Erie weekly observer. (Erie [Pa.]) 1853-1859, July 14, 1855, Image 1

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    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 : , <o A ..e.s .1,4• Cutei...i 1.,' ew
They were speaking of the child, aduor •
',. .. el ; , lin ers 1, L. t 1, 4 )1. ~.t.
ing his beauty, and commenting on the joy et tale ; tee , te n : le , N a e e• ~.• hi, ~t sec:
parents he *at 1... r; : • 'I ss, L. u ,Pl-LIIV rtart,..,: as if
"Ah:" cried the old nurse, "Sir E iwa-d's well' under 'he eitluence of gene, siren. , n••r us of
pleased enough now; but, Lifil lore v', if you'd f
ceti so II ifo.e. ILI 1... ,to ride, i, t...ci d, a•ei
sees the fuse there we, when Master Frank ea. the F, ae I e was,. t i ie lei's. e i•cr b„„,. Lim,
born—ho warn't nothing to compsre to this here whicu, k,o • t er, et r e , . ~ .ipr ae ~.- 3 !...
lamb, but then he was the heir—Lerii, the nue drew bask ft in ei li .a'al e r 1,. w.- the o
ing of bells and the driving up of carriages: I that ti, , r iu trio- 'tic • f ib %t .an 1 he had re•
made nigh twenty pound at the christening— crave 1 from too il e; and the h ii rib! •• idea of
and all the village was leveed to dine, there was by iroplieuia, flasheie aer ,se Le m ue, and tic
an oax rusted whole—and, as to th • iii”, it wee hurt .at) :151 :It uc i'.' g- .f Si.e teat tie,
t quite a sin to pee it flowing about everywher , like :lie .., ,u• • illy Lei, ert 1 i y ,ii ...- 1, it L ,net
CLIAPTER rr water i 1iUrb , 3.1 . 1 , ^ t [t• :.,!' . n^ 1. ~ i .1 • -,' li, ..c% i i
.
Little Prank Irwin would have been sadly Nothing uonl.l ex. e , d the teal rote; or Q I ivritie inc I qui 1 2• -t - 1 •t- efie- e l , i , wi en
starved for affection aid sympathy if he had Edward;
h .c." could not 1 1 ,‘, si, 'en in we
break entirely lependent for both on his stop- !the birth of his eldest *al; the ie l uire• II v. 1-,, excepLion of now eel iece, eeeue ewe. Ila/ .i.
mother- for annegle 81 1 5,41 tiawa4l4ll , : s pPressed hue pumerous the christening splendid; but th •, 'A vele }hues a 4 • / ‘ig 11-',, /1 , h., face 4' /• •
11/tallsWrefftsuit, aterladtagssi b evetn belund nismies irt ' svd. rankled - in Ler irwin's heart --. and bl' , " 7l an•' . ' i s ss., t.t, ir it. 3.5. oral Au t fur.u'
what was wholesome for him, she C 12 r 4..i)n, I'l fl t, 1 1, ,1 - t.. 1 , .1 hi
grew so capri- , She- still loved Frank, but she could not et ill ex
clone in her treatment of him, after the death of ' times bear to see him caress his half broth , • r
•
though, if be showed th 3 least eadifferenee, e ' anal
Pir l e'' N ` lT ' lci n i I :I n i
ft • ll ` r "" : " it ' 7 (
'Ps5 !.:-n" u:. In
-1
:5411 ' tu. " "
her infant, that bus uaturally sweet and trustful
temper must have beets itijared But wheu they tortured het self by thinking how much the Jilt i s oataral 5.1111.. t, was a it, ure f Lin.. .'t.. 1/ a 5
were in the country, wht-h was generally for fate depended ou his aff emir'. As soon 1.4 the •ve w eal I age." 11 ' , , i f 1 •li. pr s,ri. e la et
ninemonths iut he year, Frank foun dap ls yfel hehy began to - in erei t u
iw.:ifriend:nthelittedangtterofthecicr:cidedaffect,ufurvrnk;therew,nly,l‘t:Tie p, ''r wretch, is
