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terview that morning at the chateau, she had not | tramping-or would you that we spend the night yet got over the shock; nor could she find any in this uncomfortable spot! Ugh! it is combalm of consolation to pour on the fresh wound. fortless-but sorrow makes one peevish-when

At last the poor abandoned boy yielded to his despair, and, flinging himself down on the stones, howled and shrieked in the very convulsion of agony. It was awful to behold the anguish of the untrained mind. Not for a second did he grasp the notion that the object of his fantastic terror was connected with him in the way the count had described; but the idea that her malignant sorcery had prevailed at last, and that now she had got possession of him, she would transform him into something horrible, or make the world believe that he was her son, force him to toil and carry weights-vague and wild notions, in short, drawn from the "Arabian Night," struggled with the still more appalling reality, as a nightmare contends with our waking senses. The misery of childhood is more exquisite, though less lasting, than that of after years; because the tender mind has not the power to encompass its sense of misfortune; the child is overwhelmed by its incapacity for action-the feeling of its utter helplessness of its being, as it were, but a mere ball in the hands of others.

Jakubska suffered this crisis of nature to have full play. She sat herself on the stone steps, and soon became absorbed in thought; so absorbed, indeed, that she was not aware how swiftly time sped. The very excess of the boy's passion soon exhausted it, and he sat at as great a distance as he conveniently could from her he so much dreaded, with his face buried in his hands, his elbows resting on his knees, hoping, poor child, that the weariness, the sickness of heart that weighed him down, was the harbinger of that repose to which his best friend had been consigned a few days ago -the first sorrow is a thing so new; and this was worse than grief, it was a catastrophe !

"Now," said the woman, rising and shaking the rain from her cloak, as if it had been but morning dew, so light did she seem to make of her wetting--" now, Pavel, we must move forward, or we shall not arrive to-night where we must go, though we are not expected-but we'll make our own welcome. Come," she continued, "do not look so wild-you must go with me-it's true, though you are my own flesh and flood, I can't expect you to feel for me what I feel for you; and I am not astonished that poverty frightens you -that you'd rather be a lord than a serf. I had myself destined you for another fate, but Heaven would not permit it-however, I shall take care my brave boy is not lowered down to work like a common peasant. I'll beg, or, for that matter, steal, before it comes to such a pass. No, no; you need not be afraid-be of good cheer, my son. Your fall has been great; but comfort yourself, yours is not the only heavy heart to-day-yon proud man does not bear a light one in his bosom! I say, Pavel-for I must tell you you are christened Pavel, and not by that French name they used to call you by up there in the castle-we must be

you've known as much of it as I have, you will be tougher than you are now! What will you do?-remain here-well-I am willing-not that I like it, but on a day like this, how can I refuse you anything?"

"I won't go with you," said the boy, resolutely.

"Then, where will you go, pray?"

"Return to the chateau-to my good Seraphinka-the only friend I have left in the world-she 'll take care of me."

"You have yet to learn the ways of the world, my boy. Seraphinka would no sooner know you to be what you are than all her boasted friendship were at once forfeited; her kindness was for the heir of Count Stanoiki-to her future lord. and not to the son of the despised Jakubska! If you return to the castle in that character, the very stable boys will hoot at, and set the dogs on you! No, no; you have yet to learn a lesson or twobut those lessons will come fast enough now."

"I'll not move a step with you!" "Well, then, I'll spend the night here with you."

"I'll appeal to the protection of the first passerby-don't think I am afraid of you, old witchfor I am sure you are a witch. I will not go with you, I tell you. I will not cease to be a count. I will not be a churl-so you may just say and do what you please."

Jakubska at a single glance perceived the difficulty of her situation, but she was keenly alive to the consequences of neglecting the count's injunetions, and felt, for the child's sake as well as for her own, she must find means to conquer his obstinacy; suddenly a bright thought occurred to her.

"You say truly, my son, I am a mighty witch; and if you do not obey me, I will utter a spell so potent that you will be bound to that stone on which you sit, and the murdered man who lies beneath, and the murderers gibbeted above, shall come and howl throughout the night around you! Now, choose if you will stay. Nay, I see in your eyes you think of running back to the castle in spite of me; but if you attempt to stir, I shall first make you halt of one foot; if you persist, I'll make you blind of one eye-nay, if you move but one inch," she added, with flashing eye, "look 'here!" and she drew forth a long knife from her girdle.

