,Z ... .". - .. _• . -• 7....:r. , .. ...r: . . . ..,' ,i 1 . 1 ._ ... - i ., I -- „ ' :.!,,,,,.-- ' . :.: • .. ..-.. • .n.;:.1..., .. • t. _ ... '.,.,.. , / ~ ...2 - „ , .. .i. . .-, . . ' _... ir. . „ 11 7. ; : , '... , , ...; .'...-;t: i -- ,~.1... • .„.-.,_ . ... .4. 5 ' ...r. +.... . i f i -- 1 I . •N 7'....' :,....---: '7'. , .... .. . t...? Ti': , . - ... 7 . _, ~.... ~. ' i . ~ . . . - .. .. . ~.. - , _ . . 7.7. - .... X 1- . ..... Vinall . c . . ..... . ..... , , . ,_ . , ' . ,7, 7 : , '4 , .:: r'- .. - .. . , .. .!. .---• r.' ..„ ''':' '...Y :- ..;:. :-. .., t ..-.„ _ ~. . .. . . Fli SAMUEL wituar, Editor and Proprietor. V OLUME XXXIII, UMBER 25.1 PUBLISHED EVERT SITURILIY MORNING. Oli:e in Carpet lid!, NortlL-utai coma. of Front and Locust streets. Terms of Subscription. flu. copy pe .111.11111.1 f paid. advance. • • • 11 ~.1 pun! willeil. rre • rnoililis - roco fin menermen 101 l hr year. 2 (70 .96 Coats A, cc:xi:var. iNo; ttib-eriptioti.ecetvetitora It,- time thult .iidilo ).414 NII• br le -ennlitilled oull On ,zere.tragr. Ire p:ud..eolc<.o thr , rplun.oltln• lath : i ,_7"tloote) na y .e- emnteeht , nai a Rates of Advertising tite.Jout• %v., I. t ll rre week,: e.telk •m,equvniiii,Crlion. 10 (12 j ne Q jo,,,ver k ilik ed. week:. I oil edel , ml,-equenmi-ertion. yo proportirm .0,er•i111-eoult“vsld,c made to qu•tnerlp,Lnlf ••• tile , dvertlier-, , n0 are irit9l3eoainefl t their 4,1-1110.-4. gffttrg, The Harvest of the Heart .PER Wt• • at Itenenth the apple h00,1e3, Upon that wel I ren.rollseled day, A,W. ph mule,: el the •tantner The ripened , Wlllll, 1/001 e u, lay. 01. joyful 1.:41e1 Ol Yon. 1111 IMES S.a in my own—lii, 4.111.1 om• Could irptieli It. Out li iq. m till !ad WO W:110, d th^ 1n00Y•I. n, iln•y Anent their 1ou• And saw 1111. ',tinned ph J.x f ill Before their clw dy. mveupi,,z blow 4. And earth and sky %vete full of love; It breathed from every balmy le,f, And ~.mne 11.1” 0-. tho goalra fic:d Front entry golden•m+•eled -hear. The leaned to hear the -mix The lively brook sang running by; Tbe old oak moved his gram head In joy, appruvingly on high. The wild bar droned upon lua way, To Fro an will' the dainty ro-e; And far nway I!'c Lan' hills %Vern wrapand in tbealny •oa ose The robin rocked upon the -pray, Anti poured 1111011 'he fungi:Alit alt A flood of unittuAllt melody That woke the woo Hand everywhere Oh. height:)• shone the lilt,: then! r.w. et tea- the •o.tg the runnel -a ng, And dear the tn.•rry f 111111 1 7• peps That round ti- clearly, lithely rang. Andy nu tVIIO sat. with bleshotig eh« t ki Aud dowheugt eye-, vie,: di city Long elle the leave- their puree .tom Bad ptomt-ett ‘vou.i.l he my liarve-: of) ha- come and goat Cterc we two 5..11 Lrue.nh ihe :Ice And) et it li.en Gum tut Mrlll, L • crn 11.11/gill b it to MC A time of all the That loci can to u• impuz'i The gortieling of earile-t love-- The fi of the heart A Little While Beyond the sirtling and the weeping, I -11,411 lie soon; 13,.. ) ,:‘,1 ow 3.1 a 6 Mg .11,1 the •leepteg, .13e3 °eel the .otrwg and the fenpmg. I .11:11i I -onn Love. on -t and lAntue. I= I.nrd, lorry 1101 but come 131) and tinr blooming anti the fading, • I -ball be coon; 13eyoaLl the , Imane nu,l ille it,)01,,1, the awl lime tire: Wing, I , ball Love, ie.n. utid hrmrh Swoet home! Lor.i. LJII ry not, but come Ileyond :he rigior ilhtl I lie setting, ,h.itt be -non; Beyond ihe ealfziwg and the netting. Be) end remethhe,m4 ~nd [oQ:clung, I shall Love, .e.t, wid home Swet 11.1tc! Lord, t.n nut. Inn enne 113eY011(1 tire feiralez and the ntcettng• •unit; Beyond for limn ell nil On. g - reli:•g r 113:: mot for l e v e r .nn lESTI tt cl llntnt Sweri home: 1... rd. t. not. but 00,71 Deyoncl the tin and the fever, I .1.1111 t.t,-ortn; IR nu' 'he 10 , 1%-IVII-le Qllll the river, lie) and the ever ood the never ? I Ithe'l 100 -non Love. req. am! home! S sect =IIIMI getirtiiaits. Carlyon's Vacation DONT UR TROLLED ron JACK. AND COT DOCKED DP CUPID [coNT]:quED.] CIIAPTER 111 ristrlxc FOR A HEART The next morning, as soon as breakfast %vas over, C.Lrlyun prepared to start for his seventh heaven, fur though very unlike old Izaak: Walton in temperament, he resembled him epeedingly in the ardor of his piscatory passion. "Your paradise, Lion, trill be full of chalk streams to a deed certainty. I believe, on my soul, you'd prefer a 31b. trout to a blacl.•- eyed houri," said Da Plat, as Philip un packed his tackle and flies with all a lover's girder. "3.luch safer game k this world, at any rate, and much less expensive,"? said Car lyon. "Your rod will never deceive you, never alter, and never pall; you•can't say as much for houris. old fellow. Won't , you come and try the charmers hid in the waters of the Alder?" • . " nit. I. I'm ding 1.0 the ACIIOOI-1 . 