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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Miriam Monfort</title>
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12453 ***</div>
+
+<h1>MIRIAM MONFORT:</h1>
+
+<h3><i>A NOVEL</i>.</h3>
+
+<h3>BY THE AUTHOR OF</h3>
+
+<h3>&quot;THE HOUSEHOLD OF BOUVERIE.&quot;</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>&quot;Fancy, <i>with</i> fact, is just one fact the more.&quot;<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>&quot;Let this old woe step on the stage again,<br /></span>
+<span>Act itself o'er anew for men to judge;<br /></span>
+<span>Not by the very sense and sight indeed,<br /></span>
+<span>Which take at best imperfect cognizance.<br /></span>
+<span>Since, how heart moves brain, and how both move hand,<br /></span>
+<span>What mortal ever in entirety saw?<br /></span>
+<span>Yet helping us to all we seem to hear,<br /></span>
+<span>For, how else know we save by worth of word?&quot;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>BROWNING, &quot;<i>The Ring and the Book</i>&quot;</p>
+
+NEW YORK:<br />
+D. APPLETON AND COMPANY,<br />
+549 &amp; 551 BROADWAY.<br />
+1873.<br />
+
+<h2>DEDICATION</h2>
+
+<p><i>This book is dedicated to the memory of one most dear, who saw it grow
+to completion with pleasure and approbation, during the last happy
+summer of a life since darkened by misfortune. Peace be his!</i></p>
+
+<p><i>MONFORT HALL.</i></p>
+
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>&quot;Not one friend have we here, not one true heart;<br /></span>
+<span>We've nothing but ourselves.&quot;<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>&quot;There's a dark spirit walking in our house,<br /></span>
+<span>And swiftly will the destiny close on us.<br /></span>
+<span>It drove me hither from my calm asylum;<br /></span>
+<span>It lures me forward&mdash;in a seraph's shape<br /></span>
+<span>I see it near, I see it nearer floating&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span>It draws, it pulls me with a godlike power,<br /></span>
+<span>And, lo, the abyss! and thither am I moving;<br /></span>
+<span>I have no power within me&mdash;but to move.&quot;<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>&quot;He is the only one we have to fear, he and his father.&quot;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>COLERIDGE'S <i>Translation of Schiller's &quot;Wallenstein&quot;</i></p>
+
+<p>MIRIAM MONFORT</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+ <b>PART I.</b><br />
+<ul>
+ <li><a href="#I_CHAPTER_I"><b>CHAPTER I.</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#I_CHAPTER_II"><b>CHAPTER II.</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#I_CHAPTER_III"><b>CHAPTER III.</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#I_CHAPTER_IV"><b>CHAPTER IV.</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#I_CHAPTER_V"><b>CHAPTER V.</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#I_CHAPTER_VI"><b>CHAPTER VI.</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#I_CHAPTER_VII"><b>CHAPTER VII.</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#I_CHAPTER_VIII"><b>CHAPTER VIII.</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#I_CHAPTER_IX"><b>CHAPTER IX.</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#I_CHAPTER_X"><b>CHAPTER X.</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#LIFE_AT_quotLESDERNIERquot"><b><i>LIFE AT &quot;LESDERNIER.&quot;</i></b></a></li>
+</ul>
+ <b>PART II.</b><br />
+<ul>
+ <li><a href="#AN_INTERLUDE"><b>AN INTERLUDE.</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#SEA_AND_SHORE"><b><i>SEA AND SHORE</i></b></a></li>
+</ul>
+ <b>PART III.</b><br />
+<ul>
+ <li><a href="#III_CHAPTER_I"><b>CHAPTER I.</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#III_CHAPTER_II"><b>CHAPTER II.</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#III_CHAPTER_III"><b>CHAPTER III.</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#III_CHAPTER_IV"><b>CHAPTER IV.</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#III_CHAPTER_V"><b>CHAPTER V.</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#III_CHAPTER_VI"><b>CHAPTER VI.</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#III_CHAPTER_VIa"><b>CHAPTER VI.</b></a> [printer's error in original]</li>
+ <li><a href="#III_CHAPTER_VII"><b>CHAPTER VII.</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#THE_LETTER"><b>THE LETTER.</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#III_CHAPTER_VIII"><b>CHAPTER VIII.</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#III_CHAPTER_IX"><b>CHAPTER IX.</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#III_CHAPTER_X"><b>CHAPTER X.</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#III_CHAPTER_XI"><b>CHAPTER XI.</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#III_CHAPTER_XII"><b>CHAPTER XII.</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#III_CHAPTER_XIII"><b>CHAPTER XIII.</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#III_CHAPTER_XIV"><b>CHAPTER XIV.</b></a></li>
+ <li><a href="#III_CHAPTER_XV"><b>CHAPTER XV.</b></a></li>
+</ul>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>PART I.</h2>
+
+<h2><i>MONFORT HALL</i>.</h2>
+
+<a name="I_CHAPTER_I"></a><h2>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>My father, Reginald Monfort, was an English gentleman of good family,
+who, on his marriage with a Jewish lady of wealth and refinement,
+emigrated to America, rather than subject her and himself to the
+commentaries of his own fastidious relatives, and the incivilities of a
+clique to which by allegiance of birth and breeding he unfortunately
+belonged.</p>
+
+<p>Her own family had not been less averse to this union than the
+aristocratic house of Monfort, and, had she not been the mistress of her
+own acts and fortune, would, no doubt, have absolutely prevented it. As
+it was, a wild wail went up from the synagogue at the loss of one of its
+brightest ornaments, and the name of &quot;Miriam Harz&quot; was consigned to
+silence forever.</p>
+
+<p>Orphaned and independent, this obloquy and oblivion made little
+difference to its object, especially when the broad Atlantic was placed,
+as it soon was, between her and her people, and new ties and duties
+arose in a strange land to bind and interest her feelings.</p>
+
+<p>During her six years of married life, I have every reason to believe
+that she was, as it is termed, &quot;perfectly happy,&quot; although a mysterious
+disease of the nervous centres, that baffled medical skill either to
+cure or to name, early laid its grasp upon her, and brought her by slow
+degrees to the grave, when her only child had just completed her fifth
+year.</p>
+
+<p>My father, the younger son of a nobleman who traced his lineage from
+Simon de Montfort, had been married in his own estate and among his
+peers before he met my mother. Poor himself (his commission in the army
+constituting his sole livelihood), he had espoused the young and
+beautiful widow of a brother officer, who, in dying, had committed his
+wife and her orphan child to his care and good offices, on a
+battle-field in Spain, and with her hand he had received but little of
+this world's lucre. The very pension, to which she would have been
+entitled living singly, was cut off by her second marriage, and with
+habits of luxury and indolence, such as too often appertain to the
+high-born, and cling fatally to the physically delicate, the burden of
+her expenses was more than her husband could well sustain.</p>
+
+<p>Her parents and his own were dead, and there were no relatives on either
+side who could be called upon for aid, without a sacrifice of pride,
+which my father would have died rather than have made. He was nearly
+reduced to desperation by the circumstances of the case, when,
+fortunately perhaps for both, she suddenly sickened, drooped, and died,
+in his absence, during her brief sojourn at a watering-place, and all
+considerations were lost sight of at the time, in view of this
+unexpected and stunning blow&mdash;for Reginald Monfort was devoted, in his
+chivalric way, to his beautiful and fragile wife, as it was, indeed, his
+nature to be to every thing that was his own. Her very dependence had
+endeared her to him, nor had she known probably to what straits her
+exactions had driven him, nor what were his exigencies. Perhaps (let me
+strive to do her this justice, at least), had he been more open on these
+subjects, matters might have gone better. Yet he found consolation in
+the reflection that she had been happy in her ignorance of his affairs,
+and had experienced no strict privation during their short union,
+inevitably as this must later have been her portion, and certainly as,
+in her case, misery must have accompanied it.</p>
+
+<p>Her child, in the absence of all near relatives, became his charge, and
+the little three-year-old girl, her mother's image, grew into his
+closest affections by reason of this likeness and her very helplessness.
+Two years after the death of his wife, he espoused my mother, a bright
+and beautiful woman of his own age, with whom he met casually at a
+banker's dinner in London, and who, fascinated by his Christian graces,
+reached her fair Judaic hand over all lines of Purim prejudice, and
+placed it confidingly in his own for life, thereby, as I have said,
+relinquishing home and kindred forever.</p>
+
+<p>A hundred thousand pounds was a great fortune in those days and in our
+then modest republic, and this was the sum my parents brought with them
+from England&mdash;a heritage sufficiently large to have enriched a numerous
+family in America, but which was chiefly centred on one alone, as will
+be shown.</p>
+
+<p>My father, a proud, shy, fastidious man, had always been galled by the
+consciousness of my mother's Israelitish descent, which she never
+attempted to conceal or deny, although, to please his sensitive
+requisitions, she dispensed with most of its open observances. That she
+clung to it with unfailing tenacity to the last I cannot doubt, however,
+from memorials written in her own hand&mdash;a very characteristic one&mdash;and
+from the testimony of Mrs. Austin, her faithful friend and
+attendant&mdash;the nurse, let me mention here, of my father's little
+step-daughter during her mother's lifetime, and her brief orphanage, as
+well as of his succeeding children.</p>
+
+<p>Stanch in his love of church and country, we, his daughters, were all
+three christened, and &quot;brought up,&quot; as it is termed, in the Episcopal
+Church, and early taught devotion to its rites and ceremonies. Yet, had
+we chosen for ourselves, perhaps our different temperaments might, even
+in this thing, have asserted themselves, and we might have embraced
+sects as diverse as our tastes were several. I shall come to this third
+sister presently, of whom I make but passing mention here. She was our
+flower, our pearl, our little ewe-lamb&mdash;the loveliest and the last&mdash;and
+I must not trust myself to linger with her memory now, or I shall lose
+the thread of my story, and tangle it with digression.</p>
+
+<p>With my Oriental blood there came strange, passionate affection for all
+things sharing it, unknown to colder organizations&mdash;an affection in
+whose very vitality were the seeds of suffering, in whose very strength
+was weakness, perhaps in whose very enjoyment, sorrow. I have said my
+mother died of an insidious and inscrutable malady, which baffled friend
+and physician, when I was five years old. She had been so long ill, so
+often alienated from her household for days together, that her death was
+a less terrible evil, less suddenly so, at least, than if each morning
+had found her at her board, each evening at the family hearth, and
+every hour, as would have been the case in health, occupied with her
+children.</p>
+
+<p>My father's grief was stern, quiet, solitary; ours, unreasonable and
+noisy, but soon over as to manifestation. Yet I must have suffered more
+than I knew of, I think, for then occurred the first of those strange
+lethargies or seizures that afterward returned at very unequal intervals
+during my childhood and early youth, and which roused my father's fears
+about my life and intellect itself, and gave me into the hands of a
+physician for many years thereof, vigorous, and healthy, and intelligent
+otherwise as I felt, and seemed, and <i>was</i>.</p>
+
+<p>It was soon after the first settling down of tribulation in our
+household to that flat and almost unendurable calm or level that
+succeeds affliction, when a void is felt rather than expressed, and when
+all outward observances return to their olden habit, as a car backs
+slowly from a switch to its accustomed grooves, that a new face appeared
+among us, destined to influence, in no slight degree, the happiness of
+all who composed the family of Reginald Monfort.</p>
+
+<p>It was summer. The house in which we lived was partly finished in the
+rear by wide and extensive galleries above and below, shaded by movable
+<i>jalousies;</i> and, on the upper one of these, that on which our
+apartments opened, my father had caused a hammock to be swung, for the
+comfort and pleasure of his children. With one foot listlessly dragging
+on the floor of the portico so as to propel the hammock, and lying
+partly on my face while I soothed my wide-eyed doll to sleep, I lay
+swaying in childish fashion when I heard Evelyn's soft step beside me,
+accompanied by another, firmer, slower, but as gentle if not as light. I
+looked up: a sweet face was bending over me, framed in a simple cottage
+bonnet of white straw, and braids of shining brown hair.</p>
+
+<p>The eyes, large, lustrous, tender, of deepest blue, with their black
+dilated pupils, I shall never forget as they first met my own, nor the
+slow, sad smile that seemed to entreat my affectionate acquaintance. The
+effect was immediate and electric. I sat up in the hammock, I stretched
+out my hands to receive the proffered greeting, and then remained
+silently, child-fashion, surveying the new-comer.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Kiss me,&quot; she said, &quot;little Miriam. Have they not told you of me? I am
+Constance Glen&mdash;soon to be your teacher.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then I think I shall learn,&quot; I made grave reply, putting away the thick
+curls from my eyes and fixing them once more steadily on the face of the
+new-comer. &quot;Yes, I <i>will</i> kiss you, for you look good and pretty. Did my
+mother send you here?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She is a strange child, Miss Glen,&quot; I heard Evelyn whisper. &quot;Don't mind
+her&mdash;she often asks such questions.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very natural and affecting ones,&quot; Miss Glen observed, quietly, and the
+tears sprang to her violet eyes, at which I wondered. Yet, understanding
+not her words, I remembered them for later comprehension; a habit of
+childhood too little appreciated or considered, I think, by older
+people.</p>
+
+<p>She had not replied to my question, so I repeated it eagerly. &quot;Did my
+dear mother send you to me?&quot; I said. &quot;And where is she now?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, tender child! I have not seen your mother. She is in heaven, I
+trust; where I hope we shall all be some day&mdash;with God. <i>He</i> sent me to
+you, probably&mdash;I fancy so, at least.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then God has got good again. He was very bad last week&mdash;very wicked;
+he killed our mother,&quot; whispering mysteriously.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He is never bad, Miriam, never wicked; you must not say such things&mdash;no
+Christian would.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But I am <i>not</i> a Christian, Mrs. Austin says; only a Jew. Did you ever
+hear of the Jews?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Evelyn laughed, Mrs. Austin frowned, but Miss Glen was intensely grave,
+as she rejoined:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A Jew may be very good and love God. That is all a little child can
+know of religion. Yet we must all believe God and His Son were one.&quot; The
+last words were murmured rather than spoken&mdash;almost self-directed.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is His Son a little boy, and will he be fond of my mother?&quot; I asked.
