190 THE WEST SHORE. Of family treasure it had been the solo repository; and the receptacle perhaps of many a family secret Im mensely large dark rooms oened on long and gloomy hulls and ghostly passages which led to vaults beneath, into whose mysteries few had tho desire and none the courage to penetrate. Its moss-grown walls, to which the ivy clung, and over which the morning-glory dis played iU royal purple, were shaded by the larch and willow; in front a broad lawn stretched away, and from the richly curtained windows of my own room I looked out on ships at soil Here I ofteu sat, and childlike mused for hours and hours, happy in the love which my father lavished upon me, and grateful for tho care with which my slightest wish was gratified. Adjoining my father's estato was that of another eer, whose daughter Isaliol, of exactly my own ago, was my constant companion. Whatever might have been tho charms of my own mthoii, Isabel was very, very beautiful. Her form was willowy and graceful, her hair was raveu black, her complexion olive, mid her eyes a dark brown, deep and lustrous. Her wishes were my wishes, her friends were my friends; I shared her joys, and her griefs 1 made my own. Tho same teachers in slrucfckl us; we studied our lessons from tho same book. Thus passed our childhood. When we had arrived at the ago of ninxUti years our friendship had not waned; if Nwsibln it was doejior and firmer than ever beforo. " About this time a French teacher was engaged to instruct us in the language of his people, Louis was young, vivacious and agreeable; and under his tutorship we mado rapid progress. When wo rodo out he accom panied us, and he was our companion in many a ramble across the fields and through the woods in search of ferns and flowers. As might have lieon oxected, this daily intercourse led to yet more intimate relations. Isaliel ami I were young and thoughtless; Louis was full of the passion of his race, and ho fell a victim to its fierce consuming fire. I supoed Imiliel to be the ob ject of his love by reason of the marked attention he jMiid her. Uuoonscious alike of its presence and of its nature, a change took place in all my feelings. This change I knew afterward to have been the beginning of a pnssiou which gave rise to hoiea, alas ! never to lie re alised. I fell madly in love with our French tutor. When he smiled on me I was happy; when ho sought Isaliel'a society I was miserable indeed. At last he turned from her and devoted himself to me exclusively; my cup of happinais was full. Contrary to what I had' feared, and what I had existed WM't affection for me underwent no change. Thus a winter and a spring Miaed by, and with its balmy air, its clear blue sky, its bird ami flowers, the month of Juno came on. "Iu the uorthwest corner of the old hall was a room whoso interior had never lieen seen by myself, or by any living servant; and even my fther had never sto.nl with in iU walls. Its heavy oaken door, with its rusty lock aud the dusty cobweb which enveloped it like a screen, were evidence of iU long disuse. Among the servants waa a tradition that, during a past generation, Ud, Alioe a beautiful and accomplished daughter of the4 house was wont to meet her lover in this very room. Her lover was of a family at feud with her own, and he was forbidden to seek her hand. But through the bribery of a servant, he gained access to his lady's pres ence, and here in this ghostly chamber they secretly kept their tryst One night they were discovered by an angry brother, who fought with and slew the lover with his mistress standing by. Shrieking she threw herself upon her lover's corpse; when removed, her reason had tied forever. Not long afterward she died a maniac, tear ing out handfuls of her golden hair, and raving to the lost her lover's name. The room in which the tragedy took place was closed and never afterward reopened. "This tale was told me by my nurse over and over again. So firmly did the servants believe in this legend, and so filled were their minds with superstitious fears, that not one of them could be induced to approach the threshold of what they termed the haunted chamber. Beneath a portrait in my father's room, hung a large and rusty iron key. This the servants said belonged to the door of the haunted chamber, from which they fancied issued sounds of mortal combat In vain I ar gued that what resembled scuffling wan only the sound of the scampering rats. "One day I asked my father if he knew what the room contained why it remained a sealed aud almost forgotten mystory. He Bhook his head sadly in reply. With his hand resting upon my hair he said, '"My doar child, in this world are many, many things it wore better never to have known, or if known bettor they were totally forgotten. This is one of them. The threshold of that chamber I have never crossed; neither did my father, nor his father before him. To stand within its walls, or to penetrate its mysteries, I have no desire; and I hope I never shall have. Go, my dear child, to your studies never mention the subject again.' "As may be supposed, this, instead of satisfying my childish curiosity, served to inflame it the more. I mused over the mystory by day, and at night my dreams were of a glwstly creature with pleading eyes and stream ing hairwho kept pointing to the portajs of the haunted room. " One day in confidence I whispered the tale to Louis. He laughed in scorn. "'Fudge! It is but the fancy of some daft crea ture,' he said. " Next day, however, he asked me to repeat the story; I did so. Instead of jesting, he listened attentively. When I had done he asked me to show him the door of the haunted room. I complied, clinging to his arm, fear ful lest evil might befall him. "From this time forward a change came over him hardly preeeptible at first, but more aud more plainly marked each day. Formerly he was gay and sprightly and free of speech; now he was fitful, uneasy and taci turn. With Borrow I observed the change. How bit terly I upbraided myself for having told him the weird