Newspaper Page Text
Written for Tnk (‘rrizbn.
Blanche Garleton.
A STORY, HV FOUR PARTS.
in mim.
PART IT—CONTINUED.
HUM M Kit.
Thus 1 At me hold thee to my Im a <1,
Ami ovory rare resign ;
Ami slmll we never—never part,
My life— iny all that’s mine?
—Oliver (loldainilh.
The curtain rises upon a scene of
brilliance and beauty. The spacious
parlors of the Elmores are literally
ablaze with pleasure and refine
ment, while myriad lights stream
from as many chandeliers, flashing-
hack the radiance and loveliness of
a courtly neighborhood. Pretty
women, pretty dresses, pretty feet
are mingling in the fairy pleasures
of the giddy waltz and dance, and
brilliants are glistening and scintil
lating from the snowy necks and
arms of England’s fairest beauties.
The occasion ot this splendid and
magnificent assemblage is the in
troduction of the handsome and
accomplished Cyril Elmore, who
has successfully completed his stud
ies at the University. His debut,
together with the royal social event
that would attend it, has been for
some days past the subject and
chief topic of coversation at the
Manor, whore everything lias been
going on in busy preparation. Cer
tainly, as the courteous anti knight
ly debutant stands before us on this
happy and auspicious evening, re
ceiving and welcoming with kingly
grace the invited guests, he pre
sents an appearance in every way
attractive and worthy of admira
tion. Both Hamilton nqtl Neville
an hour later behold in him a rival,
generous—but dangerous.
The splendid phaeton of the Nev
illes wheels up the graveled walk,
and Lady Neville accompanied by
Blanche and Florence alight. The
irrepressible Ashley, coming upon
the scene a few moments later with
Miss Palmer, completes our inter
esting circle.
“Miss Carleton, the players are
ready—shall we form?”
Blanche turns to behold Neville
tenderly bending over her, his face
a study in its implied admiration.
“Lead off, Mr. Neville!”
The musicians strike the chords,
a quick, inspiring strain flashes and
falls, the dancers move, and
Blanche and her handsome partner
are soon lost in the confused and
brilliant whirl. Neville for the
moment is absorbed in a transport
of dreamy delight. He is conscious
of but one fact—his arm encircles
the fairest dancer in the room!—
Could knowledge be more supreme
ly conscious?—could pleasure be
more intense and subtile? But
why are the musicians so impa
tient? Already the cadencies of
the impassioned and beautiful
strain are quivering to their end,
and—the delicious dream has Hed
forever!
(1 lowing with heat and excitement,
Blanche sighs for a breath of air.—
Neville conducts her to the conser
vatoire; but she never reaches it, at
least for the present, for the ubiq
uitous Hamilton turns up just in
time t<5 claim the promenade. Ne
ville releases her rather reluctant
ly, and turns to greet M iss Palmer,
who is advancing leaning upon
the arm of Elmore.
Hamilton has fully recovered
from the set-back which he receiv
ed at the Hills, and is playing the
devoted as desperately as ever.—
Blanche, however much she may
appear to countenance him, evi
dently does not encourage him suffi
ciently to reattempt his daring and
desperate game. And thus matters
wear along smoothly and evenly
between them.
Not so with Neville, who exhibits
much 1 ess patience than his friend
and rival. The scene is an hour
later. A temporary lull has en
sued, during which he seeks the ob
ject of his thoughts, lie finds her,
at length, in a remote corner, sur
rounded by a number of swains,
with whom she is coquetting
fearfully and desperately.
He requests a promumule; she
gracefully accepts, and soon they
are treading the cool, open walks
of the garden.
The night was such as usually
follows one of those warm, mellow
days in June. The air “a solemn
stillness held,” as if in deference to
the pale Empress, who in the third
quarter was.Hooding garden, lawn
and terrace with an ocean of liquid
silver. It must have been just such
such a night as Canuens had in
mind, when he wrote:
“Now Cynthia's rays with n gentle lustre
shown, *
Reflecting from the sparkling, silvered waves;
In harmony the starry sky appeared
A Held celestial, shewed ,wllh heavenly
(lowers.