+&quot;Will she love him too? Oh, she loved me so much, so much!&quot; and, in an
+agony of grief, I caught Miss Glen around the neck, and sobbed
+convulsively on her sympathetic breast. Again Evelyn smiled, I suppose,
+for I heard Miss Glen say, rebukingly:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear Miss Erle, you must not make light of your little sister's
+sufferings. They are very severe, I doubt not, young as she is. All the
+more so that she does not know how to express them.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Revolving these words, I came later to know their import. They seemed
+unmeaning to me at the time, but the kind and deprecating tone of voice
+in which they were conveyed was unmistakable, and that sufficed to
+reassure me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And now, Miriam, let me go to my room and take off my bonnet and shawl,
+for I am going to stay with you. Perhaps you will show me the way
+yourself,&quot; she said, pausing. &quot;Bring Dolly, too;&quot; and we walked off
+hand-in-hand together to the large, commodious chamber Mrs. Austin
+pointed out as that prepared for our governess. I recognized my affinity
+from that hour.</p>
+
+<p>There, sitting on her knee, with her gentle hand on my hair, and her
+sweet eyes fixed on mine, I learned at once to love Miss Glen, or
+&quot;Constance,&quot; as she made us call her, because her surname seemed
+over-formal. She wished us to regard her as an elder sister, she said,
+rather than mere instructress, deeming rightly that the law of love
+would prove the stronger and better guidance in our case, and
+understanding well, and by some line magnetic sympathy as it appeared,
+my own peculiar nature, to which affection was a necessity.</p>
+
+<p>Ours was a peaceful and happy childhood under her gentle and fostering
+rule; and, when it ceased, all the wires of life seemed jangled and
+discordant again.</p>
+
+<p>She lived with us three years as friend and teacher. At the end of that
+time her vocation and sphere of action were enlarged, not changed, for
+she married my father, and thus our future welfare seemed secured.</p>
+
+<p>Alas for human foresight! Alas for affection powerless to save! Alas for
+the vanity of mortal effort to contend with Fate!</p>
+
+<p>Our home was in one of the chief Northern cities of that great republic
+which has for so many years commanded the admiration, respect, and
+wonder, of the whole world. The house we occupied was situated in the
+old and fashion-forsaken portion of the city. From its upper windows a
+view of the majestic Delaware and its opposite shores was afforded to
+the spectator; and the grounds surrounding the mansion were spacious for
+those of a city-house, and deeply shaded by elms that had been lofty
+trees in the time of General Washington.</p>
+
+<p>Four squares farther on, the roar of commerce swelled and surged, in
+storehouse and counting-room, on mart and shipboard and quay; but here
+all was quiet, calm, secluded, as in the country, miles beyond.</p>
+
+<p>Two houses besides our own shared the whole square between them, though
+ours, the central one, possessed the largest inclosure, and was the
+finest residence of the three, architecturally speaking; and the inmates
+of these dwellings, with very few exceptions, constituted for years our
+whole circle of friends and visitors.</p>
+
+<p>So it will be seen how secluded was the life we led, how narrow the
+sphere we moved in, despite our acknowledged wealth, which, with some
+other attributes we possessed, had not failed, if desired, to confer on
+us both power and position in the society we shunned rather than shared.</p>
+
+<p>To my father's nature, however, retirement was as essential as routine.
+He was one of those outwardly calm and inwardly excitable and nervous
+people we sometimes encounter without detecting the fire beneath the
+marble, the ever-burning lamp in the sarcophagus, unless we lift the lid
+of rock to find it&mdash;an effort scarcely worth the making in any case, for
+at best it lights only a tomb.</p>
+
+<p>Extremely mild and self-contained in manner, and chary of opinion and
+expression, he was at the same time a man of strong and implacable
+prejudices and even bitter animosities when once engendered. I do not
+think his affections kept pace with these. He loved what belonged to
+him, it is true, in a quiet, consistent way, and his good breeding and
+practised equanimity were alone sufficient to secure the peace, and even
+happiness, of a household; but of much effort or self-sacrifice I judge
+him to have been incapable.</p>
+
+<p>He was a handsome man in his stiff and military way&mdash;well made, tall,
+commanding in figure and in demeanor, stately in movement. His features
+were regular, his teeth and hair well preserved, especially the first,
+his hands and feet aristocratically small and shapely, his manner
+vaguely courteous. He was a shy rather than reserved person, for, when
+once the ice was broken, his nature bubbled over very boyishly at times,
+and his confidence, once bestowed, was irrevocable. Like most men of his
+temperament, he was keenly susceptible to deferential flattery, and
+impatient of the slightest infraction of his dignity, which he guarded
+punctiliously at all points. It was more this disposition always to wait
+for overtures from others, and to slightly repel their first
+manifestations, from his inveterate shyness, than any settled
+determination on his part, that made him such an alien from general
+association. Nervous, fastidious, exacting&mdash;what had he in common with
+the texture of the new society in which he found himself, and what right
+had he to fancy himself neglected where the &quot;go-ahead&quot; principle alone
+was recognized, and time was esteemed too precious to waste in ceremony?</p>
+
+<p>Yet this injured feeling pursued him through life and made one of his
+peculiarities, so that he drew more and more closely, as years passed
+on, into his own shell, which may be said to have comprised his
+household, his comforts, his hobbies, and his narrow neighborhood, in
+which he was idolized, and the sympathy of which was very soothing to
+his fastidious pride.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing so fosters haughtiness and egotism as a sphere like this, and it
+may be doubted whether the crowned heads of the world receive more
+adulation from their households than men so situated.</p>
+
+<p>From the moment he set his foot on the threshold of his own house, nay,
+on the broad, quiet pavement of his own street, with its stately row of
+ancient Lombardy poplars on one side, and blank, high-walled lumber-yard
+on the other, he felt himself a sovereign&mdash;king of a principality! king
+of a neighborhood;&mdash;what great difference is there, after all?</p>
+
+<p>It was only the hypochondriacal character of his mind that shielded him
+from that chief human absurdity, pomposity. He needed all the praise and
+consolation his friends could bestow simply to sustain him&mdash;no danger of
+inflation in his case! He was shut away from self-complacency (the only
+vice to which virtue is subjected) by the melancholy that permeated his
+being, and which was probably in his case an
+inheritance&mdash;constitutional, as it is said to be with things.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps it will be well to give, in this place, some more vivid idea of
+our home, which, after all, like the shell of the sea-fish, most
+frequently shapes itself to fit the necessities and habits of its
+occupants.</p>
+
+<p>Our house had been built in early times, and was essentially
+old-fashioned, like the part of the city in which it was situated.. My
+father, soon after his arrival in America, had fancied and purchased
+this gloomy-looking gray stone edifice, with its massive granite steps
+(imported at great cost, before the beautiful white-marble quarries had
+been developed which abound in the vicinity of, and characterize the
+dwellings of, that rare and perfect city), and remodelled its interior,
+leaving the outside front of the building, with its screens of ancient
+ivy, untouched and venerable, and changing only the exterior aspect of
+the back of the mansion. Very striking was the contrast between the rear
+and front and exterior and interior of &quot;Monfort Hall,&quot; as it was
+universally called.</p>
+
+<p>The dark panel-work within had all been rent away, to give place to
+plaster glossy as marble, or fine French papers, gilded and painted, or
+fresco-paintings done with great cost and labor, and indifferent
+success. The lofty ceilings and massive walls formed outlines of
+strength and beauty to the large and well-ventilated apartments, which
+made it easy to render them almost palatial by the means of such
+accessories and appliances as wealth commands, and which were lavished
+in this instance.</p>
+
+<p>The back of the house was, however, truly picturesque. Here a bay window
+was judiciously thrown out; there a portico appended or hanging balcony
+added to break the gray expanse of wall or sullen glare of windows; and
+a small gray tower or belfry, containing a clock that chimed the hours,
+and a fine telescope, rose from the octagon library which my father had
+built for his own peculiar sanctum after my mother's death, and which
+formed an ell to the building. The green, grassy, deeply-shadowed lawn
+lay behind the mansion, sloping down into a dark, deep dell, across
+which brawled a tiny brook long since absorbed by the thirsty earth
+thrown out from many foundations of stores and tenements and great
+warehouses hard by; a dell where once roses, lilacs, guelder-globes, and
+calacanthus-bushes, grew with a vigor that I have nowhere seen
+surpassed.</p>
+
+<p>It was not much the fashion then to have rare garden-flowers. Our
+conservatory contained a fair array of these, but we had beds of tulips,
+hyacinths, and crocuses, basking in the sunshine, and violets and lilies
+lying in the shadow such as I see rarely now, and which cost us as
+little thought or trouble in their perennial permanence, whereas the
+conservatory was an endless grief and care, although superintended by a
+thoroughly-taught English gardener, and kept up at unlimited expense.</p>
+
+<p>My sister&mdash;for so I was taught to call Evelyn Erle&mdash;revelled in this
+floral exclusiveness, but to me the dear old garden was far more
+delightful and life-giving. I loved our sweet home-flowers better than
+those foreign blossoms which lived in an artificial climate, and
+answered no thrilling voice of Nature, no internal impulse in their
+hot-house growth and development. What stirred me so deeply in April,
+stirred also the hyacinth-bulb and the lily of the valley deep in the
+earth&mdash;warmth, moisture, sunshine and shadow, and sweet spring rain&mdash;and
+the same fullness of life that throbbed in my veins in June called forth
+the rose. There was vivid sympathy here, and I gave my heart to the
+garden-flowers as I never could do to the frailer children of the
+hot-house, beautiful as they undeniably are.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miriam has really a <i>vulgar</i> taste for Nature, as Miss Glen calls it,&quot;
+Evelyn said one day, with a curl of her slight, exquisite lip as she
+shook away from her painted muslin robe, the butter-cups, heavy with
+moisture and radiant with sunshine, which I had laid upon her knee. &quot;She
+ought to have been an Irish child and born, in a hovel, don't you think
+so, papa?&quot; and she put me aside superciliously. Dirt and Nature were
+synonymous terms with her.</p>
+
+<p>My father smiled and laid down his newspaper, then looked at me a little
+gravely as I stood downcast by Evelyn.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You <i>are</i> getting very much sunburnt, Miriam, there is no doubt of
+that. A complexion like yours needs greater care for its preservation
+than if ten shades fairer. Little daughter, you must wear your bonnet,
+or give up running in the garden in the heat of the day.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I try to impress this on Miriam all the time,&quot; said Mrs. Austin,
+coming as usual to aid in the assault, &quot;but she is so hard-headed, it is
+next to impossible to make her mindful of what I tell her. Miss Glen is
+the only one that seems to have any influence over her nowadays.&quot; She
+said this with a slight, impatient toss of the head, as she paused in
+her progress through the room with a huge jar of currant-jelly, she had
+been sunning in the dining-room window, poised on the palm of either
+hand, jelly that looked like melted rubies, now to be consigned to the
+store-room.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, well, we must have patience,&quot; was the rejoinder. &quot;She is
+young&mdash;impulsive (I wish she were more like you, Evelyn, my dear!), her
+mother over again in temperament, without the saving clauses of beauty
+and refinement; these she will never attain, I fear, and with much of
+the characteristic persistence of that singular race, which in my wife,
+however, I never detected, though so much nearer the fountain-head!&quot;
+This was said half in soliloquy, but Evelyn replied to it as if it had
+been addressed to her&mdash;replied, as she often did, by an interrogatory.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What tribe did her mother belong to, papa?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The tribe of Judah, I believe, my love, was that her family traced
+their lineage from; but you question as if it were Pocahontas there was
+reference to instead of a high-bred Jewish lady!&quot; speaking with
+asperity.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I meant no offence, papa, I assure you,&quot; said Evelyn, quietly; &quot;I only
+asked for information. Certainly there <i>is</i> something very grand in
+being related to King David.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There is, indeed,&quot; said a gentle voice close at hand. Miss Glen had
+entered silently as they were speaking. &quot;There was genius in that
+strain of blood, Evelyn, nay, more, divinity. Christ claimed such
+descent. Let us never forget that! He, the universal brother.&quot; She spoke
+with feeling and dignity, and led me away, lecturing me greatly as she
+did so for not obeying Mrs. Austin as to the sun-bonnet bondage, which
+she promised; to make as light as possible by purchasing for me a new
+French contrivance called a <i>cal&ecirc;che</i>, light and airy and sheltering all
+at once.</p>
+
+<p>I was seven years old then, and the understanding was complete between
+us that endured to the end, but as yet there was no foreshadowing of her
+marriage with my father.</p>
+
+<p>She had been engaged, when she came to us, to a gentleman, who must have
+perished at sea soon afterward&mdash;a young naval officer who had gone out
+on board of the United States sloop-of-war Hornet, the fate of which
+vessel is still wrapped in mystery, though that it foundered suddenly
+seemed then, as now, the universal opinion. Miss Glen some time before
+had made up her mind to this, and was stemming a tide of grief with
+great fortitude and resolution, while she was laying the foundations of
+character and education in her two very opposite pupils, both of whom
+she guided with equal ability.</p>
+
+<p>My father was not unaware of her sufferings, I think, indeed, this
+community of sorrow first attracted him toward her, and later he was
+confirmed in his admiration of her womanly self-control and beauty of
+character, by the development he saw in his children, the work of her
+hand. That he was ever profoundly in love with her I do not believe, nor
+did she pretend to any passionate regard for him. Respect, friendship,
+confidence, mutual esteem, were the foundations of their union, which
+certainly promised enduring happiness to all concerned, and which was
+looked on with favor by the whole household, not excepting Mrs. Austin
+herself.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If any successor of your dear mother <i>must</i> come, Evelyn,&quot; I heard her
+say one day to my sister, &quot;we had better have her we know, to be sure,
+than a mere stranger, but I <i>must</i> say I can't see why your papa does
+not content himself as he is. I am sure he seems very happy in his
+library and his greenhouse, and driving out in his Tilbury, or with you
+two young ladies in the coach of afternoons, and chatting and smoking of
+evenings with Mr. Bainrothe or old Mr. Stanbury. I should think he might
+have had enough of marrying by this time, and funerals and all that.
