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like most other people, and take their chance no harm in that." "Not a bit of harm," said the rich aunt; "they're good boys enough, and I daresay they'll get on. As for Gerald, if you have any influence with your brother, I think he's in a bad way. I think he has a bad attack of Romishness coming on. If you are not in that way yourself," said Miss Leonora, with a sharp glance, "I think you should go and see after Gerald. He is the sort of man who would do anything foolish, you know. He doesn't understand what prudence means. Remember, I believe he is a good Christian all the same. It's very incomprehensible; but the fact is, a man may be a very good Christian, and have the least quantity of sense that is compatible with existence. I've seen it over and over again. Gerald's notions are idiocy to me," said the sensible but candid woman, shrugging her shoulders; "but I can't deny that he's a good man, for all that."

"He is the best man I ever knew," said young Wentworth, with enthusiasm.

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Quite so, Frank," echoed aunt Cecilia, with her sweet smile: it was almost the only conversational effort Miss Wentworth ever made.

"But it is so sad to see how he's led away," said Miss Dora; "it is all owing to the bad advisers young men meet with at the universities; and how can it be otherwise as long as tutors and professors are chosen just for their learning, without any regard to their principles? What is Greek and Latin in comparison with a pious guide for the young? We would not have to feel frightened, as we do so often, about young men's principles," continued aunt Dora, fixing her eyes with warning significance on her nephew, and trying hard to open telegraphic communications with him, "if more attention was paid at the universities to give them sound guidance in their studies. So long as you are sound in your principles, there is no fear of you," said

the timid diplomatist, trying to aid the warning look of her eyes by emphasis and inflection. Poor Miss Dora! it was her unlucky fate, by dint of her very exertions in smoothing matters, always to make things worse.

"He would be a bold man who would call those principles unsound which have made my brother Gerald what he is," said, with an affectionate admiration that became him, the curate of St Roque's.

"It's a slavish system, notwithstanding Gerald," said Miss Leonora, with some heat; "and a false system, and leads to Antichrist at the end, and nothing less. Eat your dinner, Frank-we are not going to argue just now. We expected to hear that another of the girls was engaged before we came away, but it has not occurred yet. I don't approve of young men dancing about a house for ever and ever, unless they mean something. Do you!"

Mr Wentworth faltered at this question; it disturbed his composure more than anything that had preceded it. "I-really I don't know," he said, after a pause, with a sickly smile-of which all three of the aunts took private notes, forming their own conclusions. It was, as may well be supposed, a very severe ordeal which the poor young man had to go through. When he was permitted to say good-night, he went away with a sensation of fatigue more overpowering than if he had visited all the houses in Wharfside. When he passed the green door, over which the apple-tree rustled in the dark, it was with a pang in his heart. How was he to continue to live

to come and go through that familiar road-to go through all the meetings and partings, when this last hopeless trial was over, and Lucy and he were swept apart as if by an earthquake? If his lips were sealed henceforward, and he never was at liberty to say what was in his heart, what would she think of him? He could not fly from his work because he lost Skelmersdale;

and how was he to bear it? He went home with a dull bitterness in his mind, trying, when he thought of it, to quiet the aching pulses which throbbed all over him, with what ought to have been the hallowed associations of the last Lenten vigil. But it was difficult, throbbing as he was with wild life and trouble to the very finger-points, to get himself into the shadow of that rock-hewn grave, by which, according to his own theory, the Church should be watching on this Easter Eve. It was hard just then to be bound to that special remembrance. What he wanted at this moment was no memory of one hour, however memorable or glorious, not even though it contained the Redeemer's grave, but the sense of a living Friend standing by him in the great struggle, which is the essential and unfailing comfort of a Christian's life.

Next morning he went to church with a half-conscious, youthful sense of martyrdom, of which in his heart he was half ashamed. St Roque's was very fair to see that Easter morning. Above the communiontable, with all its sacred vessels, the carved oaken cross of the reredos was wreathed tenderly with white fragrant festoons of spring lilies, sweet Narcissus of the poets; and Mr Wentworth's choristers made another white line, two deep, down each side of the chancel. young Anglican took in all the details of the scene on his way to the reading-desk as the white procession ranged itself in the oaken stalls. At that moment-the worst moment for such a thought-it sud