00111 to h..ar Smllls %ay their catechism. You know my right feelings on such subjects, and I've an idea I'm gnlfather to one of them." Carlson looked scorn unutterable. "I don't doubt you'll show, tote-a-tcte with your Andalusian beauty, that you consider your duty to your neighbor is to love her as your self." EEEI “Well! I may as well set my affections on a live governess as a dead pike any day. I bet you toy sport in the school-room will be as good as yours in the Alder.” And Du Plat sprang up the stairs, three at a time, to the school-room, where he obtained the young Chips an immediate holiday, and sang duets with the governess all the morn- Mg. Carlyon went forth to his loves—jack. porch, trout and notch—beauties, to watch, ever ',ince lie fi-died for sticklebacks with a phial, lie had always been addicted. Day after day he spent crouching down in the sloppy grass, it shower wettin g , bite to the skin, waiting for the fl-h to nibble. or standing in the full blaze of an August in ton, c , tacelaral nig all hie energies an trot ling f a • jack. W.iling home through dank fern a ad 1.1.11,11 , X,, d in a thungerstorm—got ting up before dawn to walk ten tttiL•s, only to find the , tee ins It i l been whippet bof ire into fttntlessly, hour :trier hour. while the rain drippot off hie wid,•.aw.ike in miniature Niagoras—getting benighted. and following a J.tek-o'•latiteru straignt away into a hog—or finding himself strand ed on a c. !ninon, the night too dark to de cipher the sign-post—all this was the sotire., of purest delight to Pit, lip, becau s e-0 initiated!—it was ristitsul The Egyptian canaille might as well have sought to pene trate the mysteries of Isis, or neophytes as pired to propound the learning of the school.- as ignorant tyros to understand the mysteri ous joy locked up in that one word for all brethren of the gentle craft. Of course, if this toil and tr 7 avail had been his trade, nev er, he would have vowed, was there so ill used a man, but being sport, the knowledze that he was fishing made Carlyon, wet. weary, foot-core, with every limb aching. and every thread dripping, experience a deep strong sensation of delight, which the \win itiated need never strive to explain or com prehend, and which lie himself, I dare say, if put to it, would have been puzzled to an alyse, philosopher thou 4.11 he was. ENE 131111119 Ou the banks of the Alder, Corlyon forgo; hi+ care., his profession, his fl inceo—every thlng di-agreeable; and came home to din ner in -rch charming, spirits that every one at Monkstone Court voted him the be-t con versationalist in the world. And so he wa-: his sweet voice, his fascinating way., told his brilliant chat were not loot on sinehoil‘ to whom he specially addressed them. I can't say whether he was aware of it or not. (we'll hope not, and that he didn't honk hearts with as little remorse as trout.) but certain it was that Philip conquered as mnan, fair ladies as he cured. As Lady Chip averred, he was a "dangerous doctor," and Leila Wyndham began to grudge the, jock so munch of his company, and think thm+ handsome, graceful, winning angler umigni just as well talk with her, and ride with her as a hip the Alder all day long. Before very long Ca rlyon began to share her opin ion, and robbed the jack of several hour+ t o spend them in the Monk,tone drowing-roion or in riding and driving, with the little heir esv. Every evening Carlyon took ow:sc.:ion of the els-a-vii n 'EL and talked hi. way 'ha, the young lady's heart as he had talked it int m a good for when Cam lyon chim.e to go tr.dhrip: with the bait of his fa..eination., woe he to any trout that came nigh, ha hookel it was, ?Wens micas. Leila soon beg tn believe that nob was ever so kind or sim perfect as Mr. Carly and when he at ye a small Chip frown a grave in tin. Alder. thought lino thd noblest paladin that ever breatiied. Ile tra`i Standing, on the river bank one day with her and Jlrd. E heltill, when Feream , at the top of a shritl, terrified interrupted thein in the middle of a di:+sei tation on PendenniA. "Gond G• 011 the b.ty'll be c•trrietl into the sluice," cried Philip, taking ..lf he beheld, IL nnl litany yard.; dktant, a tab floating fast towards a water mill and de struction, and Chip's &111 and heir within it. Carlyon was into the water in a sez, nd. and swimming like another Leander, while ' Leila stood on the banks, looking, Mrs. Edgehill told her afterwards, desperately imdined to throw herself in after him.