THE TIMES, NEW BLOOMFIELD, 1A.. , SEPTEMBER 21, 1880. THE DOCTOR'S STORY, on . A Bride From the Grave. .. t ONCLVDEl). ' j ', BY the tnanoouvres of mamma,; who Is a great matchmaker, In the very year of ruy debut in London she con trived, I scarcely know how, to have me engaged to a mart for whom I cared nothing then, aud O, how much less now! A young girl of eighteen, his presence dazzled, his attentions flattered me, and that was the whole matter. I tolerated him. I have done all I can to delay the marriage for many months by feigning illness; but papa and mamma nay that to make a regular break ofF will prove such an esclandre In society. ; Vet Is my life, all my future, to be sacrificed for the myth we call society V I foresee too clearly what my fate will be, to pass through existence unloving and unlov ed ? but It is Heaven's will, or rather mamma's pleasure." i " O, that I were rich, Gertrude, or that men could not stigmatize me as an adventurer and fortune-hunter, as they will If I I " ' "Did what?" . "Proposed the alternative. " " Fear nothing, Fred, but speak.' I need advice." The sound of my name on her lips the In tense sweetness of her eyes and sorrow of her air, rendered me blind to all but her beauty, her love, and the passion that was In my own heart, and oblivious of those who might be passing near--and afterwards we had soon cruel reason to believe that we were not only seen but watched, as it was quite un usual for her to be out a-foot and alone" I told her that If she would rely upon my affection and honor, on the love with which she had already Inspired me, it would be the duty of my life to render hers happy j that I would save her from the delusive snare called "so ciety, " and the thraldom of her proud old father and calculating mother. Of c ourse I didn't call them so to her. I spoke with boldness, decision and facil ity, for love and passion lent me power. I looked into her eyes, and saw an auswerlng light; but she answered, pale and trembling : - "' ' ''' ' , ' " You are poor, you say, Fred. Now papa is rich, and ambitious of being richer.' Alas,' you must be satisfied with-" ' '. '' "What? Your friendship? : O Ger trude, can you speak so coldly and to me?" Her tears fell fast.: "You overrate my powers of endur ance. To be your friend, and even that only in secret to see you, after your avowal to me, the wife of another, per haps, rendering all my existence here after a blank." " "I do not mean that, Fred. Alas, I know not what I do mean," she added, weeping so bitterly that my heart was pained. ' ' ; : " Mean say that you will be mine, and not the wife of this mysterious other.1' " To-morrow I shall be here again to-morrow shall end all !" " ' She held up her sweet face; no one seemed near. With the speed of thought I pressed my lips to hers for the first and last time on this side of the grove, as it proved and we separated in a tumult of joy. ' , . Next day I kept my appointment without fall, but not without difficulty, a.3 I had a long and troublesome opera tion to perform in a totally different direction, near kringdon Street. I waited till I could linger no longer, and quitted the ptrk slowly, filled by doubts and dread, and by the hope that visitors something unavoidable anything but illness, caprice, or change of mind bad prevented my bright Gertrude from meeting me. The morning of the second day brought me a note from her, dated from St. George's Place. ' " A note I ' "; -; " We had met again and again by ar rangement, but never had I got a note from her, and I read and kissed it a score of times, and committed many other absurdities while studying the bad writing, which somehow seemed totally ' unlike that of a lady; but then poor Gertrude had never ventured to write to me before. " ' It contained but three lines, snyicg that the was unable to meet me as usual, for reasons I should learn if I would call and see her after luncheon time, as papa and mamma had left town, and she s should be quite alone. ;-. . , - The boldness of this proceeding was so' altogether unlike her, and so strange, that my mind became filled with .vague fears of some impending calamity, and I counted every moment till with a heart, the pulses of W'lalcii certainly beat 'fast, I rang the sonorous bell at the door of the lofty house in St. George's Place, then a more fashionable locality than now, for the houte Itself Is changed Into a public building, I had neve before entered it but once, though many a promenade I had made before its stately plate-glass windows, In hopes of obtain lug a glimpse, however brief, of her I loved so dearly. ,' . " Jeanies" lie of the calves and whiskers opened the door rather wider, I thought, than before, and his usual stolid