The furious winds pent within distant eaves,
Tn quiet slumber undisturbed reposed.
Hut through the silent night the watchful
guard
On hoard the fleet tlnlr usual vigils kept!”
Upon the lawn they pace, rousing
the slumbering moonbeams that
rest timidly there. To Neville,
Blanche never looked more exquis
ite and idealistic. The soft, Odal
isque splendor shines from out the
depths ofthe deep violet eyes, and
the lips in their simple but expres
sive mobility, are like orient pearls
dissolved in wine. Antony gazing
into the fatal loveliness of Egypt’s
queen, was never more madly in
volved than our hero. The perfec
tion of incarnation was never more
ap—
“Are you at all sentimental, Mr.
Neville?” the soft, sweet voice of
Blanche interrupts.
“Too much so at times 1 fear; but
why the question ?”
“Of no special import,” she an
swers; “1 was only thinking if you
were, this scene is well calculated
to arouse the poetic languor.”
“He must bn cold and unimpas-
sioned indeed, who could resist the
calm, sweet influences of this
charming scene. Are you fond of
the poets, Miss Carleton ?”
“I must confess to n decided
weakness in that direction; it is
needless to say you have a favorite
among them.”
“Ifyou will excuse the unpatri
otic partiality, I must admit a pe
culiar preference for the American
poet Longfellow, whose descriptive
night-pieces I think unequnlled?”
“It would he unjust to tho poets
of our own merry England, were 1
to admit your preference well
founded, before you had convinced
me that he deserves the sobriquet
with which you have honored him
—‘Poet ofthe Night!’”
“I can recall but one extract at
present—brief but characteristic.”
“I know you will favor me with
it.”
“Most cheerfully—
“Uenutiful was the night. Behind the black
wall of the forest,
Tipping the summit with silver, arose the J
moon. On tho river—
Fell here and there through the branches, a
t rambling gleam of the moonlight—
Like the siwoot thoughts of love on a darken
ed and devious spirit!’ ”
“From ‘Evangalino,’ is it not, Mr.
Neville?”
“Aye—the ‘melancholly Evanga-
line!”’
“As you recited the beautiful se
lection, the memorable ‘prairie
scene’ came fully before me”—and
under the sweet, poetic contagion,
Blanch repeats slowly the sequent
lines—
“‘Nearer and round about her, tho manifold
flowers of the garden
Fouled out their souls in odors that were
their prayers and eonfesslons
Unto the night, us it went away, like a silent
Ca rthuslnn.
Fuller of fragrance than they, and as heavy
with shadows and night-dews,
11 ling the heart ofthe maiden—' ”
And its she finished, it really
seemed that the calm and magical
moonlight had crept tenderly into
the eyes, so full of celestial languor,
leaving its pathway marked by a
sweet, unfathomable wistfullness!
“But, unlike the ‘melancholy
maiden,’ you are not searching for a
long lost Gabriel—oh, Blanche! say
the word now that alone can make
me happy for till time—say that
you will be mine forever!”
She gives him her hand timidly,
confidingly, and as he fondly gazes
into the depths of the upturned eyes,
now suffused with tears of love and
happiness, he feels assured that she
is his beyond all partings and mis
givings.
What pen is there powerful
enough to trace the happiness of
that sweet, brief existsnee, when
heart meets heart, and the soul ga
zes lingeringly and fondly upon
kindred soul! Oh, it is sweet to
love and to be loved! There is
nothing this side of heaven that
comes so near satisfying the selflish
heart of man. That there heats for
us a kindred and smpathotic heart;
that there pulsates, all for us, one
devoted life, full of charity, compas
sion and tenderness, is the sole
knowledge that renders earth en
durable and existence bearable.—
Eliminate from the world the po
tent influence of love, and you rob
Truth of its beauty, Virtue of its
worth, Justice of its sceptre, and
Religion of its purity!
The sound of approaching steps
makes an abrupt end ofthe tender
and interesting interview,
“Had we not better return?” she
murmurs softly. “They will miss
us.”
For reply he imprints a hasty
kiss.