we bef•re said, lee req
gn,ahiwledehiid:Lmethingleamthaias,nwhomhtprefene(iandthatPr'uwa:k:Ji „• i 1 LCrICC at th, ',me r ,, in Iwo, hut 01 5 2 ,
year his junior. Birkby. to ate suel were in irui 1 us iti it a short 11111,1 pre•
•
The rectory was not a quarter of a mile from With a ll her p assionate affection, Ltd,' I r wi n i ,
the gates of Sir Edward's park; an 1 Mr. Birkby,
which chetk. she wakes wanted - the art to accommodate herst-if to the vi Us his c CltU..l 1... ....... . 6,.. 51 la. le 1.- 11.10151 C
C 55 lane 's.r an 5 t , , , ii '' tie ilii.,r^l+lln
the rect ir, was a distant relative of the Irwins ~ ;Li et.bef , ir ' e in . rn j ' e g :I, ' t
:.: , 1 • 1 b i srip iled to
' weaknesses of a little child. she couldnottalk
be the intimacy of the children was quite natur- -eak°
al, and whenever his mamma was busy when - he fond noneense which the ordinary 'nether ,
t m akes the vehicle of her tend , roe se , and h Late attende d him, I a tuuct.: it at once ail , pee
ever Aguese was cruss—whenever, in short, ' ' Y Iss cube L,t ii. , 5 • in hit , 1 s u eth,ie f In
drawITIC a comparison between the Salem
anything happened to disquiet him at home— the dimples in her infant's - , i ,i , Wheecreli Ja Ig aue i tee Pailadelphia Know
on the other band, was distineu the i e.l.l't e c. 0 . I . o /11^ [ r wet ,Lr ''
away ran little Frank, to forget hie trouble in the, N .:hen s ; C ell ell ie. n, tee A bany Kaukerbocker
fished by an extraordinary power of symp it /I\
1s be seemed to know intuitively what was waisted
ss , II 1, „ e h r wee eie , '
is a y Uri,: 11111 11' 1 : .5. iv .1 :5 ,pp. ,r, i i -
c eupany of Kitty liirkby; and many a sunny at ' ,ir wee f r tu•l • ••. ,1- it i c . 1: i e , we , .1, '1 i) ,ate•
Tl. r. is i -(iiking similarity in the proceed
teruonn did they sit together, tinder the large apple- of her, and with happy ant unconscious grace t, i , ss , h , ii,n-e-ine an
ell , f the Pe l l i • !tepee' Illuiiiie Convention on
tree, in the orchard, or iu the shadow of the old co- Odra Let a fee. iv ks ,o I, i. ue in .015 e• ihsh
meet the requirement. She loved all el ildr u, 1 i i et , entiti„g 11,... It man Catholic delegates from
dar, making daisy garlands, and mangling their • ' - iv ,11.4 ~ l it) tbi e i i • . he •,_ e _reil to the sr ru
so it was very natural that she should feel cep* , L ie. , oil., au ,1 111 , i C , LIU.II .5f eonr Protestant
htarts in muoceut prattle. lamb —Core i tre L• i•
cial delight in the beautiful child who crowed and • • i fr t ell rs 1.',. Z. t' _to 11.1 111J2, why Sal. its jiadg-
Frank was a great hero to Kitty. Frank went l •
c apped his little hands at her appearane ci incnt 1 p r - I, 0 lmess w men charged with
to London and to all kinds of places with long' A Pleasant Country fur a Nervous Kan.
name., which he knew quite well, and could re- In spite of her dissatisfactinu that her son was -------....---- vr,t h , rat' TI, Hull s would not admit Ro
peat as easily as she could repeat the namea oft not hit father's heir, Lady ,Irwin was made much I • Tears c,rr 5.il •u . .f tic Sw I" .rk „, au Colt 511.5 tut ttl.s.:`,cattreatiort, notwighatand.