+Your own precious mamma first, an earl's own daughter (Evelyn Erle,
+never forget that, if your father <i>was</i> a poor soldier! you have grand
+relations in England, child, if you are not as rich as some others I
+could name), and then your mother and Miriam's, Miss Harz that was, such
+an excellent woman for all her persuasion, to be sure; better than some
+Christians, I must say; and she just three years and a half laid in her
+grave!&quot; A doleful sigh gave emphasis to this remark. &quot;I was never more
+surprised, I must confess, than when he sent for me last night to tell
+me he was to marry Miss Glen next week! Who is she, I wonder, Evelyn;
+did you ever hear her speak of her kinfolks? Not a soul except two or
+three of her church-people has been near her since she has been here,
+and Franklin says she very seldom gets letters.&quot; A pinch of snuff
+emphasized this remark.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I heard her say she had only one brother, Mrs. Austin, and that he was
+in some distant part of the world, in India, or New Orleans, or some
+such place, she does not know herself exactly where. He is a young lad,
+and she grieves about him; his picture is most beautiful, I think. He
+ran off and went to sea, and it almost killed her. That was some years
+ago, and since then she has been teaching in a great school until she
+came to us, and was never so peaceful before, she says, as she is now. I
+think she will make papa happy too, and keep him in his own family,
+since she has none of her own. I was so afraid it was Mrs. Stanbury at
+one time.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I never thought of that,&quot; said Mrs. Austin, starting. &quot;What put it into
+your head, Evelyn, and what made you so close-mouthed about it? Child,
+you have an old head on young shoulders&mdash;I always said so; as like your
+own precious mother as two peas. Yes, that would have been a nice
+connection truly! The two young Stanburys forsooth, to divide every
+thing with you and Miriam, and her rigid economy the rule in the house,
+and Norman riding over every one on a high horse, and that lame brat to
+be nursed and waited on! Any thing better than that, Evelyn. You are
+right, my dear.&quot; And she tapped her suggestive snuffbox.</p>
+
+<p>My elder sister was about thirteen years old when she uttered those
+oracular sentences which elicited Mrs. Austin's commendations, and her
+own clear-sighted <i>pr&eacute;voyance;</i> and I, at eight, whose mind was turned
+to any subject save that of marrying and giving in marriage, stood
+confounded by her superior wisdom and discretion. I gazed upon her
+open-mouthed and wide-eyed as she spoke, drinking in every word, yet
+very little enlightened, after all, by her remarks. She turned suddenly
+upon me, and tapped my cheek slightly with her fan. It was a way she had
+of manifesting contempt.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now run and tell Mrs. Stanbury every word I have spoken, just as soon
+as you can, Miriam, do you hear? Don't forget one syllable, that's a
+darling. Come, rehearse!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Won't it do after dinner, sister Evelyn?&quot; I asked, gravely and
+literally. &quot;I want to go and see about my mole, now&mdash;my poor mole that
+Hodges wounded with his spade this morning. It suffers so
+dreadfully!&quot;&mdash;clasping my hands in a tragic manner, not unusual with me
+when excited.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There! what did I tell you, Mrs. Austin? You will believe my report of
+Miriam another time&mdash;little blab! There is nothing safe where she is,
+and as to keeping a secret, she could not do it if her own life were at
+stake, I verily believe.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I <i>can</i> keep a secret,&quot; I said, fiercely, &quot;you know I can! You burnt my
+finger in the candle to make me tell you where the squirrel was, and I
+would not do it; Now, miss, remember that, and tell the truth next
+time!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What a little spit-fire,&quot; said Evelyn, derisively. &quot;You see for
+yourself, Mrs. Austin.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O Evelyn, Evelyn, did you, do that?&quot; moaned the good woman. &quot;Your
+little sister's hand! To burn it so cruelly, and in cold blood. I would
+not have believed it of you, my Evelyn&mdash;that was not like your mamma at
+all,&quot; and she shook her head dolefully. &quot;Miriam is a brave child, after
+all.&quot; A wonderful admission for her to make.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If you believe every thing that limb of the synagogue tells you, Mrs.
+Austin, you will have a great deal to swallow, that is all I shall say
+on the subject,&quot; and she turned away derisively.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you mean to deny it, then, Evelyn Erle?&quot; asked Mrs. Austin,
+earnestly, laying her hand on her arm, and shaking her slightly as she
+was about to leave the room. &quot;Come back and answer me. I hope Miriam is
+only angry&mdash;I hope you did <i>not</i> do this thing.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I will not be forcibly detained by any old woman in America,&quot; said
+Evelyn, struggling stoutly, &quot;nor questioned either about a pack of fibs.
+Miriam knows better than to tell such stories&mdash;or ought to be taught
+better.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It was no story,&quot; I said, solemnly. &quot;It was true. You did burn my
+finger, and begged me not to tell Constance or papa afterward, and I
+never told them, because I never break my word if I can help it, and I
+wouldn't have told Mrs. Austin (but I didn't <i>promise</i> about her, you
+know), only you twitted me so meanly, and made me so mad&mdash;and it all
+came out. For I can keep a secret! I know where that squirrel is now,
+Evelyn Erle, but I will never tell any one&mdash;never&mdash;not even Constance
+Glen. I promised myself that, and crossed my heart about it when you
+tried to cut off its tail&mdash;its pretty, bushy tail that God gave it to
+keep the flies off with.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Austin was shedding tears by this time; Evelyn's insolence and
+duplicity had stung her to the quick, and she saw, with real concern,
+that I had justice on my side. She had relinquished her hold on Evelyn,
+who stood now sullenly glaring at me, pale as a sheet, her eyes white
+with rage, looking like heated steel, her lips trembling with passion.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You <i>shall</i> tell me where that squirrel is, or I will appeal to papa,&quot;
+she said, sharply. &quot;It was mine. Norman Stanbury said so when he brought
+it here and gave it to me. You heard him, little cheat!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He told me to feed it, and take care of it, and not let it get hurt, if
+he did give it to you,&quot; I replied, doggedly, &quot;and I did what he told me.
+You are a born tyrant, Evelyn. Constance told you so a month ago, when
+you twisted Laura Stanbury's arm for not teaching you that puzzle; and
+there is a wicked word I know that suits you to-day, only I am afraid to
+say it&mdash;Constance would be angry&mdash;but it begins with an L and ends with
+an R, and has only four letters in it. There, now!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I well deserved the slap, no doubt, that rang down with such lightning
+speed and force on my cheek, and, fortunately, Mrs. Austin arrested my
+panther-like spring toward Evelyn, or the nails I held in rest might
+have brought blood from her waxen face, and marred its symmetry for a
+season. As it was, I screamed wildly, until Miss Glen came in, attracted
+by my cries, and, receiving no satisfactory explanation as to their
+cause, led me to her own apartment to compose, question, and rebuke me
+in that firm but gentle manner that ever calmed my spirit like oil
+poured upon troubled waters. The end of the matter was that, when I met
+Evelyn again, I went up to her in a spirit of conciliation, and mutely
+kissed her as a sign of peace and penitence.</p>
+
+<p>It was a matter of indifference to me that this advance was carelessly
+received, since it satisfied my conscience and her who stirred its
+depths&mdash;nor did my cheek flush at the derisive taunt that followed me
+from the room after this obligation to self was discharged&mdash;&quot;Now tattle
+again, little prophetess,&quot; for thus she often alluded to my Hebrew name
+and its signification, &quot;and produce my squirrel, or look well to your
+wounded mole!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>This threat was not without its effect. In a deep, leafy covert I
+concealed my poor dying patient, &quot;earthy, and of the earth&quot;&mdash;literally,
+in every sense&mdash;but the squirrel still enjoyed its sequestered home on
+the topmost branch of an English walnut-tree, from which it cheerfully,
+but cautiously, descended at my call when I went out to carry it
+almonds or filberts from the dessert (invariably served with wine to my
+father, who, in observance of his English custom, sat alone some moments
+after the ladies of his household had withdrawn from table), nor did
+Evelyn have the despotic pleasure of abbreviating his right of tail.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="I_CHAPTER_II"></a><h2>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>My father's marriage was solemnized very quietly in that old gray church
+with its fairy chime of bells, all alive on that occasion, which stood
+in the busy street not far from our quiet house. An aged and reverend
+bishop, who had administered the sacred communion to Washington and his
+wife when the city we dwelt in had been the temporary residence of that
+chief, performed the ceremony, which, with the exception of my father's
+immediate household and neighbors, none were invited to witness. When
+the solemn rite was ended, I made my way to Constance, so fair that day
+in her pearl-gray robes and simple white bonnet, and clasped her hand.
+She stooped down and kissed me many times, to conceal her tears,
+probably.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Call me mamma now, dearest,&quot; she said, at last; &quot;and let the name be as
+a new compact between us. Now let Evelyn come to me, my love, she, too,
+is my daughter; and go with Mrs. Austin.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I did as she directed, grasping Mrs. Austin's hand tightly as we walked
+home, and proceeding at so brisk a pace that she was often obliged to
+check me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Poor child, why should you rejoice so?&quot; she said, mournfully. &quot;Don't
+you know you have lost your father from this hour? Do you suppose he
+will ever love you as well again&mdash;you or Evelyn? Poor, ignorant,
+sacrificed babes in the woods!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I don't care,&quot; I said. &quot;I have got my new mamma to love me, even if he
+does not. 'Mamma&mdash;mamma Constance!' how pretty that sounds. Oh, that is
+what I shall always call her from this time&mdash;'Constance,' as usual, you
+know, with 'mamma' before it.&quot; And I kept repeating &quot;mamma Constance,&quot;
+childishly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Foolish thing,&quot; she rejoined. &quot;I wish you had your sister Evelyn's
+consideration; but at any rate,&quot; she murmured, &quot;the money will be all
+yours. He cannot alienate that; yours by marriage contract, not even to
+divide with Evelyn, and&quot; (elevating her voice) &quot;that you will surely do
+hereafter, will you not, Miriam?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I don't know,&quot; I replied; &quot;not unless she is good to me and stops
+calling me 'little Jew,' and other mean, disagreeable names. But I
+always thought Evelyn was the rich one until now. She has so many fine
+clothes, and such great relations, you say, in England.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;True, true, gentle blood is a fine heritage; but your mother had great
+store of gold, and, when your papa dies, all this will belong to you (it
+is time you should know this, Miriam), and you will have us all to take
+care of and support; so you must be very good, indeed.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am so sorry,&quot; I said, with a deep sigh and a feeling that a heavy
+burden had been thrown suddenly on my shoulders; &quot;but I tell you what I
+will do&quot; (brightening up), &quot;I will give it every bit to mamma, and she
+will support us all. She will live much longer than papa, because she is
+so much younger&mdash;twenty years, I believe. Isn't that a great
+difference?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your father will outlive me, child, I trust, should such a state of
+things ever come to pass; but I am old, and shall not cumber the earth
+long,&quot; and a groan burst from her lips.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How old <i>are</i> you, Mrs. Austin?&quot; I asked, with a feeling of awe
+creeping over me, as though I had been talking to the widow of
+Methuselah, and I looked up into her face, pityingly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Fifty-five years old, child, come next Michaelmas, and a miserable
+sinner still, in the eyes of my Lord! I was a widow when I went to hire
+with Mrs. Erle, Evelyn's lady mother&mdash;that was soon after she married
+the captain, who had only his sword&mdash;and I have lived with her and hers
+ever since, and served them faithfully, I trust, and I hope I do not
+deserve to be cast on strangers and upstarts in my old age, even if one
+of them happens to marry your father. Constance Glen, forsooth!&quot; and she
+drew up her stiff figure.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;To be wicked and old must be <i>so</i> dreadful,&quot; I said, thoughtfully
+shaking my head and casting my eyes to heaven.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What are you thinking about, child?&quot; she asked, jerking my hand
+sharply. &quot;Who is it that you call such hard names&mdash;'wicked and old'
+forsooth? Answer me directly!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It was what you said a while ago about yourself I was thinking of, Mrs.
+Austin,&quot; I replied. &quot;To be more than half a hundred years old! It is so
+many years to live; and then to be such a sinner, too&mdash;how hard it must
+be! I always thought you were very good before; and I am sure you are
+not gray and wrinkled and blear-eyed, like Granny Simpson!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Granny Simpson, indeed! You must be crazy, Miriam Monfort! Why, she is
+eighty if she is an hour, and hobbles on a cane! I flatter myself I am
+not infirm yet; and, if you call a well-preserved, middle-aged, English
+woman, like me, <i>old</i>, your brains must be addled. Look at my hair, my
+teeth, my complexion&quot;&mdash;pausing suddenly before me and confronting me
+fiercely. &quot;See my step, my figure, and have more sense, if you <i>are</i> a
+little foreign Jewish child. As to sinfulness, we are all <i>sinful</i>
+beings, more or less. To be <i>wicked</i> is a very different thing from
+sinful. I never told you I was wicked, child. What put that into your
+head?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, I thought they were the same thing. Which is the worst, Mrs.
+Austin?&quot; I asked, with unfeigned simplicity.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There, Miriam, step on before! you walk too fast anyhow for me to-day.
+Besides, your tongue wags too limberly by half. You always did ask queer
+questions, and will to your dying day. No help for it, I suppose, but
+patience; but it is all of that Gipsy blood! Now, Evelyn's line of
+people was altogether different. She has what they used to call in
+England 'blue blood in her veins;' do you understand, Miriam? Blue
+blood! Catch her asking indiscreet questions! Take pattern by your elder
+sister, Miss Miriam Monfort, and you will do well.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Not knowing what evil I had done, or how I had offended, or how blood
+could be <i>blue</i>, yet sorry for having erred, I made my way as I was told
+to do, speedily and silently homeward, and was glad to find shelter from
+all misunderstanding and persecution in the arms and shadow of my &quot;mamma
+Constance,&quot; as I called her from that hour.</p>
+
+<p>But, to Evelyn she was &quot;Mistress Monfort,&quot; from the time she espoused my
+father; and the coldness between them (they were never very congenial)
+was apparent from that time, in spite of every effort on the part of my
+sweet mamma to surmount and throw it aside.</p>
+
+<p>It is time I should speak of those few neighbors who composed our
+society at this period, and to whom some allusion has already been
+made&mdash;the occupants of those two houses which, as I have said, divided
+with ours the square we lived in, with their grounds. These green-shaded
+yards were divided one from the other by slender iron railings, which
+formed a line of boundary, no more, and presented no obstacle to the
+exploring eye. Graceful gates of the same material opened from the
+pavement, common to all, and presented a symmetrical and uniform
+appearance to the passer-by. Stone lions guarded ours, but Etruscan
+vases crowned the portals of Mrs. Stanbury and Mr. Bainrothe, filled
+with blooming plants in the summer season, but bare and desolate and
+gray enough in winter.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Stanbury, our right-hand neighbor (ay, in every way right-handed),
+was a widow lady of about thirty-five years of age. Her husband had been
+a sea-captain, and, being cut off suddenly, had, with the exception of
+the house she lived in, left her no estate. She owed her maintenance
+chiefly to the liberality of his uncle, a gruff old bachelor of sixty or
+more, who lived with and took care of her and her children in a way that
+was both kindly and disagreeable. He was a bald-headed man (who
+flourished a stout, gold-headed cane, I remember), with a florid,
+healthy, and honest face and burly figure, engaged in some lucrative
+city business, and entirely devoted to his nephew and niece, Mrs.
