and pink, where the flowers seemed to be looking at her with wondering elf-like 
   eyes, knowing nothing of sorrow, the feeling of isolation in her wretchedness 
   overcame her, and he tears, which had been before trickling slowly down her pale 
   cheeks, now gushed forth accompanied with sobs. And yet there was a loving human 
   being close beside her, whose heart was aching for hers, who was possessed by 
   the feeling that she was miserable, and that he was helpless to soothe her. But 
   she was too much irritated by the idea that his wishes were different from hers, 
   that he rather regretted the folly of her hopes than the probability of their 
   disappointment, to take any comfort in his sympathy. Caterina, like the rest of 
   us, turned away from sympathy which she suspected to be mingled with criticism, 
   as the child turns away from the sweetmeat in which it suspects imperceptible 
   medicine.
   "Dear Caterina, I think I hear voices," said Mr Gilfil; "they may be coming this 
   way."
   She checked herself like one accustomed to conceal her emotions, and ran rapidly 
   to the other end of the garden, where she seemed occupied in selecting a rose. 
   Presently Lady Cheverel entered, leaning on the arm of Captain Wybrow, and 
   followed by Sir Christopher. The party stopped to admire the tiers of geraniums 
   near the gate; and in the mean time Caterina tripped back with a moss rose-bud 
   in her hand, and going up to Sir Christopher, said?"There, Padroncello?there is 
   a nice rose for your button-hole."
   "Ah, you black-eyed monkey," he said, fondly stroking her cheek; "so you have 
   been running off with Maynard, either to torment or coax him an inch or two 
   deeper into love. Come, come, I want you to sing us 'Ho perduto' before we sit 
   down to picquet. Anthony goes to-morrow, you know; you must warble him into the 
   right sentimental lover's mood, that he may acquit himself well at Bath." He put 
   her little arm under his, and calling to Lady Cheverel, "Come Henrietta!" led 
   the way towards the house.
   The party entered the drawing-room, which, with its oriel window, corresponded 
   to the library in the other wing, and had also a flat ceiling heavy with carving 
   and blazonry; but the window being unshaded, and the walls hung with full-length 
   portraits of knights and dames in scarlet, white, and gold, it had not the 
   sombre effect of the library. Here hung the portrait of Sir Anthony Cheverel, 
   who in the reign of Charles II. was the renovator of the family splendour, which 
   had suffered some declension from the early brilliancy of that Chevreuil who 
   came over with the Conqueror. A very imposing personage was this Sir Anthony, 
   standing with one arm akimbo, and one fine leg and foot advanced, evidently with 
   a view to the gratification of his contemporaries and posterity. You might have 
   taken off his splendid peruke, and his scarlet cloak, which was thrown backward 
   from his shoulders, without annihilating the dignity of his appearance. And he 
   had known how to choose a wife, too, for his lady, hanging opposite to him, with 
   her sunny brown hair drawn away in bands from her mild grave face, and falling 
   in two large rich curls on her snowy gently-sloping neck, which shamed the 
   harsher hue and outline of her white satin robe, was a fit mother of 
   "large-acred" heirs.
   In this room tea was served; and here, every evening, as regularly as the great 
   clock in the courtyard with deliberate bass tones struck nine, Sir Christopher 
   and Lady Cheverel sat down to picquet until half-past ten, when Mr Gilfil read 
   prayers to the assembled household in the chapel.
   But now it was not near nine, and Caterina must sit down to the harpsichord and 
   sing Sir Christopher's favourite airs from Gluck's Orfeo, an opera which, for 
   the happiness of that generation, was then to be heard on the London stage. It 
   happened this evening that the sentiment of these airs, "Che far? senza 
   Eurydice?" and "Ho perduto il bel sembiante," in both of which Orpheus pours out 
   his yearning after his lost love, came very close to Caterina's own feeling. But 
   her emotion, instead of being a hindrance to her singing, gave her additional 
   power. Her singing was what she could do best; it was her one point of 
   superiority, in which it was probable she would excel the highborn beauty whom 
   Anthony was to woo; and her love, her jealousy, her pride, her rebellion against 
   her destiny, made one stream of passion which welled forth in the deep rich 
   tones of her voice. She had a rare contralto, which Lady Cheverel, who had high 
   musical taste, had been careful to preserve her from straining.