and stupefied Visage wore a Btrange expression. That might all have been fancy, for he could hot know the secrets of his mistress. I warily did not ask for her; but on giving my card, Inquired for Sir Perclval Chalcot, or either of the ladles, certain that she I wanted alone was "at home." The tall loafer In livery bowed, and ushered me up the great etuircase again ; butlnBteadof opening the door of the glittering drawing-room, where I ex pected to be met by the beaming face, the tender eyes and radiant figure of her I loved, I was shown Into the library, and found myself face to face ' with the baronet himself. He looked as high-nosed and aristo cratic as ever, and, moreover, as grim, and pale, aud stern as death. He barely acknowledged my somewhat bewildered bow 1 felt conscious that I had not been sent for professionally and Instead of asking me to be seated, he took a chair himself, and left me standing opposite. Folding one leg over the other, and putting the tips of his fingers together, as he lay back, and mostly looking up to the celling . "Sir," said he, "my son has, doubt less, Informed you In his note of this morning that I wished to see you i"' ; "Your son, Sir Perclval I received no note from him I" I replied, in utter bewilderment. "If Miss Chalcot Is indisposed " ' , . " Do not dare to name Miss Chalcot, fellow I She Is by this time in France." "In France?" I repeated, faintly, aud with a sinking heart. " Yes ; and beyond the reach of beg garly adventurers and chevaliers d'in diiBtrie." (So the letter had been a forgery by the brother a lure for me.) I " Listen to me, sir, and attend," said the old man, gravely and calmly, "for this Is the last time I shall ever degrade myself by addressing so contemptible a tricksterl" " ' ' ' " Trickster, Sir Perclval I" I exclaim ed. " Your Injurious language " ' I said trickster," he continued with a mock bow. ' "All has now been dis- covered ; the secret meetings ' in the park, the artful plans you have laid to worm yourself into the ' affections of a silly and wealthy young girl, luring her heart from the man the gentleman, I mean she Is to marry ; causing the delay of the marriage ; making scandal and gossip even among the menials of my own household. ' Miss Chalcot, sir, has been sent to the Continent, and I hereby Inform you that if you venture to follow, to trace, to speak with, or to write to her, this is but a ' small install ment of what Is in store for you 1" ; And ere I could think or act, the savagely-proud old man had snatched up a heavy rldlng-whip that lay at hand, and dealt me two severe cuts fairly across the face, almost laying . it open, as if with a sword bladeJ " Madman 1" I exclaimed ; "dare you strike me V" " ." ." . " I have struck you twice, sir," said he, with a disdainful smile, as he reseat ed himself. ' You are old, and your white hairs protect you ; but you have a son, and I'll have him out at Chalk Farm," It was really Chalk Farm . then "and and but 0 heaven ! he Is the brother of Gertrude 1" " Bah I I thought so, you presumptu ous beggar ; Go go 1 or I shall chastise you again. Go, I say 1 and remember well my words and my warning I", I was trying to say something--! know not what when the door opened, and his son appeared, with several ger- vants, and before I could speak, I was thrust, dragged, beaten by many clenched hands, and forcibly expelled yea, literally spurned into the publio street I, Frederick Morrison, Mj. D. , K!ght well did they know, old Chalcot and his son that the ; very magnitude and depth of the insult to which they subjected me would protect them, and that, for her sake, tbey might have torn me limb from limb without revenge on my part. Yet every nerve and fibre tingled with shame and passion as-I crossed the street; and while endeavor ing to conceal my discolored and lacer ated face by my handkerchief,; Bought the seclusion of the park opposite, going to the very place where I was wont to meet my lost Gertrude, and where the charm of her presence seemed to hover a till. i There I remained fur some hours in a state difficult to conceive. The insults to which I had been subjected drove me to the verge of insanity. My situation was unique, and I cannot now analyze or describe all the emotions that surged through my brain memory furnishes nothing that will connect, them. But there were rage and shame, grief, hatred and love aud sorrow. It was here but yesterday she had said, prophetically, 'to-morrow shall end all." And all was ended, Indeed t France! she was In France; there would I follow her, and yet be revenged Upon them all. I started up to seek old Crammer, and resign my situation as assistant. . The afternoon was far advanced, and many a patient must have