Columbus daily enquirer. (Columbus, Ga.) 1874-1877, August 05, 1877, Image 1
VOL. XIX. COLUMBUS, GEORGIA, SUNDAY, AUGUST 5, 1877. NO. 185 SOHO OF A SHIRT. W ITU MANX APOLOGIES TO HOOD. With face that was weary and worn, With eytl ds heavy and red, Poor Morton sat with a look forlorn, And doMully scratched his head. The bottles lay shoot, The returns weie in the dirt, And in a voice 'twin a howl and a shout lie sang this song of a shirt: Flail! flapl flap 1 While evou the boys do scoff, And tell me to wash the bloody shirt, And take the old thing ofT. Its Oh! for a fight in the South, With bucketsful cf gore! Uow I could flourish the shirt again, And renew the stains once more! Work! work! work! Till the brain begins to swim; I've worked upon that bloody ehTt Til l my eyes are heavy and dim. Seam, and gusset and band— I’ve stcepe l them all in gore. And tin* bloodier that I made the shirt The Uoosiers cheered the more. I stumped the State a!l through Th • bloody shirt to wave; lint all my toil and great ado Could not the “grandson” save. Despite of Chandler’s cash, t iling out as free as dirt, A tiilal wave lies swept the State And washed the bloody shirt. It s all well enough to talk, And say tnat my shirt's played out, Hut if that old stand-by is lost What can we talk about? And so, though the thing don't take, And rath r seems to hurt; For one, ! never shall f irsaae The well-known bloody shirt. With face that was weary and worn, With eyelids heavy ajd red, Poor Morton sat, with a look forlorn, And d ilefully scratched his head, llis features oft would twitch, As if from tbo iglits that hurt; Ku' r-ti 11 with a rolce of dolorous pitch lie sung his song of a shirt. I.UVi: IX A COTrAUK. BY N. P. WILLIS. They may talk of love in a cottage, And bowers o trellised vine— Of nature bewilchingly simple, And milkmaids half divine; Th y may talk of the pleasure of Bleeping In the shade of a spreading tree And a walk in the field, at morning Uy tlia side of a footstep free. l!ut give mo a sly flirtation By the light of a chandelier— With music to play in the pauses And nobody very near; Or a - eat on a silken sola, \\ ith a glass of pure old wine, And piamma too blind to discover The small white hand in mine. Vour love in acottige is hungry, Your vine is a ucst for flies— Your milkmaid shocks the Uraces, And simplicity talks of pies! Y’oit lie down to your shady slumber, And wake with a fly in your ear. And your damsel that walks m tlio morning Is shod like a mountain.er. True love is at li 'me on a carpet, And mightily lik e his ea-e— And true love has an eye f.ra dinner, Aud starves beneath shady trees. His w ing is the fan of a lady, ilis foot's an invisible thing. And his arrow i- tipp’d with a jewel, And shot from a silver ttring. A WORK OF RETRIBUTION.- BY CHRISTIAN BEID. [From Appleton’s Journal.] CHAPTER III.; Time flies fast in a pleasant country- house full of gay young people, and Sans- Souci was one of the pleasantest of houses, its owners the most charming of hosts. Wbat with rides and drives, mu sic, visits, and boating, time flew almost too fast for some of the inmates—for those whose stay was limited, for those who fouud that long rides in green woods ami voluptuous summer nights among the rosesjled to results more serious than flirt ation. The number of matohes which had been made at Sans-Souoi was a source of great pride to Mrs. Jennings, who was a confirmed match-maker. All men of marriageable age and marriagea- hie means who fell into her Lauds she regarded with an eye to matri mony, and she never failed to offer them excellent opportunities to exchange the single for the wedded state. It was not likely that, nnder these cir cumstances, she would neglect the inter ests of the cousin who, in what she felt to be a truly pathetic condition of loneli ness, had drifted into her hands. On the day after his arrival she informed him. with a significance which waB alto gether wusted on his obtnseness, that Mary Herbert was one of the most charm ing girls in the world (the number of charming girls that Mrs. Jennings knew spoke volumes for her belief in her own sex , and would make the best of wives for any man who was fortunate enough to secure her. To this Thurston cheerfully assented, though the idea of becoming that happy benedict did not for a moment occur to hint; but he did not rebel when he found himself constantly ia Miss Herbert’s company during the next few days. She was a pretty, pleasant, well-bred girl, who entertained him sufficiently to keep ennui at bay, and who taught him (the dullest of pupils) the abstruse science called croquet. ILiDg in the same bonse with Miss taring, and sitting at the same table with her three times a day, not to speak of other occasions of meeting, it was im possible that he could altogether ignore r presence. In fact, that presence was tmt one which could readily be ignored. " hether for good or ill, for pleasure or P & in, Agatha Loring was a person who un der all circumstances and at all times, commanded attention at least. Bitterly as Thurston hated her, he found his ghnee following the motions of her graceful figure; he found his ear attracted ‘ v the full, sweet music of her tones; he found his eye resting, with a mixture of Reluctant admiration and repulsion, on the perfect outlines of her head, with its dark braids. He