   "Excellent, Caterina," said Lady Cheverel, as there was a pause after the 
   wonderful linked sweetness of "Che far?." "I never heard you sing that so well. 
   Once more!"
   It was repeated; and then came "Ho perduto," which Sir Christopher encored, in 
   spite of the clock, just striking nine. When the last note was dying out, he 
   said?
   "There's a clever black-eyed monkey. Now bring out the table for picquet."
   Caterina drew out the table, and placed the cards; then, with her rapid fairy 
   suddenness of motion, threw herself on her knees, and clasped Sir Christopher's 
   knee. He bent down, stroked her cheek, and smiled.
   "Caterina, that is foolish," said Lady Cheverel. "I wish you would leave off 
   those stage-players' antics."
   She jumped up, arranged the music on the harpsichord, and then, seeing the 
   Baronet and his lady seated at picquet, quietly glided out of the room.
   Captain Wybrow had been leaning near the harpsichord during the singing, and the 
   chaplain had thrown himself on a sofa at the end of the room. They both now took 
   up a book. Mr Gilfil chose the last number of the Gentleman's Magazine; Captain 
   Wybrow, stretched on an ottoman near the door, opened Faublas; and there was 
   perfect silence in the room which, ten minutes before, was vibrating to the 
   passionate tones of Caterina.
   She had made her way along the cloistered passages, now lighted here and there 
   by a small oil-lamp, to the grand-staircase, which led directly to a gallery 
   running along the whole eastern side of the building, where it was her habit to 
   walk when she wished to be alone. The bright moon-light was streaming through 
   the windows, throwing into strange light and shadow the heterogeneous objects 
   that lined the long walls. Greek statues, and busts of Roman emperors; low 
   cabinets filled with curiosities, natural and antiquarian; tropical birds, and 
   huge horns of beasts; Hindoo gods and strange shells; swords and daggers, and 
   bits of chain-armour; Roman lamps, and tiny models of Greek temples; and, above 
   all these, queer old family portraits?of little boys and girls, once the hope of 
   the Cheverels, with close-shaven heads imprisoned in stiff ruffs?of faded, 
   pink-faced ladies, with rudimentary features and highly-developed 
   head-dresses?of gallant gentlemen, with high hips, high shoulders, and red 
   pointed beards.
   Here, on rainy days, Sir Christopher and his lady took their promenade, and here 
   billiards were played; but, in the evening, it was forsaken by all except 
   Caterina?and, sometimes, one other person.
					     					 			br />   She paced up and down in the moonlight, her pale face and thin white-robed form 
   making her look like the ghost of some former Lady Cheverel come to revisit the 
   glimpses of the moon.
   By-and-by she paused opposite the broad window above the portico, and looked out 
   on the long vista of turf and trees now stretching chill and saddened in the 
   moonlight.
   Suddenly a breath of warmth and roses seemed to float towards her, and an arm 
   stole gently round her waist, while a soft hand took up her tiny fingers. 
   Caterina felt an electric thrill, and was motionless for one long moment; then 
   she pushed away the arm and hand, and, turning round, lifted up to the face that 
   hung over her, eyes full of tenderness and reproach. The fawn-like 
   unconsciousness was gone, and in that one look were the ground tones of poor 
   little Caterina's nature?intense love and fierce jealousy.
   "Why do you push me away, Tina?" said Captain Wybrow in a half-whisper; "are you 
   angry with me for what a hard fate puts upon me? Would you have me cross my 
   uncle?who has done so much for us both?in his dearest wish? You know I have 
   duties?we both have duties?before which feeling must be sacrificed."
   "Yes, yes," said Caterina, stamping her foot, and turning away her head; "don't 
   tell me what I know already."
   There was a voice speaking in Caterina's mind, to which she had never yet given 
   vent. That voice said continually, "Why did he make me love him?why did he let 
   me know he loved me, if he knew all the while that he couldn't brave everything 
   for my sake?" Then love answered, "He was led on by the feeling of the moment, 
   as you have been, Caterina; and now you ought to help him to do what is right." 
   Then the voice rejoined, "It was a slight matter to him. He doesn't much mind 
   giving you up. He will soon love that beautiful woman, and forget a poor little 
   pale thing like you."
   Thus love, anger, and jealousy were struggling in that young soul.
