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Galen and Hippocrates, but was also a profound adept in those arts, for the learning of which some men toil their whole lives away, and are none the wiser; such as Alchemy, converse with spirits, Magic, and so forth. Dr. Du Pilon had abundant leisure to talk of his knowledge at the little Cabaret of St. Yrieux, which bore the sign of the Chevalier Bayard's Arms, where he assembled round him many of the idler members of the town, the chief of whom were Cuirbouilli, the Currier; Malbois, the Joiner; La Jacquette, the Tailor; and Nicole Bonvarlet, his Host, together with several other equally arrant gossips, who all swore roundly, at the end of each of their parleys, that Doctor Antoine Du Pilon was the best Doctor, and the wisest man in the whole world! To remove, however, any wonder that may arise in the reader's mind, how a professor of such skill and knowledge should be left to waste his abilites so remote from the patronage of the great, it should be remarked, that in snch cases as had already come before him, he had not been quite so successful as could have

been expected, or desired, since old Genefrede Corbeau, who was frozen almost double with age and ague, he kept cold and fasting, to preserve her from fever; and he would have cut off the leg of Pierre Faucille, the reaper, when he wounded his right arm in harvest time, to prevent the flesh from mortifying downwards!

In a retired apartment of the same deserted mansion where this mirror of Chirurgeons resided, dwelt a peasant and his daughter, who had come to St. Yrieux from a distant part of Normandy, and of whose history nothing was known, but that they seemed to be in the deepest poverty; although they neither asked relief, nor uttered a single complaint. Indeed they rather avoided all discourse with their gossiping neighbours, and even with their fellow inmates, excepting so far as the briefest courtesy required, and as they were able, on entering their abode, to place a reasonable security for payment in the hands of old Gervais, the Baroness Joliedame's Steward, they were permitted to live in the old Chateau with little ques

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tioning, and less sympathy. The father appeared in general to be a plain rude peasant, whom poverty had somewhat tinctured with misanthropy: though there were times when his bluntness towered into a haughtiness not accordant with his present station, but seemed like a relique of a higher sphere from which he had fallen. He strove, and the very endeavour increased the bitterness of his heart to mankind, to conceal his abject indigence, but that was too apparent to all, since he was rarely to be found at St. Yrieux, but led a wild life in the adjacent mountains and forests, occasionally visiting the town, to bring to his daughter Adele a portion of the spoil, which, as a hunter, he indefatigably sought for the subsistence of both. Adele, on the contrary, though she felt as deeply as her father the sad reverse of fortune to which they were exposed, had more gentleness in her sorrow, and more content in her humiliation. She would, when he returned to the cottage, worn with the fatigue of his forest labours, try, but many times in vain, to bring a smile to his face, and consolation to his heart. "My father," she would say, "quit I beseech you, this wearisome hunting for some safer employment, nearer home. You depart, and I watch in vain for your return; days and nights pass away, and you come not! while my disturbed imagination will ever whisper the danger of a forest midnight, fierce howling wolves, and robbers still more cruel."

"Robbers! girl, sayest thou?" answered her father with a bitter laugh, "and what shall they gain from me, think ye? is there ought in this wornout gaberdine to tempt them? Go to, Adele! I am not now Count Gaspar de Marcanville, the friend of the royal Francis, and a Knight of the Holy Ghost; but plain Hubert, the Hunter of the Limousin; and wolves, thou trowest, will not prey upon wolves."

But, my dear father," said Adele, embracing him, "I would that thou would'st seek a safer occupation nearer to our dwelling, for I would be by your side.

What would'st have me to do, girl?" interrupted Gaspar impatiently; "would'st have me put this hand to the sickle or the plough, which has so often grasped a sword in the battle, and a banner-lance in the tournament? or shall a companion of Le Saint-Esprit become a fellow-handworker with the low artizans of this miserable town? I tell thee Adele that but for thy sake I would never again quit the forest but would remain there in a savage life, till I forgot my language and

my species, and became a Wehr-wolf, or a wild-buck!"

