WE DOLLAR PER ANNUM INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. T O WAIST D A.: Thursday Morning, August 11, 1859. [From Chamber's Journal.] POUDRE ROSE. i. A dark wintry day, in the year of grace 1839, was closing upon the final scene of one of those tragedies of real life which would be affecting, were they not, in France at least, of such everv day occurrence. Eugene Beaude sert, the direct representative of a long line of courtiers, warriors, diplomatists, commencing with the Merovingian kings, and now for some time schoolmaster in Lyon, was dying in a mean apartment au troisieme of a house iu an obscure street of that wealthy and splendid city • not, however, of want, of physical des titution, as the wine, cordials, and various tempting delicacies by his bedside, the heaped up blazing tagots on the hearth, the presence of an unexceptionable nurse, and, above all, ofM. Vermont, a physician of eminence, whose minutes wtre Napoleons, lully testified. Nor, still judging by its surronndiugs, ought unsat isfied soul-cravings, hunger of the spirit, to have bet-u felt at that death bed, since two ministers to opiritua 1 needs, one officious, the other official, were in attendance there. The first, a stout, somewhat rustic-looking man, past middle age, at the entrance of the Abbe Morlaix, the famous preacher at the Church of the Assumption, had hastily returned his balm for hurt minds, Plato's Divine Dialogue, to his pocket, and shrunk back to a corner of the room where the fire-blaze revealed him with but fitful indistinctness. I, however, from knowing .Tales Delpech so well, can easily iden tify, through the flashing gloom, that large head, fairly developed intellectually, and that face every way ordinary save for a pair of glittering gray eyes ; which, from under cover of the pent-house brows, pierce to a very long way off—further, deeper, indeed, than it is de sirable to follow, even in imagination. The countenance withal has not what is usually termed a malignant expression. The most timid person, a girl, would hardly be scared at confronting it upon a lonely road in the even ing of such another dark day as this ; for plainly, vividly, as that unblest, bastard wis dom called cunuing, caution,timidity, are writ ten thereon for dullest eyes to read ; there is al.-o a certain air of bonhomie, assumed it may ]) C —hut, if so, habitually assumed—which does much to neutralize the vulpine craftiness of aspect which familiar observers were wont to say fuitbfuliy mirrored Jules Delpech's vulpine crafty soul A rash judgment, let us, hope, iu submission to the divine injunction of charity— the charity that thinketh no evil, believeth no evil, with which M. Morlaix, a lew minutes since, just before the arrival of the physician, relinked the raoribuud's glare of rage, called forth bv a somewhat eulogistic allusion to .Madame la Baronne de Vautpre ; the person age albeit to whom Eugene Beaudesert is in debted for the lay and clerical ministrations which console, or embitter—for there is no in terpreting the changeful lights and shadows which flit across that constrainedly calm white face —these last supreme moments of parting life. There was no warning of how few those moments were in the suave tones of Dr. Ver mont as he felt the pulse and looked steadily into the eyes of his patient. lie merely ob served, addressing the nurse, that M. Beaude sert must be kept as quiet as possible ; and then turned away with a slight gesture to the abbe, who followed him to the door, where a few whimpered words passed between them The look and manner of the abbe, as he again turned towards the sick man, revealed, deary as speech, the significance of those whispered words ; and Jules Delpech starting up, hur riedly embraced, and bade his friend adieu, as if for a brief time only, pressed one of the cold hands of a girl s tting by the head of the bed, in both his own, softly suggested hope and courage, and glidi d from the apartment. The nurse, at a sign from the abbe, did the same, and then the reverend gentleman request ed the girl to permit him to speak for a few minutes with her father alone. The answer was an outburst of convulsive grief—passion ate exclamations of refusal, which the abbe could only partially calm by consenting that she should remain whilst he administered the last rites of his church to the now avowedly dying sufferer ; whose thoughts, whilst fully comprehending, as he seemed to do, the abbe's meaning and purpose, were nevertheless—if one might judge by the feeble demonstrations permitted by his fast failing strength—with his child, with the earthly future of that young life ; and but slightly impressed by the immi nence of his own death, and the