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Leaves from a Life in London — No. III

by William E. Burton


The Secret Cell


I’ll no more—the heart is torn
   By views of woe we cannot heal; 
Long shall I see these things forlorn,
   And oft again their griefs shall feel,
   As each upon the mind shall steal; 
That wan projector’s mystic style.
   That lumpish idiot leering by, 
That peevish idler’s ceaseless wile, 
And that poor maiden’s half-form’d smile,
   While struggling for the full-drawn sigh.
                                                        —Crabbe.


About eight years ago, I was the humble means of unraveling a curious piece of villainy that occurred in one of the suburbs of London; it is well worth recording, in exemplification of that portion of “Life” which is constantly passing in the holes and corners of the Great Metropolis. My tale, although romantic enough to be a fiction, is excessively commonplace in some of the details—it is a jumble of real life; a conspiracy, an abduction, a nunnery, and a lunatic asylum, are mixed up with constables, hackney-coaches, and an old washerwoman. I regret also that my heroine is not only without a lover, but is absolutely free from the influence of the passion, and is not persecuted on account of her transcendent beauty.

Mrs. Lobenstein was the widow of a German coachman, who had accompanied a noble family from the continent of Europe; and, anticipating a lengthened stay, he had prevailed upon his wife to bring over their only child, a daughter, and settle down in the rooms apportioned to his use, over the stable, in one of the fashionable mews at the west end of London.… Read More