Mountjey: but he gave me the fullest powers to act fur hint, and, if it could be any way possible, to bring about a separa tion. I went upon my sad errand, among the throng of pleasure seekers, on the noble riv er which is the most famous in song; all things around were beautiful, end every heart seemed to be enjoying, them save mine. A knot of young collegians con trasted, in their super-abundance of high spirits, most painfully with my fl)reboding thoughts. NVihnot, the youngest of them, and their favorite, reminded me of what Monntjoy once had been, and my heart grew heavy for the boy, in fear. Wie , haden; where I na•nrally intended to first seek the :\lountjoys, was also the first halt of these young men. The first af ternoon after our arrival, spent by me in fruitless inquiries, was passed by them at the Kursaal, and Wilmot gave me an ac count that very night of his luck in in ningaillo fit c-franc pieces at the gaming-ta ble. I could not help giving him in return the outlines of this very story, but of course without mentioning names, but he interrup ted me with, "Why they are here, sir; they were both playing at the Kursaal; I am sure of it; the man quite white on a dark ground, with thick monstachios and sunken eyes; the woman, not good-looking at all, but . "Gond Heavens! and did you ask their name?" "Oh ycs, my brother told me: everybody knows them here,—Molyneu; Captain end Mrs. Molvneux." "Thank God," I said; and yet the next moment I doubted whether it would not be better that they should be these than not find them et all, or to find them doing worse. Not certain in my mind, however, I attend ed the Kursnal as soon as the tables were open on the following day. I sat myself down and held my head low, as though in tent upon the game, and watched the com pany as they dropped in. The table was soon full, except a couple of seats directly opposite to me, which appeared to be re served by tacit consent for some habitues. Presently the man I was in search of enter ed, with a lady, thickly veiled, upon his arm, and they took their seats. Yes, it was she, but deadly pale and still, looking less like the light-hearted and self-willed Lucy I had known, than some wax automa ton. She had been fond of jewelry, and wore it rather in profusion; but there was not an ornament about her now, unless her marriage ring could be so called, which I saw as she stretched out her hand (with the gambling rake in it, alas, alas!) to re-' ceive or pay. She seemed to be utterly careless about that matter herself, but when more fortunate than usual, she looked up from the board into her husband's face, as if to glean from it a joy. They played, it was evident, in accordance with some sys tematic plan, but they did not prosper. I saw Monntjoy's face darkening; and his I teeth setting tighter with every revolution of the ball; at last, with a terrible oath, he rose up, and walked rapidly from the room, motioning to his wife to follow him. The Captain's scheme doesn't answer," said one; "he said he blould break the bank as surely as Baron Grimloff did last sum- ME "Ahl" said the croupier, imperturbably, "the Baron did not go away with the money, though; and for the Captain's new system, it'sns old as the hills." It was strange to hear the banter thus proclaiming his own invincibility, but he knew well how fast the devotees of the table were bound to him, and, indeed, was answered by a general laugh. I had al ready risen, and was following the couple into the garden. I overtook the Mountjoys in one of the shaded walks, and itreminded me of the "time when I first met thorn to gether in the rosary at Thorney Grove; the way in which he laid his hand upon her arm at my approach recalled the manner in which he refused to be shaken off on that occasion. I saw in that grip that he was recalling to her some previous directions, and that ho had calculated upon a meeting of this sort. "Captain Mountjoy or Molvneux," I said, "I have matters of a very serious na ture to .3penk to you upon," (at that begin ning his pain cheek grew whiter, and I felt sure, nt one , ., that he had done something to be afraid of, besidev the things I knew.) "Mrs. Mountjuy," I continued, "to you, too, I have sorne weighty messages from a father whom you possibly may cover see again." "Address yourself to me, if you please, sir," burst forth her husband, violently: but she broko in with, "Tell me, for God's sake, is be here, Fir? Oh! Laurance, Laurance, let me see our father." •'IIe iv not ill, ma lam." said I, "unloss to be broken-hearted can be called el, but if I return to him without you, I do not "o tlyt that be will din; and at your door, $1,50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE; $2,00 IF NOT IN ADVANCE Captain INlountjoy, who hare not suffered his daughter to write to him, his death will lie. Shall I return to him to say his sou in•law dare not pass under his own name, and that his daughter is compelled to be come a professional gambler in the public rooms of Wiesbaden?" "You will return to him," replied