the field and h e flowers. Frank went to the
happier by his birth; the boy was all h er o wn Herald, ,1 crib. 5. t 5 1o .5 i I. a I th a t lig Illy) gi‘.. th stro ngest p esible assurance
edg
theatres where he saw all sorts of wonderful —he had her fi tful eyes, her Aquare brow, fieerei laud in ewet 's 1- It• It ' h ill' fhis t ,at they ; d'n tr, e igule.. tee authority of the
the shape of his mouth was like hers, soil iee writ is trot, it 010.1 p / 'int plicc 1r ii l'eP • r tit au ) tta r .sirttail functionary, to
things, which be described to her with indefatig•
a bl e 1. , ~i, n „,. Th ere was not a marvellous feat a shadow of his father's smile; and bot“re 1 leis nery us wan, or ade ,c it. 1.11 . ,t 5 w win the sigh• lot , I r in too ” t), "r th soy L i tetit, with the
of harlequin that she watt not familiar with; and lit became evident that he inherited her temper oil ale tar or a Lodi Is toe t,o -t ato .f ••,ou , p el• , rinauct ot their cat it duties These emu
oh•t even dreamt of the fairy—in pink, with silver He was wilful and impatient, he never ICt hisWirt/ Ili ~ n,:•.,, e -es• ic r were not e nsidered satisfacto
wings—who always came down in a chariot,
mother fret herself for want of ezciteno ot; it 1 The e itil s• h )weier, -its is -i• h .1J1... / env in s ry, and tee 2 , ec i e order , 10 stand aside.
drawn by peacocks, just in time to save the
was never possible to tell in what mood the young of the prairie by ens ia .n le eset e , i .e Si ..al
tee . C au 5 , N
lerea Cory, on h er
prince and princess from the deeplaid plots or
autocrat might choose to show himself; he was here , _s are nit will qua n', lll. ,ed c _er are in c
• e . imiu it ..iieu to m i.. ,sg u LIS , b. f ire a throng,
like a mountain girdled lake, now laughing to less number-. Tee sae. i Lit 5a Li aide r i•cay elite in, .d lI, _ P" 'e uce 1 a l'el'reft Rebecca
the cruel ogre with green hair, a bulbous nose,N tors., e i , a, Bat rdt r presents as a woman
and a caveman.; mouth who bad atroonooed to I
the summer sun, now lashing its ere -red billows is quite e ,rumen, au Iy i tea-: i. ~)g • ,
;
be his intention to dine off the prince, and pro- II " fur/ Kitty Birkby was the only person glitup-e of hi- 1 ir s e bee. is , i rße 1. .1., t pue.--t 1111 • 4.4 1 11 , 5 Ulm: ale presence of witch
whore influence with him never failed; his wit- I• the pi t t ha, i.f is i f Is , 1 1 ts, i. .
• , h , ss. _ 1 r LI, kl sd, I Saree LT 00. i
mete the little trembling princess to the hou, lir I u“ i s.l, , 1 •‘e,l and were strangled
their might waste her strength in Inc attempt to Rattle and m sect-in bi. ik s “"e to t. let, •i ‘ll. iL. ‘L ie ,
~
of Mrs Ogress.o, with what eloquence did he
storm him down; she never gained her point; he even to shakeb •!I IWIJet 1, ,cigiu4o The Roman
a suck ei; tee bite ut the t •rule r ~ t . i i )
d 'scribe, to the round eyed, eager auditress, the L oi , i,nl o, le d the power of the
screamed till she was terrified for his health, hut easy cured by ...i .1...ug rata a1...i.) 111 .t pro- C ~i, 1 , 'I
dual scene of the drums, when the fairy, havingl' t , • NI rth U 1 mut_ r. 4 tt. tr c hurch, but the
he could not yield; yet Kitty, without violence. dace- . inel, to 1L1JX,...1.,h, L:u, :, , / . A.,. ,
wade the prince and princess happy, and eon
hyaline subtle charm in her touch or in her voice, there is n•+ Le er- 11 ii, - 1 ~.4 VI U 1 no t I.k. hot 11.1 te Ihe poor 're
signed their wicked aunts and uoalva to well
roe ht. back the smile in five minutes, and woo • Tle ta-int.d'a sd t 'ol,lll' 0-e•ite nt i g•t %inn i f •selam eve , . 1 ti , pr e lice ,•f ii eche/rat,
m feted punishment, ascended out of moral ken b . g
him to obedience .nte n quern, l with lit is a -pad, rvi it• aI) 1: ' , n I the LI iu el-, 15 tt 6 r. 5, Br ,ke sei ~ iii those -
a
ate.' ou a welly ealeured el eel, which seem so
gs Lie ir le ,I,y, iv .ii, •. ~, ic u ze, 1, Tit 111 . , diffeer
hi evil y charged with electricity,--e mode of For two year?! longer Erank Irwin pursued his about "I'2 six: of a he" 5 s gg , ' lt ' ll
I...eik , .i loo g, and c 1%, red with lee es', Se b .... es . 1,, 1 ''‘, Is th C • , l , t ii - 1k r and the coon
travelling highly unpleasant to any one beta studies at home, under the direct! mof Mr Birk•
fairy, but which of coulee, afforded her unalloyed by; he was then sent to Rugby, at that time no : air li_ll,. in .i., (.41 1'......... , audit )• , u 5a.t.011 , 1 Cut( su Nlailti r isn't Pima is in the fact. that
a'.ii • le , is o e-'' he t lee r eust, ui n th, It enati Cathodes, sag
l. a., DI se 'lt of his pi i ~
delight! as she took care w comeaumeete to th e (I k e the wise goueernment of Dr. Ai mold Het
death, iti I lit 131 v(r Z . ut 1 •LPN It tae 1...tt,L ea-pti, i,. 1 tt, p . i e,,,m üby the seek,
prince and princess that they must expect netbarg departure caused Kitty great sorrow, but it mail ,rely certain ,
'- n u" e . r , let i , lead
,-.