+Stanbury's only children, the one fifteen and the other about twelve
+years old at the time of my father's marriage.</p>
+
+<p>Strangely enough, her own deepest interest, if not affection, seemed
+centred at this period in her little orphan ward and nephew, George
+Gaston, a child of nine years old, who had recently come into her hands;
+singularly gifted and beautiful, but lamed for life, it was feared, and
+a great sufferer physically from the effects of the fatal hip-disease
+that had destroyed the strength and usefulness of one limb, and impaired
+his constitution.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Stanbury herself was a lady-like and pretty woman, fair and
+graceful, and her daughter Laura closely resembled her; both sweet
+specimens of unpretending womanhood; both devoted to the discharge of
+their simple duties and to one another; both entirely estimable.</p>
+
+<p>Norman Stanbury was of a different type. He had probably inherited from
+his father his manly and robust person, his open, dauntless, dark, and
+handsome face, in which there was so much character that you hardly
+looked for intellect, or perhaps at a brief glance confounded one with
+the other. He was the avowed and devoted swain of my sister Evelyn, from
+the time when they first chased fireflies together, up to their
+dancing-school adolescence, and for me maintained a disinterested,
+brotherly regard that was never slow to manifest itself in any time of
+need, or even in the furtherance of my childish whims. Our relations
+with this family were most friendly and agreeable. There never was any
+undue familiarity; my father's reserve, and their own dignity, would of
+themselves have precluded that certain precursor to the decline of
+superficial friendship; but a consistent and somewhat ceremonious
+intercourse was preserved from first to last, that could scarcely be
+called intimacy.</p>
+
+<p>Between George Gaston and myself alone existed that perfect freedom of
+speech and intuitive understanding that lie at the root of all true and
+deep affection. His delicacy of appearance, his stunted stature, his
+invalid requisitions, nay, his very deformity, for his twisted limb
+amounted to this, put aside all thought of infantile flirtation (for we
+know that, strange as it may seem, such a thing does exist) from the
+first hour of our acquaintance. He always seemed to me much younger than
+he was, or than I was&mdash;as boys, even under ordinary circumstances, are
+apt to appear to girls of their own age, from their slower development
+of mind and manner, if not of body.</p>
+
+<p>But this lovely waxen boy, so frail and spiritual as to look almost
+angelic, and certainly very far my superior intellectually, seemed from
+his helplessness peculiarly infantile in comparison with my robust
+energy, and became consequently, in my eyes, an object of tenderest
+commiseration. From the first he clung to me with strange tenacity, for
+our tastes were congenial. He brought with him from his Southern home
+stores of books and shells and curious playthings and mechanical toys,
+such as I had never seen before, and to spread these out and explain
+them for my amusement was his chief delight.</p>
+
+<p>My memory in turn was richly stored with poetry, some of it far above my
+own comprehension, but clinging irresistibly to my mind through the
+music of the metre. I had revelled in old ballads until I could recite
+nearly all of these precious relics of heroic times, or rather chant
+them forth monotonously enough in all probability, yet in a way that
+riveted his attention forcibly, and roused his high-strung poetic
+temperament to enthusiasm.</p>
+
+<p>When ill or suffering, if asked what he needed for relief, he would say
+&quot;Miriam,&quot; as naturally as a thirsty man would call for a glass of clear
+cold water. For his amusement I converted myself into a mime, a
+mountebank. When I went to the theatre, the performance must be repeated
+for his benefit, and many characters centred in one.</p>
+
+<p>For him I danced the &quot;Gavotte,&quot; the &quot;shawl-dance,&quot; as taught to do by
+Monsieur Mallet, at the great dancing-school on Chestnut Street, or
+jumped Jim Crow to his infinite amusement and the unmitigated disgust of
+Evelyn, to whom his physical infirmity made him any thing but
+attractive. Such personal perfection as she possessed is, I am afraid,
+apt to make us cold-hearted and exacting as to externals in others.
+Evelyn could endure commonplace, but could not forgive a blemish. Once
+Norman Stanbury came very near, losing her favor for having a wart on
+his finger; another time, she banished him from her presence for weeks,
+for having stained his hands, beyond the power of soap-and-water or
+vinegar to efface, in gathering walnuts. Certainly no despot ever
+governed more entirely through the medium of fear than did she through
+the tyranny of a fastidious caprice united to a form and face of
+surpassing beauty and high-bred grace.</p>
+
+<p>Even my father fell under this requisitive influence of hers. Propriety,
+the quality he worshipped, stood forth enshrined in her, and, from the
+lifting of her fan to the laying down of her knife and fork, all was
+faultless. The prestige, too, of birth, his special weakness, lingered
+about her, and elevated her to a pedestal above any other inmate of his
+household.</p>
+
+<p>Her mother, who married him for convenience, and whose selfish
+requisitions had almost driven him mad, was the honorable Mrs. Erle, and
+an earl's daughter. He had loved my mother twice as well, found her ten
+times more attractive and interesting, devoted and congenial; admired
+her grace, recognized all her worth, not only in deed but in word, and
+with a fidelity of heart that never wavered even when he married again.
+Yet the prestige of descent was wanting in her and hers, or rather,
+such as it was, brought with it ignoble and repulsive associations
+<i>only</i>. He was not the man to reach a hand across Shylock and the
+old-clothes man, to grasp that of the poet-king of Israel; or Esther,
+the avenging queen of a downtrodden nation; or Joab, strong in valor and
+fidelity; or Deborah, inspired to rule a people from beneath the shelter
+of her palm-tree in the wilderness.</p>
+
+<p>The grandeur of the past, in his estimation, was eclipsed by the
+ignominy of the present; but with me it was otherwise, and, as I grew
+old enough to recognize the peculiar traits of that ancient people from
+which I sprung, it pleased me to imagine that whatever there was about
+me of fiery persistency, of fearless faith, of unshrinking devotion,
+nay, of bitter remembrance of injuries, and power to avenge or forgive
+them, as the case might be, sprang from that remarkable race who called
+themselves at one time, with His permission, the chosen children of God.</p>
+
+<p>I think these very characteristics of mine repelled my father and jarred
+on his nervous temperament, endangering that outward calm which it was
+his pride and care to preserve as necessary to high-bred demeanor, and
+thus intrenching on his ideas of personal dignity. Yet, with strange
+inconsistency, it was her very indulgence of these peculiarities that
+inclined him most strongly to Constance Glen, and finally, I am well
+convinced, determined him on making her his wife, as one well suited to
+secure the welfare of his turbulent and incomprehensible child, his
+&quot;rebellious Miriam,&quot; as he sometimes called me when milder words availed
+not.</p>
+
+<p>He had, as I have said, an &quot;English&quot; horror of scenes and excitement of
+any kind. He was conservative in every way. He believed in the British
+classics, and would not admit that any thing could ever equal, far less
+surpass them (dreary bores that many of them are to me!). Walter Scott's
+novels were the only ones of later days he ever allowed himself to read
+approvingly; for, once being beguiled, against his will almost, into
+sitting up late at night to finish a new work called &quot;Pelham,&quot; he
+frowned down all allusion to the book or its author ever afterward, as
+derogatory to his dignity.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Bulwer and Disraeli are literary coxcombs,&quot; he said, &quot;who ought not to
+be encouraged, and who are trying to undermine wholesome English
+literature.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O father,&quot; I ventured to observe on one occasion, &quot;'Vivian Grey' is
+splendid. It is a delightful dream, more vivid than life itself; it is
+like drinking champagne, smelling tuberoses, inhaling laughing-gas,
+going to the opera, all at one time, and, if you once take it in your
+hand, nothing short of a stroke of lightning could rend it away, I am
+convinced. Do read it, sir, to please me, and retract your
+denunciation.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Never,&quot; he said firmly, solemnly even, &quot;and I counsel you, Miriam, in
+turn, to seek your draughts of soul from our pure 'wells of English
+undefiled,' rather than such high-flown fancies and maudlin streams as
+flow from the pen of this accomplished Hebrew. There is a little too
+much of the Jeremiah and Isaiah style about such extracts as I have
+seen, to suit my taste.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The idea of a Jew writing novels!&quot; said Evelyn, derisively as she
+sipped her wine.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Or the grandest poem in the world!&quot; added Mr. Bainrothe, who was dining
+with us that day, coming to the rescue quite magnanimously as it seemed,
+and for once receiving as his recompense a grateful look from the stray
+lamb of the tribe of Judah, reposing quietly in a Christian fold.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What poem do you allude to?&quot; said Evelyn, superciliously. &quot;'Paradise
+Lost?'&mdash;Oh, I thought Milton was a Unitarian, not quite a Jew; almost as
+bad though!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, the book of Job,&quot; replied Mr. Bainrothe. &quot;It was that I alluded
+to.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And the Psalms,&quot; I added, breathlessly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Dear me,&quot; said Evelyn, &quot;what an array of learning we have all at once!
+Why, every Sunday-school child knows about the Psalms. David and Solomon
+did nothing else but sing and dance, I believe.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Irreverent, very, Evelyn,&quot; said my father, looking at her a little
+severely, in spite of his own &quot;Jeremiah&quot; and &quot;Isaiah&quot; allusions. I had
+never heard him check her so openly before, and enjoyed it thoroughly.
+My smile of approbation provoked her, I suppose, for she pursued:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am so tired of having the Bible thrown at my head; you must excuse
+me, papa. For my part, I find the New Testament all-sufficient. I weary
+of the horrors of those Jews; worse than our Choctaw Indians, I verily
+believe.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So they were, so they were, my dear,&quot; said my father, complacently,
+&quot;but for some reasons we must always treat their memory with a certain
+respect. They were God's people, remember, in the absence of a better,
+and their history is written in this book, which we must all revere.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A very great people, surely,&quot; said Mr. Bainrothe, &quot;and destined to be
+so again. Don't you think so, Miriam?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I don't know,&quot; I said; &quot;I have never thought of such a possibility
+before, I acknowledge, yet it is natural I should incline to my
+mother's people, and I can say heartily, <i>I hope so</i>, Mr. Bainrothe.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then you want to see the Christian religion trampled under foot,&quot; said
+Evelyn, spitefully, fixing her eyes on mine.</p>
+
+<p>The blood rose hotly to my temples. &quot;No, no, indeed! You know I do not,
+Evelyn, for it is mine; but Christ died for all, Jew as well as Gentile.
+Through him let us hope for change and mercy and peace on earth. When
+infinite harmony prevails, the Hebrew race will find its appointed place
+and level again, through one great principle.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My idea is, that it has found its appointed place and level, and will
+abide there.&mdash;But to digress, when do you expect your son, Mr.
+Bainrothe?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I have anticipated by many years in giving this snatch of conversation
+here. Let us go back to the time of my father's marriage, and to affairs
+as they stood then, for precious are the unities.</p>
+
+<p>I need not drop Mr. Bainrothe, however, and it was of him, our left-hand
+neighbor, so intimately connected with our destiny, one and all, that I
+was about to speak when the digression occurred which led me from the
+high-road of my story.</p>
+
+<p>Our &quot;sinister neighbor,&quot; as my father laughingly called him sometimes
+with unconscious truth, in reference to his <i>left-hand</i> adjacency, was a
+handsome and gentlemanly-looking man of no very particular age, or
+rather in his appearance there was no criterion for decision on this
+subject. His form was as slender and elastic, his step as light, his
+teeth, hair, and complexion, as unexceptionable as though he had been
+twenty-five; nor were there any of those signs and symptoms about him by
+which the weather-wise usually measure experience and length of days.</p>
+
+<p>If care had come nigh him at all, it had swept as lightly past him as
+time itself. His address was invariably urbane, self-possessed,
+well-bred; his voice was pleasant, his smile rather brilliant, though it
+never reached his eyes, except when he sneered, which was rarely and
+terribly.</p>
+
+<p>They glittered then with a strange cold light, those variegated orbs,
+but their ordinary expression was earnest and investigatory. They were
+well-cut eyes, moreover, of a yellowish-brown color, and I used to
+remark as a little child&mdash;for children observe the minutiae of personal
+peculiarities much more closely than their elders&mdash;that the iris of both
+orbs was speckled with green and golden spots, which seemed to mix and
+dilate occasionally, and gave them a decidedly kaleidoscopic effect.</p>
+
+<p>His skin was clear and even florid, and his lips had the peculiarity of
+turning suddenly white, or rather livid, without any evident cause. This
+my father thought betokened disease of the heart, but I learned later to
+know it was the only manifestation of suppressed feeling which the habit
+of his life could not overcome, and that proved him still mortal and
+fallible.</p>
+
+<p>He had bought and moved into the house he occupied, in his single
+estate, with a few efficient servants, soon after my father had taken
+possession of his own larger mansion, and it was not long before the
+best understanding existed between these two. My father's <i>hauteur</i> was
+no safeguard against the steady and self-poised approaches&mdash;his shyness
+found relief in the calm self-reliance of his &quot;left-hand&quot; neighbor; and,
+as they were both lovers of books, rather than students thereof, a
+congeniality of tastes on literary subjects drew them together in those
+hours of leisure which Mr. Bainrothe usually passed in his own or my
+father's library, in the cultivation of the <i>dolce far niente</i>&mdash;I beg
+pardon&mdash;his mind.</p>
+
+<p>What his occupation was, if indeed he had any worthy of a definite name,
+I never knew. That he was a kind of intermediate agent or broker I have
+since suspected. His leisure seemed infinite. He came and went to and
+from the business part of the city several times a day, and often in the
+elegant barouche he kept, with its span of highly-groomed horses and
+respectable-looking negro driver in simple livery&mdash;an old retainer of
+his house, as he informed my father, faithful still, though freed in the
+time of universal emancipation.</p>
+
+<p>His association was undoubtedly, to some extent, with the best men of
+the town&mdash;bankers and merchants chiefly; and once, when my father had
+called in a considerable sum of money which he had loaned out at
+interest on good mortgages, for a term of years, he was so obliging as
+to interest the most notable bankers of the city in its safe and prompt
+reinvestment.</p>
+
+<p>This gentleman dined with us on one occasion at this period, when his
+conference with my father intrenched on our late dinner-hour, and I
+shall never forget the singular beauty of his face and expression, nor
+the charm of his manner, as he sat at our board discoursing, with an
+<i>abandon</i> and witchery I have observed in no one else, on subjects of
+art and letters, on men and manners, of nations past and present, until
+hours fled like moments, and time seemed utterly forgotten in the
+presence of geniality and genius. Then, starting gayly and suddenly to
+his feet, he remembered an engagement, and sped away so abruptly that
+his visit seemed to me but a vision breaking in on the monotony of our
+lives, too bright to have been lasting.</p>
+
+<p>Afterward, invitations came repeatedly to my father, for his grand
+dinners and <i>lev&eacute;es</i>, from this potentate, for he <i>was</i> a prince and a
+leader in those days of a society that, more than any other I have
+known, requires such leadership to make its conventionalities available;
+but these were not accepted, though appreciated and gratefully
+acknowledged. Nor could Mr. Bainrothe, with all his influence over him
+(that rare influence that a worldly and efficient man wields over a shy
+and retiring one unacquainted with the detail of affairs, and dependent
+upon active assistance in their management), prevail upon him to break
+through the monotonous routine of his life so far as to accept any one
+of them. His church, the theatre, when a British star appeared, his
+hearth and home&mdash;these were my father's hobbies and resources. Travel
+and society abroad he equally shrank from and abjured, or the presence
+of strange guests in his household circle.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I will change all this, when I grow up, Mrs. Austin,&quot; I heard Evelyn
+say, one day. &quot;We shall have parties and pleasures then, like other
+people, and, instead of masters and tedious old church humdrums, Mr.
+Lodore and the like, you shall see beaux and belles dashing up to this
+out-of-the-way place; and I will make papa build a ballroom, and we
+shall have a band and supper once a month. You know he can afford any
+thing he likes of that sort, and as for me&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Child, it will never be,&quot; she interrupted, shaking her head gravely.
