de Monticoli was enamoured of Juliet de Cappelletti, and she of him, their families being at the time in bitter enmity with each other on account of party feuds. As therefore they could not be openly married, a private union took place between them. Shortly afterwards, Romeo, having in an affray of the two factions killed Tebaldo, the cousin of Juliet, was obliged to seek for safety in flight, and proceeded to Mantua. His unhappy spouse, afflicted beyond measure, sought com-' miseration and counsel from the intermediate agent of her secret marriage, seeing that there was no longer any hope of a reconciliation between families now still more incensed against each other than before. Therefore, by a preconcerted arrangement, Juliet procured a sleeping draught, and shortly after, according to common report, yielded up her life. Romeo having been apprised of the dire news, before he heard that she was only apparently dead, resolved, in the bitterness of his anguish, to take poison, and die likewise. Previously to his doing so, however, not entirely despairing of her life, he went to Verona, and availed himself of the evening hour to enter the monastery. Being here assured that his Juliet had been interred not long before, he swal lowed some poison he had with him, and hastened to the tomb, where their mutual friend pointed out the way by a passage beyond that which was ready for his return. The friar wondered very much what had happened to Romeo, unconscious of the hard, fate that awaited him. While he endeavoured to assure him that the lady was not in reality dead, the poison began to operate, and now on the very verge of death he called on his Juliet with a faint voice. She awoke, and scarcely recognised him. Romeo expired, and Juliet breathed for a moment only to share his hapless doom." THE MYSTERIOUS MONK; OR, THE MOUNTAIN ROSE. (Concluded from page 243.) By a violent exertion of strength di Moralvidini now succeeded in dislodging the net-work, and, springing forwards, his first impulse was to clasp the lovely form of his still sleeping daughter to his heart; the next to raise the inanimate Blanche, and convey her to a couch. By every means in his power he endeavoured to restore her fleeting senses, but in vain; and he now applied himself to find an outlet by which he might call some one to his aid. At length he discovered the panel by which he had entered, and, snatching a taper from the altar, he endeavoured to retrace his steps; but the windings were too numerous; and, after having proceeded a considerable way, to his vexation he discovered he was wrong. Completely bewildered, he stopped, and was tempted to think that he should never escape from this dilemma. He was, however, agreeably relieved by hearing the sound of human voices, and, on shouting loudly, was quickly answered, and presently joined by two lay brothers, belonging to the Carthusian Priory. Speedily making them acquainted with his errand, he prevailed on them to return with him, and soon arrived at the chamber where he had left the objects of his care. Fortunately Father Reginald was a skil ful leech. The duke first directed his attention to the beautiful Correlia, whom he soon pronounced not to be in any danger, her lethargy being only occasioned by a powerful opiate. Of Blanche he spoke not so favourably. She still lay perfectly unconscious, and it was long after the lancet had been applied to her arm before the crimson stream would flow. So faint, so weak was she, that the father - pro nounced her incapable of being moved without imminent danger. The duke now despatched a messenger for his carriage, and on its arrival, raising Correlia in his arms, he placed her in the vehicle, and, ordering the coachman to drive slowly, soon reached the Castello della Rinaldo. Having delivered her to the care of her attendant, he returned to watch for the first dawn of consciousness, by the side of his once-loved Blanche. Let us now retrace the occurrences of the last seventeen years, and return to the period when Antonio, glowing with love and happiness, left the lowly cottage which contained her who, by her unaffected beauty and playful vivacity, had obtained the appellation of the Mountain Rose. He left Blanche with the intention of obtaining his father's permission to make her his bride, for Antonio thought not of the differences of birth and education. To wish had always been to have his wishes complied with, or even anticipated, and he dreamed not of the least opposition to his will. His enamoured fancy told him that Blanche would add lustre to a name already ennobled. When, therefore, he presented his suit to his hitherto too-indulgent parent, he was not prepared for the storm of rage and indignation which burst from his father. Amazed and astonished, he fled from his presence, resolved to leave his native home, and to renounce rank and wealth for the sake of his Blanche and love. But his father, perfectly aware of his wayward temper, prevented his escape, and had him confined in a turret of the castle, where he was denied nothing but liberty. Vain, for several months, were all the projects of the youthful Antonio to liberate himself; at length Providence appeared to favour him; the vigilance of his keeper relaxed, and Antonio, taking advantage of an opportunity which presented itself, flew on the wings of love to the little cottage in the vale, the abode of his idolized Blanche. Necessary rest and food he scarcely allowed himself, so great was his impatience to arrive. On reaching the mountains, which surounded the vale, he looked in vain for the blue curling smoke, which, rising in fantastic wreaths, used to top even the tallest tree he beheld. The flowers around were withered and faded. An inward apprehension seized him; he darted forwards, he raised the unconfined latch; his worst fears were realized, the little tenement was deserted! Almost frantic, he rushed to the