Such was commonly the close of their conversation; for if Adele dared to press her entreaties farther, Gaspar, half frenzied, would not fail to call, to her mind all the unhappy circumstances of his fall, and work himself almost to madness by their repetition. He had in early life been introduced by the Count De Saintfleur to the Court of Francis I., where he had risen so high in the favour of his Sovereign, that he was continually in his society; and in the many wars which so embittered the reign of that excellent monarch, De Marcanville's station was ever by his side. Iu these conflicts, Gaspar's bosom had often been the shield of Francis, even in moments of the most imminent danger; and the grateful King as often showered upon his deliverer those rewards, which, to the valiant and high-minded soldier, are far dearer than riches; the glittering jewels of knighthood, and the golden coronal of the peerage. To that friend who had fixed his feet so loftily and securely in the slippery paths of a Court, Gaspar felt all the ardour of youthful gratitude; and yet he sometimes imagined, that he could perceive an abatement in the favour of De Saintefleur, as that of Francis increased. The truth was, that the gold and rich promises of the King's great enemy the Emperor Charles V., had induced De Saintefleur to swerve from his allegiance; and he now waited but for a convenient season to put the darkest designs in practice against his Sovereign. He also felt no slight degree of envy, even against that very person whom he had been the instrument of raising; and at length an opportunity occurred, when he might gratify both his ambition and his revenge by the same blow. It was in one of those long wars in which the French Monarch was engaged, and in which De Saintefleur and De Marcanville were his most constant companions, that they were both watching near his couch whilst he slept, when the former, in a low tone of voice, thus began to sound the faith of the latter towards his royal master.

"What sayest thou, Gaspar, were not a prince's coronet and a king's revenue in Naples, better than thus ever toiling in a war that seems unending? Hearest thou, brave De Marcanville? we can close it with the loss of one life only!"

"Queen of Heaven !" ejaculated Gaspar, "what is it thou would's say, De Saintefleur?"

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Say! why that there have been other Kings of France before this Francis, and will be, when he shall have gone to his

place. Thinkest thou that He of the double-headed black eagle would not amply reward the sword that cut this fading lily from the earth ?"

"No more, no more, De Saintefleur!" cried Gaspar; even from you, who placed me where I might flourish beneath that lily's shade, will I not hear this treason. Rest secure that I will not betray thee to the King, my life shall sooner be given for thine; but I will watch thee with more vigilance than the wolf hath when he watcheth the night-fold, and your first step to the heart of Francis shall be over the body of Gaspar De Marcanville."

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Nay, then," said De Saintefleur aside, he must be my first victim," and immediately drawing his sword, he cried aloud," What, ho! guards! treason!"-whilst Gaspar stood immoveable with astonishment and horror, The event is soon related, for Francis was but too

recesses of the Hercynian woods, Gaspar acquired considerable skill as a hunter: had it been to preserve his own life only he had laid him calmly down upon the sod, and resigned that life to famine, or to the hungry wolf; but he had still two objects, which bound him to existence, and therefore in the chase the wild-buck was too slow to escape his spear, and the bear too weak to resist his attacks.

His fate, notwithstanding, preyed heavily upon him, and often brake out in fits of vehement passion, and the most bitter lamentations; which at length so wrought upon the grief-worn frame of Rosalie de Marcanville, that about ten years after Gaspar's exile, her death left him a widower, when his daughter Adele was scarcely eighteen years of age. It was then, with a mixture of desperation and distress, that De Marcanville determined to rush forth from his solitude into France, and, careless of the fate

easily persuaded that De Marcanville was might await him for returning free

n reality guilty of the act about to have been perpetrated by De Saintefleur; and the magnanimity of Gaspar was such, that not one word which might criminate his former friend could be drawn from him, even to save his own life. The kind hearted Francis, however, was unable to forget in a moment the favour with which for years he had been accustomed to look upon De Marcanville; and it was only at the earnest solicitation of the Courtiers, many of whom were rejoiced at the thought of a powerful rival's removal, that he could be prevailed on to pass even the

tion and banishment.

Gaspar hastened to his Chateau, but the treasures which he was allowed to bear with him into exile were little more than his Rosalie and his daughter Adele; with whom he immured himself in the dark, and almost boundless recesses of the Hanoverian Harz, where his fatigues and his sorrows soon rendered his gaunt and attenuated form altogether unknown. In this savage retirement, he drew up a faithful narration of De Saintefleur's treachery; and in confirmation of it's truth produced a certificate from his Confessor, Father Ægidius,one of those holy men who of old were dwellers in forests and deserts, and directing it" To the King," placed it in the hands of his wife, that if, in any of those hazardous excursions in which he was engaged to procure their daily subsistance, he should perish, it might be delivered to Francis, and his family thus be restored to their rank and estates, when his pledge to De Saintefleur could no longer be claimed. Years passed away, and, in the gloomy

unrecalled, to advance even to the Court, and laying his papers at the foot of the throne, to demand the Ordeal of Combat with De Saintefleur; but when he had arrived at the woody Provence of the Upper Limousin, his purpose failed him, as he saw in the broad day-light, which rarely entered the Harz Forest, the afflicting changes which ten years of the severest labour, and the most heartfelt sorrow, had made upon his form. He might, indeed, so far as it regarded all recollections of his person, have safely gone even into the Court of Francis; but

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rounding St, Yrieux, he might still reside unknown in his beloved France; that under the guise of a hunter, he could still provide for the support of his gentle Adele; and that, in the event of his death she would be considerably nearer to her Sovereign's abode. It was, then, in consequence of these reasons, that De Marcanville employed a part of his small remaining property, in securing a residence in the dilapidated Chateau, as it has been already mentioned.

