We must, however, conduct our readers back into the fresh morning we

have instanced as one of the favourites of spring. Leaving Robin to his

preparations for the stranger's breakfast, and premising that he had

previously dismissed the midnight revellers on their respective errands,

we will roam for a while amid the sheltered walks of Cecil Place.

It was situated on the slope of the hill, leading to the old monastery

of Minster. Although nothing now exists except the church, a few broken

walls, and a modernised house, formed out of one of the principal

entrances to what was once an extensive range of monastic buildings; yet

at the time of which we treat, the ruins of the nunnery, founded by

Sexburga, the widow of Ercombert, King of Kent, extended down the rising

ground, presenting many picturesque points of view from the small but

highly-cultivated pleasure grounds of Cecil Place. Nothing could be more

beautiful than the prospect from a rude terrace which had been the

favourite walk of Lady Cecil. The small luxuriant hills, folding one

over the other, and terminating in the most exquisite valleys and bosky

glades the imagination can conceive--the rich mixture of pasture and

meadow land--the Downs, stretching to King's Ferry, whitened by

thousands of sheep, whose bleatings and whose bells made the isle

musical--while, beyond, the narrow Swale, widening into the open sea,

shone like a silver girdle in the rays of the glorious sun--were

objects, indeed, delicious to gaze upon.

Although, during the Protectorate, some pains had been taken to render

Sheerness, then a very inconsiderable village, a place of strength and

safety, and the ancient castle of Queenborough had been pulled down by

the Parliamentarians, as deficient in strength and utility, no one

visiting only the southern and western parts of the island could for a

moment imagine that the interior contained spots of such positive and

cultivated beauty.

It was yet early, when Constantia Cecil, accompanied by a female friend,

entered her favourite flower-garden by a private door, and strolled

towards a small Gothic temple overshadowed by wide-spreading oaks,

which, sheltered by the surrounding hills, had numbered more than a

century of unscathed and undiminished beauty, and had as yet escaped the

rude pruning of the woodman's axe. The morning habit of the noble

Constance fitted tightly to the throat, where it was terminated by a

full ruff of starched muslin, and the waist was encircled by a wide band

of black crape, from which the drapery descended in massive folds to her

feet. She pressed the soft green turf with a more measured step than was

her wont, as if the body shared the mind's sad heaviness. Her head was

uncovered, save that, as she passed into the garden, she had carelessly

thrown on a veil of black muslin, through which her bright hair shone

with the lustre and richness of the finest satin: her throat and

forehead appeared most dazzlingly white in contrast with her sable

dress.




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