The

denly flashed over him that, after all, a wreath of spring flowers or a chorister's surplice was scarcely worth suffering martyrdom for. This horrible suggestion, true essence of an unheroic age, which will not suffer a man to be absolutely sure of anything, disturbed his prayer as he knelt down in silence to ask God's blessing. Easter, to be sure, was lovely enough of itself without the garland, and Mr Wentworth knew well enough that his white-robed singers were no immaculate angel-band. It was Satan himself, surely, and no inferior imp, who shot that sudden arrow into the young man's heart as he tried to say his private prayer; for the curate of St Roque's was not only a fervent Anglican, but also a young Englishman sans reproche, with all the sensitive, almost fantastic, delicacy of honour which belongs to that development of humanity; and not for a dozen worlds would he have sacrificed a lily or a surplice on this particular Easter, when all his worldly hopes hung in the balance. But to think at this crowning moment that a villanous doubt of the benefit of these surplices and lilies should seize his troubled heart! for just then the strains of the organ died away in lengthened whispers, and Miss Leonora Wentworth, severe and awful, swept up through the middle aisle. It was under these terrible circumstances that the Perpetual Curate, with his heart throbbing and his head aching, began to intone the morning service on that Easter Sunday, ever after a day so memorable in the records of St Roque's.

3 F

VOL. XCIII.-NO. DLXXII.

INDEX TO VOL. XCIII.

Adams, Mr, the American minister,
641.

Admiralty, Sir James Graham's admin-
istration of the, 448.

Adoption, recognition of, by the French
law, 318.

Advocates' fees, the Roman law re-
garding, 320.

Black Bird, an American Indian, burial
of, 534.

Blockade, declaration of the Treaty of
Paris regarding, 116.

BLOMFIELD, CHARLES JAMES, 731.

Boat, the, from Uhland, 590.

BOOTH'S EPIGRAMS, ANCIENT AND MO-
DERN, reviewed, 750.

Agricultural Society of Poland, the, its Borges, the Italian brigand, extracts

objects, &c., 723, 724.
Aheung, a Chinese coolie, 500.

Albany, the Duke of, his arrival in
Scotland and its effects, 343 et seq.
ALCOCK, SIR RUTHERFORD, THE CAPI-
TAL OF THE TYCOON by, reviewed, 397.
Alexander II., the policy of, in Poland,
722.

Alma, the battle of the, 379.

America, the ancient traces of man in,
528.

American Indians, gradual absorption
of the, by the whites, 539.
AMERICAN STATE PAPERS, 628.
Antietam, the battle of, 18.
Antiquity of man, the question regard-
ing, 526.

Armaments, the proposed reduction of
the, 387.

Art, on certain principles of, in works
of imagination, 545.
Austen, Miss, her pictures of village
life in England, 301.

Austria, recent reforms in, 260 et seq.-
her policy in Galicia, 718.
BABYLON, A SKETCH FROM, 99-conclu-
sion, 205.

BABYLON, ROUGH NOTES OF A RIDE TO,
667.

BACON, SPEDDING'S LIFE OF, reviewed,
480.

Bacon, Lady, mother of Lord Bacon,

482 et seq. passim.

Baghdad, sketches in, 667- a ride to
Babylon from, 672 et seq.
Banks, General, character of, 28.
Bastie, the Chevalier de la, his career

and death, 347, 348.
BELLIGERENT RIGHTS AT SEA, AND THE
CHANGES PROPOSED IN THEM, 116.
Belligerent rights, Lord Mackenzie on,

316.

Bianchi's defence of Cavour, remarks
on, 666.

Biers-Nimrood, a visit to the, 681.

from the journal of, 581.

Bourbons, the, characteristics of their
rule in Naples, 576.

Bournazel, the Lord of, French ambas-
sador to Scotland, 331.

Brigandage in Italy, causes, &c. of,
576 et seq.

Bright, Mr, party headed by, 249.
Buddhist temples and monks in China,

506.

BUDGET, THE, 645.

Burial of the dead, early customs con-
nected with the, 533.

Cambridge, defeat of the Ministerial
candidate at, 384.

Camorra, the, in Southern Italy, 584.
Campagna of Rome, its scenery, &c.,
465.

Canoe, first form of the, &c., 532 et seq.
Capri, the ancient and modern view
from, 614.

Caracalla's Baths, the ruins of, 464.
CARLINGFORD, CHRONICLES OF: Salem
Chapel, Chap. xxxix., 61–Chap. xl,
69-Chap. xli., 71—Chap. xlii, 76–
Chap. xliii., 80; the Perpetual Curate,
Part I., 764.

Cascine, the, at Florence, 327.
CAVOUR, A GLANCE AT THE ITALY OF,
653.

CAXTONIANA, Part XII. No. xix.

Motive Power, 30- Part XIII. Mo-
tive Power, continued, 149-Part
XIV. the same, concluded, 267-
Part XV. No. xx. On Self-Control,
471-No. xxi. The Modern Misan-
thrope, 476-Part XVI. No. xxii.
On certain Principles of Art in
Works of Imagination, 545.
Censor, the, a Florentine newspaper,
324.

