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The Story of Felice

Mrs. Montressor has eloped with her husband’s most valued friend.”

So ran the tale from lip to lip in the small town of Burnley, not very far from the great metropolis.

It was quite true! A hard truth to the deserted husband, cowering from sight in his library—a palpable truth to the circle of fashionable gossips who had foreseen this coming end for some months. The wife had left her husband and her home—worse, if possible, she had left her child—Heaven be thanked, they had but one!—had left this child, a girl of four years old, to the mercy of what?—of the world, that small world centered in Burnley, to be alternately pitied, sneered at and shunned, for the sake of its mother, and its mother’s crime.

Sometimes, when he had calmer moods, the child, Felice, would be carried to his cell to look at him, to see if he would recognize her. But it was hazardous; for the child bore a cruelly beautiful resemblance to the mother, and the sight of her made him fancy she had returned, and was praying for his love, which maddened him more than ever. So at last this faint glimpse of his former joys was denied to him, the child rarely came, and the father pined away in miserable alternations of speechless despondency and raving delirium.

And the mother? Let us give a sketch of this woman’s life. She had been a child of poor parents, who apprenticed her to a fashionable milliner in the city. She was cursed, this girl, who was exceedingly frivolous, cursed with a beautiful face, and a most charming figure. She was only sixteen when she was thus flung into temptation of the sorest; for poverty was at her heels, following her like a devil, forever prompting her… Read More