He tried to silence the monitor by saying, “When I have made a little more money, I will return to the North. I will marry Loo Loo on the way and she shall be acknowledged to the world as my wife, as she now is in my own soul.”
Meanwhile, the orphan lived in her father’s house as her mother had lived before her. She never aided the voice of Alfred’s conscience by pleading with him to make her his wife; for she was completely satisfied with her condition, and had undoubting faith that whatever he did was always the wisest and the best.
[To be continued.]
CHARLEY’S DEATH.
The wind got up moaning, and blew to a
breeze;
I sat with my face closely pressed
on the pane;
In a minute or two it began to rain,
And put out the sunset-fire in the trees.
In the clouds’ black faces broke
out dismay
That ran of a sudden up half the
sky,
And the team, cutting ruts in the
grass, went by,
Heavy and dripping with sweet wet hay.
Clutching the straws out and knitting
his brow,
Walked Arthur beside it, unsteady
of limb;
I stood up in wonder, for, following
him,
Charley was used to be;—where
was he now?
“’Tis like him,” I said,
“to be working thus late!”—
I said it, but did not believe it
was so;
He could not have staid in the meadow
to mow,
With rain coming down at so dismal a rate.
“He’s bringing the cows home.”—I
choked at that lie:
They were huddled close by in a
tumult and fret,
Some pawing the dry dust up out
of the wet,
Some looking afield with their heads lifted
high.
O’er the run, o’er the hilltop,
and on through the gloom
My vision ran quick as the lightning
could dart;
All at once the blood shocked and
stood still in my heart;—
He was coming as never till then he had
come!
Borne ’twixt our four work-hands,
I saw through the fall
Of the rain, and the shadows so
thick and so dim,
They had taken their coats off and
spread them on him,
And that he was lying out straight,—that
was all!
THE CATACOMBS OF ROME.
[Continued.]
Custodit Dominus emnia ossa eorum. Ps. xxxiii. 20
III.
Not quite two miles from the city-gate known as the Porta Pia, there stands, on the left hand of the Nomentan Way, the ancient, and, until lately, beautiful, Church of St. Agnes outside the Walls. The chief entrance to it descends by a flight of wide steps; for its pavement is below the level of the ground, in order to afford easy access to the catacombs known as those of St. Agnes, which opened out from it and stretched away in interlacing passages under the neighboring fields. It was a quiet, retired place, with the sacredness