could not fail to per ceive that there was a distinctive charm about her which marked her out and set tar apart from other women. What can We call this charm, which is so fine that it eludes all analysis in words? Whatever we call it—personal magnetism, fasoina- tion or enght else—the fact remains that too often it is ruthlessly used for purpo- •as of harm only. It was impossible for Agatha Loring’s best friends to deny that she had used it with a cruel recklessness which some- times seemed like the wanton mischief of a child; while dark were the tales her enemies told of the lives she had wreck" ed, the hearts she had broken. After the manner of most women of her class, she was very capricious in her fancies, and a man’s best fortune often lay in not pos sessing interest enough in .her eyes to make it worth her while to fascinate him. Let his social rank, wealth, or power, be wbat it wonld, if he did not possess this interest, she paid no regard to him. If on the contrary, she conceived a caprice in his favor, nothing satisfied her save his complete subjection. A fancy of this description she had ta- ken to Thurston at once, and wben she saw his deliberate intention to avoid her —when she read accurately enough the scarcely-veiled dislike and contempt he felt for her—pique came to the aid-of ca price and she determined to bring such a stout rebel to her feet. “My dear,” she said one afternoon, when Mrs. Jennings sought her room da ring the siesta hoar, “what is the reason that yonr Egyptian cousin dislikes me so much?” “I—really I don’t know what you mean” answered Mrs. Jennings, surpised and a little confused. “Why should you im agine that Colonel Thurston—I suppose it ia he whom you mean—dislikes you?” “Hypocrisy is not at all yonr particular talent, Lncy,” was the quiet response. “I do not ‘imagine’ that Colonel Thurston dislikes me—I know it. Do you remem ber when you introduced him to me? Be fore we had either of us uttered a word, his eyes told me what his sentiments to ward me were. Have I injured him in any past state of existence, or what is the reason of his dislike?” “I suppose he has heard of all your wicked coquetries, and disapproves of them—as well he may,” said Mrs. Jen nings, who had by this time recovered herself possesssion. “He is a wise man not to give you a chance to win his heart, for if he did he would fare no better than others have done.” Miss Loring laughed softly. “We shall see!” she said. “A chal lenge ia something I could never brook, and I have taken a fancy to his face and manner. He seems so frank, so honest, so brave—I should like him for a friend.” “A friend!” Mrs. Jennings scornfully repeated. “Agatha, I am ashamed of you! Why not call a spade a spade, and say at once that you want to make a fool of him?" “Because that is not what I want. I am tired of making fools of men—oh you may raise your hands if you like; I am tired of all such folly. I don’t say I could live without it—I don’t say I shall not be a coquette till I die—but I do say that sometimes I would like to feel that I had one hoDest, genuine friend iu the world, and such a friend this man conld be. I can see in his face that he would go through fire and water for any one for whom he—cared.” “I think he wonld,” said Mrs. Jen- nings, “but he will never go through lire and water for you, and the sooner you put such ideas oat of your head the bet ter. He is not the kind of man whom yon cun fascinate, and as for friendhsip that, of course, is stuff ! Content your self with men who belong to your own world, like Antoine Virien, and let my Egyptian cousin alone.” *My dear, do you know that every word you utter gives me an additional rea son for overcoming the prejudice that your Egyptian cousin appears to have oonceived against me?” ‘Agatha, I think you are the most heartless girl and the greatest handle of contradictions I ever knew!” cried Mrs. Jennings, thoroughly vexed. “If you will have the truth—though I was asked not to tell yon—you have alread inflicted pain enough on Philip Thurston—” Tap, tap, at the door, and a domestic summons took Mrs. Jennings away at once, leaving her sentence unfinished. Agatha made no effort to detain her; but after the door closed, she said to her self: ‘Strange! What possible pain have I ever inflicted on Philip Thurston? And she was asked not to tell me. Well I shall not tempt her to betray his confi dence, but I will seek information at the fountain head. ” Though usually one of the last of the feminine band to appear, Miss Loring broke through her habit this afternoon, and half an hour before the dinner bell rang she swept lightly down the broad staircase and paused in the wide, airy hall below. Everything was silent around for the masculine as well as the feminine occupants of the house were still strug gling with their evening toilets in the upper regions, and the cool, dusky draw ing room was entire’y deserted. So she had thought, at least; until she entered and crossed half its length. Then a man’s figure rose from a couch in a bay window, and advanced toward her. At first, in the dim obscurity, she did not recognize him, then her heart gave a leap and she felt that fate fought for her. “Ah, Colonel Thurston, yon are like myself first in the field!” she said. “The heat is tropical, is it not? But yon have really found a cool place, I