111 STALVI,.E3 =c) TOWANDA: taturban Sltorninpc Jannacn 2A, 1852. THE WAY TO BE BRAVE. Speak kindly to that pour old man, Pick op his fallen cane, And place it gently in his hand, That he may walk again. His bundle, too replace with cam Beneath his trembling arm; Brave all, the taunts that you may heat, To give his life a charm. A braver deed than scorners boast Will be your triumph then, A braver deed than annals tell, Of some distinguished , tita n. Ye-, leave that thoughtless, sneering crowd; Dare to he good 'and kind ; Then let them lacgh, as laugh they may, - Pass on„but never mind. Pass on; hut think once more of him ' The wreck th.it you hive seen, How once a happy boy lake you He sported on the green ; • A cloudless iky above hiehead; The future brilht and fair, And friends all notching o'er his conch To breatkallection's prayer. But ah, the change ! He shziders now, Fosaken, lone and sad— • Thrice blessed is the task of those 6 Who Arive to make him glad. Speak kindly to that poor old marr, P.ck up his fallen cane, To that will ease has burdened heart; And make him smile again. TOE STORM4IGHTS OF &NZASfk. • RY VEIGH RITCHIE The main road from the Lago Maggiore to the western partsof Sw itzetland at one time ran fitroUgh the valley of Anzasea ; • and it was once my fortune to be detained all night at a cottage in one of its oddest defiles, by a storm which rendered my horse ungovernable While leaning upon a bench and looking with a drdwsy cniiosity .towards the window-1 saw a small; taint light among the rocks distance. lat first conteived that, it might proceed from a cottage window ; but remember. in; that part ofihe mountain was vrhcflly Uninhabited, and indeed uninhabitable, I-roused myself, and cal m; one of the tritily, inquired what it all meant. While I spoke, the light suddenly vanished; but to about a minute reappeared in another place, IS if the bearer had gone round some intervening lock. The storm at that lime raged with a fury which threatened to blow our hut with its men and the night was so, intensely- dark Abet the edges of the horizon were wholly undistinguishable from the sky. " There it is again !" said I. 11 What is that,, in the name of God ?" It is !Ai s's lamp ?" cried the young man eager lr, who was a sort of otir host. " Awake father ! Ito, Batista !—Vittorio ! t.elia is on the mountain" At these cries the whole family sprung up from the lair at mice and crowding around the window, dud tneir eyes on the light ( vrhich continued to appear, although at long intervals for A considerable partof the night. When interrogated as to the nature of this mystic lamp the cottagers, made no scruple of telling me all they knew, on the sole cclnditiolt.that I should he silent fwhen It apptiaiedi and' leaire them to mark uninieriuptedly the spot where it rest ed. To render my story' intelligible, it . is necessary to ray that the minerali and farmers form two ills :met classes in the vally of Anzasca.o, The occu potion of the former ; when pursned as a profession in reckoned dis'atpmabla by the other inhabitants, who obtain their Alvin; by regular industry; and indeed the manners of the minerali oiler some excuse for what might otherwise be reckoned an illiberal prejudice —They are addicted to drinking, quarrel tome, overbearing—at one moment rich, at another starving„ ; and; in short, they are embject to ail the calamities, both moral and physical, which beset men who can have no dependance on the product of their labor ranking ikthis respect to gamesters, awhile, and other vagabonds. They are notwithstundirg, a fine race of men— brave, tardy, and often handsome., They spend lively what they Win lightly, and if one day they !jeep oil their hunger, lying-like wild animals bask Ina in the son the next, it fortune has been prop, "LIA• ihn)stvaager about gallant and gay; the eras of 'he eit(h;y. Like the eons cid God, the ,mifterali smnennies rnake. love to the danglitei 8 Of men ; arid al:"11.1h 1111. ,teliten pn=sosa the lewd, they occa- R 1 ,1141. 1) ',net! the , Iteart,yl Ala gentle maidens of A 1 174.C1 IME k tinsuct..:,slll: there are coinrades 1 . .1 w•lde t ckit, ~11 ~ se arms are always operi in receive the desperate and the brave. The clouttle of the scene, anti betake thetrisettres to the ht;hways , altell nighis.are dark and travelers are wt wary; or they list under the banner o( tense reg.,. Oar baudsoi. who rob in tnnusands, and whotitf Wry is a province or a kbiTlom. • Frcice:eo Marielb was the handsomest :t old 'eeter the volley:.