Censorship of the press, the, in Flo-
rence, 324.

Central America, the ancient cities of,
536.

Cessio Bonorum, the law of, 319.
Chickahominy river, the, and the bat-
tle-fields on it, 11 et seq.

CHINA, PROGRESS IN, 44-Part II. THE
TAEPINGS AND THEIR REMEDY, 133
-sketches in the interior of, 500 et
seq.-last census of, 504.

Chinese, disposition of the masses of,
toward England, 45.

Christian Union of Hong-Kong, the,
136.

Clan fights, prevalence of, in China,
516.

Clay, Mr, the despatches, &c. of, 642.
CLIFFORD'S, MRS, MARRIAGE-Part I.,
284-Part II., 414.

66

Cobden, Mr, arguments of, for abolish-
ing the right of blockade, 118 et seq.
Codini," the, in Florence, 327.
Colosseum at Rome, Mr Story on the,
461.
Concubinage, principles of the Roman
law regarding, 317.
Confederate cavalry, the, 27.
CONFEDERATE HEADQUARTERS,
MONTH'S VISIT TO THE, 1.
Conscription, the, in Italy, 326.
Conservatism, reaction in favour of,
247-its increased strength, 384.
CONSTITUTIONAL TENDENCIES, 684.
Copan, the ancient city of, 537.
Copper, probable early employment of,
in America, 529.

A

Cotton famine, the, 245-its moral as-
pects, 246.

Coup d'Etat, Kinglake's History of the,
361.

Court of Session, the, its adoption from
France, 342.

Court party, the, in Florence, 327.
Cracow, sketches at, during the insur-
rection, 717.
CRINOLINIANA, 762.

Denmark, Earl Russell's despatch to,
254-probable union of, with Sweden,
255-the matrimonial alliance with,
255.
Devonport, defeat of the Ministerial
candidate at, 384.

Dighton Rock, the inscription on the,
538.

Douglas, Sir Charles, 561.

DOUGLAS, GENERAL SIR HOWARD, THE
LIFE OF, 561.

Dunshunner, Crinoliniana by, 762.
Election, an, at Florence, 323.
Elizabeth, Essex's scheme against, 491

et seq.
England, the feeling in the Southern
States toward, 24-successive phases
in her intercourse with China, 51--
position of, at the opening of 1863,
245 et seq.-the rejection of Roman
law by, 341-characteristics of poli-
tical feeling in, 385.

783

ENGLISH VILLAGE, AN, IN FRENCH, 301.
English wars, the, impoverishment of
Scotland by, 335.
Eothen, remarks on, 355.
EPIGRAMS, 750.

Essex, the relation between, and
Bacon, 481, 486 et seq.
Excise, falling off in the, 650.
Ferry, the, from Uhland, 591.
Fire, speculations on the first discovery
of, 530.

Flint implements of the valley of the
Somme, the, 526.

FLORENCE, THE PERIPATETIC POLITI-
CIAN IN, 321.

Foreign Inspectorate of Customs, ori-
gin and history of, in China, 52.
Foreign policy, Lord Palmerston as di-
Foundling Hospital, the, at Florence,
rector of, 253.

323.

France, present attitude of, toward
Italy, 263-the intervention of, in
Mexico, 265-position of, toward
Italy, 583.

FRANK IN SCOTLAND, THE, 330.
Fredericksburg, a visit to, 7.

French occupation of Rome, alleged
effects of, 582.

Froissart, account of the first French
Embassy to Scotland by, 331-his
account of Scotland and the Scotch,
336.

Fruits, varieties of, in China, 514.
FULLOM'S LIFE OF SIR HOWARD DOUG-

LAS, review of, 561.

Funeral solemnities, early forms of, &c.,
533.

Galicia, the policy of Austria in, 718.
Gazzetta del Popolo, the, a Florentine
newspaper, 324.

Geomancy, prevalence of, in China,

510.

Germany, present position of, 258 et

seq.

GIROLAMO SAVONAROLA, 690.

Gladstone, Mr, his financial administra-
tion and its results, 388-his budget
for 1863, 645-his various errors,
646.

Gold, effects of the increased supply of,
647.

Goldsmith's Daughter, the, from Uh-
land, 590.

Graham, Dr, one of Sir James Graham's
ancestors, 438.

GRAHAM, SIR JAMES, 436.

Greek Revolution, the, and prospects
Hamberg, Mr, and the Taeping rebel-
of the country, 264.
lion, 135, 140.