believe. “My experience in a tropical conntry has given me a kind of instinct with re gard to cool places,” Thurston answered. “If you will take a seat in this bay win dow, Miss Loring, you will catch a pleas ant breeze.” “Thanks: bat I won't deprive you of yonr lounging-place—in fact, I am sorry to have disturbed you, for I am on my wav to the garden. My toilet needs the finishing touches of some roses, which I conld not trnst even my maid to gather for me.” She looked straight at Thurston with those limpid, darkly-fringed eyes; which poor Bertie bad said were “all express ion,” and to any other man that look would have been' enough. But this man received the glance like granite. “The snn has sank low enongh for you to find the garden very pleasant now, I have no doubt,” he answered, standing qnite still. Then her lips unclosed in a smile, and a bright light half amused,half beguiling, flashed into her eyes. “And do you mean to let me go unat tended? I am afraid, Colonel Thnrston, that Eastern habits have made you forget our Western code of gallantry.” “I did not suppose you wonld care for my attendance,” he replied; “but if I can be of service, pray command me.” “Yon can be of service at once, if you will be so good as to go to Mrs. Jenning’s sitting room and bring me her garden- shears. ” Thnrston went for the shears, and a moment later, to bis own surprise, he found himself attending Agatha Loring as she strolled slowly toward the flower garden. Once out in the open air, they found the waning afternoon more b6antifnl than they had imagined: for what is love lier than the close of a royal summer day? Long, golden light was streaming on rich green foliage and close-shorn tnrf; the distant hills were wearing a pearly haze, soft as a bridal veil; deep shadows stretched over the land; and unnumbered sweet odors were wafted to and fro by the breeze, which came with coolness and refreshment on its wings. “This is better than lying behind close blinds, with a novel in one hand and a fan in the other,” said Agatha. “Bat probably our heat seems to you so trifling after Egypt that I am half ashamed to complain of it.” “It does not seem very great,” Thnrs ton answered; “bat even if it were there are many pleasant things which one does not appreciate until one loses them. For example, I suppose it hardly strikes yon, Miss Loring, that the greenness which clothes the land is a marvel and delight? But it wonld do so if for five years you had never seen a forest or a valley like that.” And he pointed to the emerald expanse below. “If you can enjoy what appears to us snob ordinary things, you mast find a great deal of pleasure in your visit to America.” “I expected to find a great deal,” he replied; “but the expectation iu its large sense has been wholly disappointed,and I am now forced to lake what ornmbs of enjoyment I can find.” She sent a swift side-glanoe at him, and seeing the dark shadow which had fallen over his face, interest and cariosity stir red within her breast. “Could he have been coming over to be married, and did he arrive to find him self jilted?” she thought. “Snch things often make men women-haters; but he does not seem to hate some kinds of wo men! ” “What a pity!” she said—and the low tone spoke volumes of sympathy, second ed by the clear eyes. “Surely, disap pointment is the saddest thing in life; and how much of it we have to endure! Even I have known a great deal, thongh I am not very old; and now I never expect to grasp a pleasure in its completeness. I know there must bea drawback somewhere —a dash of bitter in all sweetness." “A drawback—yes,” said Thurston, coldly, “but that is not a complete and crashing disappointment, a— But here we are among the roses, Miss Loring. Shall I cut your flowers?” ‘If you will be so kind; for I am not exactly in toilet to venture among thorns —though it seems selfish to make yon risk scratching your hands.” “My hands are not delicate, nor are they surrounded by lace; but you must tell me what roses to cut.” “This way, please. I want the cloth- of-gold, and yonder are several beautiful half-opened buds.” He cut, all the buds indicated; then, mindful of the tender white hands await ing them, spent a minute carefully re moving every thorn from their smooth green stems. The woman watching him was a keen observer of human nature, and she saw at once this little aot was very characteristic.. “He dislikes me,” she thought. “Ev ery word that he utters, every look that he gives me, tells that; but he is never theless as careful not to leave any thorn to wound my hand as if—as if he loved me!” And in that moment,perhaps,the trage dy of these two lives was settled—in that moment a sudden longing for the love which she felt instictively this man could bestow rose in Agatha Loring’s breast; in that moment Philip Thurston’s chances of happiness this aide of the grave were utterly lost! He knew as little of it as any of us know when the most fateful hoar of our lives comes. Having removed all the thorns, he extended the roses, saying: “I think you will find them harmless now.” “You are very kind,” she said, with a strile; “but your labors are not quite end ed. I want one more bad—that smaller one there. Now, tell me what is your favorite flower?” “I do not know that I have a favorite flower,” he answered, clipping the bud she wanted; “but if