(L ' .. · ~ 1' ° Y2f *ý.r; i #!½ t" . ie- s? .- K ~ ~-( I;~ P *ý^rFý! - GO THRGV , -j v'II'I, IC I/, Iil!>,ýA .\ tn dI, WOU1Sfl. 1ý ý fý ý w 'ý ýit.R" ', ý . +,°;i -- ý c ý .ý - ý -);ý . r. ;-1 '' t ý ,:. , {a" ý _ - - X ýrýr "": ý> ' "` j - . _ rIh t. r ý q' ;. , y .: ý ý% ;! ;.. .i;{ 1 i.F --y16ý0 e Ri[r rt ý` J .i' r'"i"' ,F ..:k ... + s r! _+Y eUdan uneU re inters: She had bn la never bsaifrther thanuto tshe entr. town d. ret her village, and the journey astonished l bwildered-het. More than -onecomp.s- si tionate end acdjuring glance was cast on the v] ijight lovely girl, attired in such deep mourn- j lag,sai. whose eyes weressoo dim with unshed Itears. A truty farmer of St. Victoraw her to the ee coast, and put her into the charge ofthe b icptinothe vstsl i which she was to reach ' 4gand. le, in his turn consigned her to the ~, L uitoerth t At o -lenegth, Aimee found her.lsningi the great wildrness of a I- e railwayy station, with people jostling, at h inten isating, sweareing arounlhe, V a: m  , o`.bthes. A fotman at iast ame up cistdkher niame, an, findingashewas MitsMor h tnteldher he wati sent for her. He showed h to fly, which was aiting, and having d IafatadhlsilUW.P nshewas soon oIllingthrough the b tue t. At thoeA lon, dreary intermifaw .M aid ed when th d 1 licarriage hipped at thedoor one of the bar esgoomelooing mansions tohe foundin R iqare. Another footman opened the door ' and antered. No voice wclcomed her no ad er- htOlt to meet hers, no i ee ts largeroom, fern in the fashion fortyer halff luxurious lf hung wit 4ark-brown dames i wie curia t wereot same hue. a lraed massie '*ldrols hairs wme who be moved, au4-man emptydi sho uhddered. buft not with.' -whod a thenh door cin edhehind the. nt, she thlre her t ns slf, nto es chair and bitterly. re intly. ttha e roer wee-n el dt it, _was to cast her Sn self o on her d press her crcifie to her iron pshesoedn cabhi; the sae , of loni 80t ics a ntd -had a Friend who never left her, in whoe t the odreariest room ieved wee bright; and Limee rose comforted ad at is aee. bi went to the windgr and lookred out. If her was a  mall pavednoourt, and beyond ipro- thehouse a vista of other houses and lanes; not rton, aspeckof eon or asower met her eye; but she looked liuhear stiLft-sad she saw the sky' 'very 6ePdi at that momenant- surtainlv "hut then," thought she, "it wllltbe often blue, and ' I ean · fslook at it." Ando sbhetried to enlve d the rospct. A knock at the door in = a Jrishulule absmeth __, lte tosMb, m odt1 ywoman, anunwou ed she beeper. ev ad,, ~#5i fase Anuldesp' s o'1 essio n and interest Do e want i n ton told me you were coming, and toe, na'Wn Dinner won't be served rirt an "Ismyinorle at hmer " Smi, nd will t be for half our; thenhe to-dea, and then di selerd. Why, o n "o r earsid t wd ma' cruoifl5 on the thougght of that y1 nb e7º' Mr. George had "Are one, onnell n said Aimee, wth o be miss. I am an Irish woman as eia you ma know.' But as Aimee had eard English save from ler moether and cure, Mrs. Connil's- accent w4Ito lost her. Shefelt, however, she lTia 11 d _d a d; and she gladly t accepted eMrs. C 1 fonIale inter ew with her met in the drawing room afbw m to before dinner. Mr. Morton put out two of his fingers sa-cy,"lieiw are out" aftEr which-h Srela into' silence. When dintire wa au-, noun he gare her his amifinrd they went-.