The Accusing Picture
by Judge Clark
The tragic event which left violet Malvern an orphan, occurred some three years before the time at which our story opens.
In the hour of her bereavement, a kind old uncle had come and taken her to his home; where it was, while yet in deep affliction, that she was first seen by Arthur Wolcott.
No charm appeals more warmly to a generous, youthful fancy, than that which grief lends to beauty. At the first glance of Violet’s sweet, pensive face, Arthur Wolcott’s heart was filled with sympathy and admiration.
Once or twice only did they meet in the brief period before his return to college to begin his last year. But short as the time had been, it had sufficed for the growth of feelings which the ardent young student would not have departed without declaring, had he not felt that so to do would be to profane a sacred sorrow.
When he came again, it was to find that Violet’s uncle had taken her to spend some years abroad. In time, Arthur, too, was seized with the desire to see foreign lands. So it chanced that in Paris, three years after their first meeting, he and Violet met again.
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