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among us as the suitor of my eldest daughter. It has been an old compact between us to unite our families by ties still stronger than our very ancient friendship, and this match has been accordingly looked to by us both with much anxiety. Now, although on our parts I think no obstacle intervenes, yet, I am sorry to say, there appear difficulties in other quarters. In fact, certain stories have reached Lady Jane's ears concerning your cousin, which have greatly prejudiced her against him, and we have reason to think most unfairly; for we have succeeded in tracing some of the offences in question, not to Guy, but to a Mr. Morewood, who it seems has personated your cousin upon more than one occasion, and not a little to his disadvantage. Now we wish you to sift these matters to the bottom, by your going to Paris as soon as you can venture to leave London-find out this man, and, if possible, make all straight; if money is wanting, he must of course have it; but bear one thing in mind, that any possible step which may remove this unhappy impression from my daughter's mind, will be of infinite service, and never be forgotten by us. Kilkee, too, has taken some dislike to Guy. You have only, however, to talk to him on the matter, and he is sure to pay attention to you."

"And, Harry," said my uncle, "tell Guy I am much displeased that he is not here. I expected him to leave Paris with me, but some absurd wager at the Jockey Club detained him."

"Another thing, Harry, you may as well mention to your cousin, that Sir Guy has complied with every suggestion that he formerly threw out he will understand the allusion."

"Oh yes," said my uncle, " tell him roundly, he shall have Elton Hall; I have fitted up Marsden for myself; so no difficulty lies in that quarter."

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You may add, if you like, that my present position with the government enables me to offer him a speedy prospect of a regiment, and that I think he had better not leave the army."

"And say that by next post Hamercloth's bond for the six thousand shall be paid off, and let him send me a note of any other large sum he owes."

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And, above all things, no more delays. I must leave this for England

inevitably, and as the ladies will probably prefer wintering in Italy"

"Oh, certainly," said my uncle, "the wedding must take place."

"I scarcely can ask you to come to us on the occasion, though I need not say how greatly we should all feel gratified if you could do so," said my lord.

While this cross fire went on from both sides, I looked from one to the other of the speakers. My first impression being, that having perceived and disliked my attention to Lady Jane, they adopted this "mauvaise plaisanterie" as a kind of smart lesson for my future guidance. My next impression was, that they were really in earnest, but about the very stupidest pair of old gentlemen that ever wore hair powder.

"And this is all," said I, drawing a long breath, and inwardly uttering a short prayer for patience.

"Why, I believe I have mentioned every thing," said Lord Callonby, except that if anything occurs to yourself that offers a prospect of forwarding this affair, we leave you a carte blanche to adopt it."

"Of course, then," said I, "I am to understand that as no other difficulties lie in the way than those your lordship has mentioned, that the feelings of the parties-their affections are mutual."

"Oh, of course, your cousin, I suppose, has made himself agreeable; he is a good-looking fellow, and in fact, I am not aware why they should not like each other-eh, Sir Guy?"

"To be sure, and the Elton estates run half the shire with your Gloucester property. Never was there a more suitable match."

"Then only one point remains, and that being complied with, you may reckon upon my services; nay, more, I promise you success. Lady Jane's own consent must be previously assured to me without this, I most positively decline moving a step in the matter; that once obtained, freely and without constraint, I pledge myself to do all you require.'

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Quite fair, Harry; I perfectly approve of your scruples."

So saying, his lordship rose and left the room.

"Well, Harry, and yourself, what

is to be done for you? Has Callonby offered you anything yet?"

"Yes, sir, his lordship has most kindly offered me the under-secretaryship in Ireland, but I have resolved on declining it, though I shall not at present say so, lest he should feel any delicacy in employing me upon the present occasion."

"Why, is the boy deranged? Decline it! What have you got in the world, that you should refuse such an appointment?"