I have it is the white jasmine—simply from its association with other things.” “The association of certain memories with certain flowers is very powerful, is it not? There are some flowers which on that account, are hateful to me—bnt the jasmine is not one of them. I, too, love it”—and here her voice sank a little —because it reminds me of my mother, who used to wear it in her hair—my pretty mother! so long ago, for I was a mere child when she died.” “And I like it,” said Thnrston, forget ting himself for a moment, and forget ting what manner of woman this was whose perilously sweet voice sounded then so pathetic, “because it oovered one of the piazzas of my old home, and its fragrance brings back a thousand memo ries of my boyhood.” “It has the same kind of association for both of ns in that oase—and here is a hedge overran with it. Cat a few sprays, Colonel Thnrston, and then we will go back to the honse.” Back to the house they went accor dingly, and when they reentered the drawing room, they found it still uqocctl. pied. “This is fortunate! ” said Agatha. “I can put the finishing touches to my toil et before the rest appear, and you shall" ■ give your opinion of the effect.” She walked to a large mirror, and stood for a minute or two arranging the flowers in her hair; after which she fastened a cluster in front of her dress, and turned, “Throw open the window,” she said, “and tell me what you think of my ap pear an oe.” Thurston never forgot the picture which was revealed to him when the win dow was thrown open and a level flood of snnshine streamed in, filling the room with a golden mist. Surrounded by this, as the old painters snrronnded the figure of a saint, Agatha stood dressed (as he knew already) in black—light draperies of tnlle and lace, with here and there an artistic touch of amber, the golden roses which he had cut lying in a cluster where the corsage revealed the white neck, and crowning the soft masses of her dark hair. Involuntarily the self-contained man, who disliked and despised her, oanght his breath. It waR a vision of loveliness— heightened by the accidents of time and place—snch as in all his life he had nev er seen before. He felt in every fibre that this woman was more than beautiful that she was enchanting; and forgetting conventionality, and all the roles whioh govern social intercourse between men and women, the truth sprang from his lips: “My God!” he said. “I can under stand now how yon have worked such mischief! ” The intense passion of his tone was not lost on the quick ears whioh listen ed. She advanced eagerly toward him and paused—so near that he inhaled the fragrance of the roses which she wore, so near that he looked straight into the won derful depths of her eyes. “Why should you say that?” she asked. “At least I have never worked mischief to you.” “To me—” he began, and stopped ab- rubtly. No, it was impossible; he conld not mention Bertie’s name with the face which had been Bertie’s undoing gazing into his own. “Pardon me,” he said, af ter a minute: “my remark was altogether unjustifiable. I should have said that your toilet is admirably chosen and does credit to yonr taste.” “I am glad yon like it,” she said, changing her tone as entirely as he had changed bis. “Now, to repay yon for yonr exertions in my behalf, l will make you a bouqaet for your button-hole. See! I have kept this bud which you cut last and I will make it np with your favorite jasmine.” Which she did. One or two glossy dark-green leaves, . the delicate golden rose, and two or three sprays of starry jasmine—these grouped together made up the tiny boquet. “Is it not pretty?” she said, holding it out between her slender fingers. Bat it mast be tied together, and where shall I get a bit of thread? Ah! this will do.” She lifted her hand, and from a long dark cnrl which fell on her shonlder, drew a strand of hair. “I will excuse you from quoting that ‘beauty draws us with a single hair,’ ” she said, with a laugh, as she wound this about the stems of the flowers, “but you must understand that it is my own hair— not one bought from a hair-dresser— which I have given yon. Here is your bonqnet. Shall I pin it in your button hole?” “If you will be so kind,” said Thurs ton, who began to comprehend her object very clearly now. “She wants to play the same game with me which she has al ready played with Bertie,” he thought. “Let her try—one failure, perhaps, will teach her a lesson.” Despite this penetration, however, he conld not keep bis pnlses from beating more quickly when she drew near and slipped the bonqnet into his bntton hole with a dexterity evidently the result of long practice. Then she glanced in his face with a smile that made even his cool head giddy for an instant. “I hope you don’t object to wearing my colors for one evening?” she Baid. Whether or not he wonld have made the answer plainly demanded of him is a question of doubt; for at that moment Mrs. Jennings entered, and paused— transfixed with astonishment. ^“Agatha, you down! —and Cousin Phil ip ?” Miss Loring turned, a glint of triumph in her langing eyes, a cadence of triumph in her quiet voioe. “Yes, my dear Lucy, I have been down some time—one’s ohamber is so warm these afternoons! and I found Colonel Thurston before me. We have been in the garden, and, since he kindly assisted me to gather some roses