farther from her, it Fa iug her intention to retire little interruption in her visits to the hall; for me • eay, but cep juaip eight or ten fee. to le u 4 ‘• '
in'o private life, among the stars, whereshe (very Edward, as the boy was named from his father, teL 'lie d.a.-1 y bit. . _ .._ -_ -___..„,_
'
rln mally, as the world goes), did not wish to be was growing fast, and became daily more imperi Then tit , r,_ IS the e utipl -, ire sl•de i i au
Fate STEEL li —AN, INCIlti NT —A. friend
,listurbed. ous In his dementia upon her time. It was not fi•-ii Ii I. ••i iu I noel, i 1
uulierie I uu rib rof . _ , ri , ,t , .4 thel ur .111.1 ts , 1 au affair that hap
ii
in the nature of things, that Lady Irwin sh old claw, and each ' w in flate tl t a Psl l t t 0 •11/1 p.l , d 1 few 11y5 ig linS. 11 )Ul3, and the story
If he walk , ' over you at ni g ht, % „ u % s i p hate
not feel some touch of tenderness to the swr , o is ac , rob r, ',eating.
child to whom she owed so much; perhaps she cause to remember lam fur many main ha to An 1 . 1 icrant street preacher was bultlingforth
regretted that .lie could not love her, aud s'reee cute'', as the wound to et a j/.11.15 4i.iro', p• ,lemna• [lt ,„y its the %Ulna) el• the Court H Jose, and
by the lavish profn,ion of her gifts to atone f ir ous nature, audit " 11- '' 1 \") ' 1 ' l "''' ' u " " t Lu ~is It Is 0-all %i it I flit. ,;envy, wan inveigling itt
the want of real affection In one respect only heal it. •-•r lag leugu.ge m rss t il.l-51. foreigners- A policy id
did the little girl and the woman sympathize ..._ Tu, it rpjez lizird is ai•us r evil, rile s , n.l
tie, i tut: u 1, tet e , uti, red to speaker the gu alead
Lady Irwin possessed a tuueleal genius of e been tiou or i w .uuti he.,, lik,ne ito the al i eel
elite a .row I il c 1 eolleeted areuud loin, and some
order; her knowledge of the art was profound, tiers Of a reel net iron ti tee pereou; but eye is e.
ill I t en, se, distil:hence were maninfeeted, whelk
and the harp or piano under her band produce too ikhinktul to escape mini it, to censwer time-c lie in'errepd with: r
ed thrilling or stirring harmonies, the transcript les`cr evils any great auu •yittlec , '•1, , , , 1c here, old fellow, that can't b,• permitted
of her state of feeling; she was a poet of I But the lies cts! Flying, i reopin4,
..',ll-,1 lug i here You must come dean from th" r"•
. '
sound, and the pulsations of her passionate tem- rtinumg, digging, buzzing, humming 'tinging, I The office tie i
e hands on the speaker anti 111111
perament thus found immediate and ample ex- they are everywhere. Asa fir a cup ',I water , ' about to ii.ineu lc iu from the b•a u which he
prebaion. , a nd the rejoinder in our camp ths..n..l) , I . stood—a demon-tretten that pr•'me. 1 a seam
i itl\'ill you Live it with a bu '
•or without: The tutu in the au•lit re, and thee , i ut as they
Lulu:
Now, Kitty Birkby early evinced great horned fro g '
is oust et t he: g.eeteet eureisities 1 ,i t _„, e ,„ ~.h ~,,,,, shame: ' •u -c- -p 041" and
for music; her voice 'was peculiarly clear and here, and is perfectly l ' ll` ' - "
"r""`" '"' "fine ut others--down with him: i s: ""n up :" At
sweet; she owed much to the careful instrnetion
, Use cold, slimy queleies 1 L. 4 northern brother, , t i, is • Virginia elaival.
