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"Because I feel keenly. I once won of a man I respected, who was poor. His agony was a dreadful lessou to me. I went home, and was terrified to think I had felt so much pleasure in the pain of another. I have never played since that night."

66 So young and so resolute !" said Valerie, with admira tion in her voice and eyes; "you are a strange person. Others would have been cured by losing, you were cured by winning. It is a fine thing to have principle at your age, Mr. Maltravers."

"I fear it was rather pride than principle," said Maltravers. "Error is sometimes sweet; but there is no anguish like an error of which we feel ashamed. I cannot submit to blush for myself."

"Ah!" muttered Valerie; "this is the echo of my own heart!" She rose and went to the window. Maltravers paused a moment, and followed her. Perhaps he half thought there was an invitation in the movement.

There lay before them the still street, with its feeble and unfrequent lights; beyond, a few stars, struggling through an atmosphere unusually clouded, brought the murmuring ocean partially into sight. Valerie leaned against the wall, and the draperies of the window veiled her from all the guests, save Maltravers; and between her and himself was a large marble vase filled with flowers; and by that uncertain light Valerie's brilliant cheek looked pale, and soft, and thoughtful. Maltravers never before felt so much in love with the beautiful French

woman.

66

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Ah, madam!" said he, softly; "there is one error, if it be so, that never can cost me shame."

"Indeed!" said Valerie, with an unaffected start, for she was not aware he was so near her. As she spoke she began plucking (it is a common woman's trick) the flowers from the vase between her and Ernest. That small, delicate, almost transparent hand!-Maltravers gazed upon the hand, then on the countenance, then on the hand again. The scene swam before him, and, involuntarily and as by an irresistible impulse, the next moment that hand was in his own.

"Pardon me pardon me," said he, falteringly; "but that error is in the feelings that I know for you.'

Valerie lifted on him her large and radiant eyes, and made no answer.

Maltravers went on. "Chide me, scorn me, hate me if thou wilt. Valerie, I love you!"

Valerie drew away her hand, and still remained silent.

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"Speak to me," said Ernest, leaning forward; “one word, I implore thee-speak to me !"

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He paused, still no reply; he listened breathlessly-he heard her sob. Yes; that proud, that wise, that lofty woman of the world, in that moment, was as weak as the simplest girl that ever listened to a lover. But how dif ferent the feelings that made her weak what soft and what stern emotions were blent together!

12

Mr. Maltravers," she said, recovering her voice, though it sounded hollow, yet almost unnaturally firm and clear" the die is cast, and I have lost for ever the friend for whose happiness I cannot live, but for whose welfare I would have died; I should have foreseen this, but I was blind. No moreno more; see me to-morrow, and leave me now!!" DW KEY SA.

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"But, Valerie " "Ernest Maltravers," said she, laying her hand lightly on his own ; "there is no anguish like an error of which we feel ashamed!”

Before he could reply to this citation from his own aphorism, Valerie had glided away; and was already seated at the card-table, by the side of the Italian prin

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Maltravers also joined the group. He fixed his eyes on Madame de Ventadour, but her face was calm, -not a trace of emotion was discernible. Her voice, her smile, her charming and courtly manner, all were as when he first beheld her. bud kept de 13 3

"These women-what hypocrites they are!" muttered Maltravers to himself; and his lip writhed into a sneer, which had of late often forced away the serene and gracious expression of his earlier years, ere he knew what it was to

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despise. But Maltravers mistook the woman he dared to

scorn.

He soon withdrew from the palazzo, and sought his hotel. There, while yet musing in his dressing room, he was joined by Ferrers. The time had past when Ferrers had exercised an influence over Maltravers; the boy had grown up to be the equal of the man, in the exercise of that two-edged sword-the reason. And Maltravers now: felt, unalloyed, the calm consciousness of his superior genius. He could not confide to Ferrers what had passed between him and Valerie. Lumley was too hard for a confidant in matters where the heart was at all concerned. In fact, in high spirits, and in the midst of frivolous adventures, Ferrers was charming. But in sadness, or in the moments of deep feeling, Ferrers was one whom you would wish out of the way.