for my toilet, I have been sharing the spoils with him.” “So I perceive,” said Mrs. JenniDgs, very significantly. So others perceived, when the compa ny gathered, and as usual Agatha wont to dinner on Yirien’a arm. It chanced that Thurston was seated just opposite, and the creole’s eye soon fell on the rose in his bntton hole. “There appears to have been some oc cult sympythy between Colonel Thnrston and yourself in the matter of color this evening,” he said, glancing at the roses whioh were the ohief adornment of his companion. She looked at him serenely. “Occult sympathies must be easily es tablished, then. This only means that we went into the garden together. The green-eyed monster suddenly laid j scattered from his hand over the piazza- a grasp on the accomplished lady killer’s 1 floor. heart. He, too, had been in, the garden, and well he knew what spell had been wo ven about him there. “Some one has remarked,” he said, trying to speak lightly, “that gardens have always been dangerous places to mankind, since the fall of the first man was accomplished there by the first wo man.” “Poor Eve!” said Miss Loring. “How every Adam since the first has oast a re proach at her! Yet her only fault was listening to a serpent who has left many prototypes behind—in gardens and else where. ” CHAPTER IV. “I wonder how Virien likes snch a tarn of affairs?” So the inmates of Sans-Sonci said to each other, smiling, as the next few days flew by, and it became hourly more evi dent that this irresistible gentleman’s star had set as far as Miss Loring’s fickle fa vor was concerned. “Her caprices are certainly unaooonnt- able!” people agreed. “Who could have imagined that she wonld throw aside An toine Virien for a man like Colonel Thnrston—good enongh in his way, bnt not prticnlarly attractive, and altogether apart from the world in which she lives!” “But that is just what she likes!” oth^ ; ers would chime in. “To be capricions and startling, to make a new sensation at any price—what else does Agatha Loring desire? Whoever withholds incense is always the most important person of the hoar with her, and you know Colonel Thnrston did not bow down before her at once. ” “Poor Mrs. Jennings is really to be pitied,” said some one, with a laugh. “Do yon notice how anxioasly she watches Agatha’s game of fascination?Sbe thought she had arranged matters nicely to make a match between Colonel Thurston and Mary Herbert.” Mrs. Jennings was, indeed, very much to be pitied, for she was perplexed and greatly disquieted. “With all my knowl edge of the weakness and folly of men, I did not think that Philip Thurston would be such a fool! ” she confided to her hus band. “It seems incredible. He knows what Agatha is—he resented the manner in which she treated Bertie—and now to let her wind him round her finger like this! Well, I shall never again believe in the strength and stability of any man!” “Man is always weak when woman tempts, my dear,” observed Mr. Jennings placidly. “That is an old story, and yon ought to know. I don’t think Thnrston is seriously hurt, however. ” “Whether he is serionsly hart or not, it is a shame for him to allow Agatha to flirt with him in this manner. How any man can have so little self respect is a mystery to me—and there is Mary Her bert, who would make him a lovely wife!” “I don’t think he wants a wife lovely or otherwise,” said Mr. Jennings. “Pray let the poor fellow entertain himself as he likes. Yon mast admit that Miss Lo ring knows how to make time pass pleas antly.” “A great deal too pleasantly,” said Mrs. Jennings. “It is no affair of mine, of course, bat I shall remind Consin Philip of the warning I gave him the first day he came.” She soon found or made an opportnni- ty to do this, and Thnrston received her attempt at admonition very kindly. “Yon are very good to feel so much in terest in my behalf,” he said, “bnt I am in no danger, I assure you. Miss Loring is no donbt a very fascinating woman, bnt her fascinations fall harmlessly on me.” “I don’t see how that can be,” said Mrs. Jennings. “How can you acknow ledge her fascination and yet find her harmless?” “I find her harmless because her fasci nation is all born of artifice,” he answer ed. “I feel, when I am with her, that every glance is practiced, every tone cal culated—and this takes away all their charm. If she could speak, look or act, from her heart—granting that she has a heart—the matter would be different.” “A heart wonld be a very great incon venience in snch a career as Agatha Lor ing’s,” said Mrs. Jennings; “bnt—I have known her a long time, and she is a very strange girl—I should not be surprised if she had one hidden away somewhere." “I wish to Heaven she would fiud it, then!” said Thurston, bitterly. “Oh!” said Mrs. Jennings. “And yet you are not in danger! ” He smiled. “It is not possible you think I meant that I wish she wonld find it for me?" he asked. “What I meant was that I wish she wonld find it in order that she might suffer a little of the pain she has so often inflicted.” “That is very vindictive. Bat if you feel toward her in this way, why do yon flirt with her, or .allow her to flirt with yon?” “I allow her to flirt with me because it seems to amnse her, and does not injure me.” Mrs. Jennings looked at the speaker doubtfully. She did not believe that he was telling the truth, or at