   "Besides, Tina," continued Captain Wybrow in still gentler tones, "I shall not 
   succeed. Miss Assher very likely prefers some one else; and you know I have the 
   best will in the world to fail. I shall come back a hapless bachelor?perhaps to 
   find you already married to the good-looking chaplain, who is over head and ears 
   in love with you. Poor Sir Christopher has made up his mind that you're to have 
   Gilfil."
   "Why will you speak so? You speak from your own want of feeling. Go away from 
   me."
   "Don't let us part in anger, Tina. All this may pass away. It's as likely as not 
   that I may never marry any one at all. These palpitations may carry me off, and 
   you may have the satisfaction of knowing that I shall never be anybody's 
   bridegroom. Who knows what may happen? I may be my own master before I get into 
   the bonds of holy matrimony, and be able to choose my little singing-bird. Why 
   should we distress ourselves before the time?"
   "It is easy to talk so when you are not feeling," said Caterina, the tears 
   flowing fast. "It is bad to bear now, whatever may come after. But you don't 
   care about my misery."
   "Don't I, Tina?" said Anthony in his tenderest tones, again stealing his arm 
   round her waist, and drawing her towards him. Poor Tina was the slave of this 
   voice and touch. Grief and resentment, retrospect and foreboding, vanished? all 
   life before and after melted away in the bliss of that moment, as Anthony 
   pressed his lips to hers.
   Captain Wybrow thought, "Poor little Tina! it would make her very happy to have 
   me. But she is a mad little thing."
   At that moment a loud bell startled Caterina from her trance of bliss. It was 
   the summons to prayers in the chapel, and she hastened away, leaving Captain 
   Wybrow to follow slowly.
   It was a pretty sight, that family assembled to worship in the little chapel, 
   where a couple of wax-candles threw a mild faint light on the figures kneeling 
   there. In the desk was Mr Gilfil, with his face a shade graver than usual. On 
   his right hand, kneeling on their red velvet cushions, were the master and 
   mistress of the household, in their elderly dignified beauty. On his left, the 
   youthful grace of Anthony and Caterina, in all the striking contrast of their 
   colouring?he, with his exquisite outline and rounded fairness, like an Olympian 
   god; she, dark and tiny, like a gypsy changeling. Then there were the domestics 
   kneeling on red-covered forms,?the women headed by Mrs Bellamy, the natty little 
   old housekeeper, in snowy cap and apron, and Mrs Sharp, my lady's maid, of 
   somewhat vinegar aspect and flaunting attire; the men by Mr Bellamy the butler, 
   and Mr Warren, Sir Christopher's venerable valet.
   A few collects from the Evening Service was what Mr Gilfil habitully read, 
   ending with the simple petition, "Lighten our darkness."
   And then they all rose, the servants turning to curtsy and bow as they went out. 
   The family returned to the drawing-room, said good-night to each other, and 
   dispersed?all to speedy slumber except two. Caterina only cried herself to sleep 
   after the clock had struck twelve. Mr Gilfil lay awake still longer, thinking 
   that very likely Caterina was crying.
   Captain Wybrow, having dismissed his valet at eleven, was soon in a soft 
   slumber, his face looking like a fine cameo in high relief on the 
   slightlyindented pillow.
   CHAPTER III. 
   The last chapter has given the discerning reader sufficient insight into the 
   state of things at Cheverel Manor in the summer of 1788. In that summer, we 
   know, the great nation of France was agitated by conflicting thoughts and 
   passions, which were but the beginning of sorrows. And in our Caterina's little 
   breast, too, there were terrible struggles. The poor bird was beginning to 
   flutter and vainly dash its soft breast against the hard iron bars of the 
   inevitable, and we see too plainly the danger, if that anguish should go on 
   heightening instead of being allayed, that the palpitating heart may be fatally 
   bruised.
   Meanwhile, if, as I hope, you feel some interest in Caterina and her friends at 
   Cheverel Manor, you are perhaps asking, How came she to be there? How was it 
   that this tiny, dark-eyed child of the south, whose face was immediately 
   suggestive of olive-covered hills, and taper-lit shrines, came to have her home 
   in that stately English manor-house, by the side of the blonde matron, Lady 
   Cheverel?almost as if a humming-bird were found perched on one of the elm-trees 
   in the park, by the side of her ladyship's handsomest pouter-pigeon? Speaking 
   good English, too, and joining in Protestant prayers. Surely she must have been 
   adopted and brought over to England at a very early age? She was.