— Philip, who wits as plucky as he was strong, swam steadily after the brat, caught hold of the tub close to a sluice, through which the water rushed to fill the mill-pond, and land ed it in safety. Mrs. Edgehill overwhelmed him with praises, but he only shook himself like a Newfoundland; took out his watch to see if the works were wet, threw back his head, laughed, and told her it was only a little agreeable exertion of his muscles.— Leila tcok both his bands in hers, nod looked at him, the tears falling down her checks, with an expression which flattered him more than the capture of a salmon in the Tweed when he was seventeen, or the compliments the examiners paid him when he passed at College. Lady Chip, you are sure worshipped him from that hour; and when Leila heard him protesting that it was all nonsense to thank him—what had he done—nothing but what a Yarmouth boat man or a water-dog would have done every atom as well—that there was no danger in the sluice, and, if there bad been, his life wasn't so delightful to him that he'd shown "NO ENTERTAINMENTIS SO CHEAP AS READING, NOR ANY PLEASURE SO LASTING." much mi , glaniinity in risking it--she t hou.tht, "What a warm, geler.ms h-art this Min has under all his assumed coldness and philosophy!" IVheroon modest iiselle looked at C,Li•lyon's pale, handsome face, and slid into ditiigeroui speculations. "1 sappase endangerinA your life to-day was pure selfiihtiess, wits:n't it?" she whis pered as she pits+cd C.trlyon looked at her with a merry smile. "Entirely; becau-e, don't you see if there 'la 1 bean a death in the family my visit r aid have beet cut short?" "C un nc vou4 taptillez!" aria I Leila toicing her hoial. lilting her eyebrowc, and (Itching away front him in in.liguation. "Su you are g eiug fishing again," said she, next in truing at brea'tflit. "I think if I wore a in tn. 1 wool l 11.11 come better ainits.hu cot for lily lordly intellect than hooking a few poor &h." "But if your for Hy intellect had been wearing it'elf to Isiah in L 'radon streets. operati mj an I leerure., you would be very glad to rest it fir a little while. and have a Tiiet (lay under tho C1T0.4, with no greater trouble than hew to [III your basket," laughed Carlson. "Tuere, then, by your own admission, it is only an excuse for tile dote!, a cover to y or i your eigar-u ise, and your flask:" taid the little heiress, handing pion him coffee. "A, quiet day under the tree' I e.iuld per fectly uuderstand your enjoying. my dear fellow, hat a ut)rmy night spent in (landing after a IVill-o'-the-wisp, with your thing dripping like a S.tye ter a bath, .t•t 101 l halt way up to your ituce., I malt sty i.v ne yund ine," ob+ervel Du P.U. "I never knew ono or y .ur _nett anX,e.r.i bring home enough fur dinner fur the cat," Wight:4 Lldy Chip, "Fishing is neitner ni telly nor cm thing and it'e very lazy an I crust," ere I b tilt "Dear me, our por-mits are zigieere I at. hy they're ialustry la't! I t knocking some ivory b.tlli •it) our, or small shot into unii tii2y bir li, or sitaiitz round .1 card table witu a fe.v pieces ill p vitt:- board, or any other ainiise.u.mt or y lords of creation. fi to: I.ty .11 tie alt day, ur whi7pei the water with .1 mire '- brown or a c tperer, wh ic lecture we iv oil I get on Waste of tin •, .v 'az .nasrs at w •ii's petite 'eel., what sc"..ri at feat de frivoli ties?" "Q•tite right, Leila," chimed in Mrs. E Igo hill. "Fishing's not a goal ter so u4ef.ll a cr•whet or navel reading." "Or sc.tuJal. .1)3.1't forget ladiei' pet pastim•:," smiled Carlyon. "I've known some r isehu I lips torture morn with their word.) than I ever. io with ;ay h • )':, al I slay in ne r.iput.ttioas taaa I twee take perch or r.i.teit." Oa! pu're a h mri , l in,ln," said Mrs. •'I believe the file, words you tic- Lorna as a b Lby were a sarcasm against we- til 0 I." Or a petition for a 11,11ing-ra.l," udJed Leila. Corlyou lau•?,hed, and thought, "Li that littlu thing vote! 1 luove her tlLr the j Lek?" Ile went and spent the (toy Willi the jack, nevertheless; e.,.j.yel Ittntse.t t LiLuen-rely, uni.l hreugut It nue s , pole tilt r io g eve. Lilly Chili Alowel, "f.r the eat." tit diunor Luly Gin? a-cc. 1 will to d, he a eit favor—t, g ~t ,l vi.it some po.n• %count,' in tue been given up by the p ,ctsir+,+u,l dcci le/ E., h. in c Carly In Elm 'Alit of 11ii fi4hing:. Th" vi•- 1t would take .1 1.4.1011 c.poUpi ut 1 but—acquie4ced. luuke.l at him with a ertha -17.iu 1141 better nut gut have „taineit lee, and the fee, you km a', is sill ine..lical uteri came