"You are sullen to-night, mon cher," said Lumley, yawning; "I suppose you want to go to bed-some persons are so ill-bred, so selfish, they never think of their friends. Nobody asks me what I won at écarté. Don't be late to-morrow-I hate breakfasting alone, and I am never later than a quarter before nine-I hate egotistical, ill-mannered people. Good night."

With this, Ferrers sought his own room; there, as he slowly undressed, he thus soliloquized:-"I think I have put this man to all the use I can make of him. We don't pull well together any longer; perhaps I myself am a little tired of this sort of life. That is not right. I shall grow ambitious by and by; but I think it a bad calculation not to make the most of youth. At four or five-andthirty, it will be time enough to consider what one ought to be at fifty!"

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Most dangerous

Is that temptation that does goad us on

To sin, in loving virtue."-Measure for Measure.

"SEE her to-morrow!-that morrow is come!" thought Maltravers, as he rose the next day from a sleepless couch. Ere yet he had obeyed the impatient summons of Ferrers, who had thrice sent to say that "he never kept people waiting," his servant entered with a packet from England, that had just arrived by one of those rare couriers who sometimes honour that Naples, which might be so lucrative a mart to English commerce, if Neapolitan kings cared for trade, or English senators for “ foreign politics." Letters from stewards and bankers were soon got through; and Maltravers reserved for the last an epistle from Cleveland. There was much in it that touched him home. After some dry details about the property to which Maltravers had now succeeded, and some trifling comments upon trifling remarks in Ernest's former letters, Cleveland went on thus:

"I confess, my dear Ernest, that I long to welcome you back to England. You have been abroad long enough to see other countries; do not stay long enough to prefer them to your own. You are at Naples, too-I tremble for you. I know well that delicious, dreaming, holydaylife of Italy, so sweet to men of learning and imagination -so sweet too to youth-so sweet to pleasure! But, Ernest, do you not feel already how it enervates?—how the luxurious far niente unfits us for grave exertion? Men may become too refined and too fastidious for useful purposes; and nowhere can they become so more rapidly, than in Italy. My dear Ernest, I know you well;

you are not made to sink down into a virtuoso, with a cabinet full of cameos and a head full of pictures; still less are you made to be an indolent cicesbeo to some fair Italian, with one passion and two ideas: and yet I have known men as clever as you, whom that bewitching Italy has sunk into one or the other of these emasculate beings. Don't run away with the notion that you have plenty of time before you. You have no such thing. At your age, and with your fortune, (I wish you were not so rich!) the holyday of one year becomes the custom of the next. In England, to be a useful or a distinguished man, you must labour. Now, labour itself is sweet, if we take to it early. We are a hard race, but we are a manly one; and our stage is the most exciting in Europe for an able and an honest ambition. Perhaps you will tell me you are not ambitious now; very possibly-but ambitious you will be; and, believe me, there is no unhappier wretch than a man who is ambitious but disappointed,-who has the desire for fame, but has lost the power to achieve it, -who longs for the goal, but will not, and cannot, put away his slippers to walk to it. What I most fear for you is one of these two evils-an early marriage or a fatal liaison with some married woman. The first evil is certainly the least, but for you it would still be a great one. With your sensitive romance, with your morbid cravings for the Ideal, domestic happiness would soon grow trite and dull. You would demand new excitement, and become a restless and disgusted man. It is necessary for you to get rid of all the false fever of life, before you settle down to everlasting ties. You do not yet know your own mind; you would choose your partner from some visionary caprice, or momentary impulse, and not from the deep and accurate knowledge of those qualities which would most harmonize with your own character. People, to live happily with each other, must fit in, as it were the proud be mated with the meek, the irritable with the gentle, and so forth. No, my dear Maltravers, do not think of marriage yet awhile; and if there is any danger of it, come over to me immediately. But if I warn you against a lawful tie, how much more

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