iiRLIN Sc SLOAN, PUBLIgii,KRs KUME 26, itslPct ijortrq. EVENING SOLACE. CCIIRCIt ►ILL. `.art ha• hidden trwatures, •; • ✓pt :o r,lenco reeled; ❑ e• the h pea, the dreamy the pleseures, ,horms were broken, if revealed. Jo , . lAD , in gay coafw.va, Elh imy tiv, n Funr'r meu. , ry of the "apt will die. re. .r,; hours of lum•ly musing AI 10 the totenibe •IleOre •'ut4e, !t •4 bull• their p 1121.4111 Clollllllr. t,a•• befit feeltne gather home. ar • :•o•re sertne to lauguiett 1 ,13d , r 4rl-1 that t• not Coe, , ue`b.• that once wrung groan• ungutah e,LIII. ED 11 tare t, Aga •-• Pt• or•Prp .r.• on l —a fad”d drenta, got •oarp r-.ct, and wild 1413411Iluita, •ler. of other'. ruffertng *tent •,, tt,o ho.trt i. frest.ly htned:ng, • .otir It tor that tuna to La, nr lb• a:lqt of year. needing • , es but ! , ve in reverie to , e,^,l•;ltt p':Tyln)nr =I VC, 0 4 1111 , 11, And wt tit 0,1 „mg:, •kp gr ,ws ism i. 1 d.samer, .1 v 1 I 1.1 ,Ilftlrss- , a leper :Etpulsr giren , , ar nr I dirkene I r- t.• •ug`.ts that soar w kic,,A2ll, " t on: a .0. •nd work' to r.,m• 1, ;~, iscclbnv. (r.boice IE9 From llora,ohoW ('IIAFFFI: If. In qp i te rtf the , :t•—tt :•1 •• . V 1 Mr- WI: 111111 ANI) STEP—)IOTIIER.i tnn Br,„,k ..f ‘l.ll .t' r ttt , - tunr I t 0 ...1...ht. t• !y 1, • mettlot tt. Lt tit •art„,tty =I Err w -t-t r IP. • CHAPTER 1 1, , t Dr-thor'. t— al:, 1 It iNn,t •r; !1,1••!: I oh- t , t , tioriti•Lt• with Alt.'? at: Your dir.consolate wolowers 1-• 11 • 1 ,! STAt• tit^ tir , t to take comfort. P.lor dear ac..orthryz.y dre.s.4l L. r pretty p 1140 year, tail S , r, and 'dove(' in-hion, anti pr-parett li, r ruxiirrimed a2a.n. The doe: ,rs ought tu b' awl compliment , , as she drov, to vi , .t t . :a th-ct‘e-, putting it into ouc'a he id at Thvart's [I eel n. into a dctidiue lan T t If h. r prejtplioe had been stron t o.- r... 11 11 1., t , I.l‘ or night forilltiuking of Jinn it moat have i Hod to the erne , ay, t 1w ..t r,:rarulare you on die riot tilt, the -tinnier 31r , . . .u. Kiony. Thomson say- or -.4 rt.. improvemont nt h r I .r ...karz better than he ever lin HA •hr wa. gratcf•al t - ) !., i who lit gi ie.:4llle his wife is adecidi ut)h id i•; to ugh vial - id.) WoLU .ti. •iik l'• • ..cap thinking that he might have 0 0 liehei. nt in natural affec-ion. S r ...w.rna,g of hi?, intent/offs tinier It f, her only br ,thor, lire le-ad ~f her f infik , I awkw trd to know nothing of Init.'s own sit, aim ,st forg.t po ,, i Auu v. u gai :•stfa,r- I to ked bo much about Li, • Ilia renovate d f'-rm. and saw di- t, nd. r pride tail I gI. finely laughed at when he a , th which Lc w•achcd his and I, - 4- wl'h a young wife " tened to ;he words of his ;4 taLIIC endure with your usual patience, The iiippearamee of the child awoke the train of I d not think he has use% u, pariieu• oI i rce , li. eti. , ris in tbe mind rat' to runt, and but it seems she was furious for hire, she hail admired tl,. growth Late-.,.1 7. a of eighteen falls vauleutlriu i ht- fair long hair, she ehoul.t cot retrain tr an a a at-and-thirty, at niu.t be al- win-poring to its fatberr: :hat it bufficient to turn his 1it.a.1." •• li'k'e por Ann" y m• n always attach so much imp. - a- I Lidi [twin caught the wiii,per; her hp fluty yeuth For my put, I should have ,r, 1, awl th.. rotor tleopeniiti r cheek; -he E !ward would have bad too much some I dr. w :he i• 1 r within ,Lo rirt I.