judgment to follow, announced by the symbolic ceremonial, and the solemn words of the priest. And now, whilst the abbe is fulfilling his ap pointed function, I may briefly pass in review the previous and determining incidents of the life-career thus prematurely closing ; closing prematurely, there can be no question, ss far as life is reckoned by length of days, for it was no longer ago than the autumn of 1803, that the birth of Eugene Beaudeseri, the first born of a distinguished generul of that name, and Kstelle, his wife, nee Bresson, a rich heiress of Paris, was celebrated in that city with much pomp und eclat. Clouds qnick'y over grew arid darkened the brilliant future that seemed to await the child. General Beaude sert was killed at Marengo ; and his widow, to whom, by the provisions of the ante nuptial contract, her whole fortune reverted, soon married again, became the mother of a numer ous family, and gradually so estranged from her first-born, that after his tenth birthday, 6lie never again beheld him, and died without expressing a wish to do so. It is probable that this unnatural feeling was excited and confirmed by the civilly contemptuous treat ment which the plebian wife of General Beaude sert had met with from her husband's family ; one of that section of the Quartier St. Ger main, which, always with an arrierepenset, THE BRADFORD REPORTER. capitulated with the Consulate and the Empire for the profitable honors, illegitimate us they might be, and, of course, were, with which it was the weakness of the Man of Destiny to always eagerly reward such condescendence.— Madame la Baronne de Vautpre, General Beaudesert's widowed and childish sister, had especially never been at pains to conceal her disdain of her brother's ignoble alliance and no sooner was it ascertained that ci-devant Madame Beaudesert, nee Bresson, evinced a decided dislike of her son Eugene, than Mad ame la Baronne became his active partisan and patroness ; and an arrangement was final ly come to by which the guardiauship cf the last male scion of the ancient house of Beaude sert was legally transferred from the roturier mother to the aristocratic aunt. Madame de Vautpre discharged her new self imposed du ties, everybody agreed, in the most liberal, ex emplary manner. Eugene Beaudesert's educa tion was conducted by the first masters ; his purse was supplied without sting or grudge ; and he had but just completed his eighteenth year, when Madame la Baronne obtained the high favor and honor of a commission in the Garde Royalt for her fortunate nephew. But, as most of us know, or have heard, blood is stronger than water, especially that which wells up from the mighty arteries which nourish and sustain the common life of a people ; and Eu gene's precociously manifested tastes, antipa thies, predilections—all clearly traceable to his maternal origin—proved to be diametrically opposed to the tastes.antipathies, predilections of the long line of Beaude>ert celebrities dat ing from the Merovingian kings ; not one of whom, that unfilial descendant of a noble race sneeringly remarked, could be justly accused of having stained his escutcheon by doing any thing useful or helpful to mankind. As ex amples of the young man's shocking hetero doxy in matters ancestral and armonial, I may instance his proclaimed opinion, that there were in the world men as capable of governing France as Louis le Desire—an extravagance which cost him his Garde Roy ale epaulets ; that Napoleon was at least equal as a general to the great Conde ; and that to have created " a connoisseur in dry bones"—otherwise Cu vier the comparative anatomist—a baron, was not a detestable desecration by Bonaparte ol that order of nobility ! That atrocities like these should so frequently sully the lips of her nephew and heir, was naturally a source of disquiet to Madame de Vautpre ; but, to do that lady simple justice, far too right-minded and sensible a person to take au scricuz the froth-follies which flow so copiously from the lips of vain an volatile yonth ; and she more than once took occasion to observe in his hear ing, that so long as her nephew did nothing in derogation of his high lineage, whatever he might think or say. would not affect his pres ent or future position as far as she had control over it. Eugene Beaudesert was in his twen tieth year, when Madame la Baronne felt or fancied that it might be expedient to at once clearly define what it was that to do, or to leave undone, would fatally compromise the young man's future. She did so in the mild, impassive manner natural to her, after placing in his hand a draft on Lafitte for the large sum he had just intimated au immediate uud pressing occasion for. " You were