+&quot;Mr. and Mrs. Monfort&quot; (my father was again married then) &quot;are too much
+wedded to their own ways for that, and, besides, you and Miriam will not
+be ready to go out together, and the money is all hers&mdash;don't forget
+that, my dear Evelyn, and <i>you</i> must go back to England to your own, and
+I&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That I will never do,&quot; she in turn interrupted haughtily. &quot;Play second
+fiddle, indeed, to mamma's grand relations, mean, and proud, and
+presumptuous, I dare say, and full of scorn for me (a poor
+army-captain's daughter), as they were for my father? No, I shall stay
+here and shine to the best of my ability. The money is all papa's while
+he lives, and he is still a young man, you know, and Miriam's turn will
+come when mine is over. One at a time, you see. Good gracious! it would
+seem like throwing away money, though, to dress up that little dingy
+thing in pearls and laces. Ten to one but what she will marry that lame
+imp next door as soon as she is grown, and endow him with the whole of
+it&mdash;that 'little devil on two sticks,' and I must have my run before
+then, of course.&quot; She laughed merrily at the conceit.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I hear you, Evelyn Erie,&quot; I exclaimed tragically from the balcony on
+which I sat, engaged, on this occasion, in illuminating, with the most
+brilliant colors my paint-box afforded, a book of engravings for the
+especial benefit of George Gaston. It was his private opinion that
+Titian himself never painted with more skill, or gorgeous effect, than
+the youthful artist in his particular employ. &quot;I hear you, miss, and you
+ought to be ashamed of yourself to talk so behind his back, of a poor,
+afflicted boy like George, too good, a thousand times too good, to marry
+any one, even Cinderella herself. 'The devil on two sticks,' indeed!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't preach, I pray, Miriam. You have quite a dispensation in that way
+lately, I perceive. If you <i>must</i> eavesdrop, keep quiet about it now and
+hereafter, I beg.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was not eavesdropping,&quot; I screamed. &quot;I have been painting out here
+all the afternoon, and Mrs. Austin knows it, and so might you. You are
+always accusing me of doing wrong and mean things that I would cut off
+my&quot;&mdash;hesitating for a comparison&mdash;&quot;my curls rather than do. Let me
+alone!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your curls, indeed!&quot; and she came out of the window and stood on the
+balcony beside me. &quot;Do you call those tufts your curls?&quot; taking one of
+them disdainfully with the tips of her dainty fingers, then pulling it
+sharply. &quot;They make you look like a little water-dog, that's what they
+do, and I am going to cut them off at once.&mdash;Bring me the scissors, Mrs.
+Austin, and let me begin.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>In the struggle that ensued my paints were upset, my pallet broken, and
+my book drenched with the water from the glass in which I dipped my
+brushes, but, as usual, Evelyn gained the victory which her superior
+strength insured from the beginning, and fled from my wrath, after
+holding my hands awhile, laughingly entreating mercy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I will kill her some day, Mrs. Austin, if she persecutes me so,&quot; I
+cried, as I lay sobbing on the bed after the conflict was over. &quot;I am
+afraid of myself sometimes when she tantalizes me so dreadfully. I am
+glad you held me when I got hold of the scissors; I am glad she held me
+afterward. I might&mdash;I might&quot;&mdash;I hesitated&mdash;&quot;have stabbed her to the
+heart,&quot; was in my mind, but the tragic threat faltered upon my lips.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pray to God, Miriam Monfort, to subdue your temper,&quot; said the
+well-meaning but injudicious nurse, solemnly. &quot;Your sister is old enough
+to make sport with you whenever she likes, without such returns.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I wish mamma was at home,&quot; I said, still sobbing. &quot;She would not allow
+me to be so treated; but it is always the way&mdash;as soon as she turns her
+back, Evelyn besets me, and you look on and encourage her.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I do no such thing,&quot; said Mrs. Austin, sharply. &quot;You have no business
+to take up cudgels for every outsider that your sister mentions, as you
+do. She is afraid to speak her mind before you, for fear of a fuss.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I hate deceit,&quot; I said, wiping my eyes; &quot;and deceitful people, too. I
+love my friends behind their backs the same as to their faces&mdash;just the
+same.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What makes you mock Mr. Bainrothe then, and show how he minces at
+table, and uses his rattan?&quot; she asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. Bainrothe is not my friend; besides, I said no harm of him. I don't
+love him, and never will, and he knows it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Were you rude enough to tell him so, Miriam?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, but he understands very well. I never mimic any one I love.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yet you love that rough, old Mr. Gerald Stanbury, as cross as a cur.
+What taste!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, from my heart I love him. He is good, he is true, he is noble;
+that is what he is. He has no specks in his eyes. He does not say, 'Just
+so,' whenever papa opens his lips.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O Miriam! not to like him for that!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No; that is just why I <i>don't</i> like him. He has no mind of his own&mdash;or
+maybe he has two minds. Mamma thinks so, I know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She has told you so, I suppose?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If she had, I would not talk about it. No, she never told me so. I
+found it out myself. I know what she thinks, though, of every one, just
+by looking at her.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then what does she think of me?&quot; asked Mrs. Austin, sharply.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That you are a good, dear old nurse,&quot; I said, with a sudden revulsion
+of feeling, jumping up and throwing my arms about her; &quot;only a little,
+very little, bit fonder of Evelyn than me. But that is natural. She is
+so much prettier and older than I am, and takes better care of her
+clothes. Besides, I am cross about dressing, I know I am; and afterward
+I am always so sorry.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My Miriam always had a good heart,&quot; said Mrs. Austin, quite subdued,
+and returning my embraces. &quot;And now let me call Charity to wash and comb
+and dress you before your mamma comes home. You know she always likes to
+see you looking nicely. But soon you must learn to do this for yourself;
+Charity will be wanted for other uses.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I know, I know,&quot; I cried, jumping up and down; &quot;Evelyn told me all
+about it yesterday,&quot; and the flush of joy mounted to my brow. &quot;Won't we
+be too happy, Mrs. Austin, when our own dear little brother or sister
+comes?&quot; And I clasped my hands across my bare neck, hugging myself in
+ecstasy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I don't know, child; there's no telling. What fingers&quot; (holding them up
+wofully to the light); &quot;every color of the rainbow! That green stain
+will be very hard to get out of your nails. How careless you are,
+Miriam! But, as I was saying, there's no telling what to expect from an
+unborn infant. It's wrong to speculate on such uncertainties; it's
+tempting Providence, Miriam. In the first place, it may be deformed, I
+shouldn't wonder&mdash;that lame boy about so much&mdash;short of one leg, at
+least.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Deformed! O Mrs. Austin! how dreadful! I never thought of that.&quot; And I
+began to shiver before her mysterious suggestions.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Or it may be a poor, senseless idiot like Johnny Gibson. <i>He</i> comes
+here for broken victuals constantly, you know, and your mamma sees him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mrs. Austin, don't talk so, for pity's sake,&quot; catching at her gown
+wildly; &quot;don't! you frighten me to death.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Or it may be (stand still directly, Miriam, and let met get this paint
+off your ear)&mdash;or it may be, for aught we know or can help, born with a
+hard, proud, wicked heart, that may show itself in bad actions&mdash;cruelty,
+deceit, or even&mdash;&quot; she hesitated, drearily.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mrs. Austin, <i>sha'n't</i> say such things about that poor, innocent little
+thing,&quot; I cried out, stamping my foot impatiently, &quot;that isn't even
+born.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, well; there's no use rejoicing too soon, that's all I mean to
+say. And why <i>you</i> should be glad, child, to have your own nose broken,
+is more than I can see,&quot; with a deep and awful groan.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;For pity's sake, stop! I <i>am</i> glad, I <i>will</i> be glad, there now! as
+glad as I please, just because I know mamma will be glad, and papa will
+be glad, and George Gaston will be glad, and because I do so adore
+babies, sin or no sin; I can't help what you think; I say it again, I
+<i>do</i> adore them. No, I ain't afraid of 'God's eternal anger' at all for
+saying so; not a bit afraid. What does He make them so sweet for if He
+does not expect us to love them dearly&mdash;His little angels on earth?
+Whenever a baby passes here with its nurse, I run after it and stop it
+and play with it as long as I can; and oh, I wish so often we had one of
+our own here at home!&quot; embracing myself again with enthusiasm.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Evelyn is right; you are a very absurd child, Miriam,&quot; she said,
+smiling, in spite of her efforts to keep grave; &quot;very silly, even.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And you are a very foolish, dear old nurse, and you <i>will</i> love our
+baby, too, won't you now?&quot; clasping her also, zealously.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Be still, child&mdash;here comes Charity. She will think you crazy to be
+rumpling my cap in that way, and talking about such matters. You are
+getting to be a perfect tomboy, Miriam! What would your papa say if he
+could see you now, so dirty and disorderly&mdash;your papa, as neat as a pink
+always?&mdash;Charity, what kept you so long to-day? Be quick and get Miss
+Miriam's new cambric dress, and her blue sash, and her new, long, gray
+kid gloves, and her leghorn hat, and white zephyr scarf. She is going to
+drive out presently with her mamma and papa, and must look decent for
+once in a while.&quot; After a pause she continued: &quot;Miss Evelyn was dressed
+an hour ago, and is ready at the gate now, with her leghorn flat on and
+her parasol in her hand, I'll be bound,&quot; looking from the window. &quot;There
+comes Norman Stanbury home from school. That's the idea, is it?&quot; and the
+good nurse looked grave. &quot;It will never do, it will never do in the
+world,&quot; she said, as she glanced at them, then turned away, shaking her
+head dolefully. &quot;My child, my pretty piece of wax-work, must do better
+than that comes to. Her blood must never mix with such as runs in the
+veins of the Stanbury clan.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>About a month later the feeble wail of my little sister greeted my ear
+as I entered my mamma's room one morning, in obedience to her summons,
+and my heart was filled with a rapture almost as great as hers who owned
+this priceless treasure.</p>
+
+<p>Three weeks later, very suddenly and most unexpectedly, my dear mamma
+was stricken mortally as she sat, apparently quite convalescent, in her
+deep chair by the cradle, smiling at and caressing her infant. Mrs.
+Austin and I were alone in the room with her; papa and Evelyn had gone
+out for a walk. I had just been thinking how very pretty she looked that
+day in her white wrapper, with a pink ribbon at the throat, and her
+little, closely-fitting lace cap, through which her rich brown hair was
+distinctly visible. She had a fine oval face, clear, pallid skin, and
+regular though not perfect features, and never appeared so interesting
+or beautiful as now, in the joy and pride of her new maternity. Suddenly
+she grew strikingly pale, gasped, stretched out her hands, fixed her
+imploring eyes on me, and fell back, half fainting, in her chair.</p>
+
+<p>By the time we had placed her on her bed she was insensible, breathing
+hard, though with a low fluttering pulse, that kept hope alive until the
+doctor came. The moment he beheld her he knew that all was over;
+remedies were tried in vain. She never spoke again, and, when my father
+returned an hour later, a senseless mass of snow replaced the young wife
+he had left, happy and hopeful.</p>
+
+<p>I was spared the first manifestations of his agony, in which
+disappointment and the idea of being pursued by a relentless fate bore
+so great a part, by my own condition, which rendered me insensible for
+nearly thirty hours, to all that passed around me. It was afternoon when
+I awoke, as if from a deep sleep, to find myself alone with Mrs. Austin
+in my chamber.</p>
+
+<p>Except from a sense of lassitude I experienced no unpleasant sensations,
+and I found myself marveling at the causes that could have consigned me
+in health to my bed and bed-gown, to my shadowed chamber and the
+supervision of my faithful nurse, when the sound of suppressed yet
+numerous footsteps in the hall below met my ear, and the consciousness
+that something unusual was going on took possession of and quickened my
+still lethargic faculties.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What does all this mean, Mrs. Austin?&quot; I asked at last, in a voice
+feeble as an infant's, &quot;and what are those steps below? Why am I so
+weak, and what are you doing here? Answer me, I beseech you,&quot; and I
+clasped my hands piteously.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Eat your panada, Miriam, and ask no questions,&quot; she said, lifting a
+bowl from above a spirit-lamp on the chimney-piece, and bearing it
+toward me. &quot;Here it is, nice and hot. The doctor said you were to take
+it as soon as you awoke.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I received eagerly the nourishment of which I stood so greatly in need,
+spiced and seasoned as it was with nutmegs and Madeira wine, and, as I
+felt new strength return to me with the warmth that coursed through my
+veins, the memory of all that had passed surged rapidly back, as a
+suspended wave breaks on the strand, and with the shock I was restored
+to perfect consciousness.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I know what it all means now,&quot; I cried. &quot;Mamma! mamma! Let me go to my
+poor mamma!&quot; and before she could arrest my steps I flew to the head of
+the stairway, dressed as I was in my white bed-gown, and was about to
+descend, when Dr. Pemberton stopped my progress.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Go back, Miriam; I must see you a moment before you can go
+down-stairs,&quot; he said, calmly, and with authority in his voice. &quot;Nay,
+believe me, I will not restrain you a moment longer than necessary, if
+you are obedient now.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you promise this?&quot; I cried, sobbing bitterly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I do,&quot; and he led me gently back to Mrs. Austin, then examined my
+pulse, my countenance carefully, inquired if I had taken nourishment,
+gave me a few drops from a vial he afterward left on the table for use,
+and, signifying his will to Mrs. Austin, went calmly but sorrowfully
+from the room.</p>
+
+<p>My simple toilet was speedily made. My dress consisted of a
+white-cambric gown, I remember, over which Mrs. Austin bound, with some
+fantastic notion of impromptu mourning, a little scarf of black <i>crepe</i>,
+passing over one shoulder and below the other, like those worn by the
+pall-bearers; and, so attired, she took me by the hand and led me, dumb
+with amazement and grief, through the crowd that surged up the stairs
+and in the hall and parlors below, into the drawing-room, where, on its
+tressels, the velvet-covered coffin stood alone and still open, its
+occupant waiting in marble peace and dumb patience for the last rites of
+religion and affection to sanctify her repose, ere darkness and solitude
+should close around her forever.</p>
+
+<p>The spell that had controlled me was rent away, when I saw that sweet
+and well-beloved aspect once again fixed in a stillness and composure
+that I knew must be eternal, the tender eyes sealed away from mine
+forever, the fine sensitive ear dull, expression obliterated! I flung
+myself in a passion of grief across the coffin. I kissed the waxen face
+and hands a thousand times and bathed them with scalding tears, then
+stooping down to the dulled ear I whispered:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mamma! mamma! hear me, if your soul is still in your breast, as I
+believe it is; I want to say something that will comfort you: I want to
+promise you to take care of your little baby all my days and hers, to
+divide all I have with her&mdash;to live for her, to die for her if such
+need comes&mdash;never to leave her if I can help it, or to let any one
+oppress her. Do you hear me, Mamma Constance?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What are you whispering about, Miriam?&quot; said Mrs. Austin, drawing me
+away grimly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There, did you see her smile?&quot; I asked, as in my childish imagination
+that sweet expression, that comes with the relaxation of the muscles to
+some dead faces toward the last of earth, seemed to transfigure hers as
+with an angel grace. &quot;Her soul has not gone away yet,&quot; I murmured, &quot;she
+heard me, <i>she believed me</i>,&quot; and I clasped my hands tightly and sank on
+my knees beside the coffin, devoutly thanking God for this great
+consolation.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Child, child, you are mad,&quot; she said, drawing me suddenly to my feet.
