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"And a proud one," said Lady G. "Well, I suppose Erpingham House will be the rendezvous to all the Blues, and wits, and savans. Miss Vernon is

another Aspasia, I hear."

"I hate girls who are so designing," said the lady who spoke before, and had only one daughter, very ugly, who, at the age of thirty-five, was about to accept her first offer, and marry a younger son in the Guards. "I think she's rather vulgar; for my part, I doubt if—I shall patronise her."

"Well, what do you think of it, Mr. Godolphin? You have seen Miss Vernon ?"

Godolphin was gone.

It was about ten days after this conversation that Godolphin, waiting at a hotel in Dover the hour at which the packet set sail for Calais, took up the "Morning Post," and the first passage that met his eye was the one which I transcribe:

"Marriage in High Life.-On Thursday last, at Wendover Castle, the Earl of Erpingham to Constance, only daughter of the celebrated Mr. Vernon. The bride was dressed, &c." And then followed the trite yet pompous pageantry of words-the sounding nothings with which ladies who become countesses are knelled into marriage.

"The dream is over!" said Godolphin, mournfully, as the paper fell to the ground; and, burying his face within his hands, he remained motionless till they came to announce the moment of departure.

And thus Percy Godolphin left, for the second time, his native shores. When we return to him, what changes will the feelings, now awakened within him, have worked in his character! The drops that trickle within the cavern harden, yet brighten into spars as they indurate. Nothing is more polished, nothing more cold, than that wisdom which is the work of former tears, of former passions, and is formed within a musing and solitary mind!

CHAPTER XXII.

THE BRIDE ALONE.-A DIALOGUE POLITICAL AND MATRIMONIAL.-CONSTANCE'S GENIUS FOR DIPLOMACY.THE CHARACTER OF HER ASSEMBLIES.-HER CONQUEST OVER LADY DELVILLE.

"BRING me that book; place that table nearer; and leave me."

The abigail obeyed the orders, and the young Countess of Erpingham was alone. Alone! what a word for a young and beautiful bride in the first months of her marriage! Alone, and in the heart of that mighty city, in which rank and wealth-and they were hers-are the idols all worship, all throng around.

It was a room fancifully and splendidly decorated. Flowers and perfumes were, however, its chief luxury; and from the open window you might see the trees in the old Mall deepening into the rich verdure of June. That haunt, too-a classical haunt for London-was, at the hour I speak of, full of gay and idle life; and there was something fresh and joyous in the air, the sun, and the crowd of foot and horse that swept below.

Was the glory gone from your brow, Constance? or the proud gladness from your eye? Alas! are not the blessings of the world like the enchanted bullets? that which pierces our heart is united with the gift which our heart desired!

Lord Erpingham entered the room. "Well, Constance," said he, "shall you ride on horseback to-day?" "I think not."

"Then I wish you would call on Lady Delville. You see, Delville is of my party we set together. You should be very civil to her, and I did not think were so the other night."

you

"You wish Lady Delville to support your political

interest; and, if I mistake not, you think her at present lukewarm?"

"Precisely."

"Then, my dear lord, will you place confidence in my discretion? I promise you, if you will leave me undisturbed in my plans, that Lady Delville shall be the most devoted of your party before the season is half over: but then the means will not be those you advise

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Why, I advised none."

Yes-civility; a very poor policy."

"D-n it, Constance! why, you would not frown a great person like Lady Delville into affection for us?" "Leave it to me." 99

"Nonsense!"

"My dear lord, only try. Three months is all I ask. You will leave the management of politics to me ever afterward! I was born a schemer. Am I not John Vernon's daughter?"

"Well, well, do as you will!" said Lord Erpingham: "but I see how it will end. However, you will call on Lady Delville to-day?"

"If you wish it, certainly."

"I do."

Lady Delville was a proud, great lady; not very much liked, and not so often invited by her equals as if she had been agreeable and a flirt.

Constance knew with whom she had to treat. She called on Lady Delville that day. Lady Delville was at home a pretty and popular Mrs. Trevor was with her. Lady Delville received her coolly: Constance was haughtiness itself.

"You go to the Duchess of Daubigny's to-night?" said Lady Delville, in the course of their broken con. versation.

"Indeed I do not. I like agreeable society. It shall be my object to form a circle that not one displeasing person shall obtain access to. Will you assist me, my dear Mrs. Trevor?" and Constance turned, with her softest smile, to the lady she address d.

Mrs. Trevor was flattered: Lady Delville drew herself up.

"It is a small party at the duchess's," said the latter, "merely to meet the Duke and Duchess of C—.” "Ah! few people are capable of giving a suitable entertainment to the royal family."

"But surely none more so than the Duchess of Daubigny her house so large, her rank so great!"

"The

"These are but poor ingredients towards the forming of an agreeable party," said Constance, coldly. mistake made by common minds is to suppose titles the only rank. Royal dukes love, above all other persons, to be amused; and amusement is the last thing generally provided for them."

The conversation fell into other channels. Constance rose to depart. She warmly pressed the hand of Mrs. Trevor, whom she had only seen once before.

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"A few persons come to me to-morrow evening," said she; "do wave ceremony, and join us. I can promise you that not one disagreeable person shall be present; and that the Duchess of Daubigny shall write for an invitation, and be refused."

Mrs. Trevor accepted the invitation.

Never

Lady Delville was enraged beyond measure. was female tongue more bitter than hers at the expense of that insolent Lady Erpingham! Yet Lady Delville was secretly in grief; for the first time in her life, she was hurt at not having been asked to a party: and, being hurt because she was not going, she longed most eagerly to go.

The next evening came. Erpingham House was not large, but it was well adapted to the description of assembly its beautiful owner had invited. Statues, busts, pictures, books, scattered or arranged about the apartments, furnished matter for intellectual conversation, or gave, at least, an intellectual air to the meeting.

About a hundred persons were present. They were culled from the most distinguished ornaments of the time. Musicians, painters, authors, orators, fine gentlemen, dukes, princes, and beauties. One thing, how

ever, was imperatively necessary in order to admit them -the profession of liberal opinions. No Tory, however wise, eloquent, or beautiful, could have obtained the sesame to those apartments.

Constance never seemed more lovely, and never before was she so winning. The coldness and the arrogance of her manner were wholly vanished. To every one she spoke, and to every one her voice, her manner, were kind, cordial, familiar; but familiar with a soft dignity that heightened the charm. Ambitious not only to please but to dazzle, she breathed into her conversation all the grace and culture of her mind. They who admired her the most were the most accomplished themselves. Now exchanging with foreign nobles that brilliant trifling of the world in which there is often so much penetration, wisdom, and research into character; now with a kindling eye and animated cheek commenting with poets and critics on literature and the arts; now, in a more remote and quiet corner, seriously discussing, with hoary politicians, those affairs in which even they allowed her shrewdness and her grasp of intellect; and combining with every grace and every accomplishment a rare and dazzling order of beauty-we may readily imagine the sensation she created, and the sudden and novel zest which so splendid an Armida must have given to the tameness of society.

Each

The whole of the next week the party at Erpingham House was the theme of every conversation. person who had been there had met the lion he had been most anxious to see. The beauty had conversed with the poet who had charmed her; the young débutant in science had paid homage to the great professor of its loftiest mysteries; the statesman had thanked the author who had defended his measures; the author had been delighted with the compliment of the statesman. Every one then agreed that, while the highest rank in the kingdom had been there, rank had been the least attraction; and those who before had found Constance repellant, were the very persons who now expatiated with the greatest rapture on the sweet

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