conversing for some time, I no ticed. at the ball the other evening, with the Count and Mademoiselle de Cevennes ; what, frankly now, is your impression, Eugene, of the young lady ?" "My impression of Mademoiselle de Cev ennes! Frankly, then, no impression at all— except, ma foi, the vague one of a perfectly well-dressed, common-place young person, no wise distinguishable from the crowd of perfect ly well dressed, common place young persons we met there. "I have reason to believe," continued Mad ame de Vautpre, " that the proposal of an al liance by marriage of the Beaudesert and Cev ennes families would be favorably entertained by Monsieur le Compte de Cevennes." " Plail-U, madame !" exclaimed the startled nephew, flushing scarlet. " In other, though scarcely plainer words," resumed Madame de Vautpre, " that were Eu gene Beaudesert to become a suitor for the hand of Louise de Cevennes, he would not be exposed to the mortification of a refusal." " Yon must be jesting, madame," rejoined the nephew with some temper. " What have I done, that it should be propoed to wed me with such an incarnation of ugliness, ill-tern per, and Satanic ptide, as Mademoiselle de Cevennes?" " That is your ragite impression of the lady, is it? It is not a flattering one, at all events; and do not fear, Eugene, that I shall ever urge you to blaspheme the holy sacrament of marriage"—l should here statj; that it had been for some time whispered in certain circles that Madame la Baronne de Vautpre was growing terribly devout—" by uniting yourself indissoluble with a woman you could not love or esteem ; however " " Ma ckere. tante," interrupted Eugene, seiz ing Madame de Vautpre's hand, and kissing it with fervor—"you are so good." " It is well, at the same time, to remind you, Eugene," continued Madame la Baronne, with her usual calm smile and quiet evenness of voice, " that I expect from you a similar ab negation of selfish feeling in the affair of mar riage—which is to say that you will never think of uniting yourself with a person whom I could not love or esteem ! Above and before all, Eugene"—and here the speaker's earnestness lent almost tragic force and depth to Madame de Vautpre's mild, steadfast look, and tran quil, measured toues—"do not fail to bear constantly in mind that to follow your father's unhappy example, by contracting a mesallmnu, would be simply und definitively to pronounce irrevocable seuteuce upon yourself—not mere ly of immediate separation between you and me, bnt of the forfeiture of your else assured inheritance of the large possessions, which are, as von are well aware, at my absolute disposul." "My dear madame," Eugene managed to enunciate without much stammering, and with an affectation of uncoDcern with which bis changing color sod altogether discomfited as- PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY AT TOWANDA, BRADFORD COUNTY, PA., BY E. O'MEARA GOODRICH. " REGARDLESS OF DENUNCIATION FROM ANY QUARTER." pect did not harmonize, " you do not imagine, you do not suppose, that I—that you— that" * " I suppose nothing, imngine* nothing, Eu gene," interrupted the locking i her ecritoire, and rising to the iuter : view ; " I merely state be careful ly borne in mind, that were, you so insane as | to contract a discreditable "marriage—and by discreditable marriage I mean one that I could not sanction—you from that moment would be my nephew in name only, assuredly iu noth iug more. Do you return to dine ? No ; well, I shall be sure to meet you at Madame Moruy's. Adieu." An indifferent passer-by would have been struck by the extreme disquietude evinced by Eugene Beaudesert us he left his auut's splen did mansion ; but in life's careless April-time the clouds pass swiftly ; and one little hour hud scarcely elapsed since Madame de Vuut pre's words had fallen so ominously upon his ear, when they were remembered only as the casual expression of a hasty resolve, which could never be carried out ; for was not be, Eugene Beaudesert, the only living being through whom the name, the glory, and the greatness of the Beaudeserts could be preserv ed, and contined for the admiration and rever ence of unborn ages ! That great irreversible fact would necessarily outweigh all minor con siderations, when poised in so very ancestral a mind as that of Madame de Vautpre, who had, besides, displayed such Christian kindness in relatiou to that abominable Mademoiselle de Cevennes—the young lady that had gracious ly, it seemed, intimated—the amiable Gorgon I —that she would not refuse him the blessing of her hand, should he veuture to solicit the precious gift. Ugh ! The repulsive idea thus suggested quickly gave place to another and very different one— that of cetle jeune et