• 1.., rlo az , !aujit by a miss in her teens besides, what and said iiicfftiy— , •l think him 4. like EdwArd." a v . : know about the management of •"1 . -lin he i.,"raurned )11 - ook like E Is. 0.1 the nose and im wit, Litt lie she cannot know very much at pre. I has his moth. r , ye. ' het that comes by instinct. Ido not think it did no: please Lady Irwin th it the Aila ty to make the worst step-mother h..- were so la. 'Cu r. v .ung, and Frank i, aueh a potty rm.) are ‘• ry beaut,tul,' ,it. ooh an mat the danger will be of her spoiling am 1-, Ii 11l fearful look at her liti.lernd: tl %AA., 111 N./rri , 4lllll rteOlic i tjal 111 ill• C .UU. /t will be well enough till sliehas children fe1..., ahiug but prL.,.nt and Lappi eu Poor little Frank's good ne--. ru much s. rvice then; anti you may take • ••1 . .0 can form no idea, Funny, of what ain .. :IE4: it, Wilton, that it was a bad day tit. r [lank has to this dear little -0-4. 1 1 r rend Lahti L, , father saw tin- Ilehai brought you le. iliuut , tion a c h i ll 4he it \V , II might the po. t hlward Irwin, the subj..et .1 the foregoing Iraq a baronet dtaeendeti ft can a reg " 11 pia t 1.1 tven't cured f - tautly, arid 1-..l!lse!=-sed of v , ry e.tnrad 'r ' alt .tninattl.• h t) , tt of glinting wit',? n tt t N.n-th of Eugian.l lit. 'tta i uu r•tni.l, II 1. , a Lady a I ttwt , r Anti :nut ••( 1u . I !Tit . ; wish to (1., it, enly.r u r. an i t.,ehttwing faain..nalr.".• earth v.-11111:11 t. I 1 tro say. wh .11 al y u tt l at ..1 n". h ti.p,uess kitnutNt .yuAk ut, 1,. ,• gi it.ular I,iheu "..rary al! ,etentifie Tarrant- Th.- Tr , ' 1, , aa , t kilmv Lunn atrialy, but Doi ath t hi, wife startled Liin front the u oyh t ty• C tnv nee W , .h nrrtnffod • t hi- if It wa tho tir-t • , rr‘,l,v , 41- 4' the a u r Li: tAfAllf a Inn, and he w. 1 .4 . iverwbeline , l t, ,t be a -uLit C. r, r, y ,, u ku ,by ill , wile 11.11 bVeil Su elltestltlV hi., c eat- "fiat I hlv_ .11 ire u.t t." i. r di,. nail wet :ill hi• requir , nl •tit• with a 1 v Liu,- if Uat '"•:'S.Llissw r .i 1 1' 'A., • rea is and lc, that hr 1 bad eu , iug:, lb:tore, Lu. to t 'uu •iL ,L, 4 li tne dearer half of IL. soul wer • tr:, w sold li.. a er, ink s I•'' ••. , 1 aw.iy, and a , it were inap , ."it , . • for HP" 0, We 1,1 is •I " , 1111 Leloud c,LrL•i•e- au I 'II ! 1\ , I thc —.5 0 ..% is a child of some three is il..rni your- It, .1.0 A r r. ' C r ; • p , wi to r , ltpoi 61E11 Hu ea , list t. n I - el', • ill.; 11 stlitug to fore,. him from • , . 1 . e /slit r,. L 4..1 • '" means, his r tlt,,t u 144' tut. Ili to 13) 'i.tr•• it '• aux: u- trieuds, all aditimid,terid t. Ir. it, rary 1 :113; th.it wt!: I. • ' l ,le hit 1 hut sweet ueet.--i'v , tf the •. , r• - L sic ,at pie,_Lit itH„u i ' i Lc a p .s u.'/.lltu t , , uu an-1 I.) he c: inc I too n ,, 1 sorry th Lt ). , .1 t! sits:_, ;,;• Woe dl.l i•••l it, till his 1.4 , 141,1.1 . 01 v II! t rushhiwa rp,w; it weuhl n t h•,\ • •I -4 • t • Frt.:, i, t Lite' fervii; thlet , rs were 1..,4.tu• I ~,•• Aylh. h ) _I:, at • uln Lis ch,hl apv• died . • ~1 • f !•,••,./•rt e pas•4lv2ly to sent •t) .t, w b• - ..‘ :In .: I in ..f ue and ehnog , of e'dut,e, ' r,t•truri lleauu, lAughtu,l, "I t tn , d 11.Wcut Walt •UL .1: 1" ••tr yet, nn itit_ll I t ! I . r, ,‘• r) Laiy 0, Ln,tl.tutt--wthc ,perly this A IntLr, th.it t In it it to him' The world WI, gt 3 • .Nan Lictr ,• ry hirren atonal ,rth hr vt ••••, %1 • ate g In t ! h Mit , t , t ittOrr oit . it aril wept. ,So ht. e.a du,/ • lAt •-• io J 1,14,•t• ' k with him; for, though the sight, of tii.