Leon was as brave as most children of his years; but he was barely eleven. His nerves had received a shock, and he had been bred in the midst of superstition; not, indeed, but the count was quite free, and the countess slightly affected by such considerations, but the servants generally, and Seraphinka in particular, were deeply imbued with all sorts of delusions; and the latter, as we have seen, had imparted much of her way of thinking to Leon. So, terrified at last by the woman's energy and alleged power, he rose and followed her.

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whether the sky was clear or clouded. They seemed to forget what they never had. But, as to myself, on entering this gloomy and smoke-covered place, I invoked the remembrance of all the days of sunshine in which my life had been passed -of hours spent in the open air, with a clear sky above me, and unbounded space before me. At this moment, I thought with thankfulness of what I had, until then, regarded as the common gifts to all mankind-light, air, the horizon!

I AM simply going to relate an event, of which I was a spectator. It is one of the melancholy reminiscences of my life-one of those impresI had resided eighteen months in this town, sions to which the soul looks back with gentle and perhaps was about to murmur at my long

sorrow in the hour of discouragement. It diffuses an indescribable renunciation of the too vain hopes of this world-a self-denial, which appeases the murmurings within us, and summons us to silent resignation.

If ever these pages are read, I do not wish it to

captivity, when what I am now going to relate occurred.

To gain one of the gates of the fortifications, I found it necessary, when taking my daily promenade, to go down a small alley, the ground of which, being dug in the form of steps, to render

be by those who are happy, quite happy. There its ascent more easy, gave it the resemblance of a is nothing here for them; neither invention nor staircase. Passing through this narrow and obevents. But there are hearts that have known scure alley very frequently, my reflections far in affliction, that have dreamed of joys that are gone, advance of my steps, I thought only of the fields I and are prone to a quick-coming sadness; who if, was going to find; but one day, by chance, my in passing, they catch but a glimpse of a sorrow-eyes fell upon a small house which alone appeared er, or a sound of suffering meets their ear, they to be occupied. It was only one story high, with the expression) with heartfelt sadness, a small bo- | saddened, might have seemed to possess a charm quet of violets in a glass, upon the sill of one of beside the dense blackness of her hair. She inthe windows in the house. clined over her work. She was thin, or attenuated. Her hands were white, but rather bony and long. She had on a brown dress, a black apron, a small white collar-all plain and the bouquet, which had bloomed two days at the window, almost hidden in a fold of her corsage, was there, that not even a breath of its last perfume might be lost.

stop, listen, and pity. To such, I can speakalmost at random-and tell a history, simple, like all that is true; touching, like all that is simple.

In the North of France, near the Belgian frontier, is a very small, obscure, unknown town. The casualties of war have caused it to be surrounded with high fortifications, which seem to crush the wretchedly constructed houses within their enclosure. Never, since the erection of this line of walls, has a single hut been built upon the green lawn beyond them; and, as the population of the place increased, they built upon the public squares, or blocked up their streets. Space, regularity, comfort, all had been sacrificed. The houses, thus huddled together, and hemmed in by high walls, presented to the view, at a short distance, the appearance of a large prison.

The climate of the North of France, without being extremely cold, is very gloomy. Humidity, fog, clouds and snow, obscure the sky, and cover the earth with ice, during six months of the year. A dense and black smoke, rising above each habitation, added still more to the gloomy aspect of this small northern town.

Never will I forget the chilling impression of sorrow that I felt when crossing the drawbridge which served as an entrance to it. I asked myself, with a shudder, if it were possible that there could be beings who were born, and might die there, without knowing anything of the rest of the world! There were, in fact, those whose destiny was such. But Providence, whose bounties are concealed even in the privations which he imposes, had made it necessary for the inhabitants of this place to labor-to labor to acquire even comfort; and, by this means, took away from these poor, disinherited children, the time which might otherwise have been occupied in regarding

two windows; between those windows a door, above them a loft. The walls of the house were painted a dull gray color. The windows were composed of a thousand small squares of a thick and greenish glass. Daylight could never penetrate them, to brighten with its rays the interior of the dwelling. The alley was so extremely narrow, too, that the sun never appeared there. A perpetual shadow hung over it, making the atmosphere always cold there, even when it was quite warm elsewhere.

In the winter, when the snow was frozen upon the steps of the alley, it was impossible to make a single movement without danger of falling. Thus it had become a deserted way, which I alone traversed daily. I do not remember ever to have met any person in it, or to have seen a bird alight, even for an instant, upon the crevices in the walls. I hope, I said to myself, that this sad-looking abode is inhabited only by persons who have almost arrived at the term of life, and whose withered bodies can no longer know sorrow or regret. It would be frightful indeed to be young there!-

No

The small house remained in silence. sound escaped from it; no movement could be perceived in it! It was as quiet as the tomb! And every day I asked myself, Who in the world can live so?