It was some time after their arrival, that the inhabitants of the Town of St. Yrieux were alarmed by the intelligence, that a Wehr-Wolf, or perhaps a troop of them, certainly inhabited the woods of the Limousin. The most terrific howlings were heard in the night, and the wild rush of a chase swept through the deserted streets; yet the townspeople-according to the most approved rules for acting where Wehr-Wolves are concerned, never once thought of sallying forth in a body and with weapons, and lighted brands, to scare the monsters from their

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prey; but adding a more secure fastening to every window, which is the WehrWolf's usual entrance, they deserted such as had already fallen their victims, with one brief expression of pity for them, and many a "Dieu me benit!" for themselves. It was asserted, too, that some of the country people, whose dwellings came more immediately into contact with the Limousin forests, had lost their children, whose lacerated remains, afterwards discovered in the woods, only half devoured, plainly denoted them to have fallen the prey of some abandoned WehrWolf!

It is not surprising, that in a retired town, where half the people were without employment, and all were thoroughbred gossips, and lovers of wonders, that the inroads of the Wehr-Wolf formed too important an epoch in their history, to be passed over without a due discussion. Under pretence, therefore, of being a protection to each other, many of the people of St. Yrieux, and especially the worthy conclave mentioned at the beginning of this history, were, almost eternally, convened at the Chevalier Bayard's Arms; talking over their nightly terrors, and filling each other with such affright, by the repetition of many a lying old tale upon the same subject, that, too much alarmed to part, they often agreed to pass the night over Nicole Bonvarlet's wineflask and blazing fagots. Upon a theme so intimately connected with magical lore as is the history of Wehr-Wolves, Dr. Antoine De Pilon discoursed like a Solomon; citing, to the great edification and wonder of his hearers, such hosts of authors, both sacred and profane, that he who should have hinted, that the WehrWolves of St. Yrieux were simply like other Wolves, would have found as little gentleness in his hearers as he would have experienced from the animals themselves.

"Well, my masters!" began Bonvarlet, one evening when they were met, "I would not, for a tun of malmsey wine now, be in the Limousin forest to-night: for do ye hear how it blusters and pours? By the Ship of St. Mildred! in a wild night like this, there's no place in the world like your hearth-side in a goodly auberge, with a merry host and good liquor; both of which, neighbours, ye have

to admiration."

"Aye, Nicole," replied Cuirbouilli, "it's a foul night, truly, either for man or cattle; and yet I'll warrant ye that the Wehr-Wolves will be out in 't, for their skin is said to be the same as that the Fiend himself wears! and that would shut you out water, and storm, and wind,

like a castle-wall. Mass, now! but it would be simply the making of my fortune, an' I could but get one of their hides."

"Truly, for a churl," began Dr. Du Pilon, "an unlettered artizan, thy wish sheweth a pretty wit; for a cloak made from the skin of a Wehr-Wolf, would for ever defend its wearer from all other/ Wolves, and all animals that your Wolves feed upon: even, as Pythagoras writeth, that one holding the eye of a Wolf in his hand, shall scare away from him all weaker creatures; for like as the sight of a Wolf doth terrify-"

"Hark, neighbours! did ye hear that cry? it is a Wehr-Wolf's bark!" exclaimed Jerome Malbois, starting from his settle.

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5 Aye, by the Bull of St. Luke! did I, friend Jerome," returned Bonvarlet, surely the great Fiend himself can make no worser a howling; I even thought 't would split the very rafters last night, though I deem that they 're of good seasoned fir."

"There thou errest again," said the Doctor in a pompous tone to the last speaker, "Oh! ye rustics, whom I live with as Orpheus did with the savages of Thracia, whence is it that ye possess such boundless stupidity? Thon sayest, Jerome Malbois, that they bark, and could I imagine, that shooting in the dark, thou had'st hit on the Greekish phrase which calls them Nuttegi voi Kaves, or Dogs of the Night, 1 could say thou hast said wisely but now I declare that thou hast spoken full ignorantly, right woodenly, Jerome Malbois; thou art beyond thy square, friend joiner; thou hast overstepped thy rule, good Carpenter. Doth not the great Albertus bear testimony, Oh, most illiterate! that Wolves bark not, when he saith :-

"Ast Lupus ipse vlulat, frendit agrestis aper,' which for thine edification, is, in the vulgar tongue,

But the Wolf doth loudly howl, and the boar his teeth doth grind, Where the wildest plains are spread before.

and forests rise behind.