IN WHICH TWO Ft) FT It' NATl'ItKS
AFvF.ltKVKAl.F.I).
“Wlmt love Is, if thou wouldst be taught,
Thy heart m list toach alone,—
Two souls with but ti single thought
Two hearts that beat as one,”
“Ami whence comes love? like morning light,
It comes without thy call;
Ami how dies love? A splrltbright!
Love never illes at all I”
“And will you always love me,
Arthur?”
“Aye, Blanche, while life sldill
last. This frame may waste away,
but to thee will cling my soul! For
upon thy dear image it feeds alone,
and has its being. Without thee it
would wither and die, losing In
death even its immortality! For
what would heaven be, Blanche,
without thy love? Ah, yes, I do
love thee with a love transcending
bounds, and it is my wish that we
may love thus forever, until love
becomes immortal — beyond the
stars!”
“Oh, Arthur!”
“But, tell me, am 1 likewise en
shrined In thy heart and Its uil'cc-
tions ?”
“Whatneed to ask that question?
You have heard ere this my con
fessions, and what you have not
heard, your eyes have seen!”
“True, adored one; but will you
always think thus kindly of me?—
When the world veils its smiles,
will you befriend and cheer me?—
When suspicion Would blight, and
slander besmirch my fair name,
will you continue to believe me in
nocent, and pure, and good—oh,
Blanche, life without thee would
prove a burden, and the world ex
tremely lonely!”
“Arthur, you mistake my friend
ship, even, if you can think of it de
serting you; much more then do
you misconstrue my to re, if you
can picture it deserting its idol!”
“I thank you,gentle Blanche, for
that avowal; it brightens lift', and
opens before me a panorama vari
ed and beautiful. You are, indeed,
my good angel—the star of beauty
that shines above my pathway.”
And t he summer sun sinks down
the western sky, drawing gently
around the poetic lovers, the soft,
still shadows of an English gloam
ing.
And thus talking on, they con
tinue the construction of tiny air-
castles—each one a perfect, Uto
pian future—until the sensuous
stars peeping covertly forth, re
mind them of the winged flight of
time.
* Oh, why is it the cruel Hours ever
come to cut short such sweet com
munions—such blessed interming-
lings of harmonious hearts! Then
it is the better influences of our
natures seem dominant, and our
hearts yearn unto heavenlier things.
Thus are we hastened on, our gent
lin’ impulses never having sufficient
opportunity to meet and combat the
onslaughts of our tierce, material
feelings!
Arthur Neville, artist as he is,
with all of an artist’s deep, devoted
passions, loves Blanche with an ab
sorbing love, better suited to the
days of knight-errantry and chival
ry, than to this prosy, matter-ol-fact
age—a love that is simple and
supreme, and as unselfish as it is
Arcadian. Having enthroned her
upon the loftiest pedestal his affec
tions are capable of raising, she
becomes to him the embodiment of
all that is pure, good and noble.
No wonder then, that under the
spell of such deathless devotion, lie
leaves behind all worldly grossness,
entering her etherlal presence only
as the ardent, poetic lover. He
seeks her just as the Nazareno
sought, in olden times, the simple
altar of his faith, there to enshrine
his holiest offerings.
But does Blanche return this
oceanic devotion ? Tell me first, if
any heart can gaze unmoved upon
such tender adoration! tell me if
any soul can witness the love-strug*
glings of a kindred soul—knowing
too, that the battle i> waged for it
alone—and feel not its ownself
warming up, and burning with the
pleasant, divine contagion! Such a
heart, my friend, and such a soul—
to do that—must be unnatural, and,
what is worse must be untrue!
Blanche Uarleton has a nature
too pure, and is possessed of a heart
too womanly, to witness untouched,
the burning affection of Neville’s
love. Her sensibilities, while not
maudlin, or what may be termed
“scool-girlish,” are just feminine
enough to crave the nourishment
that his love affords. She, it must
be confessed, is like most girls of
nineteen summers are—romantic,
and to an extent visionary; but she
possesses that quality of mind, that
never permits (lie heart emotions
to dwindle into unntural and girlish
t el led tin 1 forehead, the liquid depths
of the violet eyes, the soft, half-way-
ward mouth? Could site deny the
languid grace of his every altitude,
the pale and handsome fact', the
commanding form, the mouth so
Athenian in its lazy mobility—could
either resist the approaches of
Cupid, the darling boy of Venus?