for. They never du any thing, except to till their parses." "Ou! we like to see interesting case.," il“wered ha , carelelsly; "and don't like to di.o'i'ige my -Anil we don't like to du st kindness, do Eli "It is not a kintlnes.; I may gain some knowle lge cut of this case. Tilat is why "You provoking mate cried Leila, giving him a blow with her bouquet. —l've known plenty of people try to make one think well of them, hut I never knew anybody so ob stinate in depreciating himself as you are. However, it is nu use with me. I have the lorgon de Balzac, and I can see your heart beneath your words, and I know your actions give the lie to your pretence of philosophic egotism. But I will adopt your phraseology, if you like it, and call giving up a morning of your darling sport to visit a poor woman, 'selfishness' instead of kind- ness.' " Carlyon laughed heartily. "Well, if you invest every ordinary action with a chivel• roes aroma, I can't help it. You'll tall me next that I passed at St. George's solely to benefit mankind. Miss Wyndham, I want to convert you—to make you a disciple of Izaak NValton. Come with me tomorrow. I promise you a luxurious scat under the willows, and you shall see the trout lying behind their stones, and tell me if the pise.t tory art you. despise does not make an August day pass pleasantly." So spe.ke Carlyon, leaning over the piano one Pvening. Leila looked enraptured. "Yes. I will come; but. as to being converted, none cerrond I shall fancy myself an Undine —an Uodine for your Alder, Sir Go Ifrey—in a black and high-heeled boots. Won't that be novel and poetic?" COLUMBIA, P.E.N.NSYLVA.NIA, SATURDAY MORNING, JANUARY 18, 1862. "And an 'awakener' in a shooting coat, ribbon-tie, and wide-awoke; don't forget that, Leila," said Mrs. Edgehill, maliciously. - Carlson put up his head in the air, and looked haughtiness unutterable. Leila culured and began to play the "Express" at a mad gallop, whereon Du Plat and the governess, aurally and Mrs. Edgehill, whirled them selves down the drawing rooms; and llonoria Cosmetique came over Philip's mind with a chill which made him shudder. Do Plat had become seriously involved with the handsome governess, with a complete renun ciation it his former estimation of govern e-ses, and oblation of how he had sworn at his friends for keeping such temptations when they were pretty; and such nuisance, when they were ugly, running tame about their houses. Du Plat dashed into love /ouch as he gave a Star and Garter il jeoner, or sent a bracelet to an actress, without thinking what price he might have to pay for it s lie had shot in arid out of love as last its nn aphrodite changes its and whispered more vows in deux temp, ice • pie -nits, nod moonlight balconies, than fickle Ring Solomon hi:aself in his sm.- :14AM. And in lore he went headlong; and the governess, proud and stately though she was, accepted it, nay. encouraged it; which was very utiprincipled in a penniless orphan. severe young ladies will soy, who have never been similarly tempted; for we all know how amusing it is to be rigid, and crushing, and vim/Mai—on other people. Whether it is so mousing on one's own sins is another 'natter. Pharisees say. Yes; publicans, N. go with the, political!3 myself—don't you? Si, belle lectriee, though it is easy no. you to say she should have repulsed Du Plat, with his bawl-mint fate and sparkling talents, an I a Ito alma ao l one attractions, I doubt it is at ,t quite so easy fir poor Inez to do so. especially as she it a. governess, and unused to t hat sort Of thing, urcourse. Anal as for Carlyon a: d Leila—dear me a couple of -.cults had brought them quite -friendship." She was a new species to P ulip.,la is I, sceptical man of the world th at be was: and such a telling e intros! to the stool:broker's daughter! The little heirs es•*s Itvely, winning, girlish nays were at -twat relief to Miss Cosinctique's dignified nothings and chill majesty ail demeanor, aod, hal Carlyou la , ‘en less of a practical philosiipacr, might have proved somewhat daugerous. Poor little Leila was not • philo-apher. Unhappily, as Ilecven bath been pleased to create younA• men and mi.idens, Carlyon's society, his soft voice, his fascinating smiles, his brilliant, witty chat, all the weapons with which he caused more heart•aithes than all his mar- Maim could soothe, or skill cure, were not without their effect on her; but then Carlyon rid nut think of that. We never do, you know, when we're amusing ourselves; what are the agonies of the little trout on the hook to as, so that we've the fun of catching him? Si