-,He was wild, it is true, but Plat v.a. the .tribei and made up for th "bY go many good twiddles, - that the ranters i ;:eriatires—at least such of them as bad not mar ' r?gtahle daughters—delighted in his company. FUT • iceseo could sing ballad. so sweetly and mourn !Zr that the old dames leant back in the chimney corner to weep while he sung. He hadihat deep and in ,, Aneltolly voice, which when once heard, Ilitgeis in the-ear, and When heard, again, howev er unetp..ciedly, seems like 41 longing once. realiz. ea There was only one young Ins. in the valley vhn 6sd mt heard the songs 01 Flan 4 cesuo.---i4l -the seen or nuseen t on some pretext or oil•er r had tuati6etl then curiosity. • The exception was • The valley of Anzasca bas been fur many ten. tunes known for its gold-mines. The minefrali are 14 %e whose occupation- it is to look for ore. In ':army nights small lights are to be seen upon the "its, which sre supposedts indicate the ptesence:of • ..:,-.:,,....7,2 . ... . f , .. , . . ................ 1, ~.i, ~ ;. , ...,, 5 ..r:.::. • -.....-. 7 . - 7 , l ':1: -.. .1 ,". • ;',•• ,• • •..' '7 '7, ..'t ..,., •,. ; ,-,,,, -...., ', ,• ', , ~,. .. . , . . ..- , . - . S. '' , ji , . .. , . , - ~ . -. , .„ ? ... • " '. ..!. '.•• 7 . ...1.. . r .... • --., ' . : '''. d ' . --.. i ..',... 1 -.-. -.-. . ... , .. ' -L %.,t".. .- 1 1 ' 2: : : : :::: ... , , . . .. . . , . ~' : I. ..1• . , .. . :... : . L:FP• RTE ~.., • , . . ~.• •. , ::,,, T 1:•' -•-...:)•;;,,:.., - II . . ; . . . , ~ _ . . • , . , • .1 . . . .., . . , . . . . . . . IME 'Lelia, the (tangier stone or the &beet tatmers in Anzasea. Lelia wilt very young, being scarcely sisteen - ; but in her quality of sr, only daughter, with a dowry in expectancy equafto morethan onethousand Austri a* liras, she attracted consideiable observation. HS face, on swim*, inspection, was beautiful to abpolute perfection, but her figure, although sym. metrical, was so polite, and her manner so shy and girlish, that she was thought of more as n child than a young woman. , The " heiress of old , Nit:co lit7 was the designation made use of, when parents Would endeaTor to awaken the ambitions of their sons, aalhey looked forward to what might be some years hence; but Lelia, in her own person was a nonentity. Her mother had died in giving her birth ; and for ninny a•year the life of the child had been pre served, or rather her death prevented; by what seemed a miracle. Even after the disease, what ever it might have been, had yielded, to the sleep. less care of her father, she remained in that state which part of the country might have passed for delicacy of feeling. Besides being in some degree shut out from the society of her equals by this peculiarity of situation she was prevented from enjoying it by another. While her body' languished, the cultivation of her mind bad advanced. Music, to which she was passionately attached, paved the way for poetry ; to spite of the doctrines is described in the exprer eion " not unwell" rather in perfect health ; al ibi:lash the most troublesomt. memento that remain ed of her illness was nothing more than a nervous timidity, which in a more civilized of a certain school you have in England, unfitted her lot..asso ciation with the ignorant and unrefined. That Le lia, therefore, had never sought to hear the ballads of Erancesco, was occasioned,, it may readily be believed, by nothing more than an instinctive ter. ror mingled with the dislike with which the name of the ruffian minerali inspired her : and in truth, she listened to the tales that from time, to time reached her eat; of the young gold-seeker, with somewhat of the vague and distant interest with which we attend to descriptions or a beautiful but wjltl and cruel animal of another heinisphere. There came one at last, however, to whom poor Lilia listened. She was sitting alone, according to her usual custom, at the bottom of her lathe! gar den, singing, while she plied her knitting needle, in the soft low tone peiultar to her voice, and be yond which it had do compass. The only fence of the garden at this place was a belt of shrubs; which enriched the border of the'cleep ravine it overlook ed. At the bottom of this ravine flowed the river, rapid and yet sullen; and beyond, scarcely distant two hundred yards. a range of precipitous cliffs shut in the horizon. The wilt and desolate aspe c 'el otthe scene was overshadowed and controlled, as it were, by the stern grandeur of these ramjarts of nature; and the whole contributed to fortesuelr a picture as artists travel a ihonsand miles to cocteth. plate. Lelia, however, had looked upon horn her childhood. It had never been forced upon her imagination by contrast, for she l i ked never traveled five miles from her father's houee, and she contin ued to knit, and sing, and dream, without even PUBLISHED EVERY SATURDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA, BY E, O'MEARA GOODRICH.