She could not, unless in utter vari
ance with all feminine principles,
nor could he, unless in direct op
position to all masculine propensi
ties!
Blanche’s visit to the Manor has
lengthened now to mid-summer.—
During the period that has inter
vened since flu 1 Ball at the Elmore’s,
she has met Neville often, and to
gether have they discussed every
phase of the rose-tinted existence
that has opened so beautifully be
fore them. Every roseate; ray from
the future’s sun has been carefully
analyzed, and the story of their
love has been oft repeated.
Thus inhaling the sweets of an
etherial atmosphere, dreaming
dreams of intoxicating delight, the
warm, summer days glide swiftly
and silently by. But wrapt com
pletely in each other’s absorbing
love, the lovers note not the cool
tinge that is creeping into the at
mosphere, nor indeed the crispness
tiie leaves are assuming!
Thus lias it ever been. Occupied
with the dreams of Life—Its pleas
ures, its hopes, its fears, how wedded
we become to the Present! We
seem to see only the beautiful sun
rise, and absorbed in a contempla
tion of its grandeur and glory, wo
see not the shadows already grow
ing long across our pathway, nor
seem to note the gloomy tinge
creeping gradually up the northern
sky! Just ahead of its iqay lie some
dreadful pitfall, and yet on we go,
stumbling blindly! In the sunlight,
which we admire, may swing the
•fatal rose in whose shadow the ser
pent lies concealed! Yet on we go,
giddy butterflies of a day, courting
unconsciously the deadly fang!
Gracious Heaven! what a wise
provision of thy mercy and love, to
shield our futures front us| Else,
how gloomy and agonizing every
thing would be—each feast a pande
monium, and every love-scene it
cruel, bitter mockery! As it is, we
plan and build, and love and hope,
in full but unconscious view of the
grim Headsman, and that Damode-
an sword ever suspended above us,
to cut short at the word our hopes,
our loves and our lives!
But dot's tlie knowledge of the
dreadful drama, lying somewhere
in our years, made more grim and
horrid because of its mystery, lessen
our enjoyment of life and its bless
ings? Assuredly, no; the conscious
ness so bitter in its conviction, only
adds a sweet to every pleasure, and
changes hope to rapture!
to UK Conti NTKi),
BLACKSMITH! N G
IN ALL ITS
B RANG HES .
Horseshoeing <t Specialty.
fancies.
Neither, on the other hand, must
the gentle and prophetic reader
suppose our hero an effeminate
visionary youth, who spends his
time in dreaming and constructing
castles that burst ere they soar; on
the contrary, while he may indulge
occasionally in the romantic, if not
absurd pastime, of sending adrift
hopes destined never to return (as
who of us, at times do not!) he is
still a man, and that, too, in the
loftiest sense of that prostituted—
hut still good—Anglo-Saxon word!
Possessed of a noble and attrac
tive person, Arthur Neville, the
young English artist, is the beau-
ideal of all that is manly and to be
admired. Painter and sculptor by
profession, he has early sought the
opportunities of perfecting himself
in his chosen Arts. Like the true
disciple, lie loves his profession with
an unwavering devotion, and pur
sues it with a hope that brings 1dm
dreams fraught with divinest rap
ture. As is natural, lie has, like all
of us, his own rhapsodical fancies;
but for all that, he is none-the-less
it hero- and a man, and so lie w ill
be (teemed. In the pure, lilac-like
loveliness of Blanche Carleton, he
beholds the ideal of his dreams, the
object of his unchanging love, his
future’s only hope.