Philip, in his bullet-proff arrnoor of philosophy, told himself no possible harm could come of it, and was exceedingly satiri cal and contemptuous on Du Plat for pay ing such compromising attentions. "I sup pose, Dupe, you mean to marry on the sale of Lllumettes made out of your dunning let ters, or keep your governess in Ben's place to rue fur the beer, and say' Not at home' to sharks, eh?" said lie, standing ou the hall steps, waiting for Leila. "Don't be a fool," rejoined Leicester, with courtesy. ' When a man's up a tree, it isn't Mee to kick him." "Yes it is, if one kicks him down. You're getting caught in the hri.tiches, my boy, and I want to poll you to earth before you aro mail of any reach." "Much obliged to you. but you may keep your civilities to yourself, as the woodcock said to the small shot.; "Talk common sense, then. What do you marry In?" "What do you marry Unnotia for?" "Money," said Carlyon, his mouth stern. "For %%bat else do you imagine I take that cold, art ificial . —" Ile broke off with a -hurt laugh. 'Came, my motive, at the le4t, is prawical. You Can't say as much f.r p.m,. Tell me, Dupe, ((leaven knows you deiervo the avw) do you dream of marrying this governess?" Du Plat made a very wry face. "Marry I don't like that word; it sounds ugly; has a detestable odor of family boots, screaming children, legs of mutton, and the semination of ono'' will oats. But I'm quite sure that if I don's hare that girl I . shall shoot myself." "Do, my dear fellow. It will be far the lesser evil of the two," said Carylon, shrug ging his shoulders. "It's all up with you if you're gone so far as that." "It's all up with you, or will be before long, so don't talk," said Du Plat, as Leila came across the hall in the identical black hat and high heels. She ran up to Carlyon. "Oh, I have just thought of it—how dread ful it will be! I shall have to hold my tongue, shan't I?" Ile smiled nt her "very kindly," as Leila called it. "Certainly, or we shall catch no fish; and fancy silence is about the sever est deprivation you could have, mademoi selle." "That it is. I woulri rather sow for an hoar, or learn a sera) by heart, than out talk f•r irholo fire Mittive4. You must fist.n tnv lip 4 op. Mr. Carlyon?" Phillip 1...ke 1 nt the Srli I laughing lips, and thought of a in.rh: of silencing them to which be should by no menus object. However, when they were under the wil lows, and he lay on the soft grans, initiating her into the mysteries of dead and live bait, spinng and trolling, minnows and gudgeons, and the more recent "spoon," and looking up into the bright eyes, beaming at him un der the black lace, Canyon, devoted angler though he was, found the lively talk and joyous voice more beguiling than all the jack, to.tch or trout in the Alder. indeed. his line fay idle on the sin face, and an epi cure trout came out of his hole, and carried off fly, hook and all, in his pretty pink stomach, without eliciting more comment from Carlyon than a surprised Jove!" To such a pass will the wisct come. They discoursed on Hallam and Macau lay, Goethe and Lamartine, Hyperion and Jocelyn, till they glided on to a dangeron. topic, which, if peorle talk of, ten to one they fall into. "I don't like to hear you Fay you do not Believe in love, Mr. Carlyon," said Leila. meditatively. "It hems a , : if you had met with neither truth nor sincerity in the wend]. Had you no mother, whose life showed you love?" 'My mother sent ate to school at four years old, kissed me once in the hol,days, liked me about n third us well as her lap dogs, and writes to toe now once a quarter. Nut much remarkable affection there, mad emoiselle?" "Nn, indeed. What a wicked woman:" cried Leila, heartily. — Not at all," said Carlson, laughing.— "People can't help it if their hearts are not patent Vestas, warranted to ignite at the touch. When I was twenty I was as ready to believe in affection, and to respond to it, as you are; but a few year's experience soon showed me my fully, and the world's cold water soon put out my r,mance." The little heiress looked earnestly at him. "I do not believe it is pot out; hidden fire may smoulder a long time, you know.— You will never dissuade me that you have nut warm and deep feelings, though you like to bide them under simulated sarcasm and coldness." "Perhaps I hare," said Philip, with romething very like a si,x,h, "but I do not spread them out fur the world, like a pedlar showing his wares." "But if you have theta, you might give others credit for them." "To what avail? Love is contraband to me. I can never enjoy it., therefore I will never think of it. 1. , ,ve is a pawsvere chi mera at the best, and I choose the wiser course—l neither look for it nor believe in lie could not see her face, for she dropped the black lace over it, but both of them were silent, and Car!you, I dare say, gave him self great credit for the masterly manner and great self-sacrifice in which, by this enigmatical speech, he had showed the girl it was no use to fall in love with him.