least, not all the troth, but she had no right to question him farther. “A willful man will not be warned any more than a willful woman,” she said. “I can only assure yon that, if you come unharmed out of a flirtation with Agatha Loring, yon will be the first man who ever did so.” She went her way then,but her words re mained behind her, and as Thnrston stood where she left him, a gravity of express sion settled over his face, which seemed like an echo of them. He was absently rolling np a cigarette, when a voioe now grown familiar, suddenly sounded behind him, and he atarted ao that the tobaooo “It is not a bad plan,” Miss Loring said, within the drawing room. “A change from onr ordinary rides and drives will be pleasant. What is the dis tance?” “Ten miles,” another voice answered. “We shall have to return after nightfall; bnt there is a moon.” “It will be delightful to ride ten miles by moonlight! ’ cried Miss Herbert en thusiastically. “How many horses will be needed?” asked Mr. Jennings.' “There are six sad dle horses in the stable, but only two of them are fit for ladies' use.” “There is only one horse that I oare to ride, said Agatha, quiokly, “and that is Salathiel. May I ride him, Mr. Jennings? Please say ‘yes!’ ” Mr. Jennings hesitated. “My dear Miss Loring,” he answered, “you don’t know that yoa are asking me to be responsible for yonr neck. No lady has ever mounted Salathiel—in fact, he is too spirited to be safe for a lady.” “I am not in tha least afraid,” she said. “I am a good rider, and I like a spirited horse. I saw Colonel Thnrston riding Salathiel the other day, and I have been pining ever since to monnt the beantifnl creature. There is Colonel Thnrston on the piazza now. Call him and ask him if he does not think it wonld be safe.” Thurston was called and the question pat to him. If he perceived the drift of it, he made no sign to that effect. Sala thiel was certainly spirited, he said, but not at all vicious; if Miss Loring was sure she was a good horsewoman, she might monnt him with safety. “Remember, you are accountable if any accident happens,” and Mr. Jennings and Agatha looked np with a laugh. “You will take charge of me, won’t you, Colonel Thurston? Thanks—I was sure you would. But have you no curi osity to know were we are going?” “I supposed I should hear in dne time.” “And this is the dne time. Do yon know a place called the Devil’s Gorge, about tea miles from here?” “Among the hills? Yes, I know of it, but I have never seen it. Are we going there?” “We are. According to programme, we leave here at four o’clock—rather a warm hoar, but it oaa’t be helped—reach there by six, spend an hoar exploring the diabolical wonders of the place, and re turn by moonlight." “And how abont dinner? Do we take it along or omit it altogether?” “We take dinner at three o’clock, and Mrs. Jennings promises us a supper when we return. The excursion makes a total bouleversement of our domestic habits— bat wbat of that? No pleasure can be gained without a sacrifice.” lt Quere: Are the pleasures worth the sacrifice?” “Ah!” said she, with the slight, bitter tinge which her tone sometimes took, “we won’t ask that. Is any game that we play in this world worth the candle we burn meanwhile? Don’t suggest snch re flections, bnt let ns go to the Devil’s Gorge and enjoy an hour.” At four o’clock the horses were brought out, and when Agatha came down—her slender, rounded figure showing to even greater advantage than usual in her close- fitting habit—Virien was standing at the foot of the staircase waiting for her. “I have not been able to ask before,” he said, “bnt I hope I may have the pleasure of attending you.” “Unfortunately, you are a little too late,” she answered, with her easy grace. “Colonel Thurston has promised to take charge of me, and see that Salathiel does not break my neck.” The young creole bowed; bat bis face changed, as a man’s face does change un der the influence of passion and mortifi cation. “My fortune is, indeed, bad,” he said. “For some time past I have seemed to be always ‘too late’ with yon. I am not so doll as to misunderstand what that means. I have had the honor to amnse mademoiselle as long as she cared to be amused—by me.” No change of any kind came to her face; she simply looked at him steadily with her dear, haughty eyes. “Let me congratulate yon on the quickness of yonr perceptions,” she said. “You are quite right. I have been amused as long as I oare to be amused —by you.” Then she swept on, and came face to faoe with Thnrston, who was issuing from the drawing room door. A glance told her that be had overheard her last words. Indignation and con tempt were mingled in the single look which fell on her as he passed, with a slight salute, and went oat to the piazza. No woman ever possessed a braver spirit than Agatha Loring, bnt, as she met that look, her heart seemed to suffer a compression, as if a strong hand had grasped it. Hatred enough she had known in her time, and faced unblench- ingly; bat to be despised was something new, and something which—from this man especially—was not easily borne. A minute later the entire party gather ed on the piazza, and the mo anting took place. Thnrston assisted Agatha to her saddle, and then placed himself by her side, keeping a watchful eye on Salathiel, who was champing his bit and tossing his handsome