Spring came. The ice in the alley was changed to dampness; dampness was succeeded by a dry soil; and then a few blades of grass sprung up near the base of the walls. The small corner of the sky, of which you could just catch a glimpse, became more clear. In fact, even in this obscure passage, spring let fall a shadow of life. But the small house still remained quiet and motionless.

Toward the month of June I was taking, as customary, my daily walk, when I beheld (excuse Ah! I exclaimed to myself, there is some one here a sufferer !

To love flowers we must either be young, or we must have preserved some sweet remembrances of youthful days; we cannot be completely absorbed by the material world; we must possess that sweet faculty of doing nothing without being idle; to muse; to call to mind things passed away; to hope. In the enjoyment which the perfume of a flower gives, there is a peculiar refinement of the mind. It is something ideal; a fragment of poetry gliding in the midst of the realities of life. When in a humble and laborious existence I find a fondness for flowers, I always suspect that there must be a struggle between the necessities of life and the instincts of the soul. It seems to me that I know how to address, that I could almost gossip with any one who cultivates a simple flower near her cottage door. But now this boquet of flowers saddened me. It said, here dwells one grieving for the air, and the sun, and happiness; one who feels all that is denied her; one so poor in enjoyment that I, a poor boquet of violets, am a joy in her life!

I regarded these flowers with melancholy. I asked myself if the darkness and the cold which pervaded the narrow alley would not make them fade quickly away-if the wind would not blight them? I felt an interest for them. I would have been happy to have preserved them a long time to the person, whoever it was, that loved them.

The next day I returned. The flowers showed a day's additional existence. They were withered, and their colorless petals curled back upon themselves. Yet they still retained a faint perfume, and they had been taken care of. Advancing, I saw that the window was partly open. A ray, I will not say of sunshine, but of light, penetrated the house, and left a luminous trail upon the chamber floor; but on either side of it the obscurity was even more intense, and I could distinguish nothing.

The next day, again, I passed. This was almost a summer's morning. The birds were singing; the trees were covered with buds; a thou

She lifted up her eyes, and saluted me. I saw her better. She was still young; but she had approached so near to that moment when we cease to be so, that this last adieu to youth was sad to look upon. She had evidently endured muchbut probably without a struggle or a murmuralmost without tears. Her countenance wore the expression of peace, of resignation and calmness; but it was the calmness which follows death! I imagined that she had never known any very severe shock, but that her soul had languished a long while, and her hopes had died away; that she was not broken-hearted, but dejected-bent down-then levelled to the earth, noiselessly and without pain.

Yes, her appearance, her expression, her attitude, said all this. There are some persons who look at you without saying a word, and whom you never forget to have met.

Each day I found her at the same place. She saluted me; and, in time, she added a sad but sweet smile to her salutation. This was the only glimpse I could catch of the existence of the female whom I constantly saw seated at the window.

She never worked on Sunday. I believed she then walked out, for on Monday there was always a small bouquet of violets at the window. But they drooped with the following days, and were not replaced until after the end of the week. I thought, moreover, that she was poor, and that she worked in secret for her livelihood; for she embroidered most beautiful and rich muslins, and I never observed any change from the most humble simplicity in her dress. In fact, she was not alone in the house, for one day a rather imperious voice called out, "Ursule!" and she rose hurriedly. The voice was not that of a master's.

sand insects were buzzing in the air. Everything | Ursule had not obeyed as a servant obeys. There morning, timidly, and with some little embarrass- | which might have been absorbed in the occuраment, I deposited them on Ursule's window. Ur- tions of the day, excited by trifles, and talking for sule blushed, and then smiled even more sweetly the love of talk! But in this house He

was dancing in the sunshine. Joy was almost everywhere. Life was in all.

One of the windows of the small house was thrown wide open.

I approached, and saw a female seated at work near the window. The first glance I cast upon her added to the sadness with which the aspect of this dwelling had already inspired me. I could not guess her age. She was no longer young; she was not handsome, or she was no longer so. She was pale, from sickness or sorrow-I could not divine which. It is certain, however, that her features wore a sweet expression, and that the absence of bloom might arise from grief as well as from years; that her pallor, if her heart was not

was an indescribable sort of willingness of heart in the precipitation with which she rose; and yet the voice had no expression of affection! I thought that Ursule, perhaps, was not loved by those with whom she lived; that she was even treated harshly-while her sad and gentle nature was attached to them, without receiving any kindly return.