- raising her eyes Her voice was loud enough to be caught by the echoes of the opposite rocks ; although sometimes, it did happen that, milled away by enthusiasm, she produced a tone which 'was repeated by the fairy minstrels of the glen. On the present occasion she listened with surprise to a similar effect, for her voice had died almost in a whisper; She rang a mania in I louder keg The challenge was accep ted, and a rich, sweet voice took up the the strain of her lavorite ballad where she had dropped it telia's first impUlseit was to fly ; her second to sit still and watch for a renewal of the music ; and the third, which obeyed, le -steal on-tiptoe to the edge of the ravine, and look down into-the abyss, from whence the voice seemed to proceed The echo she discovered, was a young man engaged in tam; igating a raft down the river—such as is used by the peasantry of the Alps 'o float themselves and their wareitto market, and which at this moment atrand• ed on the shore, at die foot of the garden. He leant upon an oar, as if in the act of pushing of! his clumsy boat : but his face was upturned, like one, watchine. for the appear-uice of a star ; and Lelia (cli a stitht-.11 eim v. whorl she knew not why, that he had seen tier through he trees while she eat sing. ins and had t'btopted this method of tomb 1- , loir attention without alarmiret her. If such had been his purpose, he scene I in have no °het' r mew ; after gazing for an im-tant, he , withdrew Ili , ryes in confusi , . , ~, d pimhing ofl the raft, dropped rapidly down 1:1,t aver, and was soon out of s‘ght. Lelia's He was as c..'m as the sleeping lake, which a cloud will blat I.c:i, and the wing of an insect disturb. Even this little incident was a mat ter for the thought, and entered into the soft rever ies of sixteen. She. felt-her cheeks tingle as she wondered how long the young man had gazed at her throilg 2 h trees, and why he had floated away without speaking When he succeeded in attracting her attention. . There was a delicacy 'in his little contrivance, to save hersurprise, perhaps the terror ,of seeing a stranger' in a such a situatioo ;';there was modesty in the contusion with which he turned away his head ; and, what perhaps was as valuable as either even to the gentle Lelia;: there was admi ration, deep and devout; in those b;illiant eyes that had wailed beneath' hers. The youth was as beautiful as a dream—and his voice !--it was so clear and yet siii soft—so power. fat, yet so melodious ! It haunted her ear like a prediction. It was a weekbefore she agau ,T saw . this Apollo of her girlish imagination. It ttecirned as if the in. terval they had lime to get acquainted ! 'They ex changed salutations--and the text time they con= versed. There WO nothing to steriOus in their communications. 'He was probably a fatmees son of the upper valley, wbriihad been attracted, like .others, by the fame of theJ heiress of old-. Nice-oil. He, indeed, kne* nothing of books, and he loved " nEssatitess ,DEXIINCIATION Stall Mt QUSAMEXL." Poetry more for the sake of ,musier_than its own bat what of,thatkthe writingwof God were around and within them ; and these, if they did not under stand they at least lel4 He was bold and vigor.. ous of mind ; and this is beauty to the lair and tim. al. lie skimmed along the edge of the precipice, and sprung from rock .to rock in the torrent, as fear less tut the chainois. He was beautiful, and brave, and proud ; and this glorious creature,- with radiant eyes, and glowingcheeks, laid himself down artier feet to gaze-taxifther face, as the poets worship the moon - ' The world, so monotonous, so bfnnk, so drear, was now a Heaven to poor Lelia. One thing only perplexed her; they were sufficiently long—accor ding to tlin calculations of sixteen—and sufficiently well acquainted ; their sentiments had been avow ea without disguise ; their faith plighted beyond re call ; and as yet her lover bad never mentioned his name! Lelia reflecting on this circumstance, con demned, far the moment, her prec)pitition; but there was now uo help