— Whether it would not have been a better and quicker way never to hay begun his at tentions, "kind" smiles, fasciniating chat, &c., is another matter; but I suppose Carlyon knew best what suited him. As the little heiress sat with the lace down and her merry tongue quiet, and Philip lay on the grass, his rod flung aside, his basket empty, and the trout rising under his very eyes; while he gathered with one hand the heaths and foxgloves and orchises round him for Leila, lazily enjo3ing the sal. try August air and the hum of the gnats and bees—a chill, dignified, deep voice fell on his ear from the other bank of the Alder. "Good morning, Philip. You have good sport, I trust?" Leila started, tossed up her lace, and col ored. Carlyon sprang to his feet with an imprecation, tt hich happily did not reach across the Alder. Fur once in his life, haughty, nonchalant, self-possessed Carlyun was nonplused and confused. Ile spoke, lie wasn't quite sure what. "Ilunerial you here—how unespect ed "Very unexpected, since I wrote you word I should be at Muddybrook yesterday," ob served Miss Cosniet ique, with cutting satire, standing and contemplating him with an air of dignified displeasure. "To be sure, I remember now; how for getful I am," said Carlyon, hastily. "I ought to have come to meet you, but—" "Fishing is very absorbing I have heard," answered his fiancee, dryly, not tnkiag her eyes from Leila Wyndham. "I cannot come to you," said Carlyon, recovering himself, with a laugh. "There is no bridge within a mile; and we are as far separated as if the Atlantic were be tweeen us. You are out for an early walk, I suppose?" "Which I will now continue. Do not let mp interrupt your—fishing. Farewell:" And Miss Cosmetique bowed majestically any floated on. Canyon lifted his hat with a rather dis tant "Good-by. for nn hour—l will come down to Muddybrook this afternoon," and began to take his rod to pieces with many anathemas on the luckless wood and brass. "Is that your sister?" asked Leiln. quickly. "No. The deuce take this thing, how tight it fits!" "Your cousin, then?" "No." "But she called you 'Philip?' " Carlyon'e pale check flushed. He could not tell this frank, generous, warm hearted little thing that he, Philip Carlyon, with all hie pride nod chivalric honor, had OW himself to a woman whom ho could nut lore —for money. $1,50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE; $2,00 IF NOT IN ADVANCE "You told me the other day you liked wild flowers. See. can anything be lovelier than that little pink heath? Conversatories can not bear it, he said, giving her his bouquet wound together with some bindweed. She thanked him, Lilt absently, and their walk home through the park was rather silent and distrait. As they crossed the lawn they fund Da Plat sitting under the cedars with Inez Windham, and two small Chips shooting at a target, and Leicester's raillery on the trout less basket was more piquant than pleasant to Philip. "Can you tell me if Miss Wyndham ever stayed nt Dawtree?" asked Du Plat, as Carlyon and,his companion went into the house. Inez It esltated and colored. "Hawtree? Yes. I believe the heiresl stayed there be fore coming here; and I think I hare heard that she met a Mr. Da Plat, a charming old gentleman. Could he be any relation of yours?" "My governor! Cant:till:emus old fellow. I asked you about her, because he met an heiress at Hawtree, with whom, or ratbdr with whoQe tin mines, acres, and ecmsols he fell in love, and wanted me to du the same." The governess blushed vividly, and player with her parasol. Do Pint saw the blush, end bent eagerly forward. "But I swear I'll never marry an heiress to save myself from beggary. I wouldn't be indebted to any woman living for her tin. I'd sooner pass the rest of my data in the Queen's Bench. I would, upon my honor. I loathe the present fashion of weighing a wife by her sheer value in specie. What is true and noble, worth winning and worth wearing, is ton high to be put in the balance with pound., shillings and pence." In (V. ii,ked pleased and vexed, happy and anxious, at the same time. She poked up the turf with her parasol, and her voice shook as she said: "Your generous thoughts will change like all the world's. The time will soon come a hen you will recant them es v isionary and Quixotic." "I'll be shot if et er I do," swore Leices ter; "and I'll prove it. Inez, the only thing I care for on earth is—" "Lethter, my awow's up the twee," cried Beale, running up to them. Du Plat could have kicked him without the smallest hesitation. `•Detil take that little wretch; he's always in the way. What It misery it is. That comes of loving a gov erness," thought the unhappy Templar. CHAPTER IV TTIE ITORTICULTUR it, TETC There was an horticultural fete in Monk stone Park the day after Carlyon's inoppor tune rencontre with his fiancee, and thither came Miss Cosmetique with her Muddy brook friends, parvenus tolerated in the county for the sake of their tin, stud, din ners, cook, and wine. The stockbroker's daughter was grand to sight, in her Paris ian chaussure, extensive toilette, and fiteen I guinea bonnet. But Carlyon thought the little heiress, in her white muslin and blue ribbons, ten thousand times fresher and fairer, and compared them in h s own mind to a vain, stiff, gorgeous dahlia, and a soft, sweet, little Ruse d'Amour. But the dah lia, not the rose, was for his conservatory; and the philosopher preached sharp practi cal lessons to himself on the folly of such regrets and comparisons. llonoria kept him well up to hand, and would'nt let him leave her for five minutes. She questioned him about Leila; but few people were able to get much out of him, unless he chose to be questioned, so Hono ria, not being able to find ground fur quar rel, contented herself with being cold, dig nignified, and excessively vigilant, for she was proud of Carlyon—of Ids talents, his courtly manners, and his gentleman's name, and didn't want to lose him, Carlyon strolled about'with her, sat with her by the band, introduced her to Lady Chip; and through it, all was haunted by a pair of blue eyes following him with wonder and re proach. The eyes worried him dreadfully, and made him answer to a tort el a tracers to his betrothed, that she stared at him in haughty surprise. "flood Heavens, Philip?" she said at last, "has your fishing turned your head? You are strangely altered since you were in town." Philip made peace with her somehow, told her he bad a headache, which was true enough, managed to leave her with a guards man fur ten minutes, and went after some white muslin and blue ribbon he saw afar off. He, fullowed Leila into a rose slice, where she was walking with two cornets, young rector, and a couple of other girls; he stepped quietly in between her and the rector, and strolled along in the tent. He and Leila waited behind the others, by some I of the Chippeham fuschias and verbenas. I "Who is that lady you have been with all day?" she whispered, with an anxious, eager look. Philip's mouth shut tight, his eyebrows contracted, and his face grew stern. as he answered briefly, "Miss Cosmetique." "Is she Puch a great friend of yours?" asked the little heiress, tremulously. "Friend? No. Heaven knows: But she will be, some day, my wife." lle did not look at her as he spoke, but bent over the fl.rwers, his lip.; as white as hers, and the veins swelling on hie forehead. She did not answer. but he: little hands clenched on her parasol handle till the ivory snapped, and the mute misery he SSW on her face male him feel that in fishing fur [ - WHOLE NUMBER 1,639. ' hearts with the live bait of love, tlmugh trolling is very good fun to the angler, dying I only to fill the basket of renriuests is net quite such fun to the Victim. The cornet and girls came up; Leila hurricaly pleaded • the heat of the tent, and went into the house alone. She did not conic down to dinner. and over the fish and soup Lady Chip said she Wll9 so sorry poor little Leila was quite unwell; had caught a chill, she feared, on the grass; what a pity it was girls would wear such thin boots; did not Carlyon think so? This speech stabbed uncorr f..rtably into Philip's heart: be felt gull ty. The spinning had been very sant, certainly, but the death-ngonies of the poor flits worried him. The warm sprirzi that lay bidden under the conventional ic"i in Carlyon's heart were stirred, and as 111 stood in his bedroom window smoking Lia Cavendish gloomily, ho swore heartily at himself. called himself very hard names, wished llonoria Costuctique at the bottom of the Red Sea; and when, at last, ho turned in and fell asleep, as the sun streamed through his room, philosophical Philip saw nothing in his (Imams but the pale face of his poor Rose d'Arnour, asking