Time passed on, and each day I initiated myself deeper into the existence of poor Ursule. Yet I possessed no other means of divining her secrets than passing once a day before her open window.

I have already said that she smiled when she saw me. A short time after, during my walk, I commenced to gather a few flowers; and one than usual. Each day after that Ursule had a bouquet. In a short time, among the wild flowers in the fields, I mixed a few from my own garden. Then there were bunches of flowers in the window, and in Ursule's belt. In fact, it was a spring-time, a summer, for the small gray house.

It happened, when returning home one evening, that a shower of rain began to fall just as I was passing this narrow alley. Ursule flew to the door of her dwelling, opened it, took my hand, made me enter - and, when we were in the passage which adjoined the chamber that she habitually occupied, the poor girl seized both my hands, and with tears starting into her eyes, she said to me: "Thank you!"

This was the first time that we had spoken to each other. I went in.

The room in which Ursule worked was the parlor. The floor was made of red tiles, which almost froze your feet. A few straw chairs were the only seats there; and two old pier-tables ornamented either end of the room. This long, narrow room, being lighted only by the small window that opened on the alley, was dark, cold, and damp!

Oh! but Ursule was right to sit near the window, seeking a little air and a little light to live on! I now understood the cause of the poor girl's paleness. It was not from her bloom that had faded, for her bloom had never existed. She was etiolated, like a plant that has sprung up in the shade.

In an obscure corner of the room, in two armchairs, more comfortable than any of the others, I discovered two persons whom the darkness had at first prevented me from seeing. They were an old man and a woman almost as old as he. The woman was knitting, away from the window, but without seeing-she was blind. The old man did nothing but glance about, in front of him, with a fixed and senseless stare. Alas! he had lived beyond the allotted limits of life, and his body alone existed. It was impossible to regard this poor old man without observing that he had fallen into second childhood.

It may often be remarked, when life is much prolonged, that the soul, fretted at her too long captivity, seeks to be disengaged from her prison house, and, in her struggles to be free, the cords of harmony are rent. Her dwelling-place is disquieted! She is no longer a portion of it; but she is no longer where she should be!

All this was hidden, in the small gray house, with its isolation, its silence, its gloom! A blind woman, an imbecile old man, a poor maiden fading away before her time, whose youth had been oppressed, had been absorbed in the care of her aged parents, and by the old walls which retained her in captivity!

had forgotten a melancholy, a dreaming, and exalted maiden; one divining life, imagining its joys, and loving it even in its sadness! He had made her heart an instrument capable of yielding the most delightful tones, and had then condemned it to an eternal silence !

Alas! the fate of Ursule was still more sad than I had supposed it, when, seeing her paleness and dejection, I believed she was suffering from some disease. She had never been unwell in her life. Not once!

She had seen time carry off, day by day, her youth, her beauty, her hopes, her life; and still there was nothing to look back on, nothing to hope for, only silence and forgetfulness!

I often returned to see Ursule; and, one day, seated with her near the window, she gave me almost in the following words, her history :

"I was born in this house; I have never left it; but my family do not belong to this country. We are strangers here, without relations or friends My parents were not young when they married; and, when I first remember them, they were quite old. My mother became blind. This misfortune had a great effect upon her character, and consequently my father's house was always very austere. I never sang in it! No person was ever happy here. My childhood was passed in silence, for the slightest noise was prohibited. It was rarely that I ever received a caress. My parents loved me, however, but they never expressed their feelings to me; I judged their hearts after my own; I loved them, and I concluded that they loved me also. Yet my life was not always so sad as it is now. I had a sister"

Ursule's eyes were moist with tears: but the tears did not flow; they were accustomed to remain hid in the poor girl's heart. She resumed:

"I had a sister, older than myself. She was rather silent, like our mother; but she was compassionate, gentle, and affectionate to me. We loved each other. We shared with each other the attention that our parents required. We never had the joy of walking together, below there, in the woods or up on the hill-side. One of us always remained at home to take care of our old father; but the one that went out always brought home to the other a few branches of hawthorn, gathered from the hedges, and spoke to her sister of the sunshine, the trees, and the air! The listener would fancy that she had also left the house; and then, in the evening, we worked together near the lamp. We could not talk to each other, for our parents were asleep beside us; but when we raised our eyes we met, on the face of the other, a gentle smile. We then went up to bed, in the same chamber; but we never went to sleep until an affectionate voice

Yet Providence might have given Ursule a often repeated:- Good night! go to sleep, limited understanding, an active management, sister!'

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"God might have left us together, do you not think so? But I do not murmur ;-Marthe is happy, up there!