• • t.wii". hi. • irrow, hd clung 3- I 3.1.01.1141 11 r he 11.1 .1:11 VI Al %l 4.1 4 17 IV 1)1 ai ert•••‘• • c••rat r oat between the Il' a•thy child 1•1. - L v •rr cir.: •p •ech fy •••.t, my dear, s•rrow-•tricken fettle' eeul I liar•i.y f..tl -41! ‘1: ); .h, ut nigh si taunt •r: .K? tho m ••areie•4 ob.ierver, •• ins. • •,iv .1 .0 ; I', lk to 'll. eteo•••1 th•• atteution of Mrs su 1111., Mac- • to, un. 124.11, W - 4 . 1 1, 160 happened to occupy an ailj•Jming m. tn• tor tn• pr •• i :It ',AL . 4 • to Florence, whither Sir E !ward had he- ; ht,u , awl lay g;r6 11 1 1y11111•'.: I r ra•elf by the directi an of ht. paysicians .11p, , • story of hie b•renvetu• ut roused the ; int 'tan la was al %AL tn:•tiss, bas both la•ll•2• , —.tuiutert•l which, au the i with a l•:00•• whiAt showe I th It. neither "...tr. E a ;•r, y wcki y assumed the character of pas• t , %said tour his wife w• int 1:ti• .1 .•• f •a, F • 1:.• ply otr• • aen derived from the preys'.,, , , ;1, sag. beautiful, and llOdisCipiaLuti, He t..1.1ut1.1. Pt.ri4p4 )Ir4L. Jrt iaal '•'••• it-• - 4r, I it'Ve:it d in wild nottota• ••f an all-cma• tatiun to t..,t th • real state ••f her ,i-ter :La atsl lasiwrsLms love. Her ardent tem- f•.•• •sr ai• her little ucp'h.w; c , :rtalul) `'• t t, been exaggerated by the I Lose tuo• 1.1 tit li-p.eased that it it 0, 1:1,)( ac, p • f the unprincipled South, Mad she La:lastly a nd •.er 0 ate, eurapturoi with the bride, toe handsome stranger as sue iucaraa- ; tea perfteLi) ro—.llsell,d w her br,,ther. 6 us t b at , which already at • ighteen she 1 1 • -paired •f tueetaug. Str E ward's sunken I.t t e'leeks, his tall, wore I,•_r.ton, and '47.101 sorrowful smile, moved her as the ;• ••110.tith and manly vig••r might have - - ":t •inwe h •r What was not tu , love w,rtb (: . 011;(1 set ouch a mark on th i bereaved - - 5 3itapa.111:,ed with, she admired his u—oft , .a it, to pour h tiot into the it LicL by level to keep t.)peu, bourne the .9h—the ~ t.j...et of her hfe. Eton u , r4rt:l) wAutiog to those who hear. 'tit lu too preeent ingt:tuee the eitil.l opened the way to thz father Tue 'l's heart was easily woo by tits smiles Ases of the beautiful btranger, whoopuke `a the language of his motLer, and folded her Inns almost IS tenderly. The risme %Would was coastal/Ili va his lips / . .. 1 . . .. .400 et ' • .. ~ ,x , 4,, „2,7 -r• .*..stigMitilleuivalliraolows6Patt. 4l - ~: - 1.1, 1 --,. • 2 0 . 4 , , , , r , , El t: I g E , .. 1111 el l it became familiar soil grateful to his father's ears erartesy required that Sir lidsrard should muse himself to show soma sense of the kindness lavished on his chill The first step taken, the re.t followed naturally. Secure in his grief. Sir Edward ~.olanitied the at f hi. neigh h-r Her profound adniiration. h. r -vmp.ithy uo ittsred, but speket. tit ev.:ty iu evory j. -:nt-, were a 1141t,ry wiii. u .1 • lc, ept 1 •A Ith. our auspic The tneetoig with her became tin• event of the day, until the sweet pale Ica of hi. I ,cc pa-..,..1 fr . - f r ,. in th e f ace o f a mir r or, and tle• Itcrng ptpsooto ate Helen reigned supretn. t lne letter strue gle he endured—one • *.`l/: 1 , r to Lie past ,tat. of feeling; tic 11 , •11 over earn. tilfA spirit, and with a sigh, half of sorrow st his ins or-thility, half of tel.et, he \ led him self to the intoxicating rapturt i 4 Ills new pa,coin Helen was en very beautiful; so tender, vet w i t h a l 4 0 ?el.