charmante Adricnne, whom it would be impossible not to love, were her father, instead of being a capitaine de dragons en retraite, a Paris shopkeeper. At that mo ment, the church-clocks chimed halt' past two, reminding the young dreamer that by the time he had reached the jeweller's, and received in exchange for his muuificent aunt's draft the superb necklace upou which Adrieune Champ fort had set her heart, it would be as much as he could do to reach Clichy by the hour he had appointed to be there. This was decisive ; and by three o'clock, Eugene Beaudesert, with the necklace—a trifle, which cost him five thousand francs, no more—safe in his pocket, was rattling gaily along the road leading to the modest Jwelling of his beautiful fiancee, and theu onwards,downwards, to marriage, re morse, ruin, despair—finally, to the dark room au troisieme in the Rue du Bac, Lyon, where the Abbe Morlaix is even now administering the viaticum to the heir of all the Beaudeserts ! An old, sad story, of which I need only furth er give the headings of the chapters interven ing between the bridal and burial. Madame la Baronne de Vautpre was in formed of the marriage of Eugene Beaudesert with Adrientie Chauipfort by u long and elo quent letter from the bridegroom ; to which au immediate answer was returned, enclosing a draft for ten thousand francs, and briefly stating that Madame de Vautpre wished Mon sieur und Madame Beaudesert happiness, in the state of life they had chosen for them selves ; but, as Monsieur Beaudesert had been timely and emphatically warned would be the case, Madame de Vautpre no longer looked upon that gentleman as her nephew, or as one possessing the slightest further claim upon her. It was all iu vain, as the teu thousand francs, and at last the costly ornaments which he had lavished upon Adrieune, melted away, that the alarmed and anxious husband and father—two daughters, Adrieune and Clarisse, were born to tiim during the first three years of wedded | life—put in practice every expedient, every | art lie was master of, to change his aunt's in- 1 exorable decision ; Madame de Vautpre was ! impassable as marble, and as smooth and pol Lhed also ; her words and manner, in the per sonal interviews which her nephew contrived to force upon her, whilst clearly expressive of unswerving resolve, never betraying tne slight est irritation or anger. Thus, step by step, poverty came upon the '■ rash couple ; the poverty, armed with serpent | stings, that treads upon tire heels of reckless j self-gratification, and which, but for Captain Champforl's pension—a rather considerable ; one for his position, he being an inferior mem- i ber of the Legion of Honor—would soon have been destitution ; for Eugene Beaudesert with ! all his wordy disdain of birth-privileges, per sisted iu keeping himself fiercely aloof from \ the contamination of useful employments, and none other were obtainable. And did the blind god that had luted them to such a pass, remain to gild the ruin he had made, to light up with his glowing torch the else drear dwel ling where sat Indigence with his black feet upon the cheerless hearth ; and Want, fever at the threshold, and waiting but for the death of that, white-headed, feeble old man to enter in, deepened the thick gloom with his gaunt forecast shadow ? Alas ! how could it be so ? Was it possible that the enchanting smile with which Adrieune Champfort received the neck lace we know of from her delighted lover, should cast its radiance upon the pawn-ticket of that same costly hauble.witli her husband, then of some seven sad years'standing, placed in her hand with a sour, fretful caution to put it safe ly away ? The truth was, neither had espoused the intended pirson. Eugene Beaudesert, Mademoiselle Champfort's idolizing admirer, was the nephew of Madame de Vanepre, heir to the splendid mansion in the Faubourg St. Germain, and the magnificent Chateau d'Ein, near Lyon, of which she had heard so much— a young gentleman, moreover, having free war ren of all the jewellers' shops and m-diste es tablishments iu Paris, the entree of Tuilleries balls, and possessed of a thonsand other trans ferable and charming gifts and privileges— 'surely a very different person from the pale, care-worn, listless man, whose stockings she darned with delicate fingers, at the faintest prc6gare whereof, in the old fast-fading time, those now downcast, nnregardfnl eyes bad flash ed with rapture ! ADd tbongb still retaining much of her brilliant form and feature-beauty, was Madame Beaudesert, wan wife and moth er, eternally busied with household cares, neces sarily negligent of the elegancies cf attire, im patient of the preseut, regretting the past, the fairy being being