- .into the dining-room./t Two Zootmen-and a hut ier ia. The plea wt-e-nargna ~ nl e t, the dinner vey -ehi- a ner word wt ad dressed, to the poor, lonely , o. terriedt L neat.-.n or twice sice made a desperate eort to -brea the iee of her own aýccord, but Rho foi~d evidenutly that this wase 4lsliked, and she S" gave It up. And so Iday succeeded ay, and here was no alteration iu her uncle's behavior. 'He might have been deaf and. dnmb as far as r inf re with him wa n onern. His or Sdens about hatohis o w r -giewto Mrs. Coe urnish her.. i self with clothes1ol ce tin sp oh e. - . Snam oe bills were to e sent tothla a a as poeesibe sire was to leave of her heavy mourning. -he. wa never to go out aI lone: a for exercise, the SqnaMa so rdetis )1 of the .a leutiments, Mr. Morton a a - considered that his duty- to h madoe. He provided her neltb.em-. t ploye tnoteimusoment; avae nrdo 1s e ,a s mne, a she >d g asmap o la I su 'wn i on reained ermwhos hihe ex ve ie tomed mountaihtow in - - ?wallw to tkia' a rle tnes llage, ,fellilkl esged brd" * g tip and dowthe gravel pathsof Russell -e an aid watching the London blPaoks ettl- - on the eaess trees. She eiJoyed onA .Eomfort, Shat of the daily wak to Mass with M. Con a' no~ve aed be the weather what i might, the os two,'giee of the old woman n youn irl - e might be seen flitting throngh the dusk to nhe tnesree- eio churchL. Still it was almost imossible to evoiaSe, lgbothhaSlthadpir- .... its-in sc s atmosphere. She w-ery sher he ageo, and she struggled resolutely a t r- depression sad enubs a word of whi.che fe n the first time besan to understand the.S O She wrote long Iet tlis thpttutre, .andhis an swers, conoa 4ngt tY scrap of v -Ill ns - wýreeager edvOn>is, a well as some soheat fulthou its on higher themes which he nevar me failed to give her. She pulled down the 1eoý to disused books inher uncle's library, andguided d by a list the cure had given her-for in tbs "u days of eile. he hand attained a,-good knowle led of Englih literature-.hehae11 a goed -She ractised on th.oli, long-disuse d pianta in the the awing-rom"much toMrs. Connoell'sde Lr light. She-tried to tenach herself Italian; and, as visiting the poor was strictly forbidden-by Sher uncle, she sent-sme flbr ownr money in biher ssad made rlothus them In Thrn,nh a .ne hardes-. sb d the with dsi ra who, with their norse-maidl, f ovresp sadthe placemnihiaoon became their Sfrisend , favorite, and sla, wo alve w terty a Shorse for Master Walter m a is vitn un- story -tellig to the whole tribe. Society she up sawliteralIy none; oneuet only eover mat at to- Mr Mortn's ttable, and his eeranes s wed joonlearnt to dread rather sire. Mr. aean, with sharp ferreteyes, o harsh, yn a o t int tof her; aao e henflltoat to and tic, eds5 d t ar Land i mil~lL; hays sted -sentimenta; but innocence wipe a S Hulme's' comarse a ROZr ,-I nelox. - TTb - v. Father B.-' c!k, of Chippew. hert her r itting WAl'-" L, her . h do peopleoutni e Church toer privations, self-denial. room dni/neeof the Catholic Priesthood(1-etbhil., tother ge. ntlemen, who couci'e the'.. yond ali to the ministr3-, enjoy all the oi6r ot meants of ibesdecomforts, family, s ky friends, the Catholic priest, let the ine-im1" ad ncy of the -weather be what it m~,en l to eounters its fiereest consequencea,-p.el or in- i hastening to Console the sick -dying, he ai listenig to the oawtp~ringsof a re' mn-~ * antheother in the coueesional, - ~P 4