for it, and, she could only resolve to extort the secret—Hsecrel it was—at the next meeting. " My name?" said the lover, in reply to her fink and sulden questions; " you will knew it soon enough." " But I will not•be said nay. You must tell me now—or at events to morrow night." " Why to-morrow night F' " Because a young, rich suitor, on whom my father's heart is set, is then to propose, in ° proper form, for this poor hand; and, let the confession cost what it may, I will n)1 overthrow the dearest plans of my only parent without giving a reason which will satisfy even him. Oh, you do not know him ! Wealth weighs as nothing in the scale against his daughter's happiness. You may be poor for aught I know ; but you are good, and honorable, and therefore, in his eyes, no unfitting match for Lelia." It, was almost dark; but Lelia thought she pe e -'4ed a smile on her lover's lace while she spoke, :nil a gay suspicion flashed through her mind, which made her heart beat and her cheeks tingle. He did not answer for many minutes; a struggle of some iind seemed to agitate him; but at length, in a suppressed voice, he said— " To•mottow night, then." " Here !" u No, in your father's house; in the presence of —my rival." The-morrow night arrived; and, with a cere monious formality practised oh such occasions in the valley, the lover of what Lelia had spoken was presented to his mistress, to ask permission to pt' his address; or, in other words=for there is but short shrift for an Anzasca cfethand her hand in marriage. This was indeed a Match on which old Niccoli had set his heart ; for the of: fer was by far the best that could have been found from the Vald*Ossola to Moict Rosa. That youth was rich, well looking, and prudent even to cold ness ;, what more could a father desire P Lelia had put oil the minute of appearing in the porch, where the elders of both families had assem bled, as long as possible. While mechanically ar ranging het dress, she continued to gaze out of the lattice, which commanded a view of the toad and of the parties below, in expectation that increased to agony. Bitter were her reflections -during that interval - ! She was almost tempted to believe that what had passed was nothing more than a dream —a fragment of herimaginalion,.disordered by pee try and solitude, and perhaps in some measure warped by - disease. Had she been made the sport of an idlemoment f—and was the smile she had observed on her lover's face only the herald of the laugh_ which perhaps at this moment testified his enjoyment of her perplexity and disappointment ! His conduct presented itself in the double, light of lolly and ingratitude ; and at length, in obedience to the repeated summons of her father, she descen ded to the porch with a trembling step and a fever ed cheek. The eight of the company that awaited her awed and depres-ed her. She shrunk from them with more titan Morbid timidity ; while their stony eyes, fixed upon her in all the rigidity of form and trans mined custom, seemed to freeze her very heart.— There was one there, however, whose ideas of " propriety," strict as they were, could never pre vent his eyes from glii-tening at the approach of Le lia. Her father, after fielding her for a moment at arm's length, as with a doming look his eyes wan dered over the bravery of her new white dress, drew her close to his bosom, and blessed her. " My child,"' said he, smiling gayly through a gathering tear, " it is hard for an old man to of parting with all he loves in the world ; but toe ' laws of nature must be rerected. Yourg men wilt love, and young lasses will like, to the end'uf time ; and new families will spring up out of their union. It is the way, girl—it is the fate of maids, and there's an end: For sixteen years have I watched over you, even like a miser watching his gold ; and now, treasnre of my life, I give, you away I All I ask, on your part is obedience—ay, and cheerful obedience —after the manner of our ancestors, tied according to the laws of God. Alter this is over let the old man stand aside or pass away, when it pleases Heaven ; he has left hischild happy, and his child's children will Wass his memory. He has drank of the cup oh lile—sweet and bitter—bitter and sweet —even to the bottom; but with honey, Lelia— thanks to his blessed darling !