The colour mounted to my cheeks, my temples burned, and what I should have replied to this taunt, I know not, for passion had completely mastered me. When Lord Callonby again entered the room, his usually calm and pale face was agitated and flushed, and his manner tremulous and hurried; for an instant he was silent, then turning towards my uncle, he took his hand affectionately, and said—

"My good old friend, I am deeply, deeply grieved; but we must abandon this scheme. I have just seen my daughter, and from the few words which we have had together, I find that her dislike to the match is invincible, and, in fact, she has obtained my promise never again to allude to it. If I were willing to constrain the feelings of my child, you yourself would not permit it. So here let us forget that we ever hoped for, ever calculated on a plan in which both our hearts were so deeply interested."

These words, few as they were, were spoken with deep feeling, and for the first time, I looked upon the speaker with sincere regard. They were both silent for some minutes; Sir Guy, who was himself much agitated, spoke first.

"So be it then, Callonby, and thus do I relinquish one-perhaps the only cheering prospect my advanced age held out to me. I have long wished to have your daughter for my niece, and since I have known her, the wish has increased tenfold."

"It was the chosen dream of all my anticipations," said Lord Callonby, "and now Jane's affections onlybut let it pass."

"And is there then really no remedy -can nothing be struck out?" "Nothing."

"I am not quite so sure, my Lord," said I, tremulously.

"No, no, Lorrequer, you are a ready witted fellow, I know, but this passes even your ingenuity, besides I have given her my word."

"Even so."

"Why, what do you mean-speak out man," said Sir Guy, "I'll give you ten thousand pounds on the spot if you suggest a means of overcoming this difficulty."

"Perhaps you might not accede afterwards."

"I pledge myself to it."

"And I, too," said Lord Callonby, "if no unfair stratagem be resorted to towards my daughter. If she only give her free and willing consent, I agree."

"Then you must bid higher, uncle, ten thousand won't do, for the bargain is well worth the money."

"Name your price, boy, and keep your word."

"Agreed then," holding my uncle to his promise, "I pledge myself that his nephew shall be husband of Lady Jane Callonby; and now, my lord, read Harry vice Guy in the contract, and I am certain my uncle is too faithful to his plighted word, and too true to his promise not to say it shall

be."

The suddenness of this rash declaration absolutely stunned them both, and then recovering at the same moment, their eyes met.

"Fairly caught, Guy," said Lord Callonby, "a bold stroke if it only succeeds."

"And it shall, by " said my uncle ; "Elton is yours, Harry, and with seven thousand a year, and my nephew to boot, Callonby won't refuse you."

There are moments in life in which conviction will follow a bold " "coup de main," that never would have ensued from the slow process of reasoning. Luckily for me, this was one of those happy intervals. Lord Callonby catching my uncle's enthusiasm, seized me by the hand, and said

"With her consent, Lorrequer, you may count upon mine, and faith if truth must be told, I always preferred you

to the other.'

What my uncle added, I waited not to listen to; but with one bound sprung from the room-dashed up stairs to Lady Callonby's drawing-room--looked

In

rapidly around to see if she were there, and then, without paying the slightest attention to the questions of Lady Callonby and her youngest daughter, was turning to leave the room, when my eye caught the flutter of a Cachmere shawl in the garden beneath. an instant the window was torn open -I stood upon the sill, and though the fall was some twenty feet, with one spring I took it, and before the ladies had recovered from their first surprise at my unaccountable conduct, put the finishing stroke to their amazement, by throwing my arms around Lady Jane, and clasping her to my heart.

I cannot remember by what process I explained the change that had taken place in my fortunes. I had some very vague recollection of vows of eternal love being mingled with praises of my worthy uncle, and the state of my affections and finances were jumbled up together, but still sufficiently intelligibly to satisfy my beloved Janethat this time at least, I made love with something more than my own consent to support me.

Before we had walked half round the garden, she had promised to be mine; and Harry Lorrequer, who rose that morning with nothing but despair and darkness before him, was now the happiest of men.

Dear reader, I have little more to confess. Lord Callonby's politics were fortunately deemed of more moment than maidenly scruples, and the treasury benches more respected than the trousseau. Our wedding was therefore settled for the following week. Meanwhile every day seemed to teem with its own meed of good fortune.