pictured in the youthful im agination of Eugene Beaudesert as the honor ed and admired mistress of his inherited splen dors, the grace and genius of the courtly cir cles to which it would be bis cbiefest pride to have raised her ? Clearly not. Do not sup pose that bitiug,bitter words—hasty aud quick ly repented of, it may be—such as escaped Adrienne's lips, when, as she was walking with her husband and children in the hot, dusty Champs Elysees, Cliurles Baudiu, the rich grocer's son, whose hand she had refused for that of Madame de Vautpre's nephew, dashed past in his new cabriolet with Madame BauJin iiis richly apparelled, very pretty wife by his side—words which ever after raukle in the memory, did not frequently pass between Mon sieur and Madame Beaudesert. And yet she was not, as the world goes, an unuffectionute wife and mother, nor he a bad, unloving hus j band and father. Both possessed amiable qualities—amiable qualities, I mean, of au or dinary degree—aud we kuow that none but those supremely angelic, uuflawed natures, whose only ascertainable dwelling-place, in my experience, is the brains of boys, girls, and authors, can illumine the bleak wastes of life with perennial radiance, make constant sun i shine in the shadiest places, sing ceaseless | songs of gladness upon empty stomachs, and delightedly disport themselves in the lowest : social quagmires, from whatever height buried down ! To that bright band, Monsieur and Madame Beaudesert assuredly did not belong. They, however, rubbed along disconsolately, till the death, in 1835, of Captain Champfort ; when Eugene, roused to spasmodic exertion, left his wile and youngest child Clarisse, at Clichy with the widow, and set out on foot with his daughter, dreamy Adrieune, for the Chateau d'Ein, where Madame du Vautpre had for some years constantly resided, determined npou one more effort—if not to regain her good will, at least to wrest from her by importunity the means of modest existence. His aunt re fused to see him, and returned his letters un opened ; wearied out at length, as well as seriously warned by the authorities, that to persist in his annoyance of Madame !u Baronne de Vautpre, would bring unpleasant conse quences upon himself, lie—by the advice of his new friend, Jules Delpech, at whose house, distant about a league from the chateau, he had taken up his temporary abode—hired an apartment iu the Rue du Back, Lyon ; and chiefly iu the hope of touching his aunt's heart through her pride, advertised in the loeul pa pers that Eugene Beaudesert, ex-captain cf the Garde Royale, gave lessons in reading, writing, arithmetic, and elementary mathematics. This notable expedient failed as completely as all previous ones. Madame de Vautpre was im movable by such fieble devices but a more po tent agent than the disinherited descendant of the Beaudeserts was at hand, bringing fullest relief to the sufferer, and rebuke, remorse to his obdurate, pitiless relative. Eugene Beaude sert fell suddenly ill ; the loug fever of despair had at length consumed .the golden oil of life, and the scetir decharite, whose mission of mercy took her to thai poor abode, saw that yet a few hours and the divine lamp would expire on earth, to be relumed only in liis presence whose breath first touched it with celestial fire. Having clearly possessed herself of the melancholy story sister Agnes lost no time in endeavoring to secure the g >od offices of the .\ bbe Morlaix, who she knew, was the con fessor of Madame de Vautpre, reputedly one of the most devout ladies of France. Tiiis was not a difficult task ; and the abbe, first visiting the moribund, hastened at once to the great lady's presence. Never was the abbe's sonorous eloquence more vigorously exerted ; and as he, with the authority of a church of which Madame de Vautpre was a fanatical adherent, entreated, menaced, commanded, hpr obduracy and pride of heart, insensible to the pleadings of humanity, yielded to religious terrors ; before the interview terminated, it was settled that all money could do to avert or delay the stroke of the destroyer was to be essayed ; aud should her nephew not re cover, his eldest daughter, Adricnne, was to be received at the Chateau d'Ein, avowedly as Madame de Vautpre's heiress. One condi tion, however, was peremptorily insisted upon, which was, that Adrieune should be separated from her family, who would be permitted to 1 sec her once only in each year ; the mother and sister to be paid a ye?rly pension of four tohus and francs during Madame de Vautpre's pleasure, which meant so long as they and Adrieune rigorously complied with the con dition of separation from each other. This ar rangement Eugene Beaudesert readily though ungraciously