   During Sir Christopher's last visit to Italy with his lady, fifteen years 
   before, they resided for some time at Milan, where Sir Christopher, who was an 
   enthusiast for Gothic architecture, and was then entertaining the project of 
   metamorphosing his plain brick family mansion into the model of a Gothic 
   manor-house, was bent on studying the details of that marble miracle, the 
   Cathedral. Here Lady Cheverel, as at other Italian cities wher 
					     					 			e she made any 
   protracted stay, engaged a maestro to give her lessons in singing, for she had 
   then not only fine musical taste, but a fine soprano voice. Those were days when 
   very rich people used manuscript music, and many a man who resembled Jean 
   Jacques in nothing else, resembled him in getting a livelihood "? copier la 
   musique ?; tant la page." Lady Cheverel having need of this service, Maestro 
   Albani told her he would send her a poveraccio of his acquaintance, whose 
   manuscript was the neatest and most correct he knew of. Unhappily, the 
   poveraccio was not always in his best wits, and was sometimes rather slow in 
   consequence; but it would be a work of Christian charity worthy of the beautiful 
   Signora to employ poor Sarti.
   The next morning, Mrs Sharp, then a blooming abigail of three-and-thirty, 
   entered her lady's private room, and said, "If you please, my lady, there's the 
   frowiest, shabbiest man you ever saw outside, and he's told Mr Warren as the 
   singing-master sent him to see your ladyship. But I think you'll hardly like him 
   to come in here. Belike he's only a beggar."
   "O yes, show him in immediately."
   Mrs Sharp retired, muttering something about "fleas and worse." She had the 
   small?st possible admiration for fair Ausonia and its natives, and even her 
   profound deference for Sir Christopher and her lady could not prevent her from 
   expressing her amazement at the infatuation of gentle-folks in choosing to 
   sojourn among "Papises, in countries where there was no getting to air a bit 
   o'linen, and where the people smelt o' garlick fit to knock you down."
   However, she presently reappeared, ushering in a small meagre man, sallow and 
   dingy, with a restless wandering look in his dull eyes, and an excessive 
   timidity about his deep reverences, which gave him the air of a man who had been 
   long a solitary prisoner. Yet through all this squalor and wretchedness there 
   were some traces discernible of comparative youth and former good looks. Lady 
   Cheverel, though not very tender-hearted, still less sentimental, was 
   essentially kind, and liked to dispense benefits like a goddess, who looks down 
   benignly on the halt, the maimed, and the blind that approach her shrine. She 
   was smitten with some compassion at the sight of poor Sarti, who struck her as 
   the mere battered wreck of a vessel that might have once floated gaily enough on 
   its outward voyage, to the sound of pipes and tabors. She spoke gently as she 
   pointed out to him the operatic selections she wished him to copy, and he seemed 
   to sun himself in her auburn, radiant presence, so that when he made his exit 
   with the music-books under his arm, his bow, though not less reverent, was less 
   timid.
   It was ten years at least since Sarti had seen anything so bright and stately 
   and beautiful as Lady Cheverel. For the time was far off in which he had trod 
   the stage in satin and feathers, the primo tenore of one short season. Alas! he 
   had completely lost his voice in the following winter, and had ever since been 
   little better than a cracked fiddle, which is good for nothing but firewood. 
   For, like many Italian singers, he was too ignorant to teach, and if it had not 
   been for his one talent of penmanship, he and his young helpless wife might have 
   starved. Then, just after their third child was born, fever came, swept away the 
   sickly mother and the two eldest children, and attacked Sarti himself, who rose 
   from his sick-bed with enfeebled brain and muscle, and a tiny baby on his hands, 
   scarcely four months old. He lodged over a fruit-shop kept by a stout virago, 
   loud of tongue and irate in temper, but who had had children born to her, and so 
   had taken care of the tiny yellow, black-eyed bambinetto, and tended Sarti 
   himself through his sickness. Here he continued to live, earning a meagre 
   subsistence for himself and his little one by the work of copying music, put 
   into his hands chiefly by Maestro Albani. He seemed to exist for nothing but the