village, and was there told the fate of the unfortunate Blanche. It appeared that Jeannette had been concealed in the village in which Blanche had been confined, and had, by some means or other, recognised her in the mother of the helpless innocent. Finding that the idolized Mountain Rose had been equally guilty as herself, she resolved not to be alone the sufferer, and had watched an opportunity of entering the cottage, and, undiscovered, conveyed the child away, and instantly speeded with the utmost celerity to the cottage of Rodolph de la Valois. The direful catastrophe has been related. The infant, which had been left in the cottage again, was restored to the person from whom it was stolen, and the heart-riven Antonio had only the satisfaction of weeping over the child of his beloved, ever-regretted, Blanche. Time that universal mitigator of all our sorrows-at length calmed the violence of his, and the love he owed to Blanche he now transferred to her child. Her he still continued under the care of her original protectress, having first munificently rewarded her for her attention to it. Having done this, Antonio returned, unhappy and disconsolate, to his father's mansion. Years now passed away. The little Correlia united to a disposition of uncommon sweetness a heart, feelingly alive to every virtue; no wonder, then, that Antonio idolized her. When, on the death of his father he became Duke Di Moralvidini, he had her brought to his home, procured a grant from the king to legitimate her, and introduced her to the world as his heiress. The unhappy and maddened Blanche, when she hurled her victim with such frantic violence down the precipice, and fell with her, found not the death she sought; for, while Jeannette became a victim, the waves threw the wretched Blanche on the opposite shore, where she was discovered by some smugglers, and conveyed on board their vessel. They attended her with humanity; but reason had fled, and the object of their compassion was a confirmed maniac. After fruitless endeavours to recover her, they placed her in a receptacle for lunatics, and for sixteen years was this unhappy female an inhabitant of a madhouse. At length, however, the news of di Moralvidini's arrival with his lovely and beautiful heiress reached her ears; the effect was instantaneous, her wandering faculties were instantly aroused, and she resolved to escape, if possible. Nothing now haunted her brain but that Antonio had forgotten her, that he had become the husband of another, the father of an idolized daughter, while her's was left to perish. "Merciful God! what has become of my child?" she for the first time thought. "Perished, perhaps, for want of food! My fair fame has been blasted, my father destroyed, the flower of my early youth crushed. I am deprived of every blessing, even deprived of pressing to my agonized heart the little innocent who owes its life to me; bereft of reason, the wretched occupant of a madhouse; no food but hard bread moistened with water, no bed save the floor, no pillow but straw on which to rest my aching head! While he, he revels in every luxury, thoughtless and forgetful of the wretch he left to perish! But revenge may yet be mine! This proud duke may be taught that wrongs like mine go not unpunished; may be made to feel in his very heart's core part of the agony which rends mine." From this moment Blanche acted with a composure and tractability which effectually deceived her attendant, and at length succeeded in effecting her escape, a few days after the duke had taken up his residence at the Castella della Rinaldo. It was there that, in wandering about the gloomy passages, she discovered the superb apartment before described, and a considerable sum of money which was concealed in it. Here, then, she took up her abode, and hither she contrived to allure the gentle Correlia by a well-feigned tale of her distress. Unconscious of the evil meditated, and ever alive to the feelings of humanity, Correlia attended Blanche to the black chamber, and there Blanche told her own unhappy tale, concealing nothing but the name of her betrayer. Correlia wept, but knew not she wept the sorrows of a mother. But when at last Blanche disclosed the name of her betrayer --when she heard the name of her father, that father so loved, so idolized-her senses almost forsook her, she gasped for breath, and eagerly drank the contents of a goblet which was offered to her. Correlia imagined it a re. storative; it was in reality an opiate. She was placed on a sable couch: the rest has been told. When Blanche recovered from her stupor, the first object her eyes fell on was the lover of her youth, seated by her side. "I have had a fearful dream, Antonio," she said, pressing her thin and bloodless hand to her pale forehead. "It could not be reality! Say, speak!" she cried, with energy, and exerting herself with more strength than her fragile form seemed capable of, and catching the hand of the duke. "Speak," she continued, " have I indeed a daughter? and I, I raised my hand against her life! Horrible! horrible! God, I thank thee that thou hast spared me that one crime! Oh! it wanted not that to fill up my measure of them! You weep, Antonio. Ah! one false step is irretrievable. It brings in its train a load of guilt and misery, and wretchedness. More tears, Antonio! Would that I could weep; it would cool the burning fever in my brain. Sixteen years, Antonio, sixteen years I lived in a madhouse; the only sounds I heard were the groans and shrieks of those miserable as myself; the only be ings I saw besides my keeper, were the airy form of my good, my venerable, my murdered father, and the bleeding spectre of Jeannette: they haunted my couch, they visited me in the dead of the night! This, this is the punishment of guilt,' they cried, as they mocked my agony and derided my pangs. O God, mercy! mercy!" She hid her face in the pillow, overcome by