Mount jay, savagely, "with a bullet through your heart, if—;" but here poor Lucy, in an agony of tear., and half swooming, entreat ed to be led home; and we bore her between us to their apartments on the third floor of a nei::l;boring street. They were almost without furniture, and nut altogether clean, hut with a glass of fluweri here and there, and a few other traces of the "grace past neatmes•." which rarely forakes a woman. He carried hi, wife, still subbing piteously, into an inner room, and returning in.3tantly, motioned mo to a chair, and demanded my busines.. "Mny I nsic, sir, on the part of Mr. Wey nail, why you have not corresponded with him thesc niontly,?" "You know ai well and better, sir, than T, (cur I believe you put your meddling:, hand to it,)" he replied, "that be refused a pecuniary requeqt, ;undo on the part of his own daughter, and I do not choose to have anything more to do with such a hard hearted old miser." — N,,w supposing," raid I, "a; one man (1 llrc werl.lialAing En another, it was rather in hopes to bring thc. , old miser into your terms; and supposing that your plan hag taken effect, and that I am instructed to pay you half your demand—that is to say, C.-Iwo—upon condition that Mrs. Mount joy returns to her friends?" I had e:pected rn outburst of rage at this proposal, but he only turned himself to the cabalistic documents neon the table; after a little consideration he answered calmly, "No, I must have ,CG000." Iwas so enraged by this coolness and want of feeling, that I expressed myself with an eloquence that WI 11 14 have carried everything before it at the Old Bailey. "Swindler! cheat! felon!" I cried (and at the word felon ho trembled;) "yes, felon, whom to-morrow may consign to a lifelong imprisonment, how dare you make condi tions with me?" But he recovered himself almost immedi ately, and bade me leave the room. "To morrow, sir, will see me far from Weishaden, with her whom your unselfish ness is so anxious to divorce from her bus. hand. Do you think," he added, bitterly, as I crossed the threshold, ' , that I have not heard of the family lawyer, the rejected suitor before now?" My indiscretion had thus broken off a treaty which had shown signs of being favorably settled. If Lucy could have been got to leave him,the business might have been by this time legally accomplished; but what was to be done now? I went straight to my young steamboat acquaintance, in whose quickmes I had great c:lnfidence, and laid before him the circumstances. Ile repaired with me to the office of his brother, an attache, who took a great interest in the whole case. I pro •ut ed the assis tance of a couple of soldiers, with full in structions as to how they were to proceed, and returned with them t • the lodgings of Mountios. I left my myrmidons outside, and entering found the Captain alone, but with a crowd of boxes about him, and every thing ready fn• departure. I said, "I am come once more to repeat my offer of this morning lle laughed semnfull:, and replied,— " Since you nre so hot about it, sir, you must give .CS,OOO for the lady. I will take no less : in two hours it will be too late ; go to yonr hotel in the meantime, and debate the question of "'Love or inomey.' " "You do not move fron this place unless I wish," I nnswered. At a sign from me the soldiers entered, and I continued, " You are now arrested for living underan assumed name, and possessing a forged passport; and you will be confined in prison until graver charges which may be brought against you shall have been substantiated." The last sentence was a happy addition of my own, and had a great success. " Well," he said with an appearance of frankness, "you hare out-tnanamvred me, I confess ; withdraw your forces, and pay me the:COM, and I v.-ill perform my part of the business." The men retired. "Shall I take an oath bef.iro you, or will tny word suffice ?" said he. "Sir," I replied, "the remits of the last oath you took in my pre.enc..e have not been quell as to 1141 , 'C me to a=l; you for an ot her." " Ile ^ai I nothing, but a flash came which forcibly recalled the same in his room• at the C,,llege. I drew up a ducumont for bite to sign., which bound him by the stron;:e , t : his own interest--never to Olin) Lucy :IR his \life rtgqiu, and he Figncd it while 7, on my part, gave him a cheque for the none} - . At that moment in came his poor wife, with her traveling dress and bon net on. " Yon rr.ay take those things off again," F iti licr hash:tad calmly ; " r:e are not go- ing away." She looked from ono to the other with a sort of hope just awakening in her tear worn face. "You aro going boo to your fatbor, Lacy:" ho aided. " Thank God, thank Gad!" she said, " and thank you Latrenae. flow happy you liaco [WHOLE 1;U:MBE11, 1,500. made me ; we will go together to him, and to the dear old place, and never leave him ; we will fc,rgct all tle, rest, won't we dear husbari.l, v..-<)t.Ct Ire, Mountjoy," I said "your husband cannot accompany you ; it would not be pos sible fur your father to sec him even if he chose to ;.