head. “A light but firm hand on the reiD, Miss Loring—yes, that is it. They have pnt a very severe bit on him, and injn- dicious curbing will fret him exceeding ly.” These words were the first Agatha heard as they were riding through the gates. She looked at the speaker with an appeal in her smile which did not bear reference to Salathiel. “I hope I am never gnilty of ‘injudi cious curbing,’ Colonel Thurston— at least I endeavor not to be. k light but firm hand is necessary on all reins, I believe. Ah, see! I have dropped my whip. How careless of me!” As Thnrston dismounted for the whip the rest of the party filed out of the gate before them, and cantered away down the road. Salathiel was impatient to follow, bnt his rider held him with a steady hand. “Thank yon,” she said, as the whip was restored; then she added, with a soft frank langh: “I dropped it on purpose, as yon probably suspect, in order that we might get rid of the others. I want to speak to yon—on an odd subject, as yon may think. I saw by your face as we left the honse that you heard what I said to Mr. Virien at the foot of the stair oase.” “I heard it by the merest accident,” Thnrston replied, ooldly. “I most apol ogize—” “Nay,” she interposed, “that is qnite unnecessary. You could not possibly avoid an aooident. Confess, however, that you thought me utterly heartless.” A flush rose to his faoe. “You should not place me in snoh a position, Miss Loring,” he said. “What is my opinion to yon, that yon should ask me to declare it in this manner?” “It is a great deal to me,” she answer ed fearlessly. “You are one of the few men I have ever known whose respect is worth winning. I know that yon don't respect me now—I have seen it plainly since the first moment we met—but I should like to convince you that I am not so black as some of my friends delight to paint me.” “It was not from any of your friends that I first heard of yon, Miss Loring,” said Thnrston, with the old sternness in his face and voice, “but from a man who like Mr. Virien, had the houor of amus- ing yon as long as yon cared to be amused —by him.” “Ah! ” she said, “that is why yon dis liked me before you knew anything of me. Well, I will not inquire into yoor friend’s case, or endeavor to defend my self from the general charge of coqoetry; bnt in this particular matter of Antoine Virien I want you to undestand that the man has no heart, or least fragment of a heart, to suffer. An enormous amount of vanity he does possess, and that I think is properly punished. He is a lady-killer by profession, a man who has won the hearts of silly women by the scores, aud who had the audacity to hope to add me to his list of victims. I hold, therefore, that I was more than justified in turning the tables on him.” “Perhaps so,” said Thurston, rather dryly. “Snch ethics are altogether be yond my experience or comprehension.’ “Why not say candidly that, despite the explanation, yon think no better of me than you did before?” she asked quiet ly. “Your ideal woman would never flirt, either for amassment or revenge, I suppose. Eh, bien ! since I cannot con quer your dislike, let us have a canter. Salathiel is palling my arms nearly off. ” When the party reached the Devil’s Gorge, they found it a very diabolical place indeed—a wild, savage-looking de - file between precipitous hills, through which a turbulent stream made its way, plunging in falls and rapids over a bed of rock and overhung by jagged cliffs and bowlders, of stone so dark in color that it looked almost black. There was very little verdure in the gorge, and at the time the party of excursionists entered, little light. In the obscurity the great masses of rock and strangely forbidding aspect, as, crowned here and there by a few pines, they stood motionless above the chafing Btream. “How cool and dark—the atmosphere is almost like that of a cave! ” several of the ladies exclaimed when—having dis mounted and fastened their horses at some distance—they entered the gorge on foot. “Thefe are several caves here,” said Mr. Jennings. “The largest is nea» the High Fall some distance np the gorge. Now let me beg you all to be careful, for the rocks are exceedingly slippery, and if yon should fall into the stream yon wonld certainly be drowned. ” This warning was not greatly regarded, but it is to be supposed that Providence watched over the reckless young people who risked their necks so heedlessly—at least there is no ether way to account for their safety. Mr. Jennings trembled as he witnessed the feats of one or two par ticularly foolish young ladies, and record ed a vow in his own mind never to bring another party to the Devil’s Gorge. It is hardly necessary to state that Agatha was not among these hoidens— she was not only past the age when ani mal spirits assert themselves so exuber antly, bnt she had Thnrston for her guide his hand to assist her, bis voioe to direct her steps, and it is safe to say that be fore any woman under his charge conld deliberately have periled her life, as many around were doing, she would have had to push him into the flood. Thongh a cautious, he was an experi enced climber, Miss Loring foond, and they soon penetrated moch farther than the others into the wild retreats of the gorge. Near the High Fall—where the stream fell into a perpendicular cascade of about fifty feet—they found the cave