-ills, so imperious, that she kindled for a time Lis mom placid temper into a semblitec of ber own. She ten: int and .1,1 , 4 slat.••. k it i,, ; h er n, qn full nt wit,thetv, that sc..• I. ft him no time fi.r haelward ttought, but lit .1 him heart still soill with her imaite 1 h-tael. 4 pt. ti in tint wiv of their iron exe-p• Nueh cry difficult try as VW taney of Helen created. Her mother, who in many ro.cpecos mgembled her daughter, w is still in 1.,- nt• rl , ll tea f nod n t bn r ved of a ....odd soe I , . 1 :2 , wern, 'Lori wit I had t.. time ind iv.• 11" r credit bly 4..tabiodied .14 th.• w I] 1. nryr• I !it E=MMWM=MM , h• , .11 tilt 11.tbn • , I lo•r it wtt, ..tt t . y.. i ti Ng!! that wrot , f.) 1. r kil I tlto ,tiny sJ , r •r w it.c,, t(• 11.1. •••4:.; , 1.•;•.: r, o.vvry and approncl.itin! utarraup., Int"r1:1-ol ~f hi• ititenttou of bt iugutg L 1.1111.0 icuno:dt.trul. t., Engl.tud. r e ~ e t Ir. jt2 IX 'II/ .1 . D. I , l' I . Inu 'W • tna.le twzird . ...If TV' • (1111. Ilb .11 t it. I I ' 11,11 . • ai% L QUO tr, r .11 ! - tL 1 CLIAPTICIL 111 A few weeks saw Su Edward Irwin and his J ly t.t.,Llp.tied fur the winter in their handsome et,lll.l!ry mansion. When the pisasiint task of his estates to his wife was over, and the excitement of returning in joy to the houto which ho had left in ',mow and weakuess, Sir lydwatd regained his old, but long in lerrepted pursuits; and his wife, true to her in. tention, entered on a t•ottrse of study which should enable her to share them. Sqr did her energies fl.ig after a few weeks of strenuous exertion; ber mind, vigorous and etiquuln;, demanded a pur suit which called its powers tuto action, and her proed spirit rose with the difficulties which pee -1 seated themselves. Her hatband smiled at her eagerness ' ...ma. issiaidighteitt st ! her inteili4enee; so that the hosts he spent in misting bar to ber 4' ILI ly I -'• - 1/.lt• tallitill`U L L you w•.l; cnmu sorer, studies she eadertook, were the pleasant- Olt of his day Ind was Lady Irwin happy. Her husband had no thought bey. , nd her; the boy throve and I ,, veil her; but yet her happiness was not per fect. Mere passion never brings happiness; it is of the earth, earthly, and bears the elements of corruption in itself. The love that does not come down from Heaven, that does not look to Ilvaren for its perfaction, cannot raise, cannot purify the heart—it is restless wind that stirs th,• tr , inbled trio not let it beat rile-. and ingsoloo, ae .elf torture. So at wa, with Il . n Irwin; bet 4.-esi her and h. , r Lap rou,••• .t shadow, th- plientoni of one un , .1,1 • I • The picture ..1 the first La•ly Irwin hung in the drawing-r•lom, and she wuld sit and gaze at tt until the canvass seemed o toglow,and the sweet thoughtful face to lire, smiling down upon her in sceret triumph She tortured herself by iw• agtning the ten.l,2rn. ss with which those large gray 4hi hung ui,,m her husband, the lov ing words which those lips had uttered. If at any time his eyes dwelt uu the picture, or if be tnviduntsrily compared the features of his son w,tl 4 it, , he could Laidiy control her impatience; I , he would break fr the boy in the midst of ins caress.2q, if the resemblance he bore to his t strike her. tl u p. pi-41 till 1 lit tlo girl was born to her, to I th d; , ..luict of 1.1. r s•ml vrns bashed for a .; st.. , :e the trouble from its too th s heart, and aw *gelled in bosom strange v. , , niti!s f)r ..nie , bing b. tier and purer than ;, • L., I;:rncru Tie: great my.itery of that new life, male so dear by suffering, and still eo I .p.