-,o which he does not." I was vc%ed that she should cling to this rotten tree. I had ir.en tco much accustomed to Divorce 'Mils, and Breach of promise Actions not to understand the love that cleaves to its chosen object, through disgrace, neglect, and crime. " I do not leave my husband," said she quietly, "until death doth us part." She ~tood erect . , and laid her hand upon hie ouldcr, but wills a mournful look : it was the dignity of love, but also of despair. He quiet' v and coldly put her arm away. "It i; I.k.tter for us both Lucy," he said ; "I wish it to be so I would rntiter he ad ,led, with some ()Fort . , " that . you never saw my facs an.a " She Ha t e a qliort..l,arr, cry, PD.] fen. tiny ily nn tiin ror many days she lay fever-strieken, and delirious; Mrs. Wilmot herself nursed her. and scare - Ay ever left her side. That poor gitl banished from her husband, without c. friend of her own sex, and in a foreign lard, was index .1 a ens'2 to cache sympathy in any heart. When si, rekurnt:d to conscious ness, the face hanging over her sweet eyes was that of her own father ; it r7as his Li em ulous voice that answered, NI hon she said "Laurence: Latirenc.2!" Nevertheless when the mist over her mind enito cleared away, ,he did not refuse to be comforted, eren at first. Whatever others might have said about her husband, whatever proofs of his unworthiness mighthave been shown to her, she would have disbelieved, or she would have forgiven, hut ilia own renunciation of her cut like a sharp sword her heart strings from him. She never asked to go to him again. He became to her an ideal being; the portrait she possessed of him, the lock of golden hair, the love letters ho had once written to her were memorials of a far other than he who bad said to her, "I would rather that you never saw my face again." Sho was taken back to the old Louse, and grew resigned, and in time almost cheerful. Sho must have suffered many and terrible things and her nature recovered itself slowly at the touch of kindness, as the drooping flower opens to the sun. The old man became al most young again, and scarcely ever left her; he is fuller of kindness towards me than ever, but not so is Lucy, and I am not wanted at Thorny Grove I can see. I had a difficult mission to perform when I went to Wies baden, and I did not do it ns well perhaps, as the attache would have done it; from first to the last, I did my best however, and with nothing but her good before my eyes. Some few years aftertheie circumstances, spent a vacation in Paris, alone. -I went from sight to sight, until I lost all interest for such things. One day I had climbed tip the tower of Nctre Dame, and its giddy height, and surveying the great city, my thoughts reverted to Mountjny, and his rogue-et-noir plans. " And whether," I asked, "in this great outstretched city, does ,that hapless man abide? Friendless, and doubt less beggard by this time, does he still walk the earth, and remembers he his forsaken wife, and does be look bask upon his earlier ME I know that I said these things to myself then, and nut afterwards ; I felt my eyes wandering. back to the sad building that stands by itself so barely across the Place, whenever I strove to look; and I left the stately cathedral with a certain step,•know ing that I should look upon Laurence Mountjoy. Drowned and stark there ho lay indeed, but not to be mistaken by me .for any other; Ile might have lain in Paris Morgue until the judgment day without.be ing claimed. but that I went and found him. The officials thought, from various -suspici ous circumstances, that he had beeuthrown in, in short, murdered ; but I can well be lieve that he sought refuge voluntarily in the deep, swift running stream- What an cad fur the once blithe spirit, en glorioiri in hope, so ardent In love, cc ge• nial in fancy, left, thus dishonored, in the sight of a strange city ! I caused him to be buried in ft quiet resting place. without the town, rind stood beside his grate a solitary, but not unpitying mourner. I too, like poor Lucy, " make n pieinro ue my brain," of him at fr.: oths: times, and. only n hen I charley to see her smileless.face, and those dark widow's weeds, do I think involuntarily, and with a shudder, of him who was cards. rrom 'he Plii , ol fim•aay ThArniciz 7.lr:E RED HAND: T 11.1: 01' 11:AT1F1 1, ntrr.xcr. Cll APTER I Id Y'• sva!king , Ilndow—a poor ploycr " Sirs/. tre-e.. • I,t itv• .1, to stv , et Shvr.rrs. "C7o forth, Clarence Stanley 1 Hence t o the bleak world, dog I You have repaid my ;generosity with the blackest ingratitude.— You have forged ray name on a five thous and-dollar chock—hare repeatedly robbed my money drawer—have perpct:ated a series of high-handed villanies—and now to-night, because, forsooth, I'll not give you more money to 'pond on your dissolute correpan. ions you break a chair over my aged bead. Away You are a young man of small mor al principle. Don't ever speak tome spin r. These harsh words fell from the lips of Horace Blinker, or. of the proud merchant