wow, ut a rt. t aest Lil 4 115
of Lady Irwin, who was pleased to have a iat r
Pupil I an d is often made a 1 f, aud rushed up, in
ri, in pa-sing, paw :he red ,
so docile and so apt in her favourite science.— . Chamehons are innumerable, darting over the -• •
„ quiriug—
In other reapeoCs, Kitty's education was not sys• prairie in ev „ y at„c„,,, with
int:team ITali le 5 ~.,
t that some d__.l abolitionist? Down
taniatised; her aunt taught her needlework and s P wiftneas, and ex - ere/sintheir
•g pecehiar fa tu i ty of i
IhueTar Rue•
with I : Lea . the mandrel!"
what she knew of French; while her lather in-
changing their color, in order tai terra•-pinad A itu i r• 0 - 1 ' 1 Lel "its only a friend
I
. LI no sal i 1
strutted her arithmetic, and formed her taste in • ofthe h . '
tut: color o 1,-et under which they way I preaching ' agiu t:, e. e: holies and foreigners!"
literature. His eyes failing him he was often 4 happen to be "I s a t it au? -„J ur Vaginivi, t•then let him
glad to use her younger sight, and thus she
i Tbe woods on the ba uks of th,tb ,)ous are per- ah ead, - 1 Li ' r free speech.”
learned to read with expression and without fail- 1 f eo 1 t go I
1 t y elite wit. mocking birds, ringing meet
gue, while she imbibed a fund of general know- b eim f u u
tt y, and the ti enter ed game is ebuudaut,
ledge, which lay in her mind like seed destinedll ARP TIMES IN CINCINNATI —The aumelis.
anti very tame, as it i s scarcely ever seught o f
to bring forth a rich harV s -'st in future years. And ter . The only varieties that I have seen are the , nail .
c , ,r , .aye that there are more stores awl
thus her childhood pained in es er-recinvieg works I • hou-e 4 for rent in that tity at present than si
einail, partridge, snipe, mallard, plover and prm•A
of tenderness and love. Shea was so gentle sad ' A a ny pre...lona period for the last ten years.
e hes.
I large number of cation , have tieepoompelLetli in
so modest that it was only 'by het absonas that as ,
ter Mends know how muck they needed ha. Morn is wall spent in par:shaming traitquiliLY go to the country and ell ambits in 92010‘110110,
TO 1111 4X419114111i110 et 'gad. id the herd tialee•
1
Through Ilelea's courtship, Agnaso had watch
ed, for jealou, care, for the stnallest sign of
faithlessness in Sir Elwird, resolved; if need
were, to prove her devotion to her mistress by
sacrificing herself to avenge her; but the need
did not arise. He had loved before--dearly lov
ed, it was said; but she and Helen were both
persuaded that true passion was oew, for the first
time, awakened in his bosom. When they were
married, and Sir Edward gradually relapsed into
•Els old habits, the ascendancy which his wife
exvrclickl over him left, noroom for jealousy, how
ever much she, might fret at the er3nneee sad
placidity of hie temper.
How mutually injurious these two women were;
'nay easily beponjeetured. Neither aeted as eor
rective to thelother; but each "strerqghtened and
c othrtued thnotht. ea evil tendencies.
By the time ha had related the story six or seven
rim 4 to Kitty, Frank became so enamoured of '
it, t hvt he cm:, ire.] lb.• bold idea of acting it; '
h. , was to bo 'h.. prig •, Kitty the princess, and
Sarah, her nurse, a particularly solid young wo
man, the fairy; the other dramatic pesonte might
he imagined.