been sorely neglected by that time. But what cared I If the world had burst like a bombshell beneath my feet ? I sought the house In Bedford Street, with the red bottle In the fanlight to find that its crimson glow paled beside the hue of Crammer's face. He was literally boiling and chok ing with indignation at me. He had received due information of my "insolence aud presumption" from Sir Perclval ; was desired to send In his account, and appear at the house no more. Thus his most aristocratic patients were lost to him forever. Ere I could speak, he took the initia tive, and dismissed me, and that night found me iu a humble residence, near the temple, with a few pounds In my purse, my worldly goods a portmanteau and a few medical books ("Bell on the Bones"), seeking to soothe my thoughts by the aid of an execrable cigar and a little weak braudy and water. The bright bubble had burst 1 I had lost Gertrude, and she, being facile, or having little will of her own, on finding that Bhe had lost me, would too' proba bly make peace with her own family by fulfilling the engagement that was so odious to her. As this conviction forced itself upon me, I could have wept ; then I would start up, and mutter of going to France ere It might be too late ; but I had ' no money, and traveling in those pre-rail- way time was not the cheap luxury It Is now. Moreover, I knew not how or where to seek her and while doubts grew thus, and time went on, I might lose her forever. The result of all this was that the next day saw me In a raging fever, and months elapsed ere I was convalescent. For some time after ' Bonse returned I knew not where I was, or what had happened to me. Close by the table sat a familiar figure in his shirt-sleeves, smoking, and occasional taking a pull at a pint of stout. The pleasures he varied by reading aloud from a med ical work, on pharmacy apparently, and breaking into a scrap from a song thus r ' "'Pluinbl subaceli an aqueous solu tion of the salt thus produced with the acetate and oxide of ' lead. A dense, clear liquid. Colorless, odorless, ' and slightly alkaline in taste. Produces a white coating on glass.' Plumbi mbacet that's the ticket! ' ' , " 'Sodce chloratce : a solution of car bonate of soda, after the absorption of chlorine gas. A clear liquid, and color less. Odor' " : . , Bob Bob Asher!" said I, in a faint voice, and he started at once to my bed- side ; and from him I got a history - of how ill I had been, and how he had been ray chief attendant ; how sore trials had come upon himself, and that, by his father's failure, he was at. the lowest ebb now for funds, he had be taken himself to study, and meant to pass now " But who the deuce is this Gertrude of whom you have been raving for weekB past? Not she 'of Wyoming' eh, Fred?" I told him my story, and he was ex cessively Indiguaut. Why, death alive 1" said he, " Chal cot is only a baronet, and in the civil line of precedence that is pretty like a full corporal in . the army the Becond round of the long ladder of rank. I'd have chucked the old beggar over his own window!" " Not if you loved his daughter, Bob," said I, mournfully. "Well, no, perhaps." "And you are reading up I1" " Hard, Fred. I am doing the ' Modi fied Examination' in pharmacy, and thiuk I shall pass now." I had been three months ill.' Three months! Bob told me that the ',' Chal- cot's town house was still shut up, and no one knew in what part of the Conti nent they were traveling. Our separa tion seemed confirmed now. The dread of never again beholding that sweet face. with the bright eyes and . the pretty crape bonnet, grew strong within me and the idea that she might already have become the wife of another added to my torture of mind. But lack of funds compelled me to bestir myself anon, and through Bob's kind offices and my own known , skill While attending la the hospitals, I was fortunate euough to , obtain temporary employment with Professor Sir then the most celebrated anatomical lecturer in England, as an under demon etrator, my duties, as I may Inform the uninitiated, consisted to a great extent in the preparation of the various sub jects for minute dissection prior to his lectures; and during the hot weather in London, I know of no task more nau seous, repulsive or typhoid in its chances and nature. However, such work Is m necessary for the progress of science and the conversation of life and health in others, as the terrible task of procuring the necessary subjects was then when the tables of anatomical theatres and dlB9ectlng-rooms depended mostly if hot solely, on the results -of felony often murder and the abduo- tlon of the tenants of . the tear-bedewed grave an abduction in many Instances, happily, never known to