My

good uncle, under whose patronage, forty odd years before, Colonel Kamworth had obtained his commission, undertook to effect the reconciliation between him and the Wallers, who now only waited for our wedding, before they set out for Hydrabad cottage, that snug receptacle of Curry and Madeira, Jack confessing that he had rather listen to the siege of Java, by that fire side, than hear an account of Waterloo from the lips of the great duke himself.

I wrote to Trevanion to invite him over to Munich for the ceremony, and the same post which informed me that he was en route to join us, brought also a letter from my eccentric friend

O'Leary, whose name having so often occurred in these confessions, I am tempted to read aloud, the more so as its contents are no secret, Kilkee having insisted upon reading it to a committee of the whole family assembled after dinner.

"DEAR LORREQUER-The trial is over, and I am acquitted, but still in St. Pelagie; for as the government were determined to cut my head off if guilty, so the mob resolved to murder me if innocent. A pleasant place this : before the trial, I was the most popular man in Paris; my face was in every print shop; plaister busts of me, with a great organ behind the ear, in all the thoroughfares; my autograph selling at six and twenty sous, and a lock of my hair at five francs. Now that it is proved I did not murder the 'minister at war,' (who is in excellent health and spirits), the popular feeling against me is very violent; and I am looked upon as an impostor, who obtained his notoriety under false pretences; and Vernet, who had begun my picture for a Judas, has left off in disgust. Your friend Trevanion is a trump; he procured a Tipperary gentleman to run away with Mrs. Ram, and they were married at Frankfort, on Tuesday last. By the by, what an escape you had of Emily: she was only quizzing you all the time. She is engaged to be married to Tom O'Flaherty, who is here now. Emily's imitation of you, with the hat a little on one side, and a handkerchief flourishing away in one hand, is capital; but when she kneels down and says,

dearest Emily,' &c., you'd swear it was yourself. [Here the laughter of the auditory prevented Kilkee proceeding, who, to my utter confusion, resumed after a little.]-Don't be losing your time making up to Lord Callonby's daughter-[here came another burst of laughter]—they say here you have not a chance, and moreover she's a downright flirt.-[It is your turn now, Jane, said Kilkee, scarcely able to proceed.]-Besides that, her father's a pompous old Tory, that won't give a sixpence with her; and the old curmudgeon, your uncle, has as much idea of providing for you, as he has of dying.-[This last sally absolutely convulsed all parties.]-To be sure Kilkee's a fool, but he is no use to you.-[Begad I thought I was going

to escape, said the indvidual alluded to, but your friend O'Leary cuts on every side of him.]" The letter, after some very grave reflections upon the hopelessness of my pursuit, concluded with a kind pledge to meet me soon, and become my travelling companion. Meanwhile, added he, I must cross over to London, and look after my new work, which is to come out soon,

under the title of "the Loiterings of Arthur O'Leary.”

This elegant epistle formed the subject of much laughter and conversation amongst us long after it was concluded; and little triumph could be claimed by any party, when nearly all were so roughly handled. So passed the last evening I spent in Munich-the next morning I was married!

[The following epistle was written to accompany the publication of the “Confessions” in a separate volume-we reprint it here, as we do not wish to withhold any part of Master Harry's Confessions from our readers.-A.P.]

DEAR PUBLIC

EPISTLE VALEDICTORY.

WHEN first I set about recording the scenes which occupy these pages, I had no intention of continuing them, except in such stray and scattered fragments as the columns of a Magazine permit of; and when at length I discovered that some interest had attached not only to the adventures, but to their narrator, I would gladly have retired with my "little laurels" from a stage, on which, having only engaged to appear between the acts, I was destined to come forward as a principal character.

Among the "miseries of human life," a most touching one is spoken of— the being obliged to listen to the repetition of a badly sung song, because some well-wishing, but not over discreet friend of the singer has called loudly for an encore.

I begin very much to fear that something of the kind has taken place here, and that I should have acted a wiser part, had I been contented with even the still small voice of a few partial friends, and retired from the boards in the pleasing delusion of success; but unfortunately, the same easy temperament that has so often involved me before, has been faithful to me here; and when you pretended to be pleased, unluckily, I believed you.

