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CHAPTER XXII.

THE YOUNG LADY WITH A CARPET-BAG.

"Pain has its own noble joy when it kindles a consciousness of life, before stagnant and torpid." John Sterling.

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\HILDREN are quick to detect flaws in the genealogy of their associates. School-girls are quite as exclusive in their notions as our grown-up leaders of society. Woe to the candidate for companionship on whose domestic record there hangs a doubt!

Mrs. Gentry having felt it her duty to inform her pupils that Clara was not a lady, the latter was thenceforth "left out in the cold" by the little Brahmins of the seminary. She would sit, like a criminal, apart from the rest, or in play-hours seek the company, either of Esha or the mocking-bird.

They

One circumstance puzzled the other young ladies. could not understand why, in the more showy accomplishments of music, singing, and dancing, more expense should be bestowed on Clara's education than on theirs. The elegance and variety of her toilet excited at once their envy and their curiosity.

Clara, finding that she was held back from serious studies, gave her thoughts to them all the more resolutely, and excelled in them so far as to shock the conservative notions of Mrs. Gentry, who thought such acquisitions presumptuous in a slave. The pupils all tossed their little heads, and turned their backs, when Clara drew near. All but one. Laura Tremaine prized Clara's counsels on questions of dress, and defied the jeers and frowns that would deter her from cultivating the acquaintance of one suspected of ignoble birth. Something almost like a friendship grew up between the two. Laura was the only daughter of a wealthy cotton-broker who resided the greater part of the year in New Orleans, at the St. Charles Hotel.

The two girls used to stroll through the garden with arms about each other's waist. One day Clara, in a gush of candor,

not only avowed herself an Abolitionist, but tried to convert Laura to the heresy. Quelle horreur! There was at once a cessation of the intimacy, Laura exacting a recantation which the little infidel proudly refused.

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The disagreement had occurred only a few days before that flight of Clara's in which we must now follow her. After parting from Esha, she walked for some distance, ignorant why she selected one direction rather than another, and having no clearly defined purpose as to her destination. She had promenaded thus about an hour, when she saw a barouche approaching. The occupant, a man, sat leaning lazily back with his feet up on the opposite cushions. A black driver and footman, both in livery, filled the lofty front seat. As the vehicle rolled on, Clara recognized Ratcliff. She shuddered and dropped her veil. Fortunately he was half asleep, and did not see her.

Whither now? Of two streets she chose the more obscure. On she walked, and the carpet-bag began to be an encumbrance. The heat was oppressive. Occasionally a passer-by among the young men would say to an acquaintance, "Did you notice that figure?" One man offered to carry the bag. She declined his aid. On and on she walked. Whither and why? could not explain. All at once it occurred to her she was wasting her strength in an objectless promenade.

She

Her utterly forlorn condition revealed itself in all its desolateness and danger. She stopped under the shade of a magnolia-tree, and, leaning against the trunk, put back her veil, and wiped the moisture from her face. She had been walking more than two hours, and was overheated and fatigued. What should she do? The tears began to flow at the thought that the question was one for which she had no reply.

Suddenly she looked round with the vague sense that some one was watching her. She encountered the gaze of a gentleman who, with an air of mingled curiosity and compassion, stood observing her grief. He wore a loose frock of buff nankin, with white vest and pantaloons; and on his head was a hat of very fine Panama straw. Whether he was young or old Clara did not remark. She only knew that a face beautiful from its compassion beamed on her, and that it was the face of a gentleman.

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"Can I assist you?" he asked.

"No, thank you," replied Clara. "I'm fatigued, that 's and am resting here a few minutes."

"Here's a little house that belongs to me," said the gentleman, pointing to a neat though small wooden tenement before which they were standing. "I do not live here, but the family who do will be pleased to receive you for my sake. You shall have a room all to yourself, and rest there till you are refreshed. Do you distrust me, my child?”

There are faces out of which Truth looks so unequivocally, that to distrust them seems like a profanation. Clara did not distrust, and yet she hesitated, and replied through her tears, "No, I do not distrust you, but I've no claim on your kindness."

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“Ah! but you have a claim," said Vance (for it was he); you are unhappy, and the unhappy are my brothers and my sisters. I've been unhappy myself. I knew one years ago, young like you, and like you unhappy, and through her also you have a claim. There! Let me relieve you of that bag. Now take my arm. Good! This way." Clara's tears gushed forth anew at these words, and yet less at the words than at the tone in which they were uttered. So musical and yet so melancholy was that tone.