relatives. The duties assigned to me at the rooms ofBlr brought me in contact, under cloud of night, with wretches whose character was revolting, and caused me to shudder. Scores of bodies were brought me valued at from five to twenty guineas each. , Use and wont Is everything, and by me at that tlmo they were viewed as coolly and callously as we may the lish that He on marble slabs In the curer's window. ... Weary with a long day'B work at the dissecting-room, I had retired to my little lodgings, and thinking sadly over the bright past that could come no more, I felt disposed to ask heaven, upbrald lngly, why I had ever been cast under the spell of Gertrude, when I was startled by the unusual sound of car riage wheels stopping before my humble place. There were steps on the rickety stairs, and to my astonishment the pro fessor entered, and shutting the door, said he wished to speak to me alone, as he had suddenly "an expedition" to suggest to me one that would require decision and care , to carry out, as so many morbid and vulgar rumors of violated graves were abroad, and the Buspected, if caught, had but email chance of mercy from the mob. " But Sir , surely you don't expect me to go on such an errand ?" I asked, with an Incredulous smile. ' By Jove, but I do!'!. said he, laugh ing. " I have frequently done so, when a student here, in many a fetid London burying-ground, now closed up or built over ; but this is a most particular case a subject we must positively have for demonstration, aud, if possible, to skele tonize afterwards." . . " Is It peculiar then ?" .... j ... "Most peculiar I" ' ' ... My curiosity Was excited. , . "Where Is the burying ground?" I asked. "At B -, eight miles from town No 'outrage,' as they call it, has occur red there. . The place is us watched and open, Would go with you myself but two, you see should be just in Hie way. Yesterday an . old woman was burled there. Cholera, they tay, caused her death ; but anything is called cholera now. She was fifty-elght years old, and known well iu the nelghboohood for a singular malformation of the ; spinal column, and I must have that portion of ber for my museum ; but as . the old dame will not be very heavy, you may as well bring the whole of her. .Young PhoBfat, so long my assistant, who has the practice there, has . w ritten me all about it. Take a trap and Bob Asher with you he's game for any thing- to-morrow afternoon, and . if you can, manage the matter without fuss. We'll call her an old Dutch woman in the class, Bay she came pickled in a cask from Holland." The whole affair was a little exciting, bo the high spirits of , Bob Asher, who had frequently been engaged in such affairs in the churchyards of Edlnburg, decided me at once. We engaged a dog cart, took large overcoats with us, as the nights were chilly, a- cloak, a, coll of rope, heavy sticks, and even a brace of pistols for an extreme emergency, which I prayed devoutly might not occur, and we soon left Loudon behind us. Tom Phosfat was duly prepared by a letter from the professor for our arrival, He was a bachelor, and made us thor oughly welcome, so we had supper and a glass of grog with him ; I should rather say several glasses of grog too many for the work we were on. How ever, we set out at midnight for the churchyard, which stood apart from the village, on the borders of a wide waste common, dark, secluded among trees and lonely., The night was gloomy and starless, and not a sound was heard not even withered leaf whirled by the passing wind as we left the horse . and trap under a high hedge, and vaulted over the low churchyard wall. My heart beat quickly, all the more so that Tom'i brandy had been pretty potent. The mouldering tombstones,haIf sunk In the long reedy grass, and tossing nettles, studded all the mournful place, God's Acre . seemed very solemn that night. , The lonely old church, old as the days of the third Edward, half, hid den by ivy, and spotted . by Jiuchens raised Us square Norman tower against the vapor-laden sky, and quaint heads and demon faces were peeping out of the mouldings and gurgoyles upon us. "You know the grave, Phosfat?' said I. " Yes huhthlg must be It. There In the ground," hnd Imbibed too much. , This seems the burial place of wealthy people," gald Bob Asher. " The Id dame must have had money to spare." , . , " By Jove, It Is open I" said I. in a low whisper. .' ' ' .