—with honey in the dregs!" Lelia fell on her father's neck, and sobbed aloud. So long and bitter was her sobbing that the formali ty of the party was broken, and the circle narrow ed anxiously around her. When at last she raised her head, it was seen that her cheeks were dry, and her face as .white as the marble olCordalia. A inurmur of compassion -ran through the by- . standers ; and the words" poor thing so deli cater!—old hysterics!" wr,riwhisperingiy o repeated from one to the - other. Tbe father : was alarmed, and hastened to cut short a ceremony which seem ed so apptiliiig the•nervous tlibiditrof his daughl ter, • "ft is enough," said he . ;,"all will be over in a moment. Lelia, do you accept of this young man for your suitor L—come, one little word, and it is done." Lelia tried in vain to speak, att.l she bowed her acquiescence. "Sirs,'' continued Mead,- "my daughler - ac: eepts of die suitor you offer. It is enough"; salute your mistress, my son, and let us go in, and pass round the cup of alliance." "The maiden bath trot answered," observed a cold, cautious Voice unions. - the relations of the sal tor. "Speak, thert," l said Niccoli, casting an angry and disdaMfid look at the formalist - 0 it is but a word y a'sound, speak !" Lelia's dry, white lips had unclosed to obey, when the gate of the little court was wrenched open by one who was apparently too much in haste to find the latch, and a man rushed into the mit!st of the circle. "Speak not I" he shouted, " I forbid !" Lelia sprang towards him with a stifled cry, and would have thrown herself into his arms, had she not been suddenly caught midway by her father. " What is this?" demanded he sternly, but in ris ing alarm ; " ruffian—drunkard—madman !—what would you here?" "Yon cannot provoke me, Niccoli," said the in truder, " were you to spit upon me ! I come to de mand your daughter in marriage." " You I" shouted the enraged father. "You!" repeated the relations in tones of won der, rage, or ridicule, according to 'the tem perament of the individual. "There needeth no more of this," said the same cold, cautious voice that bad spoken before; " wedding begun in a brawl will never end well.— To demand a girl in legitimate marriage is neither sin nor'shame ; let the young man be answered by the maiden herself, and then depart in peace." " He bath spoken well," raid the more caufoos among the old men; "speak, daughter; answer, and let the man be gone!" • Lelia grew pale j and then red. She made a step fat ward—hesitated—looked at her father timidly— and then stood as still as a statute, pressing her clasped hands upon her bosom, as if to silence the throbbings that disturbed her reason. "Girl," said old Niccoli, in a voice of suppressed passion, tei he seized her by the arm, "do you knots , that man ?—did you ever see him before ? Answer, can you tell me his name?" "No !" "No l—the insolent ruffian! Go, girl, present your cheek to your future husband, that the customs of our ancestors may be fulfilled, and leave me to clear my doorway of vagabonds." She stepped forward mechanically; but when the legitimate suitor. emending his arms, ran for. ward to meet her, she eluded him with a sudden shriek, and staggered towards the intruder. "Hold—bold I" cried the relations, "you are mad—you know oat what you do—it is Francesco, the minerali !" She had reached the sitanger, who did not move from where he stood ; and, as the lilomened name met her ear, she fainted in his arms. The confuSion that ensued was ifidescribable.— Lelia was carried senseless into the house ; and it required the efforts•of half the party to hold back her father who would have grappled with the min erali upon the spot. Francesco stood,for some time with folded arms, in mournful and moody silence; but when at length the voice demising, which Nic- coli continued to pour forth against him bad sunk in exhaustion, he advanced and confronted him. I can bear-those names," said he.." from you Some of them, you know well, are undeserved ; and if otheis fit, it is more my misfortune than my fault. If to chastise insults, and render back scorn for scorn is to be s ruffiian, I am one; but no one can be called a vagabond who resides in the habi• cation and follows the trade of his ancestors. These things, however, are trifles-Wm they are only words. Your real objection to• me is that I am Pope. •It is a strong one. If 1 choose to take. your daughter without a dowry, I would take her in spite of you all ; but T will leave her-.