Han-kow, the destruction of, by the
Taepings, 141.

Hat mountain, the, in China, 504.
HENRI LACORDAIRE, 169.

Heuskin, Mr, the murder of, in Japan,
401.

Hienfung, Emperor of China, character,
&c. of, 45, 46-his death, 47.
Hieroglyphics, the so-called American,

541.

Hillah, sketches at, 679.

Holmes, Mr, account of the Taepings
by, 142.

Holy Places, history of the dispute re-
garding the, 357 et seq.
Hong-kong, the scenery of, &c., 499.
Horner, Leonard, Savonarola and his
Times translated by, 690.

Hull, return of Sir James Graham for,
441.

Hungary, present attitude of, towards
Austria, 262 et seq.

Hung-jin, one of the leaders of the
Taepings, 137.

Hung-siu-tsien, one of the leaders of

the Taepings, 135– his career, 139.
I, the Prince of, head of the reaction-
ary party in China, 45 et seq. pass. —
his fall, 49.

Imagination, on certain principles of
art in works of, 545.

Income-tax, the proposed modifications
in the, 649.

INEXHAUSTIBLE CAPITAL, THE, 457.
Instinct, meaning of the term, 530.
International law, Lord Mackenzie on,
316.

Ionian Islands, the, proposed cession of,
264-Sir Howard Douglas as com-
missioner of, 573.

Ireland, characteristics of political feel-
ing in, 385.

ITALIAN BRIGANDAGE, 576.

ITALY, ANCIENT, THE LANDSCAPE OF,
as delineated in the Pompeian paint-
ings, 613.

ITALY OF CAVOUR, A GLANCE AT THE,
653.

Italy, present position of, 263-causes,
&c. of brigandage in, 576.
Jackson, Stonewall, sketch of, 21.
James V., the French marriages of, 349.
JAPAN, SENSATION DIPLOMACY IN,
397.

Japanese jugglers, feats of, 413.

John of Vienne, expedition of, into
Scotland, 334.

Kiaking, state of China under, 46.
KINGLAKE'S INVASION OF THE CRIMEA,
355.

King's College, Aberdeen, modelled on
the University of Paris, 342.
Kung, Prince of, the head of the liberal
party in China, 46 et seq. pass.
Kwang-tung and Kwang-si, character
of the population of, 133.

La Bastie, the Chevalier, career and
death of, 347, 348.

La Beata, review of, 84.

LACORDAIRE, HENRI, 169.

Ladrones, the inhabitants of, ignorant
of fire, 530.

Lamarmora, General, his report on bri-
gandage, 578.

Lammennais, the Abbé de, notices of,
171 et seq.

Landlady's Daughter, the, from Uhland,

589.

Langiewicz, the Polish Dictator, his
career and fall, 717 et seq., 725 et seq.
Language, origin of, 531, 541.
Latin and Greek language, comparison
of the, 314.

L'Avenir, the French journal called,
172 et seq.

LA VIE DE VILLAGE EN ANGLETERRE,
review of, 301.

Lay, Mr, head of the Foreign Inspec-
torate in China, 54.

Lee, General, sketch of, 18 et seq.
Liberalism, decline of, in England, 247.
Longstreet, General, sketch of, 22.
LUDWIG UHLAND, 586.

Macaulay's Essay on Bacon, notice of,
480.

M'Clellan, General, sketch of, 18, 28.
MACKENZIE, LORD, HIS STUDIES IN RO-
MAN LAW reviewed, 315.

M'Culloch, Mr, on the true principles
of finance, 645 et seq.

Madeleine of France, the marriage of
James V. to, 349.

Maguire, Mr, his account of Rome, &c.,
463.

Malmesbury, Lord, his despatches on
the Italian question, 386.

Man, the question regarding the anti-
quity of, 526.

Manchester, the distress in, 245.

Marchese's Storico del Convento di San
Marco, &c., 698.

Marietta, review of, 91.

Market of Rome, the, 468.
MARRIAGE BELLS, 521.

Mary of Guise, the marriage of James
V. to, 349.

Maryland, the Confederate expedition
into, and its results, 19.
Meadows, Mr, on the Taeping rebellion,
141.

Mentschikoff, Prince, the mission of,
to the Sultan, 358.
Merchant ships, the arguments for
abolishing the right to capture, 123
et seq.

Mexico, the French intervention in, 265.
Michel's Les Ecossais en France, &c.,
review of, 330.

Mieroslawski, party headed by, &c., in
Poland, 725, 729.

Ministry, present position of the, 250
et seq.-prospects of the, at the open-
ing of the session, 384.

Misanthropy, modern phase of, 477.

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