-r.d..ut on her, stirred her to meditation on ne groat ot ~u r being—the weakness Tl , •L. r , tllitikiGl, while it humbled her io r heart ro roeive with tueekne.a 4 , , hi! e ;LAI earl %plain it But in a fro- 'ir• ir.tl ttt f tnt stekoued and died \"„ tt .r w..tt. d cheek, she endured to3e the .it to winch she wouid nut ,niunit-ly arraigning. the Ilan.] that sent , trio , ttr p ivn of r..:lisi•ani truth h.l t enurinin yaw-tiled, ind in up ,u her ',All „. 1, • I h i .; child Intuit in a (lute m•ittiqr of th ask.iy thin v.1.11t whore Lady ! • . -1. tt•iniivr at luue• t -it ..1.1 i t u. ,un 1 with dry , ...thi•lls that ii•am n•ts 4 . , .W It plucked and 1 , it isli• i,nur u the stuu,.. float.,, •,%,r the place of her iu t IBM 'in n -1 , t ,t If .r. stolit , s, o ',htli sh. had rather neglected 11 „ .: th loth. ,ne's hif•, , h e 11 ,, li re3Driled with iii,t, .-i i ortior, seeking diotriotion for her aching 1. test 111 in , ntal ecerei..• Hcr husband, aware I L.al .iH Tr:' , . not a• It .11..u1d bl, theugh far from ' :Troll, ic.ling the true uat ure of to i grief of which ' shc never spoke, willingly lent Ler hi, aid, hop lug Ct..: tit ptir,ult- witch yielded him such lia ' It-faction would act with medical virtue upon li r Iler nowt thus arquired strength, but her lic,rt dcl pot keep pate with its progress; the clr, le uf her affeeti .us u.trruwkd, uo interchange i.l tri. wily sy wpatines with her equals drew licr tr 'itu her,. if, ti tender act of personaleharity to ' thi , pour about her softened Ler sorrow. She tie- 1 c d! ,,.• e.,hi and stately. ant, proud ,if her seerot grc I unprofnued b; uotnnatin pity and unlike that ef iny other i .A 1,„un,, , , woman_ ul.this it kllagn. wain bail married shortry after Lady Irwiii7i . arriya l rl u it : ' , ir iil not; lel, lost her.thi ly soon atter tli_ death ut Ili len Is daughter. Sint was a simple creature, , auti the aft:ll,o'l,w lay sore up in her, for her hus bond was often rough. sometimes unkind to her, iand. liclu i l flow i distant part of the eou utry , she liilf 'v fi ii nl- in the % tilage Many a summer t'‘, ii , D,! ili'l , 11.! .'',7,Cliti ID the el,nrA;ard, dud uhitly a t.i,•. fit garland of will 110 s , i, .lid ~/.' w 'ai t.. to dr. her b 'by's grate. More than 11,2 Lily li win passed her in the glowing, but lo r he ,rt n, ter s-ft-u,..1 with a feeling of kiu• iir, I , orr tw; she rather despised the grief which c ~ I ti.iil relief to such chi:dish tlemonstrotriens, i au' the po .r RODltiLl—with the only thing tbit,t ' 1 ,x. 1 h r la, l in the lust, with clothes bar Z ll,, iii o •., to t c .v, r her, and a cold hearth at Iso —i,,re 'i ran I Lapp!. r than the beautiful lad , vc „ ~, c ~...) i it, , in ui,lierl Ler as she passed, fur, i'i 'he ,1 , 1,; It of her tle-olation, she could lock to o.c. wit . het pr .mused to bear her sorrow, in the . ~:.et of wii tie preotied she might hope t o be re ri • 1 ,Il no h •i to tier 'Latin!! '1 ti•• a. it t-' called, occupied a due mbar , . ' f Loh. Irwin's tline and attention; her tastes ,n,- o• r maginficence, htr beauty and her t t•• dt.pi.,y, while her hu.lind's fortune j .1 L r in a,-ainiog, a leading pusitieu in so p , were more brilliant, no din t.l appoin•, d than lArs. Science, liter t... tile. art a.