What marvel or mystery is it to
the reader,* then, that such a hero
and heroine should meet among the
sylvan beauties of Neville Manor
and—love? None at all! Souls so
similarly gifted, can never long re
main apart; and when they do meet
—as meet they will—they Instantly
read in each other’s glances their
counterparts and futures. Blanche
fair, slim and lovely—Neville ele
gant and accomplished; she radiant
Intelligent and sensitive—lie pale,
poetical and < irecian ; both romantic
and expressive! Could the artist
fail to note the perfect symmetry of
the. chiseled contour, the graceful
meeting of the brows, the steady
drooping of the lashes, the pale, lu-
CAnnraof.h, buggies and wagons
Repaired at Short Not lee anti in
the best style.
The undersigned hogs leave to Inform the
public t Imt he is prepared to do blacksmlthing
in all its branches, at his shop opposite Mr. S.
A. Bray’s stable, and asksa share ot the pub
lic patronage. He makes Horseshoeing a
Specially, and does his work promptly and
well, lie has secured the services ol a coni pc
tent carriage maker and Wheelwright, amt is
prepared to make your broken or worn Car
riages’ I higgles and Wagons ns good as new.
Prices to suit the times.
Give him a trial.
apri28’vSjtf J. O’BYUNS,
Use The Old Brands
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AND
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ANNUAL CLEARANCE SALE OF
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DURING THE MONTH OF MAY.
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;>00 Polls Now’Wall Papers, Dadoes ami Hordern, Ww Engravings, Oil Painting ami
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j IU1 IGj’S’Ji ’.-y.
Spring Summer SniL^.
0TT0 W. MARSHAL,
MERCHANT TAILOR,
217 Seventh Street, Opposite Mayor’s Otlice, Augusta, Ga.
A fair Business Suit from
$17 to $20
u flue
u
l £
Li
$20
tl
$25
u u
Fancy
U
U
$20
u
$28
u u
Dress
u
U
$25
u
$35
Pantaloons in latest
$6, $6.50, $7, $8.
IT STANDS AT THE HEAD.
TIIE LIGIIT-RUNNINU
DOMESTIC.
Tlmt II K the neknowlmlged Lender in tho
Irmlelsn fact tlinl cannot lie disputed. Many
iudlnte II, none cijtml It. The largest armed
Ihe lightest running, the most beautiful
wood-work.
ii) best nmj.'iiul,
AND IS WARRANTED
To be made oft ho
To do any and all kinds of work.
To bo complete In every respect
For Sale by Fulcher Co., Waynesboro, (la. Agents wauled in unoccupied territory,
Address, DOMESTIC SEWING MACH1NECU., Richmond, Yu. ocl27xgby
REV. A. 1. HOBBS WrTTes:-
After a tnorou.
IRON TONIC, I ta
in stating that Z have been
greatly benefited b
use. Ministers aud - -
lie Speakers will find it
of the greatest value
where a Tonic is neces
sary. I recommend It
ns a reliable remedial
agent, possessing un
doubted nutritive and
restorative properties.
louisiitti, At/., Oct, J, 1882.
trh trial of t;ho /PURIFIES
ike pleasure ./ THC -
wyBLOOD,
A combination of Pro.
to.ride of Jron, Peruvian
Hark a nil Phoa/diorualn
n jialutnble form, l'or
Jlvbilltf/, Xoss of Appe
tite, 1‘rujtrutiun of Vital
J'owers It it lncll*pen*a-
blo.
REV. J.L. TOWNER,
Industry, 111., cays:—
*‘I consider It
a most excellent remedy for
the debllitutod vital forces,
«’SimrC BY T23 OR. HARTER MEDICINE CO., 31311. ZilH ST., OT. 10919.
junK),'82.b-y.
Pendleton Foundry & Machine Works.
C: 1 I IAS. F. I > M lIAB1 >,
(Successor to Fendlelon llrothor)
No. (il-), (i 17 and (il!) KollocL Struct, Augusta, Georgia.
Manufaelurer und dealer In mill mucldnery, engines and supplies. Ilrass und Iron ('list
ings ol cm r.v viii li ly uudst'Vlc. Special ullcnilon given to repair-. Give me a call.
scpi22's2b\ \VM. 1’FNDLKTUN, Superintendent. CHAS. F. Lc.MlIAUD, Froprlctor.