+&quot;Come away, Miriam, this is no place for you; I wonder at Dr. Pemberton!
+That coffin ought to be closed at once, for decay has set in; and there
+is no sense in supposing the spirit in the poor, crumbling body, when
+such signs as these exist,&quot; and she pointed to two blue spots on the
+throat and chin.</p>
+
+<p>I did not understand her then&mdash;I thought they were bruises received in
+life&mdash;and wondered what she meant as well as I could conjecture at such
+a time of bewilderment; but still I resolutely refused to leave my dear
+one's side, sobbing passionately when Mr. Lodore came in to take me away
+at last, in obedience to Dr. Pemberton's orders.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come, Miriam, this will never do,&quot; he said. &quot;Grief must have its way,
+but reason must be listened to as well. You have been ill yourself, and
+your friends are anxious about you; if your mamma could speak to you,
+she would ask you to go to your chamber and seek repose. Nay, more, she
+would tell you that, for all the thrones of the earth, she would not
+come back if she could, and forsake her angel estate.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not even to see her baby?&quot; I asked, through my blinding tears. &quot;O Mr.
+Lodore, you must be mistaken about that; you are wrong, if you are a
+preacher, for she told me lately she valued her life chiefly for its
+sake; and I heard her praying one night to be spared to raise it up to
+womanhood.&mdash;Mamma! mamma! you would come back to us I know, if God would
+let you, but you cannot, you cannot; He is so strong, so cruel! and He
+holds you fast.&quot; And I sobbed afresh, covering up my face.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miriam, what words are these?&mdash;Mr. Monfort, I am pleased that you have
+come. It is best for your little daughter to retire; she is greatly
+moved and excited;&quot; and, yielding to my father's guidance and
+persuasion, I went passively from the presence of the dead, into which
+came, a moment later, the hushed crowd of her church-people and our few
+private friends, assembled to witness her obsequies.</p>
+
+<p>Evelyn Erie accompanied my father to the grave as one of the chief
+mourners, and at my entreaty Mrs. Austin laid my little sister on the
+bed by my side, and I was soothed and strengthened by the sight of her
+baby loveliness as nothing else could have soothed and strengthened me.</p>
+
+<p>Then, solemnly and in my own heart, I renewed the promise I had made the
+dead, and as far as in me lay have I kept it, Mabel, through thy life
+and mine!</p>
+
+<p>I roused from an uneasy sleep an hour later, to find George Gaston at my
+side.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have brought you this, Miriam,&quot; he said, &quot;because I thought it might
+help you to bear up. It is a little book my mother loved; perhaps you
+can read it and understand it when you are older even if you cannot now.
+See, there is a cross on the back, and such a pretty picture of Jesus in
+the front. It is for you to <i>keep</i> forever, Miriam. It is called Keble's
+'Christian Year.'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you, George,&quot; and I kissed him, murmuring, &quot;But I do not think I
+shall ever read any more,&quot; tearfully.</p>
+
+<p>He, too, begged to see the baby for all recompense&mdash;his darling as well
+as mine thenceforth; and I recall to this hour the lovely face of the
+boy, with all his clustering, nut-brown curls damp with the clammy
+perspiration incident to his debility, bending above the tiny infant as
+it lay in sweet repose, with words of pity and tenderness, and tearful,
+steadfast eyes that seemed filled with almost angelic solicitude and
+solemn blessing.</p>
+
+<p>Two guardians of ten years old then clasped hands above its downy head,
+and in childish earnestness vowed to one another to protect, to cherish,
+to defend it as long as life was spared to either. Hannibal was not
+older than we were when he swore his famous oath at Carthage, kneeling
+at the feet of Hamilcar before the altar, to hate the Romans. How was
+our oath of love less solemn or impressive than his of hatred?&mdash;pledged
+as it was, too, in the presence of an angel too lately freed from
+earth's bondage not to hover still around her prison-house and above the
+sleeping cherub she left so lately!</p>
+
+<p>Such resolutions, however carried out, react on the character that
+conceives them. I felt from that time strengthened, uplifted, calmed, as
+I had never felt before. I learned the precious secret of patience in
+watching over that baby head, and for its sake grew forbearing to all
+around; toward Evelyn, even, whose taunts were so hard to bear, so
+unendurable on occasions.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There is a great change in Miriam,&quot; she said one day to Norman
+Stanbury. &quot;I believe she is getting religion, or perhaps she and George
+Gaston are training themselves to go forth as married missionaries,
+after a while, to the heathen. They are studying parental responsibility
+already, one at the head and the other at the foot of the baby's
+cradle-carriage, but I am afraid it will be but a <i>lame</i> concern, after
+all.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>We both heard this cruel speech and the laugh that succeeded it, in
+passing by, as it was intended we should do, probably&mdash;heard it in
+silence, and perhaps it may be said in dignity, not even a remark being
+interchanged between us concerning it; but I saw George Gaston flush to
+the roots of his hair.</p>
+
+<p>A few minutes later we were ourselves laughing merrily over the baby's
+ineffectual efforts to catch a bunch of scarlet roses which George
+dangled above her head, and, altogether forgetful of Evelyn's sneer,
+bumped our heads together in trying to kiss her.</p>
+
+<p>In truth, my superb sense of womanhood lifted me quite above all
+frivolous suggestions; thenceforth George seemed to me physically almost
+as much of a baby as Mabel, and was nearly as dependent on my aid. In
+his sudden fits of exhaustion and agony of such uncertain recurrence as
+to render it dangerous for him to venture forth alone, he always turned
+with confidence to my supporting and guiding hand.</p>
+
+<p>I taught him his lessons in the intervals of my own studies, which he
+recited when he could to a private teacher, the same who gave me
+lessons.</p>
+
+<p>Evelyn preferred a public school, and was sent, at her own request, to
+a fashionable establishment in the city attended by the <i>&eacute;lite</i> alone,
+as the enormous prices charged for tuition indicated, as a day-boarder.
+There she became proficient in mere mechanical music&mdash;her ear being a
+poor one naturally&mdash;and learned to speak two languages, dance to
+perfection, and conduct herself like a high-bred woman of fashion on all
+occasions and in all emergencies&mdash;each and all necessities for a belle,
+which, it may be remembered, she had aspired to be, and announced her
+intention of becoming.</p>
+
+<p>The fame of my father's wealth, her own beauty, tact, and grace, and
+elegant attire, rendered her conspicuous among her school-mates, and
+from among these she selected as friends such as appeared to her most
+desirable as bearing on her future plans of life. So that already Evelyn
+had made for herself a sphere outside and beyond any thing known in
+&quot;Monfort Hall&quot; or its vicinity.</p>
+
+<p>My father, who, like all shy persons, admired cool self-possession and
+the leading hand in others, looked on with quiet approbation and some
+diversion at these proceedings. He gave her the use of his equipage, his
+house, his grounds, reserving to himself only intact the refuge of his
+library, from which ark of safety he surveyed at leisure, with quiet,
+curious, and amused scrutiny, the gay young forms that on holiday
+occasions glided through his garden and conservatory, and filled his
+drawing-room and halls with laughter and revelry.</p>
+
+<p>On such occasions I was permitted, on certain conditions, to appear as a
+spectator. One of the most imperative of these was, that I was never to
+reveal to any one that Evelyn was not my own half-sister.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are not called upon to tell a story, Miriam, only to give them no
+satisfaction. You see they might as well think part of all this wealth,
+which came from your mother, is mine. It will in no way affect the
+reality&mdash;only their demeanor&mdash;for they every one worship money.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I would not care for such girls, sister Evelyn, nor what they thought,&quot;
+I rejoined. &quot;Besides, are you not an earl's granddaughter; why not boast
+of that instead, which would be the truth?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;An earl's fiddlestick! What do you suppose American girls would care
+for that? Nor would they believe it, even, unless I had diamonds and
+coronet and every thing to match. Your mother had diamonds, I know, but
+mine had not. By-the-by, where are they, Miriam? I have never seen
+them.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I do not know, Evelyn,&quot; I replied, gravely. &quot;I have never thought about
+them until now, I am so sorry your heart is set upon such things. You
+know what Mamma Constance used to tell us.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, yes, I remember she croaked continually, as all delicate, doomed
+people do, I believe. It was well enough in her case, as she <i>had</i> to
+die; but, as for me&mdash;look at me, Miriam Monfort! Do I look like death?
+No; victory, rather!&quot; and she straightened her elastic form exultingly.
+&quot;And you, too, little one, are growing up strong and tall and
+better-looking than you used to be,&quot; she continued, patting my cheek
+carelessly. &quot;The Jewish gaberdine is gradually dropping off; I mean the
+dinginess of your early complexion. By the time I have had my successful
+career, and am settled in life, yours will begin. Help me now, and I
+will help you then.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are only a school-girl,&quot; I said, sententiously. &quot;You had better be
+thinking of your lessons, and let beaux and diamonds alone. I would be
+ashamed to keep a key to my exercises and sums, as you do. I would
+blush in the dark to do such a thing.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am not preparing myself for a governess, that I should make a point
+of honor of such things, little pragmatical prig that you are; nor are
+you, that I know of. You will always have plenty of money. 'Rich as a
+Jew' is a proverb, you know, all the world over.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The taunt had long since lost its sting; so I replied, meekly:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We none of us know what may happen. I should like to be able to support
+myself and Mabel, if the worst came. Old Mr. Stanbury says all property
+is uncertain nowadays, especially in this country.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, don't repeat what that old croaking vulgarian and general leveller
+and democrat says, to me! A democrat is my aversion, anyhow. I wonder
+papa, can tolerate that coarse old Jackson man in his sight. 'Adams and
+the Federal cause forever,' say I; and all aristocratic people are on
+that side. I never enjoyed any thing so much as our illumination when
+Mr. Clay gave his casting vote, and carried Congress. The Stanbury house
+was as dark as a grave that night; but Norman was in our interest, and I
+made him halloo 'Hurrah for Adams!' That was a triumph, at all events.
+It nearly killed the old gentleman, though.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If I were a man, <i>I</i>, too, would vote for General Jackson,&quot; I
+said defiantly. &quot;He was such a brave soldier; he could defend our
+country if it was attacked again. Besides, I like his face better than
+old moon-faced Adams; and I despise Norman for his time-serving.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miriam, I shall tell papa if you utter such sentiments again; you know
+how devoted he is to the Federal party, and you ought to be ashamed of
+yourself.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That is just because Mr. Bainrothe over-persuaded him. He used to
+admire General Jackson. I heard him say once, myself, he would be the
+people's choice, next time.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I thought you accused Mr. Bainrothe of toadying papa. Where, now, is
+your boasted consistency?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Evelyn, you know very well that is the way to rule and toady papa.
+Yield to him apparently, and he will let you lead him and have your own
+way pretty much. You have found that out long ago, Evelyn.&quot; And I looked
+at her sharply, I confess. She colored, but did not reply. &quot;There is
+more,&quot; I said. &quot;A girl who would be ashamed of her own mother, and
+afraid to acknowledge her poverty, would not scruple to do this. I
+believe you are almost as great a humbug at heart as Mr. Bainrothe
+himself,&quot; and I smiled scornfully. &quot;That is what <i>some</i> people call
+him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She turned on me with cold, white eyes and quivering lips; she shook me
+by the shoulder until my teeth chattered and my hair tossed up and down
+like a pony's mane blown by the winds, with her long, nervous fingers.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Inform on me if you dare,&quot; she said, &quot;or utter such an opinion to papa,
+and I will make you and your baby both suffer for it, and that lame
+hop-toad too, who follows you everywhere like your shadow! Moreover, if
+you do breathe a syllable of this slander, I shall tell Mr. Bainrothe
+your opinion of him, and make <i>him</i> your enemy. And mark me, Miriam
+Monfort, precious Hebrew imp that you are, you could not have a direr
+one, not even if you searched your old Jewish Bible through and through
+for a parallel, or called up Satan himself. I shall tell papa, too, that
+you are a story-teller, so that he will never again believe one word
+that you say, miss!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You could not convince him of that,&quot; I said, disengaging myself from
+her grasp, &quot;if you were to try, for I have honest eyes in my head, not
+speckled like a toad's back, nor turning white with rage like a
+tree-frog laid on a window-sill; but, if you ever dare to lay your hand
+on me again, Evelyn Erle, I will tell papa <i>every thing</i>&mdash;there, now!
+This is the last time, remember.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I did not hurt you, and you know it, Miriam; I only shook you to settle
+your brains,&quot; and she laughed a ghastly laugh, &quot;and to make you a little
+bit afraid of me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am not afraid of you,&quot; I said, &quot;that is one comfort; and you can
+never make me so again; and I am not a mischief-maker, that is another;
+so rest in peace. <i>Pass</i> for my sister if you choose, and are proud of
+the title; I shall not say yes or no, but of this be certain, you are no
+sister of mine, though I call you such, either in heart or blood. I do
+not love you, Evelyn Erle; and, if I were not afraid of the anger of God
+and my own heart, I would <i>let</i> myself hate you, and strike you. But I
+always try and remember what mamma said, and what Mr. Lodore tells us
+every Sunday. Yet I find it hard.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Little hypocrite! little Jew!&quot; burst from her angry lips, and she left
+the room in a whirl of rage, not forgetting, however, to write me a very
+smooth note before she went to school next morning, which was, with her
+usual tact, slipped under my pillow before I awoke; and, after that, all
+was outward peace between us for a season.</p>
+
+<p>Evelyn was about sixteen when this occurred, I nearly twelve. The next
+year she left school and made her <i>d&eacute;but</i> in society, and, through her
+machinations, no doubt, I was sent away to a distant boarding-school for
+two years, coming home only at holiday intervals thereafter to my
+dearest baby, my home, my parent, and narrow circle of friends, and
+finding Miss Erle more and more in possession of my father's confidence,
+even to the arrangement of his papers and participation in the knowledge
+of his business transactions, and entirely installed as the head of the
+house, which post she maintained ever afterward indomitably.</p>
+
+<p>Singularly enough, however, Mr. Bainrothe seemed secretly to prefer me
+at this period, however much he openly inclined to her, and he lost no
+occasion of privately speaking to me in rapturous terms (such as I never
+heard him employ in the presence of Evelyn and my father) of his only
+son, then absent in Germany engaged in the prosecution of his studies,
+but to return home, he told me, to remain, as soon as he had completed
+his majority.</p>
+
+<p>It was only through our knowledge of his son's age, and his admissions
+as to the time of his own early marriage, that we arrived at any
+estimate of Mr. Bainrothe's years; for, as I have said, Time, in his
+case, had omitted what he so rarely forgets to imprint&mdash;his sign manual
+on his exterior.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="I_CHAPTER_III"></a><h2>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>The school to which I was sent was half a day's journey from the city of
+our residence, situated in a small but ancient town of Revolutionary
+notoriety. The river, very wide at that point, was shaded by
+willow-trees to some extent along its banks, immediately in front of the
+Academy of St. Mark's, and beyond it to a considerable distance on
+either hand. The town itself was an old-fashioned, primitive village
+rather than burgh, quaintly built, and little adorned by modern taste or
+improvement; but the air was fine and elastic, the water
+unexceptionable, and bathing and boating were among our privileged
+amusements. Among other less useful accomplishments, I there acquired
+that of swimming expertly; and, as a place of exile, this quaint town
+answered as well as any other for the intended purpose.</p>
+
+<p>For, notwithstanding my father's assurances that Dr. Pemberton had
+recommended change of air&mdash;to some degree true, of course&mdash;and that he
+himself believed a public course of study would exhaust me less than my
+solitary lessons, to which I gave such undivided attention, and
+notwithstanding Evelyn's professions of regret at the necessity of
+parting with me, and Mrs. Austin's belief that the &quot;baby was killing me
+by inches,&quot; since she took it into her head to sleep with no one else,
+and to play half the night, and to stay with me all day besides, I felt
+myself &quot;ostracized.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The whole matter was so sudden that I scarcely knew what to make of it.