hint why, for her sake and his own, he had ever come out fishing in August? '.C.one here, you star of St. Cle-rge'e," said La ly Chip, smiling, "and tell me what is the matter with Leila IVynanin. She tells me site is nut ill, but I fear very much she is." She led the way to the library, and Car- Igen followed her, looking all the more stern sod stoical because he was feeling un comfortably remorseful and unhappy. • Leila was sitting in rt. window, and did not look un, as she assured him she was quite well—neVer better, &e., &c. Carlyon .at down by her, felt her pulse, and asked a few quiet questions, to which he obtained very unintelligible answers; and, soon after, Lady Chip was called out of the room.— There was a dead silence. Leila played with Pluck's ears, who (more faithful to her than his master) lay nt her feet. Carlyon got up, sat down again, opened a window, shut it, played with his whiskers, then sud denly spoke: ' You asked me, yesterday, who Miss Cos. inetique was. I wish to tell you more fully how I.—l first came to form an engagement with her. Heaven knows I bear her little love, and wish I had never known and never met her. I acted wrongly at the first, and now I bear the punishment. I engaged my. Nell' fur money; men told me, and it is so far true, that in our profession more than any, money is wanted. If I can giro good par ties, keep my carriageand my footman, and make some show, people will say, Carlyon must have a good practice, he lives in such style; and patients will come to me. If not, they say, Carlyon is going to the dogs, and patients will fail. I knew this, lam not rich. I met Miss Cosmetiquc, who is; .lie sought me, I may say without vanity.- 1 did not then believe in love, and I thought I had done with romance. This is my ex cuse for my engagement to her. I have none for my fault of coming here as a free man. Judge me gently, Leila; you cannot blame ate more than I blame myself. I could not resist the temptations of your so ciety; you were so fresh, so charming, so novel a study to ins, who disbelieved in n:l truth and innocence. Forgive me! Great as has been my fault, I suffer, Heaven knows, enough for ill" llis voice loot its forced calmness, his face was white as death, and his lips worked convulsively, in the double effort of conquering his pride and combating his love. Leila flung her self down, her face buried in the sofa cush ions, and sobbed passionately.; deep, heart-- breaking sobs, which nearly drove poor Philip mad. "I never dreamt of this—l never thought that you would care thus for me," lie murmured, half distineted. "My God! to see this, and be compelled to re nounce it. Oh, Leila! never shall I forgive myself. But tell me, for pity's sake, that you forgive me, my poor darling!" lie drew away her hands as tic spoke, and the little heiress lifted her face to his, also unutterable in the once bright eyes. "For give you? Yes, what would I not forgive you? But—but—" Sobs choked her voice, and s he sank down in an abandon of grief. Carlyon bent over her, his warm, passionate nature break ing away from the ice of yenre. "Leila, my dearest, I shall go mad: Bet ! ter had I gone down to the grave unloving and unloved, than brought the misery of my fate on your young head. Tell ins—tell me once more you do not hate me, cruel and selfish as I have been?' "Hate you?" murmured the girl. "Nev er—tuner! God bless you always, Philip:" As she whispered his name, Carlyon, haughty Carlyon's tears dropped on her brow; and ho kissed her passionately again and again. Uneven knows what he might not have sworn if Lady Chip bad not at that moment turned the handle of the door. Leila sprang up nad, rushed away through n side-door.— Carlyon, with his head high in the air, fur fear Lady Chip should detect the unusual moisture in his dark ryes. began to talk rather hurriedly of headache, remittent fever, cold caught on the lawn. chlorin, ether. and quinine, telling as many medical false hoods as ever a professional man did on occasion, till Lady Chip, reminded thereby, gave him a telegraphic dispatch, just come far him. It summoned him to one of his patients in town. Carlyon was glad of it.-- It gave him time for thought, and obviated the irksome duty of attendance on Ilonoria, and in half an hour he want in the train and off. It was a dangerous ease: be was kept there three weeks; and as he sat night after night in his own lintpue, smoking in his soli tude, the generosity, and passionate feeling, and depth of affection that lay perdue in his inner nature rose un. grew and strengthened. [To BE CJ,NII7.MED.]