acquiesced in—l mean that he neither fell nor affected gratitude for the tardy and fear-extorted concession—and he commanded liis reluctant daughter to comply therewith when he was gone, as she valued his blessing and her mother and sister's welfare. Of that young girl—of Adrieune Beaudesert whom we just now saw passionately refuse to abandon for a moment the post assigned to her by filial love and duty—l have not as yet spoken, though it is around her the interest of this narrative will mainly gather. It will, however, be only necessary in this place to pre mise that Adrienne Beaudesert will be thirteen on her next birthday, that she is well formed and tall of her age, and that her now death pale complexion, eyes swollen and red with weeping, loose untended hair, obscure a beauty as exquisite as that of her mother at the same age ; whilst even through that clouding veil of tears and terror, the infantine candor, the faith—how shall I express myself ?—the simple trustfulness, verging upon credulity, that marks her character, is strikingly apparent. There are lines, however faint, nascent as yet, indi cative of firmness about her sweet, rose-lipped month, which cannot be too soon developed and confirmed. That simple, credulous predis position has nnhappily been fostered, exagger ated by the education, if It cao be called one, , she has received, chiefly from her grandmoth er ; an honest, simple-minded native of Prov ence, who has peopled the child's mind with the thousand and-one legends of fairies, de mons, witch-charms, potent alike for good and evil, received as gospel-truth in that part of F-ance ; and in which her grand-daughter be lieves as firmly as iu the ogre-like instincts of the dreaded relative to whose abhorred com panionship or custody her father's last com mands have doomed her. Childhood's common dreams, it may be said. Yes, but will they, I as such illusions usually do, exuale and pass i away in the expanding light of reason, or re r main hiddeu, latent in the mind of Adrieune i Beaudesert, till, under stimulating conditions, • tbev start into fatal life and activity ? This I is the yet unsolved euigma of the story of the i Poudre Rose. > 11. ; The pruyers are doue ; the holy oil has dried - upou the forehead of the anointed, tenant less : clay, by the side whereof Adrienne Beaudesert ! is lying in a stupor of despair, which the nurse, gliding noiselessly about the room, does not ! think it prudent to disturb. We ulso will de • purt, following the abbe, who goes straight to ; the Chateau d'Em. The face of Madame Iu , Baronne de Vautpre whitens visibly through • the thick rouge, as she listens to the reverend I man's tidings ; and the moment his voice ceases, she hastens to place in his hands a lurge sum ■ to be expended iu massea for the dead man's i soul. As to the funeral of the last male heir [ of the Beaudeserts, who is to be entombed in i the catacombs of the Church of the Assump- I tion, Madame de Vautpre desires that no ex pense shall be spared tiiereou ; aud the child i Adrienne is to be assured that the heart of her too long estranged relative is yearning to em brace, to love, to cherish her Monsieur Mor laix, moreover, who is shortly goiog to Paris i on business, undertakes to be the bearer of one j year's pension in advance, with the donor's good wishes, to Madame and Clarisse Beau i desert at Clichy. The chief facts just related having been i through; worthy of more than one paragraph iu the local papers, and being skilfully marveliz ed to suit the public taste, had the effect of attracting a numerous concourse of curious spectators to the funeral—one of the most irn posing, it was on all hands agreed,the Prompes i Funebres had got up for many years. The ■ catafalque, especially, was magnificent ; so much so, that the crowded congregation were i divided in opinion as to which was most solemn and effective—it, the catafalque, or the Abbe Morlaix's funeral oration, grounded upon the scripture verse, " Whoso breaketh a hedge, a ' serpent shall bite him." The abbe's eloquent illustrations of his theme were also variously interpreted. Some held tliat they applied to ( the relentless cruelty of Madame la Baronne de Vautpre, punished by the untimely death, | without male issue, of the heir to her house's j honors ; others, that preacher had in mind the : nephew's sin of ingratitude and disobedience towards his guardian and benefactress, resnlt ' | ing in misery and an early grave. Of this last opinion was Adrienne Beaudesert, upon whose i j heart the words of the abbe smote like so many swordstabs aimed at her dead father, exciting ! in the mind of the wounded, sensitive girl a feeling of resentment towards the reverend orator, not, unhappily, to be soon or easily effaced. Of all the obsequious attendants sur rounding her, there was not one who felt, or successfully assumed to feel, the slightest sympathy with her bitter grief. Ii was tl.c j less surprising, therefore—terribly indecorous |in the heiress of Madume de Vautpre as- it | might be—that, upou recognizing Jules Del-1 j pechin the crowd, us she was leaving the church i | Mademoiselle Beaudesert darted away from j | her entourage, and threw herself sobbing : violently into the gray-headed man's arms.