+Mr. Bainrothe alone let in a little light upon the subject by one
+remark, unintentionally, no doubt:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The fact is, Miriam, you are getting too much wound up with that
+Stanbury family, and you would be perfectly entangled there in another
+year. The idea of putting the whole hardship of George Gaston's
+education on your shoulders was worthy of diplomatic brains, and
+something I should scarcely have suspected that calm, quiet little woman
+to have been capable of conceiving. There is an old, worn-out plantation
+in the Gaston family, that your money would set going again, no doubt,
+with accelerated velocity. Did you never suspect anything of that sort?&quot;
+he asked, carelessly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Never; nor did I suppose any one else was stupid or wicked enough to
+entertain such an idea. I, being tolerably acute, <i>knew</i> better,
+fortunately.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear little girl, you are entirely too chivalrous and confiding
+where your feelings are engaged. What if I were to assure that this plan
+had been agitated?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I should think you had been deceived, or that you were deceiving me,
+one or the other. I should not <i>believe</i> you, that would be all. You
+understand me now, Mr. Bainrothe; there are no purer people than the
+Stanburys&mdash;I wish every one was half as good and true.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Old Gerald at the head of them, I suppose?&quot; with a sneer and a
+kaleidoscopic glance.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. Gerald Stanbury at the head of them,&quot; I reiterated firmly, adding:
+&quot;These are friends of mine, Mr. Bainrothe; it hurts and offends me to
+hear them lightly discussed. If I am sent away from home to break off my
+affection for them, the measure is a vain one, for I shall returned
+unchanged.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, but with enlarged views, I trust, Miriam,&quot; he rejoined,
+pertinaciously. &quot;See how Evelyn was improved by her two years at school;
+besides, how would you ever increase your circle of acquaintances here,
+studying alone, or even with your shy disposition, at a day-school?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am sent from home, then, to make acquaintances it seems, and to
+prepare for my <i>d&eacute;but</i> into society? Very well, I shall not forget that;
+but pray, what particular advantage in this respect does a
+country-school present?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, the very first people send their daughters to St. Mark's. If I were
+training a wife for my son, I should educate her there. What higher
+eulogium could I bestow, or&quot;&mdash;dropping his voice&mdash;&quot;what higher
+compliment pay you, Miriam?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If he were a king's son, you could not speak more confidently,&quot; I
+rejoined, with inexcusable rudeness. &quot;Remember, too, you are <i>not</i>
+training a wife for your prince in disguise.&quot; But I was annoyed and
+irritated by his patronizing manner, and the suspicion that took
+possession of me from that time, that he had aided Evelyn in this
+conspiracy against my peace for selfish views.</p>
+
+<p>He laughed carelessly and turned away, but I saw triumph in his
+variegated eye; yet was I powerless to resent it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am leaving my poor papa bound hand and foot,&quot; I thought, &quot;in
+designing hands, but I cannot help it. He has chosen for himself, I will
+not entreat his affection, his confidence, misplaced as they surely are.
+I <i>cannot</i> do this if I would; something stronger than myself binds me
+to silence. But O papa, papa! if you only knew how I loved you, you
+would not suffer these strangers to take my place, or banish your poor
+Miriam so cruelly!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't let Mabel forget me,&quot; were the last words I spoke to Mrs. Austin,
+as with a bursting heart I turned from the lovely child I had made
+perhaps too much an idol; &quot;and George, let her see George Gaston every
+day; it will be a comfort to both.&quot; So, choking, I went my way.</p>
+
+<p>I bade Evelyn &quot;good-by&quot; gayly, Mr. Bainrothe superciliously, my father
+bitterly, for I felt his ingratitude to my heart's core; and, under dear
+old Mr. Stanbury's escort, went to the steamboat, there to find one of
+the lady principals of the academy ready to take charge of me on our
+brief voyage. It was not in my nature to cherish depression or to make
+complaints and sudden confidences, and we chatted very cheerfully all
+the way up the river on indifferent subjects chiefly; sharing fruit and
+flowers, and general observations and opinions, so that I felt quite
+inspirited on my arrival, and made, I have reason to believe, no
+unfavorable impression.</p>
+
+<p>My school-girl experiences I shall not record here. They were pleasant
+and profitable on the whole, and I earned the esteem of my teachers, by
+my zeal and diligence in my studies, and made some few valued friends
+more or less permanent, but none so dear as those I left behind.</p>
+
+<p>Laura Stanbury, quiet and uninteresting as she seemed to many, had a
+hold on my heart that no newer acquaintance could boast, and for dear
+George Gaston, where was there another like him? I have known no one so
+gifted, so spiritual, so simply affectionate, as this child of genius
+and physical misfortune, whose short but brilliant career is engraven on
+the annals of his country, I well believe, indelibly.</p>
+
+<p>When I was fifteen years old, I was recalled suddenly and in the middle
+of a busy session to my home, by the severe and almost fatal illness of
+my father. He rallied, however, soon after my return, and I had the
+inexpressible satisfaction of hearing Dr. Pemberton, our good and
+skillful family physician, pronounce him out of danger a week later, but
+he would suffer me to go from him no more. The voice of Nature asserted
+her claim at last, and, feeling within himself that indescribable
+failure of vitality in which no one is ever deceived, and which can
+never be explained to or wholly understood by another, he desired me to
+remain with him through the remainder of a life which he foresaw would
+not be long.</p>
+
+<p>It was in vain that Dr. Pemberton tried to rally him on the score of his
+old hypochondriacal tendencies, or that Evelyn quietly remarked: &quot;I am
+sure, papa, I never saw you looking better! It is a pity to interrupt
+dear Miriam now in the full tide of her studies. I am sure that <i>I</i> am
+willing to devote every moment of my time to you if needful;&quot; or that
+Mrs. Austin added: &quot;Miriam is so well, and growing so fast, that I am
+afraid to see her take on care again, for fear of a check; and now that
+Mabel is partly weaned from her they are both happy to be separated;&quot; or
+that Mr. Bainrothe carelessly interpolated: &quot;Let the child go back, my
+dear Monfort, or you will spoil her again among you. She is developing
+splendidly at St. Mark's, and you have twenty good years before you yet,
+with your unbroken English constitution.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Not even the joy manifested by George Gaston and Mrs. and Miss
+Stanbury, or bluff old Mr. Gerald, at the good news of my return, could
+shake his resolution.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miriam shall leave me no more while life is mine,&quot; he said, &quot;be it long
+or short. When she marries, I will surrender every thing I possess, save
+a stipend, into her hands, and Evelyn and Mabel and I to some extent
+will be her pensioners thereafter. Until that time, matters will stand
+as they do now.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Folly, folly, Colonel Monfort! You talk like a dotard of eighty; you, a
+superb-looking man yet, younger than I am, no doubt; young enough to
+marry again, if the fancy took you, and head a second family.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why not say a third?&quot; asked my father, sadly. &quot;Don't you know,
+Bainrothe, I am a fatal upas-tree to the wives of my bosom? See how it
+has been already.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Better luck next time. Now, there is the Widow Stanbury, willing and
+waiting, you know, and a dozen others.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I turned a flashing eye upon him that silenced him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You know better than that,&quot; I said, in suppressed tones, hoarse with
+anger. &quot;Better let that subject rest hereafter, unless, indeed, your
+object is feud with me. You shall not slander my friends with impunity,
+nor must you come any longer between me and them and my father.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I spoke, for his ear alone, and waited for no reply. I understood his
+game by this time, as he did mine.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;His son, indeed!&quot; I murmured, with a scornful lip, as I found myself
+alone. &quot;I would cut off my right hand before I would give it to a
+Bainrothe,&quot; and I scoffed at him bitterly in the depths of my resentful
+Judaic heart.</p>
+
+<p>About this time I passed through a painful trial. It was autumn, and
+early fires of wood had been kindled in the chambers; more, so far, for
+the sake of cheerfulness than warmth. Mabel was playing on the hearth of
+her nursery preparatory to going to bed, and I was in the adjoining
+room, my own chamber, making an evening toilet, for Evelyn expected a
+party of young visitors that night, and my presence had been requested.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Austin, it seemed, had left the room for one moment, when a cry
+from Mabel brought me to her side. She had fanned the fire with her
+little cambric night-dress, and was already in a blaze. I caught Mrs.
+Austin's heavy shawl from the bed, and promptly extinguished the flames,
+but not without receiving serious injury myself. The child, with the
+exception of a slight but painful burn on her ankle, was unhurt, but my
+left arm and shoulder and bosom were fearfully burned, and for some days
+my life hung on a thread.</p>
+
+<p>Months passed before I was able to leave my own chamber, and the blow to
+my health was so severe as to induce a return of those lethargic attacks
+from which I had been entirely free for the last two years. It is true
+they were brief in duration compared to those of old, but that they
+should exist at all was a cause of anxiety and disquietude both to my
+father and physician.</p>
+
+<p>By the first of March, however, I was again in glowing health, and no
+trace remained, except those carefully-concealed scars on my shoulder,
+of my fearful injury.</p>
+
+<p>Soon after this accident had occurred, two circumstances of interest had
+taken place in our household and vicinity. One of these was the return
+of Claude Bainrothe from abroad, and the other the rather mysterious
+visit of a gentleman, young and handsome, but poorly clad, who had
+inquired for my step-mother, Mrs. Constance Monfort, and on hearing, to
+his surprise and grief, apparently, that she was dead, had gone away
+again without requesting an interview with any other member of the
+family.</p>
+
+<p>He had met Evelyn at the door just as she was about to step into the
+carriage, dressed for visiting, and had said to her, merely (as she
+asserted), as he turned away, evidently in sorrow:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am the brother of Mrs. Monfort, once Constance Glen&mdash;now, as you tell
+me, no more. What children did she leave?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;One only&mdash;a daughter,&quot; was Evelyn's reply. &quot;Not visible to-day,
+however, since she was severely burned a few days since, and is still
+confined to her bed; not dangerously ill, though.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I passed on then, as quickly as I could,&quot; said Evelyn, &quot;for I saw no
+end to questioning, and had an appointment to keep. I said, however,
+civilly, 'Suppose you call another time, when papa is disengaged. To-day
+he could not possibly receive you,' pausing on the steps for a reply.
+This was of course all that was required of me, but he merely lifted his
+hat with a cool 'Thank you, Miss Monfort,' and went his way silently. He
+evidently mistook me for you, Miriam, and I did not undeceive him. My
+greatest oversight was in forgetting to ask for his card; but his name
+was Glen, of course, as hers was, so it would have been a mere form.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The whole transaction seems to have been inconsiderate on your part,
+Evelyn,&quot; I remarked, as mildly as I could. &quot;Mamma's brother! Oh, what
+would I not have given to have seen him! Did he never return, and where
+is he now?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, never that I know of, and he has disappeared. He walked by here a
+few days later, Franklin says, when he was standing at the door with
+papa's tilbury, still very poorly dressed, but neither stopped nor
+spoke. You could not have seen him in your condition, at any rate,
+Miriam, so you need not look so vexed; and I had no idea of having papa
+annoyed so soon after his severe attack. Besides, I want no such claims
+established over Mabel. She is ours, and need desire no other relations.
+The next thing would have been an application for money, or board and
+lodging, or some such thing, no doubt.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How old did he seem to be, Evelyn?&quot; I asked, conquering a qualm of
+feeling at these words, and inexpressibly interested in her relation.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'm sure I can't tell, Miriam; about twenty-five or six, I suppose; the
+usual age of all such bores. You know mamma was seven or eight and
+twenty when she died, and she said he was much younger than herself, you
+may remember.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, yes, I recollect perfectly. Did he resemble mamma, Evelyn? Was he
+tall or short, fair or dark? Had he her lovely eyes? Do tell me about
+him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;None of these things. A sort of medium man; not at all like mamma,
+however, as far as I could see on such brief scrutiny, and as well as I
+remember; with fine eyes, however. Not as good-looking as Claude
+Bainrothe, by any means. Commonplace, very, with a seedy coat.
+By-the-way, Miriam, <i>he</i> will be back next week, I believe, and then you
+will see this phenomenon. You know Mr. Bainrothe and papa design you for
+one another.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Papa, indeed! I suppose you mean Claude Bainrothe,&quot; and I laughed
+disdainfully, I fear. &quot;Nay, it is you rather, Evelyn, who have
+captivated this piece of perfection, as far as I can learn. At least,
+this is the report that&mdash;&quot; I hesitated&mdash;colored.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Finish your sentence, Miriam. The report that your faithful spies,
+Laura Stanbury and George Gaston, have brought to you in your solitude.
+They are very observing, truly,&quot; she pursued. &quot;Creatures that never
+penetrate beneath the surface, though. Self-deluders, I fancy, however,
+rather than story-tellers.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you pretend to deny it, Evelyn? Now, look me in the eyes and say
+'No' if you dare,&quot; and I grasped her slender wrists playfully. She
+opened her large, blue eyes and fixed them full on mine, responsively.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;<i>No</i>! Now you have the unmitigated truth. Ah, Miriam, I have no wish to
+interfere with you,&quot; and she leaned forward and kissed my cheek
+tenderly, disengaging her hands as she did so. Her manner had so changed
+to me of late that she was growing rapidly into my affections, and I
+returned her embrace cordially.</p>
+
+<p>In the next moment we were laughing merrily together over the ridiculous
+schemes of the elder Bainrothe, so transparent that every one understood
+them perfectly, motive and all, and which my father winked at evidently,
+rather than favored or encouraged, as our charlatan thought he
+did&mdash;&quot;Cagliostro,&quot; as we habitually called him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The fact is, prophetess, the person in question would not suit you at
+all, with your grand ways and notions and prospects. I have fathomed his
+depth pretty successfully, and I find him full of shoals and shallows.