-even to that thing without a soul—rather than subject so gentle a being to the privations and vieisitudes of a life like mine. 1 demand, therefore, not simply your daughter, but a dowry, if only a small one; and you shall hare the right lo require that on my put shall not be empty handed. She is young, and there can be, and ought to be no hnrry with her ma,liage; but give me only a year—a single year; name a reasno.l;le sum; and if by the appointed time I canna: tell the money into yonr hand, I here by t.agoge to relinquish every claim, which her generous preference has given me, upon 3'.11f daughter's hand." "It is well put," replied the cold and cautious voice in the assembly. «A year at any rate, wonld hay', elapsed be tweet' the present betrothing and the damsel's mar riage. If the young man before the bells of twelve, on this night twelve months, layeth down upon the table, either in coined money, or in gold, or golden ore, the Eame sum which we were here ready to guarantee on the part of my grandson, why I for one, shall not object to the maiden's whitn—pro- tided it continues so long—being consulted, in the disposal of bet' hand, in preterence to her father's judgment and desires. „The sum is only three thou sand livres A laugh of scorn end derision rose among the rti latione. 41 Yes, yes," said they, it is but just. Let the minerali proeuee three thonsand livers, and he shall have his bride.• Neighbor Niccoli, it is a fair pro. Fisal; allow us•to intercede for Francesco, and beg your assent "Sire," said Francesco, in perplexity mingled with anger, !gibe. sum of three , thousand livreft.',C—, He !vas inteitupted by another forced !sigh el dee rision.' 4 rhis a fair prOposaly" repealed the relatioite " Agreed!" replied Fianeesao ) Oka burs( o haughty indignatioh and with a.swelling heart ha withdrew. A very remarkable changer appeared to take place from-that moment m ,the character and habits of the minerali. He not only deserted the company of his riotous associates,. but even that of the few respectable persona to whose houses he had obtain ed admission, either by talents for singing, or the comparative propriety of his condom. Day after day he labored in his precarious avocation. The changes of the seasons were not • 1104 admitted as excuses. The storm did not drive him tothiwine shed, and the rain did not confine him to his, hut Day after day, and often night alter night he was to be found in the field—on the mountains-.by the sides of the rain courses—on the shores of the tor rent: HP rarely indulged himself even in the recreation of meeting his mistress, for whom . all this labor was submitted to. Gold, not as a means but as an end, seemed to be his thoughts by day, and his dream by night, the object and end of existence.— When they did meet in darkness and loneliness, and mastery, it was but to exchange a few harried sentences of hope and comfort, and affected reli ance upon fortune. On these occasion tears, and tremblings, and hysterical sobbinp, sometimes told, on her part, at (ince the hollowness of her words and the weakness of her constitution; but on his, all was, or seemed to be, enthusiasm and steadfast expectation. Days and weeks, however, passed by—moons rolled away—the year was thawing to its wane, - and a great part of the enormous sum was still in the womb of d a mountains. Day by day, week by week, Month by month, the hopes of the minerali became fainter. He could no longer bestow- the comfort which did not cheer even his dreams.— Glcomy and sad, he could only strain his mistress in his arms, without uttering a word when she ven• lured an inquiry respecting his progress, and then hurry away to resume, mechanically, his hopeless task. It is a strtnge, sometimes an awful thing, to look nto the mystery of the female mind. Lefial health had received a shock from the cis. cumatancea we have recorded, which left her cheek pale, and her limbs weak for many month; and to this physical infirmity was now added the effect of those dumb, but too eloquent, interviews with her lover. The lower be sunk in despondency, howev. er, and the more desperate grew their affairs, the higher her spirit arose, as if to quell and control their famine Her hopes seemed to grow in pro panion with his fears, and the strength-IP:Web de serted him went over as an ally and apponer to her . weakness. Even her bodily health received its direction from her mind. Her nerves seemed to recover their tone, her cheek its hue, and her eye its brilliancy. The cold and sluggish imagination of a man is unacquainted with half the resources of a woman in such circomaances. Disappointed in her dependence on fortune and 'casualty Lelia be. took herself to the altars and gods