So much of apology for the matter-a little now for the manner of my offending, and I have done. I wrote as I felt-sometimes in good spirits, sometimes in bad-always carelessly-for, God help me, I can do no better.

When the celibacy of the Fellows of Trinity College, Dublin, became an active law in that University, the Board proceeded to enforce it, by summoning to their presence all the individuals who it was well known had transgressed the regulation, and among them figured Dr. S., many of whose sons were at the same time students in the college. "Are you married, Dr. Sr?" said the bachelor viceprovost, in all the dignity and pride of conscious innocence. "Married!" said the father of ten children, with a start of involuntary horror;-"married?" "Yes, sir, married." "Why, sir, I am no more married than the provost." This was quite enoughno farther questions were asked, and the head of the University preferred a merciful course towards the offender, to repudiating his wife and disowning his children. Now for the application. Certain captious and incredulous people have doubted the veracity of the adventures I have recorded in these pages; I do not think it necessary to appeal to concurrent testimony and credible witnesses for their proof, but I pledge myself to the fact that every tittle I have related is as true as that my name is Lorrequer-need I say

more?

Another objection has been made to my narrative, and I cannot pass it by without a word of remark ;-"these Confessions are wanting in scenes of touching and pathetic interest"--true, quite true; but I console myself on this head, for I remember hearing of an author whose paraphrase of the

We have the author's permission to state, that all the pathetic and moving incidents of his career he has reserved for a second series of "Confessions," to be entitled " Lorrequer Married?"-Publisher's Note.

book of Job was refused by a publisher, if he could not throw a little more humour into it; and if I have not been more miserable and more unhappy, I am very sorry for it on your account, but you must excuse my regretting it on my own. Another story and I have done ;-the Newgate Calendar makes mention of a notorious housebreaker, who closed his career of outrage and violence by the murder of a whole family, whose house he robbed; on the scaffold he entreated permission to speak a few words to the crowd beneath, and thus addressed them:-" My friends, it is quite true I murdered this family; in cold blood I did it-one by one they fell beneath my hand, while I rifled their coffers, and took forth their effects; but one thing is imputed to me, which I cannot die without denying-it is asserted that I stole an extinguisher; the contemptible character of this petty theft is a stain upon my reputation, that I cannot suffer to disgrace my memory.' So would I now address you for all the graver offences of my book; I stand forth guilty-miserably, palpably guilty ---they are mine every one of them; and I dare not, I cannot deny them; but if you think that the blunders in French and the hash of spelling so widely spread through these pages, are attributable to me; on the faith of a gentleman I pledge myself you are wrong, and that I had nothing to do with them. If my thanks for the kindness and indulgence with which these hastily written and rashly conceived sketches have been received by the press and the public, are of any avail, let me add, in conclusion, that a more grateful author does not exist than HARRY LORRequer. Harry Lorrequer's new work will be commenced in our Magazine for March.

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TWO SONNETS.

"Great men have been among us."-Wordsworth.

I.

Ancestral halls, hung round with goodly store
Of lances, swords, and bucklers-proving well
The truth of all that household legends tell
Of those who once that ancient armour wore ;-
And happy hamlets, on the sunny shore

Of broad, blue lakes-or shelter'd in deep dell
Among green hills, that angry storms repel,
And keep fond vigil o'er them evermore ;-
And stately fanes, to organ's billowy tone
Responding solemn echoes, through dim aisles
And pillar'd vaults, paved with sepulchral stone ;-
And village churches, in morn's radiant smiles,
Or holier twilight, rising still and lone ;-
Halls-hamlets-fanes-England! are all thine own.

II.

Yes-they are thine; but yet a better dower,
A richer treasure, it is thine to claim-
The odorous memory of each sainted name,
That, in old time, in battle-field or bower,

Wrought noble deeds, or utter'd words of power ;-
Warrior-like Bayard, without fear or blame;
Statesman-with single eye and honest aim,
Holding his country's helm in evil hour;
Poet-whose heart is with us to this day
Embalmed in song; and Priest-who, for the ark
Of God, battled in troublous times and dark.
Hallow their memories, England! such as they
Not were, but are-their blood is in our veins-
Around, within, their presence still remains.

J. K. I.

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