Kitty took very kindly to being the privass;
i-he stuck a tiow.r in her hair, sat herself down
o a bank, au i preteoded it was a throne; but
when Frank tried to induce her to personate the
agony of the princess when her lover was torn
...way
Iron her by the savage ogre, hero represent
...l by a crabbed old tree, he was almost discom
fited. Ver) muell urkd, Kitty rushed fiercely
up to the tree, and beating its knotty stem with
her uhebby !Innis, cried, "Naughty ogre, take
away my prince' It was in vaie that Frank
explained the truculent nature of the etre, and
' the tinti,l character of the princess. This, how
' ever, was twthing iu comparison to the trouble 1
he had with Sarah, who was always deeply en
gaged in rending a dilapidated copy of the Old
English Baron, in devouring per apples, or darn
ing stockings, when she was required to make has
i.raceful descent upon earth.
1 But there were other things w'uieh Frank de
-1 lighted to impart to Kitty; the grand mystery of
hie hsee. hoc. in which he was, at an early age,
indoctrinated; yet Kitty wee no prodigy, at five
years old she hardly knew het Ismer% and if any
OW had told her that the nett` was like an
orange, flutteaed,it the poise, she would have
opened her blue eyes in nod ptbeed utonish
mat. /aka Frady she had Zan bee maw is
her infancy, and was ja great measure dependtat
ow a maiden sister of her father, wbo resided
with Mei, and who loved her dearly, But Miss'
Selina Birkby was now in the winter of her
days, and having 'pest the prime of her life is
the dreary state called, in derision, single Wes- i
sadness, she knew no more of the rearing and tram
lug of children than a day-labourer, accustomed ,
tonosort of horticulture bathe sowing of turnips,
might be supposed to know of the rearing of de-
Licata etAties.
Kitty, neyerthelen, had a moat charming little
esontenance, which changed from smiles to tears !
with the rapidity of an April day. Mos was a'
great throurito with Sir Fdward Irwin, whet lilt
ed to labs her on his knee, aad to play with bar
sort carb but she sever pleased Lady ,
perhaps because the eight of her wakened the
memories of her own lost little girl—perhaps
from the inereasieg jealousy of her disposition, 1 ,
which nothing seemed too small, nothing too in.
accent, to excite. Into wondered what Sir Ed.
ward and Frank could see to interest them in a 1
little creature neither remarkable for beauty, nor
distinguished for intelligenee; and Kitty &r her
part, had an instinctive dread of Lady Trivia; she
was almost eoepletely silent in her presence, and
approached her only with snort and unwilling
nese.
But if her instinct led her to avoid Lady Irwin,
it operated yet more strongly in the ease of Ag-
Bete. The child absolutely trembled if Agnese
touched her, and once, when-she insisted on kis
sing her, she was almost colavulsed with terror.
Agnes*, as may be imagined, was not slow to re
pay dislike with dislike. She chose to believe,
that, being the child of an ecclesiastic, Kitty was
peculiarly tinder the ban of Heaven, for, though
destitute of anything like true religion, she clung
with pertinacity to the superstitious which she
had been taught in childhood, and especially; de
lighted to believe that the marriage of a pricst
was a sacrilegious thing, and that, theref ;re, lit-
le - Kitty was nothing but a foredootued child of
Sataa.
CIIAPTEIt V
east I saw /waver NIL= MAIM
r NA RT ritaYCLS I TLC
the sky the bright stur glittered,
Oa Liss grass the moonlight fel!,
Bashed the sound of daylight's bustle,
Closed the "Pink-eyed pluspernall."
As si-dowa the aseseigroera erosod•petts-.•
Where the cattle ley, to roam—
Prom mint Pat!le's glinting party
I was seeing Felly hoes
Jetty ringlets aoftlyilaisarad.
O'er a brow u white as 11301, t
And her ebeek!—the erliaion earmet
!Mares!? had a warmer clew;
'111:14 her parted lips' vermilion.
White teeth dabbed liked ocean foam,
sic t marked, with pulses thrnbbing,
While I saw sweet tweet Nally home.
111.
Witmetbe Astemo tinged the greseweott,
Tanklrbfg all to loaves t , . w.ll,
Ia the lawn by alders shadad .
I my kme to :telly told;
Al tie Meal teipellter ruing
Os the mer-bmopmegled dame.
How I blamed the August erectly'.
When I saw sweat Nolly home.
White 'lairs mingle with my tresses,
Farrows steal upon my brow,
But a hr.-smile cheers an! b;esses
Life's declining znyn)nts
Nairn in the snowy 'kerehief,
Closer to my bosom come—
Tell me, doss thou rill recnorsher
When I saw Plkael Nelly L , ?