-re duly honor, ether house, it was an ace ouplishedcduversational . 'ad -L• h, r-elf ipissessed the rarer virtue of ex ell, nt 11- , tetwr Thus her house was • r, • t, • f tii• a of the highest intellectual at• • • in t ,ten, and when at Swallowfield she •- r treiy w t.bouL visitura whose names were osu and honored. llitt Lily Irwin had many admireia -i• had u friend-; •he asked no isyrnpathy,and bad Ai , t., 2tve—n.ino at least, fir the sorrows and Of .1 lily lif, —.he was self-conceited In a .00h a character is hard and sad—how much li ler, 11,.w iitu.,h budder, in a woman, whose vo• • it. ti it is to temper the stern realities of life, A Iv), 10 be sir tug, inns:. have some touch of weak ', -ss, who, if by too cool credulity she opened the A ly t • .in and death, should also point the road t - the by tam, p •rfected in the sense of her in- NM th In .I..v.tre rf the violence of her pa , t , inns, and .I-, :y bcliksiug that unhubdu.d vigor of natural I,poith.t was a pruof of grLatuess of character, 111 , •re wa3 nothing of which Lily Irwta stood iu • u,l. dread as tie e,itup.u-kt Ju ~1 people t.,f a taa r temp , ram at. Si," theref , re, learnt, put iu• ad go.cru her fecitog lit to repress alt out. t ,u ottfe4tatt u ~ f !hew. in I to bide ,ht to 111441 r bar b u uudor n c Id awl v hoar I inelined to ?Plitt! le, t tic rot .0 14 ut:Lig •A cc It ig/ ti her Iron Italy. an I ....It I ~u) creature she W.lb io t.. ..n.• ..fnin , -i.."l t z h , r einJtuins. I , •.. •.-. to be An imp •rattve law of our Lt.:tor , •.,1, -', •• ,r' .h , 11 1 .1 unborthon itself to 4oin ~,• \‘' 1, 11, wi,‘,o, Val: trU•t ii inlet' I a ft:uod 1.1...',,,1 ii, . .t.iii-• i ...I i L-troug in comfort, 0t... , ~,_ t., tili., L.w 14 Cie sw., test ...,ulaoe uf uur ;(„;) 1 ,,! 4 7itn ~..... : I Wii LI Wi . i. 11.: till , ' lig ' .) 1 ., rt;,,a,..> 4,1 , ii: ,I, it IL t• r frum thf., , ,..: who 1,..ve u-, dud L xp.,:e them outy to thole of whose jude,- m nt NI gt l(11 in uo awe, who, oar inferiors in iu:eit,,..i. rut •LL..ti. , 11, pauder t. - ) our passions and to-ter our t. v.l trudeueies, there is no prevert el ble,-,ing %iAteli way be turned to more deadly ack.. ,ul.l L. Aguese. Pi,tnrella was the natural daughter of a Veuetiau uobientAu, who had been aseaainated by her in - .th .r in a fit of jealous de:pair. Hay ing aecomplished Ltr clime, the wurilerebe waa overw'ut.itui:d witu reinorSe, and, far from at tempting to make her escape, heraelf sent to summon tilt. officers of jitstiJe, and lay with her loo&ened hair falling like a pail over her victim till they arrived. Her youth, her beauty, and the violence of her passions, drew much attention to her e‘se, but she wag executed--submitting to her fate with the constancy of one who knew it to be the natural consequenes of her 484 the compensation dae to the Mum of borloot. 