of her people ! Saints and martyrs were by turns invoked; vows were. offered tip, and pilgrims and religions watch. ings performed. Then came dreams and prmligieti into play, and omens, and auguries. Sorter were wrested from the pages of Dante, and warnings and commands translated from - the mystic writings, of the sky— "The sutra erhieh ere the poetry or Heave: V. The year touched upon its- close; and the gain which the gold seeker had amassed, although great almost to a miracle, was still far—very far, from sufficient. The last day of the year arrived, usher ed in by storm, and thundering*, and lightnings ; and the evening fell cold and dark upon the des pairing labors of Francesco. He was on the side of the iutiuntairt opposite Niccoli's house; and as daylight died in the valley, he saw, with inexpres sible bitterness of soul, by the number of lights in the windows, that the fete was not forgotten. Some trifling success, however, induced him, like a drowning man grasping at a straw, to continue his search. He was on the spot indicated by a dream of his enthusiastic mistress; and she had conjured him not to abandon the attempt till the bell of the distant church should silence their hopes for ever. His success contitmed. lie was working with the pick-axe, and had discovered a very small per pendicular vein ; and its was just possible that this, altho' altogether inadequate in itself might be cros sed at a greater depth, by a horizontal one, and thus form one of the gruff:, or nests, in which the ore is plentiful and easily 'ettracted. To work, however, was difficult, and to. perk lung impossi• ble. His strength was almostiEthausted ; the storm beat fiercely in his•face ; and the darkness increas ed every moment. His heart wholly failed him ; his limbs trembled, a cold perspiration bedewed his brow; and, as the last rays ot daylight departed from the mountain-side I e fell senseless upon the ground. How long he remained in this slate he did not know ; but he was recalled to Me by a sound re sembling, as he imagis a human cry. The storm howled more wildly Than ever along the side of the mountain, and it Was now pitch ',Jerk; but on turning round his head he saw, at a little distance above where he lay, a small steady light Fran. cesco's heart began to quake The light advanced towards him,'and he perceived that it was borne by a flptre arrayed in white from head !o foot. " Lelia !" cried he in amazement, mingled with rnperstitious terror, as he recognized theleatureeof his young, fair mistress. " Waste not time in words," said she " much may yet be. done, and I have the most perfect as surance that now at least lam not deceived Up, and be of good heart. Wok for here is light. I will sit down in this shelter, bleak though it be, of the Plifl, and aid you with mylPrayera, since I can. dolt with my hands." - . • Francesco seized the axe, and stirred, hall with shame,•half with edmiration,lirthe courage of the generous girl, resumed his labOiwith new vigor. • "Be of good heart," continued Iwiia, "anii all •,.. '4; • will yet- be wend Bravely—bravely dowet bi sore - the saints have beard Only once she uttered anythingi semmthdin eompkiiut—" It is so cold !" she raid, ig mmitibasie, dearest, for !cannot find my way home, ifl weak% without the light." By and bye she repeated Inure fisquently therir. junction to " make haste." Francesco's heart bled while he thought of i sufferings of the sick and delicate gill ea such a night, in sub a place; and bis blowe fell deeper. ately on the stubborn reek. He was now eta little distance from the spot where shear, and' was tuat about to beg her to bring the light nearer, when abi spoke againi " Make hasta—make haste !" she said, " dos time is almost come--I shall be wanted—l eon wan. tee—t - oan stay no longer—forewell•lt" Francesco looked up, bat the light wu alietadit gone. .It was so strange, this sudden desertion 1 If de, termined to g e, why did She go alone? aware, a* she must have been, that Ws remaining in the dart could be of 'no use. Could it be that her he a rt had changed; the moment hpr hopes hell vanished! U was a bitter and ungenerous thought i.neventheless i it served to bridle the speed with which Francesco at first sprung forward to overtake his mistrals. He bad not gone far, however, when it sudden arrested his progress. His heart melted to bear,twi grew faint, and would have fallen to the grtiatid„' bat far the support of a rock, againsti wettish he stag gered. When he recovered, he retraced - bit demi as accurately as it was possible to do in utter dark ness. He knew not whether he found the exact spot on which Leliathad sat, bnt bewas =roof the surrounding localities; and, if she was still there her white dress rood no docbt gleans even throttles the thick night which snrrounded her. With a lightened hewn-1o:, compared with That phantom of the mind which, had presented itself, all things seemed endurablcs—he begun again to descend the mountain. In 'a place so aingalarly wild, where the rocks were piled around in corn. binations at once fantastic and sublime, it ,was net wounderful that the light carried by hie" mistress should be wholly invisible to him, even bad it been much nerer than was by this time probable. Far less was it surprising that the shouts which eir. er and anon he offered should not teach her ear; for he was on the lee side of the storm, which I. ed among the cliffs with a fury that might have drowned the thunder. Even to the practised feet of Francesco, the reel, without the smallest light to guide his imps, waa danger:nail in the extreme; and to the occupation thus afforded to his thoughts it was perhaps owing dist he reached Kiecoll's house in a state of mind to enable him to acquiet himself irr a manner net derogatory to the dignity of manhood. "Niccoli," said he, on entering the tom, " I have come to return you thanks for the trial you have el. lowed me. I have failed, and, in terms of the en.' gagement between us I relinquish my claims to your danghter's hand " He would then have retired assudenly as he err. tered ; but old Niccoli caught hold o his arm s' Bid us farewell," said he, in a tremulous voice, "go not in anger. Forgive me for the ;rash words I used when we last met. I have watch you, Fran. cesco, from that day—end—." He wiped away a tear, as he looked upon the soiled antLueolected eppirerorttcl tee fisggird and' glassily face of the young man—" No matter—my word is plighted... lareireit Now call my daughter,"' ath:ed he, rr lad I pray God that the business of this night end in no ill!" Fran'nese° lingered at the doer. Re troold fain have seen but the skirt of Lelia'a mantle before.da ! patting! " She is not in her robin I" eriei a voice of alarm Francesco's heart quaked. Presently the whole house was astir. The sound of feet fanning here and there was heard, and agitated yokes call ed out her name. The next moment the old man rushed out of the room ; and, laying both hands on Fracesco's shoulders looked wild in his lace. "know you aught of my daughter !" said he.-- "Speak, I conjure you, in the name of the Blessed Saviour! Tell that you have married her, and I wi!l forgive and bless you !—Speak, will you no speak ! A single word ! Where is my daughter Where is my Lelia! my life—my light—my hope —my child '!" The minerali started as from I% dream,- and looked around apparently without comprehending what had parsed. A strong shod. der then shook his flame for an instant. n Lights!" he said, torches—every one of you ! Follow me!" and he rushed ont into the night. He was speedily overtaken by the whole of the company amounting to more than twelve men, with lighted larches, that flared like Meteors in the storm. 4.9 for this leader himself, he seemed scarce able to drag one limb alter the other, and-be staggered to and Ire, like one that is drunk with wine. They at length reached the piaci he sought; and by the light of the :etches, something white was seen at thi base of the cid]. It was Lelia. She leaned back agair 6i the rock; one hand was press ell upon her heart, like a person who shrinks from cold; and in the other she hell the lamp, the flame of which had expired in the socket: Francesca threw himself on his knees at one side and the al man et the other, while a light, as strong as dal - , was shed by the torches upon the spot. She was dead—dead—stone dead ! Aber a time, the childless old man went to seek oat the object of his daughter's love ; but Frances. co waft never teen from that fatal night. A wail. ing sortnd is sometimes heard to this day'aptin the' hills, and the peasants eay'it is the voice of the minerali seeking his mistrws among. the rocks; and every dark and and !dourly night the lamp of Lelia is still teen upon the mountain, as she figlde her phantom lover in his search for gold. Such is the story of the storm lights of Anzaarii, and the only part of it which, iarine is the,trartrlPT lion into die langwe oi ciTiii.rilimen pi tho meets of a tuticand Ignotant • 1.- Z =MO tee lIIM