Horrid Case of Hydrophobia
B. F. SLOAN, EDITOR.
TIN Wild Ma of the Wei&
The Chicago Press publishes semomesientias
from Belvidere, 111., dated Jaz. 9 Ilikh
says:
-The an running wild in the woods ow thil;
place He not, up to the present wrltia, bus
naptired. I have taken some pains to
those who here seen him, and his dew=
were so nearly to that of Mr. Mellen, that thrs
seems maree4y a doubt that he is the man. lb
has been round here about, a week, and sourced
a - day has paseed that be has not been net by
some one. He is naked or nearly so, and swims
to be afraid of men, as se he always teeW swims
to
through the bash when mos by Sham
He has upon on's or two oceasioss, bower, elms
ed children who were in the woods gatherlmber
ries. On Sunday last, about fifty men were Am
him, Intl on Monday and yesterday bier, tbas
this number, but he has eluded, biro 111
pursuit.
Yesterday be was seen by some Dutoitkim
He sprang up from the cover of an old hallo*
stump, and made off through the brush so rapid
ly thtt they could not oateh him. The woodamos
so thick here, with so many bollow trees aid hid.
Wig pianos, that it Go very dpultful if be is takes
is say other way than by statism, as he is va
ry cunning, like all crazy men. His beard ts
long, hair over his eyes, start naked, scratched
and tanned, and, as you may suppose, he is a pito
iable looking object. Some bare been near enough!
to speak to him, but got no answer. One mad
stet tin, who had a gun, and told him to stop,
or be .would fire on him. He merely turned his
bead back, - but kept on. Wnat be tiros oe world
be hard to saw.
A BLACK LlE.tais.b VILLtAN.—The Chester
(11l ) Masons have po-sed resolutions expelling
out; Dr. Wio A G fir greet, immoral, 1112.
inasonie. unprofessional and ungentlemanly can
dne'. The history ot. the case presents one of
the most diabolical nets of Tilisioy ever pupa- -
trated in a tavilir...d community. The folletOng
particulars aro ticirived from a gentleman likable
long been intimate with the parties.
Th;si Gordon grithisted in ono of the me di ca l
schools of this city, an I removed to Chester with
Dr Ferr.s. lie has an amiable wife and several
en; ..lren From so ue csu-e, the sou of Dr Per.
ris .iislik , .rd..n af, 1 renlained enemies
“to.! th do.t.i of Dr F rris Gordon then made
ft itrli , with young Ferris. and' became iotiotate
rya,' a beautiful rung .ad) to whom he was es
gaged t.. b•• martin l F l• rernorkd to Camila
nat., nu i alai idg I.i.s irdon used every
At in p ,wer 1.) ...du t lie young girl; bat
ng in hi. liell.sh he adminstered sec.
non orugs and tl.us triumphed over her must.
By threms .sure Le f .reed her to mations
c .un,cti in, an I received from her
ku , wled ong her guilt A short time
ag ris re:L.:Ltd IC Chest , r, Ind thinking his
t.. ,, .;• sri.l 11:1!1 wen( , manic I her. G
hid n..ver really flp t iveu Ferris the tujuries
prat—placed a package of his wife'S Letters
iu his toll :h., story of her
•6 a. , u;Y w 0,10 taste t h e life of
01 • d :stn.) er of his peace, but nth meeting him,
ni deciiug that his wif.; might be equally
left the vi:l4;te and has never returned.
I Tie t.Y,,R.111 , • 11t. gr• :IC 'he affair was in
euse, ..n•1 the \las .ris promptly. Girdon
k .1..1 , I. !g Toe c.a. Is oe c in whi c h tlas
vo.r- p. n:1 ie• ..1 LI tieh law would be justill
ibie sad we sin..erely hope tlist the brutal fiend
' will get hie deieris. There is no oily law to
reach L in, and Le Si'. u I lie hung, bout judge
r je- ) , t.. tile g'. .41 Chester Bluff.
r,,t_
run I r destroyer remain in UN
- two •VCII---41.c su'obj Cl .4 pity aisa commies•
ration, he liat.•.l and c, , n I..inned b) all who now
nom known 111 ILI., city, but we advise
Lim t • p away--lie may n,L tare so well here.
Tu.re 1. putlyslan,ht severe far such is
WA...lc-hearted miscreant —St Luis Herald.
Cif Inn
hsit
NUMBER 9.
An Apt Comparison.