" I do not know if it were the want of air, of exercise, or still more the want of happiness, which planted in Marthe's breast the first germs of disease; but I saw her become weak, -languish, and suffer. Alas! I alone was uneasy for her! My mother could not see her, and Marthe never complained. Father had already become as insensible as you see him now. It was not until some time after she drooped that I could prevail upon my sister to call in a physician.

"But there was nothing more to do. She pined a short time, and died.

"The evening before her death she made me sit down near her bed-side, and took one of my hands in her own trembling hands: 'Adieu! my poor Ursule!' she said to me. 'My only regret is to part from you. Have courage; take good care of mother and father. They are good, Ursule; they love us, although they do not always tell us so. Take care of your health, for them. You must not die until after they do. Adieu! my good sister; do not weep much for me; pray to God often and we will meet again, Ursule!'

"Three days after, Marthe was carried from here, laid in her coffin, and I remained alone with my parents.

"When I informed my poor blind mother of my sister's death, she gave one loud scream, made a few steps at hazard about the room, and then fell full upon her knees. I went to her, assisted her to rise, and carried her back to her arm-chair. Since then she has neither complained nor wept; only she has become even more silent than before, and I observe more often than formerly the beads of her rosary pass through her fingers.

"I have scarcely anything more to tell you. My father became completely childish. We lost some of the little fortune which was our only comfort. I was desirous that my parents might not perceive it. To deceive them was easy. One could comprehend nothing; the other could not see. I commenced to embroider, and sold my work secretly. I had no longer any one to talk with since my sister's death. I am fond of reading;

"Do not believe that I at once accepted this bitter destiny resignedly. No; there were whole days when my heart revolted at the idea of growing old without loving. Not to be loved may be endured; but not to love, is death! Shall I avow it to you? I murmured at Providence! My guilty thoughts revolted against and reproached him!

"But this inner strife has passed away, like my hopes. I think of Marthe's gentle words: We will meet again, my sister!" and no feeling remains in my breast, but of passive resignation, of an humble abnegation of self. I often pray; I weep but rarely. And yourself, are you happy?"

I did not reply to Ursule's question. To speak of happiness to her, would have been like speak ing of an ungrateful friend before those he had forgotten.

On a lovely morning in autumn, a few months later, I was about leaving my home for a visit to Ursule, when a young lieutenant belonging to the regiment which at that time garrisoned the small town I lived in, came to see me. Finding me about to depart he offered me his arm, and we directed our steps toward the narrow little alley in which Ursule resided. Chance made me speak of her; of the interest I felt for her; and, as the young officer, whom I shall call Maurice d'Erval, appeared to take pleasure in the conversation, I walked more slowly. When we reached the little gray house, I had related to him all Ursule's history. He looked at her with interest and pity; bowed to her, and left us. Ursule, embarrassed by the presence of a stranger, when she only expected to see me, had faintly blushed. I know not whether it was caused by the momentary animation of her complexion, or whether it was only the interest I felt in her, but the poor girl certainly seemed almost handsome.

I could not describe the vague thoughts which crossed my mind. I regarded Ursule for a long time; and then, absorbed by my reflections, without speaking to her I arose; I passed my hands over the bands of her hair, and brought it down lower over her pale cheeks. I unfastened a narrow black velvet ribband, which I wore round my neck, tied it round hers, and took up a few flow

and I can never read; I have to work; I never goers and placed them in her belt. Ursule smiled,

out except on Sundays, and I do not go far then, for I am alone.

"A few years ago, when I was younger, I used to muse a great deal, seated at this window, looking at the sky! I peopled my solitude with a thousand fancies, which lessened the tedious length of the day. Now a sort of lethargy seems to deaden my thoughts; I muse no more.

"As I was young and rather pretty, I had hoped, at random, for some, I scarcely knew what, change in my destiny. Now I am twenty

without comprehending. Ursule's smile always pained me. There is nothing so mournful as the smile of an unhappy person! They seem to smile for the pleasure of others, not of themselves.

Many days passed before I again saw Maurice d'Erval; many more before chance led me with him toward the gray house. But it did happen. It was while returning from a gay promenade, in which quite a little party of us had been engaged. Entering the town, we dispersed in different directions; and I took Maurice d'Erval's arm, to make

nine years old. Sorrow, even more than years, a visit to Ursule's. It was done thoughtlessly; has withered my appearance! - all is told! but it occasioned me an involuntary, keen emotion, -I expect nothing; I hope no more; and I and I spoke no more, my mind being filled with a will finish here my isolated days. thousand fancies. It seemed impossible that the

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