81 50 YEAS; IIQ ADVOCE. ERIE, SATURDAY MORNING., JULY 14,1866. The AM she left nee emnidetitiy abastlebea by its father's friends, and bemuse dependent en its maternal grandmother-4 woman of imfamons character. Taking advantage of the int erest es; cited by her daughter, this woman made a loath ionne trate by exhibiting hereirild; but otrri.mity soon died sway—the sooner, **the pia 4 4 a o tfi er thought, that the girl inherited the swarthy countenance and beetling bream of her fatiu.e., Nursed early and often with the terrible story of her parent., and tutored to assumes 'wk. of melancholy, Agnese gradually acquired that low cunning with which Mathes assn the oppressed, passing from iotaniy to womanhood askew, to the caprices of the abandoned old woman who, even in her dotage, meditated crime A deep lying love for km her mother was the poetry of Aenete'a life; whatever was tweet or soft in her m. merles gathered round the image of the beautiful, sumptoontily4pparelleil woman, dwelling in luxureeLe chambers, who had fondled and caressed her; of those sunny, far-off times she had a vngne recollection, but well did she re member the last time bee teether's arms were folded about her—wed did she remember the bare dunv,eou walla, the darkness, the bloodshot, eyes, the pale, haggard *Melo, and the long, lingering kiss of the white tremulous lips. On her grandmother's death she was foreed to seek the moans of living, and accident planed her in the family of Mrs. Sisodonald, where she M. led cue „f the lowest grades in the household.— Here her h eighty silence, while it made her un popular amo n g the servants, but excited the in terest of Ileltsn, who, in the Ineelinese of spirit engendered by the absonosof confidence between herself and her mother, readily turned her thoughts t the outcast, and made it her earnest request tli it ill- girl might be given to her as her spedal atten t int—s request which her mother, ever earele.s of Let true interests, and blamably lax wuert , h.q. discipline should have been the strictest, nev.:r thought of denying her. The kiuduess thus unexpectedly shows to her, .igne e repaid with blind devotion. To Helen, to the dark twilight of a winter night, she told the story of her parents, lingering with fond minus sees over all the details with which her memory was stored. It was a story Helen well loved to hear; she never pointed out the heinous siti, amid how the last evil was the fruit of the first,—neither for herself nor for the poor orphan did she read this lemon. We were %weeks ye,tet lay to the sufferings of a victim of this hi et awful of mil idles, In es worst f •rin, in th • p rem ref a Germ in named Heory Uth if, a herl.w eking man age .1 twenty I nino ye ire, who mauled at N . 44 (}rat street oa 1 the piuuk. read. the particuiers arc as tellies. Abn Frank was just nine years old, and in the m , id- eas tit ,: 2 ai wLcks touce th • g,,..., e r. .e... ti .'" , r i tu , u ,, a r t t, u ‘, ri , i hrel ~h ie die of the veritable history of Pyramus and Thar- of Mr Ct - ie• e' Cr .rgn, Whr'. il T3..lt , lCltr'd h) be, which he read with Mr. Birkby, and duly a lerae ant 7 , r iceets , i- • b- eree'ee to flat g• 'n performed with Kitty, when Lady Irwin agaiu tl , mete which bit hen teroueli tire hand an I ii. id became a mother, the mother ut a son of singular i , promise, and beauty. Her heart swelled wail ten so lige- Ilia 1. . i l iee d :he iif rta oi torte or f er 'LI .i, A I.) C ... tetra.,', I D. . . 4_l 1... joyful pride, but it seemed as if happiuess f r ie .,. •:I:,t . i 1e,,,.., le l t I f 'h. , i r li',l' ^ d her ea* never to be without alloy A ooriverea- num it which we; Imre: lee .. afe,re rls •Ls ti in which she overheard between the nurse and i,,iel•eil Agoese completely dumped her pleasure, ,iud i Tee %semi.' riesee i win one hintins ei , ee ; lee awaked discouteuded thoughts in her bosom 1911 1 C,:l • 4 1. wao : ,