Such, I fancied, was the proud language of that melancholy music.

Had I been other than I was--nay, had I listened to the burden under

other circumstances and in another place--I should most probably

have felt nothing but sympathy for the musician. As it was, I

can not describe my feelings. All my racking doubts and miseries

returned. The tone of triumph which the strain conveyed wrought

upon me like an indignity. It seemed to denote that "foregone

conclusion" which had been my cause of apprehension so long. Could

it be then that Julia was really guilty? Could she have given William

Edgerton so much encouragement that triumph and exultation should

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still mingle with his farewell accents of despair? Ah! what

fantasies preyed upon my soul; haunted the smallest movements of

my mind; conjured up its spectres, and gave bitterness to its every

beverage! When I thought thus of Julia, I rose cautiously from my

seat, approached the bed where she was lying, and gazed steadily,

though with the wildest thrill of emotion, into her face. I verily

believe had she not been sleeping at that moment--sleeping beyond

question--she would have shared the fate of "The gentle lady wedded to the Moor."

I was in the mood for desperate things.

But she slept--her cheek upon her arm--pale, but oh! how beautiful!

and looking, oh! how pure! Her breathing was as tranquil and regular

as that of an infant. I felt, while I gazed, that hers must be

the purity of an infant also. I turned from beholding her, as the

renewed notes of the musician once more ascended to the chamber.

I again took my seat at the window and concealed myself behind the

curtain. Here I had been concealed but a few moments, when I heard

a rustling in the branches of the tree. Meanwhile, the music again

ceased. I peered cautiously from behind the drapery, and fancied I

beheld a dark object in the tree. It might be one of its branches,

but I had not been struck by it before. I waited in breathless

watchfulness. I saw it move. Its shape was that of a man. An

exulting feeling of violence filled my breast. I rose stealthily,

went into the dressing-room, and took up one of my pistols which

lay on the toilet, and which I had that afternoon prepared with a

travelling charge.

"A brace of bullets," I muttered to myself, "will bring out another

sort of music from this rare bird."

With this murderous purpose I concealed myself once more behind the

curtain. The figure was sufficiently distinct for aim. The window

was not more than twelve or fourteen paces from the tree. My

nerves were now as steady as if I had been about to perform the

most ordinary action. What then prevented me? What stayed my arm?

A single thonght--a momentary recollection of an event which had

taken place in my boyhood. What a providence that it should have

occurred to me at that particular moment. The circumstance was

this.