Et idem Auctor, and the same Author also saith, which maketh yet more against thee, O mentis inops !

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SUBJECT OF THE ILLUSTRATION PRESENTS the fight of Clorinda, a valiant maid on the side of the Pagans, with Tancred, a knight of Godfreys, who she opposes, full of revenge, caused by slighted love. *

Tancred his name-O! grant some happier hour May yield him, living, prisoner to my pow'r ! So might my soul some secret comfort find, And sweet revenge appease my restless mind! She said, and ceas'd! the king the damsel heard,

But to a different sense her speech referr'd; While, mingled with these artful words she spoke,

A sigh spontaneous from her bosom broke. Meanwhile, her lance in rest, the warriordame

With eager haste t' encounter Tancred came,
Their vizors struck, the spears in shivers flew ;
The virgin's face was left expos'd to view;
The thongs that held her helmet burst in twain;
Hurl'd from her head, it bounded on the plain;
Loose in the wind her golden tresses flow'd,
And now a maid confess'd to all she stood;
Keen flash her eyes, her look with fury glows;
Yet, ev'n in rage, each feature lovely shows:
What charms must then her winning smiles

disclose ?

What thoughts, O Tancred! have thy bosom

mov'd?

Dost thou not see and know that face belov❜d?

Lo! there the face that caused thy amorous

pains;

Ask thy fond heart, for there her form remains; Behold the features of the lovely dame,

Who for refreshment to the fountain came !

The knight, who mark'd not first her crest

and shield,

Astonish'd now her well-known face beheld,

She, o'er her head disarm'd, the buckler threw,

Aud on her senseless foe with fury flew ;
The foe retir'd; on other parts he turn'd
His vengeful steel; yet still her anger burn'd;
And with a threatening voice aloud she cry'd,
And with a two-fold death the chief defy'd.
Th' enamour'd warrior ne'er returns a blow,
Nor heeds the weapon of his lovely foe;
But views with eager gaze her charming eyes,

From whence the shaft of love unerring flies;
Then to himself-In vain the stroke descends;
In vain her angry sword the wound intends;
While from her face unarm'd she sends the
dart,

That rives, with surer aim, my bleeding heart!

Book III.

THE PNEUMATOLOGIST.
Unsphere

The spirit of Plato, to unfold
What worlds or what vast regions hold
The immortal mind, that hath forsook
Her mansion in this fleshy nook.
Il Penseroso.

THE year was now on the wane, and the gorgeous tints of summer were mellowing into the less obtrusive hues of autumn. The foliage, so lately of a fresh, glossy emerald green, now partook of a tinge of the sallow; and the sky,

* See the Embellishment, illustrative of the above, page 97.

which for a long period had remained of a pure unstained Ausonian blue, became regularly clouded, as the sun neared his western declension; at which time also, a chill wind arose, attended with those marshy exhalations, so noted throughout the Campagna, as the pestilent source of the malaria. Nature was as yet, however, only half rifled of her sweets; for, in the delightful land of Italy, the natural spirit of life breathes with freedom and health. The vineyards groaned beneath their gushing and purpled clusters ;—the fruitage hung in ripeness throughout orchard and garden; and the flowers of the latter, blossomed in all their rich and beautiful varieties.

As if on purpose to disappoint the studious Pietro Giannone of his accustomed and favourite sunset walk, the dews descended almost in a shower; and every thing without doors looked so cheerless and uncomfortable, that he found himself compelled to occupy his twilight breathing time from research, by seating himself beside a window that overlooked one of the principal thoroughfares of the city of Pavia, and surveying the motley groups that were passing to and fro on the pavé. Here some noble Dama whirled along in her chariot to an evening coterie; and there a brawny porter bent under his Herculean load. In one corner stood a

patient girl, waiting her turn for a pitcher of water from the public fountain; and, in another, a knot of noisy urchins had congregated for sportive pastime.

As twilight deepened, the crowd were thrown into greater obscurity; but the occasional lighting up of the warehouses of the different merchants, cast a transient gleam over the faces and garments of such as chanced to cross the openings. One after another, in rapid succession, playing in a long vista, down the squares the street-lamps sparkled brilliantly, disand alleys, a far-off line of lights, gradually losing themselves in the distant haziness of night. The fruiterers had removed their linen-covered stalls; and, as the gathering stars began to glitter from on high, the bustle and the business of day gradually subsided into the quiet of evening.

As Pietro sat musing, his mind naturally reverted to the theme of his philosophical researches; and they had that day lain among the intricacies of metaphysical speculation. He had turned from one philosopher to another. He had read and re-read, only to find doubt and perplexity, All was a labyrinth of intricacy a chaos of contradiction-a maze of obscurity— a sea without a shore! One result, and one only, was obvious

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