— She was of course, promptly plucked back to her proper place in the procession, and a few minutes afterwards driven rapidly off to her "future residence, the Chateau d'Em. Jules Delpech seemed to be not a little disconcerted as well as astonished, at so sudden and public a demonstration of the young lady's regard ; but the first flurry over, the emotion it excit ed, colored, shaped, by an elastic, sanguine imagination, assumed a hopeful, brilliant hue, as those telescopic eyes of his, piercing, as 1 have said, far into the dim future, descried the yet distant possibilities suggested by such preg nant facts as Mademoiselle Beaudesert's par tiality or respect forjliimself so openly manifest ed ; the well-renipmbered and marked partiali ty evinced towards Pan', his young and hand some son, by the unsophisticated heiress of an ailing lady long since passed her grand climac teric, when she, the heiress, was domiciled with her father at his cottage, furnishing, with minor collateral facts or fancies, ample material for castle-buikling. The subtle brain of Jules Del pech was glowing, palpitating with the crowd ing images it had conjured up by the time he reached his own door ; whence, looking up wards in the direction of the Cateau d'Em, it seemed to him that the central tower of the splendid pile, high overtopping the intervening belt of forest trees, looked haughtily and con temptuouriy down upon the lowly hut whose habitant dared to lift himself even in imagina tion to that lordly eminence ! " For all that," muttered the white lips of Jules Delpech, as he entered his cottage and closed the door, " worse cards than we hold have won as great a game. " What," said the great orator of the Mountain, " is the secret and condition of an else impossible success ?— delaudace, it en core de I'audace" —and moral audacity, where failure incurs no peril, niggard nature has not denied me." Jules Delpech was a capitaine de. douaves en retraite, or, as we say a superanuated officer of rostoras. His retiring pension was a small one bnt the cottage in which ho lived, and about three acres of adjoining land, where his own by inheritance ; and as both himself and son —ft really fine lad, about three years older than Adrienne Beandesert, of pleasant man ners and somewhat superior education—were sufficiently skilful and industrious cultivators, the retired douanier was looked upon, and really was, for bis social status, a thriving, prosperous man. In one respect, Jules Del- vol.. xx.—NO. 10. pech deserved commendation, tbougi) it may be that his conduct was governed by no higher motive than a wholesome dread of the penalties of the law—he refused, to the liege chagrin of many of the neighbors, to add to his income by the truffic which hud helped his widowed mother, the lute Madame Delpecb, to keep house and land together, her son at school, and a wellfilled purse of silver crowns always at hand for au emergency. Madame Delpecb In brief, ostensibly u herbalist, had for many years derived an iucoine, though of no very considerable amount, probubly, from the prac tice of a species of charlatanism, commou iu the French rural districts—that of selliug to simple rustics, and not untrequeutly to as sim ple-minded towufolk, certain, charms, love powders, vegetable preservatives of various kiuds from barm, spiritual or corporeal, and niugical cornpouuds wherewith to compel the i favor, else despaired of, of 6ome obdurate Jeanuette or Jeannot, as the ease mighjt be. One of those love-charms, colled yt-urf/f rose, hud, from soma accidental coincidence, attain ed so wide a celebrity as to engage the atten tion of the Correctional Police Court of Lyon, a distinction which bad the effect of compel ling the cheating old beldam to be more dis creet and wary in the sale of her magical wares and more particularly of colored bean-meal, alias poudro rose, at the rate of five francs the half ounce. This nefarious traffic was, as I have intimated, all events ostensibly, publicly repudiated by the retired officer of customs, albeit it was confidently hinted that upon more than one occasion, when tempted by a sufficient ly considerable fee, he had violated that wise resolution, and