He knocked at the door. It was opened by Madame Bernard, a spruce little Frenchwoman, who had married a journeyman printer, and who felt unbounded gratitude to Vance' for his gift of the rent of the little house.

"Is it you, Mr. Vance? We've been wondering why you did n't come.”

"Madame Bernard, this young lady is fatigued. I wish her to rest in my room.”

"The room of Monsieur is always in order. Follow me, my dear."

And, taking the carpet-bag, Madame conducted her to the little chamber, then asked: "Now what will you have, my dear? A little claret and water? Some fruit or cake?"

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Nothing, thank you. I'll rest on the sofa awhile. You're very kind. The gentleman's name is Vance, is it?”

"Yes; is he not an acquaintance?"

"I never saw him till three minutes ago. He noticed me

resting, and, I fear, weeping in the street, and he asked me in here to rest."

"Twas just like him.

He's so good, so generous! He gives me the rent of this house with the pretty garden attached. You can see it from the window. Look at the grapes. He reserves for himself this room, which I daily dust and keep in order. Poor man! 'Twas here he passed the few months of his marriage, years ago. His wife died, and he bought the house, and has kept it in repair ever since. This used to be their sleeping-room. "T was also their parlor, for they were poor. There's their little case of books. Here's the piano on which they used to play duets. 'Twas a hired piano, and was returned to the owner; but Mr. Vance found it in an old warehouse, not long ago, had it put in order, and brought here. 'Tis one of Chickering's best; a superb instrument. You should hear Mr. Vance play on it."

"Does he play well?" asked Clara, who had almost forgotten her own troubles in listening to the little woman's gossip.

"Ah! you never heard such playing! I know something of music. My family is musical. I flatter myself I'm a judge. I've heard Thalberg, Vieuxtemps, Jael, Gottschalk; and Mr. Vance plays better than any of them.” "Is he a professor ?"

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No, merely an amateur. But he puts a soul into the notes. Do you play at all, my dear?

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"Yes, I began to learn so early that I cannot recollect the time when."

"I thought you must be musical.

Just try this instrument,

my dear, that is, if you 're not too tired."

"Certainly, if 't will oblige you.”

Seating herself at the piano, Clara played, from Donizetti's Lucia, Edgardo's melodious wail of abandonment and despair, “Ľ universo intero e un deserto per me sensa Lucia.”

Mrs. Bernard had opened the door that Vance might hear. At the conclusion he knocked and entered. "Is this the way

"You're a pro

you rest yourself, young pilgrim?" he asked. ficient, I see. You've been made to practise four hours a day."

"Yes, ever since I can remember.”

"So I should think. Now let me hear something in a different vein."

Clara, while the blood mounted to her forehead, and her whole frame dilated, struck into the "Star-spangled Banner," playing it with her whole soul, and at the close singing the refrain,

"And the Star-spangled Banner in triumph shall wave
O'er the land of the free and the home of the brave."

"But that's treason!" cried Mrs. Bernard.

"Yes, Mrs. Bernard," said Vance, " run at once to the policestation. Tell them to send a file of soldiers. We must have

her arrested."

"O no, no!" exclaimed Clara, deceived by Vance's grave acting. Then, seeing her mistake, she laughed, and said: "That's too bad. I thought for a moment you were in

earnest."

"We will spare you this time," said Vance, with a smile that made his whole face luminous; "but should outsiders in the street hear you, they may not be so forbearing. They will tear our little house down if you're not careful.”

"I'll not be so imprudent again," returned Clara. 66 Will you play for me, sir?" And she resumed her seat on the sofa. Vance played some extemporized variations on the Carnival of Venice; and Clara, who had regarded Mrs. Bernard's praises as extravagant, now concluded they were the literal truth. "Oh!" she exclaimed, naively, "I never heard playing like that. Do not ask me to play before you again, sir."

Mrs. Bernard left to attend to the affairs of the cuisine.

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Now, mademoiselle," said Vance, "what can I do before I go?"

"All I want,” replied Clara, "is time to arrange some plan. I left home so suddenly I'm quite at a loss.”

"Do I understand you've left your parents?" "I have no parents, sir."

“Then a near relation, or a guardian?

,,

"Neither, sir. I am independent of all ties."

"Have you no friend to whom you can go for advice?"

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“I had a friend, but she gave me up because I'm an Abolitionist."

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