- i ; . "It has not been quite filled up boards are over it ; only some branches and soil thrown In. How la this?" " The bricking of the vault has been postponed till to-morrow," said Bob Asher, shovelling out tho debris. "We have no time to lose, Fred.; Shall we break open the top of the coffin, aud use the rope to pull up the subject by the neck ? That was the way with Knox'a fellows in Edlnburg." J. i 1 , " Nay," said I, "by such a process the spinal column may be disturbed; and that won't suit the , professor's pur pose." ' Look round, find listen well; here goes then," and half leanl ng the coffin on its side, Bob and Tom, by inserting their shovels under the lid, burst it with a hideous jarring sound, and then the ghostly tenant was seen, enveloped In a shroud of white from head to foot ; and even to us, prepared as we were for it, that figure had something horrible in its angular rigidity. Muffling it In the dark cloak, I cast it over my shoulder, and deposited it in a sitting position the rigot mortis had passed away appar entlybetween the seat and splashboard of the trap. My companions meanwhile rearranged the grave and coffin as we had found them. .. Voices and lights now scared us. ' Phosfat ' was so tipsy that I had to leave Bob Asher to take care of him ; and casting our shovels and rope into a clover field, I drove at a breaking pace towards London,' intense ly anxious to reach the professor's house before day should dawn, lest the police or a passer-by might detect some thing wierd in the person who wbb my companion. It seemed to me that we had not proceeded ' a ' mile lownward, between hedgerows, when the waning moon, hitherto invisible, began to glim mer over Hampstead, shedding a ghost ly farewell ray upon the silent country, where not a dog barked. . . , -. ;; ; A strange sound, like the murmur of a voice, came to my ear at times. . Was it a pursuit? Hooked anxiously back, and even pulled, up for au Instant. Behind all . was . silence but O, al mighty heaven I what was this t The old woman -was moving her feeble hands essayed to lift the cloth that cov ered her face! "A wild spasm of terror contracted my heart and any one but a meuicai man, i am assureu, wouiu nave abandoned the trap and an adventure so terrible', but the Idea of a recovery from trance immediately flashed upon - my mind, and my first thought . was; the professor would not get the prized verte bra; , after all. I lifted the almost inani mate woman beside 'me, and-, felt, that she was warm, fleshly too, and had re turning pulse, which the motion of the trap accelerated. '. I uncovered her face that she might respire, and a wild cry escaped me--a cry that rang far over the heath. ,,- j . .i - ,, r 1 ' Heavens ! Was I going mad outright? She was Gertrude Gerture Chalcot pale as death could make her, yet living still, her hazel eyes lurid and sunken, her dark hair fulling about her face. All that followed was like ,a swift nightmare; the drive to town, muffled in my overcoat and cloak ; the abandon ment of the trap in the street ; her con veyance In secret to my lodgings, and placing her cosily in my own bed till I could get her other quarters and attend ance. Luckily, Bob Asher, and the professor too. came about midday,, or I should soon nave been fit for Hanwell. '-. How all thia came to pass was very simple, : Unwedded still, she had re turned with her family to England in wretched health ; her illness took a more serious form, and would seem to have culminated in a species of trance, with the medical technicalities of which it might be wearisome to trouble the reader. Suffice It, that the alarm of cholera was abroad, as, perhaps,, in too many other cases, hastily and. prema turely ; hence the vault being left . un finished, permitted her to respire, and our adventure a mistake, by the way ended in her rescue, though a horror of what her fate might have been filled my heart, and for a long period we . were compelled to conceal from ber the awful place In which she was found. ' Under our united care she recovered fast. ; But my Space ia short, i Sweet is the union of lovers after a separation; but with all its charm, much that was sad, startling and even terrible, mingled with ours.' - She was mine now. Not even that proud and cruel father, who had so fiercely spurned me, could dispute the claim, I thought. Mine O, how strangely and how terri bly mine I The dote of the year found us mar ried, Bob Asher acting as groomsman- with great eclat. Sir took me as a purtner, and for a month I went with my bride to Baden. There, one day, at the table d'hote, she fouud her self face to fuce with ber own parents. The alarm, the consternation, tho scene proved frightful ', but all ended in a complete reconciliation, and Christmas day caw ui alt happy at Chalcot Park, and I felt, on seeing my blooming Ger trude, in all the epleudor of her beauty, opening the yearly ball, that I could, with a whole heart forgive even her father for hi pride and fury ou the day that saw us separated. s no other new one tuttered Toiii, who