This lady was the younger daughter of a Sicilian nobleman, whose

avarice, or necessities, had devoted her to a convent. To avoid the

threatened fate, she fled with the lover to whom her affections had

long been engaged, and whose only fault, even in the eye of her

father, was inferiority of birth. They were now on their way to the

coast, whence they designed to pass over to Italy, where the church

would confirm the bonds which their hearts had already formed. There

the friends of the cavalier resided, and with them they expected to

find a secure retreat.

The duke, who was not materially wounded, after the first transport of

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his rage had subsided, suffered them to depart. Relieved from their

fears, they joyfully set forward, leaving their late pursuer to the

anguish of defeat, and fruitless endeavour. He was remounted on his

horse; and having dispatched two of his people in search of a house

where he might obtain some relief, he proceeded slowly on his return

to the castle of Mazzini.

It was not long ere he recollected a circumstance which, in the first

tumult of his disappointment, had escaped him, but which so

essentially affected the whole tenour of his hopes, as to make him

again irresolute how to proceed. He considered that, although these

were the fugitives he had pursued over the plains, they might not be

the same who had been secreted in the cottage, and it was therefore

possible that Julia might have been the person whom they had for some

time followed from thence. This suggestion awakened his hopes, which

were however quickly destroyed; for he remembered that the only

persons who could have satisfied his doubts, were now gone beyond the

power of recall.

To pursue Julia, when no traces of her flight

remained, was absurd; and he was, therefore, compelled to return to

the marquis, as ignorant and more hopeless than he had left him. With

much pain he reached the village which his emissaries had discovered,

when fortunately he obtained some medical assistance. Here he was

obliged by indisposition to rest. The anguish of his mind equalled

that of his body. Those impetuous passions which so strongly marked

his nature, were roused and exasperated to a degree that operated

powerfully upon his constitution, and threatened him with the most

alarming consequences. The effect of his wound was heightened by the

agitation of his mind; and a fever, which quickly assumed a very

serious aspect, co-operated to endanger his life.




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