of which Mr. Jennings had spoken—a large, irregular recess, formed and over- htiDg by jagged rocks, aud (roughly speaking) about twenty feet square. The entrance to it was narrow, for the stream in its eddying flow from the foot of the fall, covered most of the mouth; but once inside, the Bpace was ample. Standing here, with the fall thundering in their ears, it was not strange they did not hear the shonts with which the oliff- bound gorge resounded when the rest of the party deoided to return. Some one had chanced to look np, and on the strip of sky overhead perceived a threatening olond, upon which the ory, “To horse!” was raised at once. “It will be no joke if we are oanght in a storm ten miles from home, with night so near,” said Mr. Jennings. “We mast return at onoe. Wbat has become o^ Thnrston and Miss Loring?” “They went np to the fall— we’ll shout for them,” said somebody. They were accordingly shouted for, with no result, as has been already said. Then a volunteer clambered np to a point which commanded a view of the fall, and reported no sign of them; and since sev eral of the ladies grew very nervous iu view of the threatening storm, it was de oided to wait no longer. “They’ll soon follow,” said one of the shonters, cheerfully. “Perhaps, indeed, they have already left the gorge. ” It was of coarse evident that this was not the case when the party reached the place where the horses were tied; bnt human nature, whioh is selfish at all times, is apt to exhibit that selfishness in peculiar degree when a olond threatens to empty itself on the defenceless heads of a pleasure party. The general con- elusion was, that Thurston and Miss Lor ing mnst look after themselves, but that they would follow in a few minutes. Instead of a few minutes, however, it was fully half an hour later before they came down the gorge and found it desert ed. “Why, the rest must have gone!” said Miss Loring. “How strange of them to leave us in this way!” “Exceedingly strange!” said Thnrston. “I can hardly think that they have really done so; bnt we shall soon see." “How very dark it is!” said the young lady a minute later. “Did you think it was so near night ?” “I can’t account for the degree of ob scurity at all—unless it ia cloudy,” her companion answered. When they emerged from the narrow ravine, the cause of this obscurity was at once evident. From end to end the sky was curtained by a cloud of lurid black ness, the aspect of which was menacing in the extreme. It seemed spread like a pall over the earth, which lay as if under a spell of stillness. Not a leaf stirred in the forest that stretched around, and the only sonnd that broke the oppressive si lence was the dull roar of water in the gorge. Agatha fairly shuddered when she faced this lowering front of Nature. “A terrible storm is about to burst ! ” she said. “Where can the others be?— and what shall we do?” “The others have played a very un handsome trick in going away and leav ing us,” said Thnrston. “I can hardly tell what we had better do unless—” The speech was never finished, for at this instant out of the bosom of the cloud darted forth not a flash but a blaze of lightning, which lighted npjfhe whole scene with a vivid glare beyond all de scription. Agatha clasped her hands over her eyes, uttering a cry which was loBt in the volleying crash of thunder that ac companied rather than followed the aw- ful illumination. The next moment she felt Thurston’s hand on her arm. “Come!” he said. “This will not do— we mu9t go back to the gorge and tejse refuge under the rocks. There is terri ble risk in remaining here.” She made no demnr, and they reenter- the girge just as a sighing sonnd of dis tant wind came to their ears—a harbin ger of the hurricane soon to sweep through the forest. In the deep-shaded ravine there had by this time fallen a darkness which made it dangerons to attempt its passage. Nev ertheless, as Thurston recognized at onoe there was no alternative. Some shelter they must have, and there was no other shelter than this to be found. Trusting to the capability of seeing in a dim light which he had acquired as a scout, he guided his companion along the narrow path. Before they had advanced very far, there came another vivid blaze of lightning and volleying crash of thunder, followed hard and fast by pour ing rain. “Oh!” said Agatha, stopping nnder a projecting rock. “Let us stay here. We can go no farther.” “We must go farther!” said Thurston. “We shall soon be drenched here. The only place which can shelter us is the cave near the High Fall. We must try and reach that. Give me your hand,Miss Loring. Trust yourself implicitly to me, and I will take you there safely!” “Trust yourself implicitly to me!’’These words rang in Agatha’s ears above the din of the storm, the roar of the stream. Perhaps the firm clasp of Thurston’s hand seconded them—at least it is certain that she had a sense of trust and reliance altogether strange to her as he led her along the perilous way to the cave they had quitted a short time before. [to be continued.] Sensible Advice. You are asked every day through the columns of newspapers and by your Drug gist to use something for Dyspepsia aud Liver Complaint that you know nothing about, you get discouraged spending money with but little success. 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