dispensed his mother's nostrums —especially the poudre rose—with the best effect. This, I say, was the common scandal or gossip of a district on the left bunk of the Rhone, not fur from the city of Lyon.no longer ago than the thirty-seventh year of this eu lighteued nineteenth century ; and I greutly doubt whether a rural commune could be point ed out iu all the vast extent of France where a like credulity is not more or less prevalent at at this very day. This is a sad. undeniable truism ; but it is not from our English glass house that we can contemptuously cast stones, in scornful reprobation of such hurtful follies, at our ueighbors ; for superstitions all asgross are to be found in as vigorous vitality in many of the rural districts of Great Rritain. Impos ture and credulity are unfortuuutely indigenous to all countries and climes, as well as marvel lously self-adaptive to varying exigencies and conditions. But in stoppiug to explain or moralize, the story perforce halts also ; and dismissing for awhile Jules Delpech, and his visions, schemes nostrums, I regain its current, at the moment of Adrienne Beuudesert's arrival at the Chateau d'Em, where she was received with every dem onstration of regard ; and it really seemed that Madame de Vautpro's heart was touched by the sorrow of the interesting grand-niece, in whose features she discerned, or fancied, a strik ing resemblance to General Bcnudesert, the brother, whose memory, spite of the Bresson mesalliance., she hud always tenderly cherished. The establishment of the chateau was an ex tremely well-ordered one ;its disciplinary march perfect in a mechanical point of view ; but it was unfortunate for a girl of Adrienne Beau desert's temperament and tendencies that Mudauie de Vautpre had already reached so far into the vale of life, as not only to have lost sight of the busy, practical world in which she had passed her youth and prime of days, but that it no longer lingered in her memory save as a far off dieam of acted vanities ; illus ions—excepting always the hallowing verity of high lineage—hurtful,if not sinful to voluntarily dwell upon, because tending to lure her mind ltoiu the contemplation, through the dusky glass of polemical dogmatism, of the eternity upon the brink of which she stood. Now, it 'is quite clear to rue, from what I have heard read of Madame la Bnrortnc tie Yuutpre, that her a>cetic piety was of the sheerest kind, as assuredly her charity—thereby meaning alms giving—was liberal and comprehensive ; but the adoption of a profitable piety by depen pents not only frequently stops at, but exag gerates the externals of devotion ; and as might be expected in such a household, most of tho persons in attendance upon the heire?s, in their anxious affections of a religious fervor they did not feel, were enthusiastic about forms, attri buted supernatural efficacy-to beads, if not to the prayers they measured^—to the image, though careless or unthougittftnjrLthe proto type. In a mental generated and maintained, it i< hardly to be wandered at that the faith in churms, amulets, ana the like fui.tasie ? , imbibed by Adrienne Beairrlesert in her childhood, instead of lining rebuked,gather ed force and authority from the countenance afforded it by apparently similar religious con victions. Had the Abbe Morlaix, now chap lain to the household, possessed her conCdenco his wiser teaching might have dissipated such noxious illusions ; but sit.ee that,as she deemed it, heartless, cute! funeral oration, Mademoiselle Beundesert, desj ire the abbe's strenuous en deavors to o iciliate her good-will, ceased uot to regard him with mingled feelings of aver son and misfru-t. Instead of complaining to Madunte de Vautpre that the sensitive girl re solutely declined his spirits! guidance, the abbe left it to time to remove her unjust antipathy —but alas ! time frequently halts in the ac complishment o! his rrands, and arrives w'th the healing remedy ODly to witness the death of the patient. Thus grew tn years, in beauty, in gnileless simplicity of heart and mind, Adrienne Beau desprt; Madame de Vautpre continuing the while towards her the stately courtesy, the re gulated,unvarying kindne s which she had from the first imposed upon herself. Madame la Baronne never went into society, no encourag ed visitors at the chatean. Adrienne's educa tion in the accomplishments of music,painting, history, foreign languges eet., was intrusted to the sisters of an 1 rsuline convent in the neigh borhood, whither and back she was daily escort ed in a carriage ; and the only male persons, except servants and M. Morlaix, with whom she ever held the slightest converse, were Jules Delpech and bis son Paul, one or the other of