exertion: recovering, she faintly added, "Antonio, farewell, my race is almost run. With my dying breath I pray for your happiness." A violent spasm shook her frame; with difficulty she proceeded: "Teach Correlia not to curse her unhappy mother. Ah! worlds would I give once more to gaze on her lovely form, to press her to this beating heart, to feel the sweetness of her breath, or to taste the richness of her coral lip; but it may not beere the opiate can cease to operate I shall be at peace. Ah! shall I ever be at peace? will not their visions haunt me even in the grave? But God refuseth not the repent int sinner; he turns not a deaf ear to the wretch's cry. My mouth is parched, my brain wanders, and my eyes grow dim! Ah! what do I behold? It is Jeannette! My father, too! how sweet, how placid is his smile! See, he beckons me away. I come! I come! Pardon, pardon, my dear, dear father! He did, he did, even with his last, his dying breath. Antonio, I have loved you as none but woman can love : let me but hear your lips pronounce my pardon. My child, do thou convey to her my last blessing. Antonio, where art thou? I cannot see thee; a mist floats before my eyes. Bless thee, Antonio; and Correlia, my child, bless, bless Corre -" Words failed her, and her head sank on his shoulder, her hand fast locked in his; it gradually grew colder-he raised his head, and gazed mournfully on her once-expressive countenance; but the spirit which animated it had fled, and nought remained but the mortal part of the once-loved, once-fascinating Mountain Rose. The anguish of di Moralvidini, as he gazed on the stiffening form of Blanche, baffles description; he thought of her as he had last seen her; fancy pictured her to his mind's eye as the bashful blooming girl, who loved and confided in him. Ah! what a mind had he wrecked! "I am her murderer," he cried, in irrepressible anguish. "Blanche! Blanche! thou art indeed my victim!" A violent burst of tears came to his relief; their effects were most salutary, and, composing himself, he returned to the Castello della Rinaldo, and was received by his lovely child, who had happily recovered, and greeted him with her sweetest smiles. His disordered appearance shocked and terrified her, and she implored him to retire and take some rest. "Not till I have told you all, my love," he said; then, seating himself, and covering his face with his hands, he related the story of her unhappy mother. The tears of Correlia fell fast, but her gentleness and sympathy assuaged the remorseful feelings of the duke, and in time afforded to his mind a peaceful calm. Happy in the smiles of his lovely daughter, he lived to attain a good old age; and when he descended this vale of life he died lamented by the rich, and regretted by the poor, who followed him with tears to the grave; but not till he had blessed his Correlia's children. The cottage in the vale had been embellished by her desire; and by the side of a bubbling stream, and shaded by the weeping ash and cypress, were deposited the mortal remains of Blanche. A black marble slab, with this inscription, "Sacred to the memory of Blanche de la Valois," marked the spot; and hither, on a bright summer's evening, do the villagers repair, decorate the tomb with garlands, and pray with tears of pity for the soul's repose of the once-beloved Blanche, the Mountain Rose. Ladies' Pocket Mag. THE WANDERING JEW. SALATHIEL AMONG THE ANTIQUES, I am emboldened to offer the following authentic anecdotes to the public, because I know that the most trivial circumstances relative to extraordinary persons are highly gratifying to this biography-mad age. Since the publication of the Rev. Mr. Croly's "Salathiel," that singular personage, commonly known as the wandering Jew, has excited great general interest, and therefore I make no further apology for communicating to the world what I know about him. I was well acquainted with Salathiel, some time ago, in Italy, and a very pleasant fellow he was; not grave and melancholy, as Croly, who evidently never saw him, would have us believe; but a shrewd, jolly dog, who, having no settled income, but living by his wits, would make himself vastly agreeable at a dinner party, in hopes of getting invited a second time; for, owing to his roving disposition, the poor fellow had well exemplified the truth of the adage, which says, that "a rolling stone gathers no moss." It was very necessary, also, for his acquaintance to guard against the consequences of one very bad propensity of Salathiel, which was that of borrowing money; for having, as I said before, nothing to live upon, he was very apt to inquire whether one had a spare ten pounds about one; and then, cursed as he was with a wandering spirit, he would be off the next morning, heaven only knows where, and never returned to the same place till his creditors were dead, and gone to the third and fourth generation. But this by the way. At a time when many curiosities were brought into the Neapolitan Museum from the ruins of Pompeii and Herculaneum, I was unwilling to lose the opportunity afforded me of visiting them and the other antiques, in company with a person so capable of elucidating those antiquities, which, at one period of his existence, were his cotemporaries. Accordingly, I prevailed on him to go with me to see the collection; and here I must warn the directors of all such establishments, if they have the least regard for the character of their medals, marbles, and inscriptions, to be very careful how they admit Salathiel, for he plays the very devil with antiquity, and is enough to destroy the credit of a whole antiquarian university.. A learned and obliging professor undertook to explain the meaning of the various precious fragments preserved in the establishment, and first displayed to us a collection of coins of all ages. Salathiel had no sooner cast his eyes upon them, than he whispered to me that he |