+Pretty well for a flirtation, though, and to keep one's hand in, but
+unavailable any further.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Having brought him to his knees, you are perfectly willing to pass him
+over to me as a bond-slave. Is that the idea, Evelyn?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Exactly, Miriam; you are always so penetrating! But don't tell, for the
+world. Old Bainrothe would never forgive me; and, as I once before told
+you in one of my savage moods, his enmity is dire&mdash;satanic!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am not afraid of Cagliostro, or his animosity,&quot; I answered; &quot;never
+was, Evelyn, as you know. The best way to disarm him is to confront him
+boldly. He is like a lion in that alone. I wish, though, he would give
+me a little of his elixir of life, for dear papa; he has never looked
+himself since that attack, though better, certainly,&mdash;oh, decidedly
+better, of course, than I dared to hope at one time ever to see him
+again. Yet I am very anxious.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Papa is well enough, Miriam; you only imagine these things. At fifty,
+you know, most men begin to break a little; then they rally again and
+look almost as well as ever in a few years, up to sixty or seventy. Look
+at Mr. Lodore! He looked older when we first knew him than he does now;
+and so did Dr. Pemberton.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That is because they have both filled out and grown more florid and
+healthy; but papa is withering away, Evelyn; shrinking day by day&mdash;his
+very step has changed recently. Oh, I hope, I hope I may be deceived!&quot;
+And I covered my face with my hands, praying aloud, as I did sometimes
+irresistibly when greatly excited. &quot;God grant, God grant us his precious
+life!&quot; I murmured. &quot;Spare him to his children!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Amen!&quot; said Evelyn Erle, solemnly.</p>
+
+<p>A few evenings after this conversation I went to see and hear the opera
+of &quot;Masaniello,&quot; then all the rage, and at the zenith of its popularity,
+with Mrs. Stanbury, Laura, and George Gaston&mdash;Norman had been recently
+placed in the navy and he was absent now, and Mr. Gerald Stanbury
+obstinately refused to accompany us to that &quot;monkey-and-parrot show,&quot; as
+he deliberately dubbed the Italian opera.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;When men and women who are in love or grief, or who are telling each
+other the news, or secrets, stop to set their words to music, and roar
+and howl in each other's ears, the world will be mad, and the opera
+natural,&quot; he said. &quot;I will not lend my countenance before them to such a
+villainous travesty.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>As &quot;Masaniello&quot; had nearly had its run, and Evelyn was disinclined to
+see it again, having attended during the winter about twenty
+representations of this great musical spectacle, I was fain to go with
+our neighbors and their very youthful escort, or forego my opera.</p>
+
+<p>As we entered the crowded lobby, Laura and I walked together behind
+George Gaston and Mrs. Stanbury, dropping later into Indian file as the
+crowd increased, in which order I was the last. I wore a rich India
+shawl, that had been my mother's, caught by a cameo clasp across the
+bosom. Suddenly I felt the pin wrenched away and the shawl torn from my
+shoulders. In another moment there was a cry&mdash;a scuffle&mdash;a fall&mdash;and a
+prostrate form was borne away between two policemen, while a gentleman,
+with his cravat hanging loose and his hair in wild confusion, came
+toward me eagerly, extending the shawl and clasp.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;These are yours, I believe, young lady,&quot; he remarked, breathlessly,
+throwing the shawl about my shoulders as he spoke, and laying the broken
+clasp in my hand. &quot;I am happy to restore them to you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The whole transaction had been so sudden and so public, that there had
+been neither time nor room for trepidation on my part. My own party,
+pressing steadily on, had not yet missed me, so that, even in that
+moment of excitement, I surveyed my champion with an eye capable of
+future recognition.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you,&quot; I said. &quot;I hope you are not hurt in my service?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, no; not at all&mdash;that is, very slightly, indeed. Pass on, I will
+attend you safely to your seat,&quot; and, obeying the wave of his hand, I
+followed the direction of Mrs. Stanbury's white plume as observingly as
+did the followers of Henry of Navarre, without turning again until I
+reached the box she had entered. I was shocked then, as I bowed my
+thanks, at the ghastly whiteness and expression of my escort's face, but
+he vanished too quickly to permit of inquiry or remark at that season.</p>
+
+<p>I had still time before the curtain rose to relate my adventure, which
+brought the blood hotly to George Gaston's brow as he listened to it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There it is!&quot; he muttered. &quot;It is all very well with me in peaceful
+times, but, when it comes to battle, a poor, lame wretch is of little
+account. I might as well be a woman;&quot; and the tears flowed down his
+quivering cheeks. &quot;It was shameful, disgraceful, that any other man
+should have defended you, Miriam,&quot; he added, in a broken voice,
+clinching his hands, &quot;than I, your escort.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You did not even see the affair, George,&quot; I remonstrated. &quot;Had you been
+as strong as Samson, and I know you are just as brave, you could not
+have helped me, for there I was lagging away behind, through my own
+fault, and how could you, in front, between your aunt and Laura,
+possibly know what danger was in store for me? Now, I shall feel
+provoked if you show so much morbid feeling; besides, reflect, you are
+but a boy, dear. George. No youth of your age is ever very strong.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A boy! and what are you, Miriam Monfort, that you taunt me with youth!
+a woman, I suppose&mdash;a heroine!&quot; with bitter sarcasm in his voice and
+eye, for the first time in his life so directed to me. I gazed at him
+in mute surprise.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear George, you are very unreasonable, indeed,&quot; said Mrs. Stanbury.
+&quot;What has Miriam done to deserve such a taunt? I never knew you to
+behave in such an uncourteous way before.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You must be crazy, George Gaston,&quot; added Laura Stanbury, sharply.
+&quot;Don't you know you are attracting attention toward our box. Be still
+directly!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh no, it is only the magnificent Miss Monfort that every one is
+staring at,&quot; he sneered. &quot;The grown-up lady, the heroine, the heiress,
+who lingers behind in the lobby, in order to get up little melodramas of
+her own at the opera where such things are admissible, at the expense of
+her lame escort!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I turned to him calmly; I had not spoken before. &quot;George,&quot; I said, &quot;if
+you say another word I shall go home alone, or burst into tears on the
+spot, and disgrace myself and you, one or the other. I cannot bear
+another word like this. I warn you, George Gaston!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Dear Miriam, forgive me; I am a fool I know,&quot; he said, as soon as he
+could recover himself. &quot;Lend me your handkerchief, Laura, mine has
+mysteriously disappeared. There&mdash;Richard's himself again! (Sorra to
+him!) He ought to have a bullet through his head for his pains&quot; (<i>sotto
+voce</i>).</p>
+
+<p>This stroke of bathos brought about good-humor again, and soon our whole
+attention was absorbed in that magical music which to this hour
+electrifies me more than that of any other opera excepting &quot;Norma.&quot; &quot;Bad
+taste this,&quot; connoisseurs will say; but the perfection of human
+enjoyment is to pursue one's own tastes independently of Mrs. Grundy,
+whether musical, or literary, or artistic, according to my mode of
+thinking. In all the pauses of the opera, however, I saw that handsome
+and agitated face, that had last caught my eye at the box-door, rise
+before me like a spell; and anxiety for the safety of my strange
+champion&mdash;some curiosity too, mingled therewith, I do not deny, to know
+his name and lineage&mdash;beset me during the whole of a sleepless night and
+the dreaming day that succeeded it.</p>
+
+<p>We were sitting around a cheerful spring fire in the front parlor, our
+ordinary sitting-room, opening as this did into the dining-room beyond
+on one hand, and the wide intersecting hall of entrance on the other, on
+the opposite side of which lay the long, double-chimneyed drawing-room,
+less cheerful than our smaller assembly-room by half, and therefore less
+often used (there, you have our whole first-floor arrangement now, my
+reader, I believe, and I must begin over again, to catch the clew of my
+long sentence). We were sitting, then, around the cheerful fire in the
+parlor in question, when Morton, my father's &quot;own man,&quot; announced &quot;Mr.
+Bainrothe and son,&quot; and a moment afterward the two gentlemen so heralded
+entered the room together. With one you are already somewhat familiar,
+reader mine, as a gentlemanly, handsome man, with deliberate movements
+and confident address. You have seen such men in cities frequently; but
+the word <i>distingu&eacute;</i>, so often too hastily bestowed, was the chief
+characteristic of the appearance of his younger companion.</p>
+
+<p>Tall, slender, graceful, strong&mdash;for strength alone bestows such easy
+perfection of movement, such equipoise of step as belonged to him&mdash;with
+a fine, clear-cut face and well-shaped head, nobly placed on his
+straight, square shoulders&mdash;wide for a man so slight&mdash;dark eyed, dark
+haired, with a mouth somewhat concealed by a long silken mustache, then
+an unusual coxcombry in our republic, yet revealing in glimpses superb
+teeth and the curve of accurately-cut lips, Claude Bainrothe stood
+before me, a young Apollo.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have brought my son here to-night, expressly to introduce him to you,
+Miriam, of whom he has heard so much.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He bowed low and silently, then tossed his curled head suddenly back
+again.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We have met before, I believe, Mr. Bainrothe,&quot; I observed, when his eye
+rose to meet mine. &quot;You were good enough to restore me my shawl and
+clasp last night at the opera, if I am not strangely mistaken.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah! were you that lady?&quot; he asked, with a slight yet somewhat
+embarrassed laugh. &quot;Forgive me, if in the confusion of the moment I
+failed to remark your appearance. I only knew an outrage had been
+committed, and naturally sought to repair it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now, that was really romantic,&quot; said Evelyn, who had caught the idea.
+&quot;Miriam related her adventure, but was sorely puzzled to know to whom
+she was indebted for such chivalrous aid.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am glad to have been of service to Miss Monfort,&quot; he rejoined,
+deferentially, &quot;but I merely obeyed an impulse strong with me. I should
+have been wanting to myself to have done otherwise than defend a
+helpless woman.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There could not have been a more favorable opening to your
+acquaintance, certainly,&quot; observed Evelyn significantly; then, turning
+away and crossing the apartment, she applied herself to the
+entertainment of the elder Mr. Bainrothe, &quot;Mr. Basil,&quot; as we called him
+after his son came, by way of distinction between the two, since the
+word &quot;old&quot; seemed invidious in his case, and we characterized them as we
+would have done two brothers.</p>
+
+<p>Indeed, in manner, in bearing, in something of quiet repose entirely
+wanting in the father, and which usually seems the accompaniment of age
+or experience, the son seemed the elder man of the two. I had yet to
+learn that there is an experience so perfect and subtle that it assumes
+the air of ignorance, and triumphs in its simplicity over inferior craft
+itself.</p>
+
+<p>When the mind has worked out the problems of life to its own
+satisfaction, like the school-boy who has proved his sums, it wipes the
+slate clean again and sets down the bare result&mdash;the laborious process
+it effaces. All is simplified.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was fearful that you had been hurt last night, Mr. Bainrothe,&quot; I
+hazarded, &quot;from the expression of your face as I caught it at the
+box-door. I am glad to see you well this evening.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I <i>was</i> hurt,&quot; he said, &quot;to be frank with you. The scoundrel gave me a
+severe blow on the chest, which brought a little blood to my lips, and
+for the time I suffered. Had it not been for the faintness under which I
+was laboring I could not have failed to identify you. But you are
+generous enough to forgive this oversight I am convinced.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, surely! it was most natural under the circumstances. I have a habit
+of fixing faces at a glance that is rather uncommon, I believe. I never
+forget any one I have seen even for a moment, or where I have seen them,
+or even a name I have heard.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A royal gift truly, one of the secrets of popularity, I believe. It is
+not so with me usually, though when my eye once drinks in a face&quot; (and
+he looked steadily at mine while he spoke those words slowly, as if
+wrapped in contemplation), &quot;it never departs again. 'A thing of beauty
+is a joy forever,' you know, Miss Monfort.&quot; He sighed slightly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, that line has passed into an axiom, the only sensible one, I
+believe, by-the-by, that Keats ever wrote,&quot; I laughed.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, you do Keats injustice. Have you studied him, Miss Monfort?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Studied poetry? What an idea! No, but I have tried to read him, and
+failed. I think he had a very crude, chaotic mind indeed; I like more
+clearness.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Clearness and shallowness most often go together,&quot; he observed. &quot;When
+you see the pebbles at the bottom of a stream, most likely its waters
+are not deep.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yet, you can stir up mud with a long pole in the pool more readily than
+in the river. Keats wanted a current, it seems to me, to give him
+vitality and carry off his own mental impurities. His was a stagnant
+being.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What a queer comparison,&quot; and he shook his head laughingly, &quot;ingenious,
+but at fault; you are begging the question now. Well, what do you say to
+Shelley?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have nothing to say to him; he has every thing to say to me. He is my
+master.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;An eccentric taste for so young a girl; and Byron? and Moore? and Mrs.
+Hemans? and Leigh Hunt? and Barry Cornwall?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, every one likes <i>them</i>, but one gets tired of hearing lions roar,
+and harps play, and angels sing; and then one goes to Shelley for
+refreshment. He is never monotonous; he was a perennial fountain,
+singing at its source, and nearly all was fragmentary that he wrote, of
+course, wanting an outlet. The mind finishes out so much for itself,
+and the thought comes to one always, that he was completed in heaven. No
+other verse stirs me like his. You know he wrote it because he had to
+write or die. He was a poet, or nothing.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You ought to write criticisms for <i>Blackwood</i>, really, Miss Monfort,
+and give a woman's reason for every opinion,&quot; with ill-concealed
+derision.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are laughing at me now, of course, but I don't regard good-natured
+raillery. I am sure I should not enjoy poetry as I do were I a better
+critic. I love flowers far more than many who understand botany as a
+science, and pull them to pieces scientifically and analytically.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And paintings; do you love them?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, passionately!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I confess I am <i>blase</i> with art,&quot; he said, quietly; &quot;I have seen so
+much of it, I like nature far better;&quot; adding, after a pause, &quot;now, that
+is your chief charm. Miss Monfort.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What, being natural?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How well you divine my meaning!&quot; with a little irony in the voice and
+eye. The tendency of his mind was evidently sarcastic.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah! true. Papa thinks me <i>too</i> natural; he often checks my impulses.
+Your father, too, coincides with him, I believe, in this opinion; but
+don't talk about me. Tell me of your sojourn in Germany. How delightful
+it must have been to have lived in Heidelberg, and felt the very
+atmosphere you breathed filled with wisdom! Did you ever go to
+Frankfort? Did you see the statue of Goethe there? Can you read 'Faust'
+in the original? Oh, I should like to so much, but I know nothing of
+German. I never could learn the character, I am convinced. French and
+Italian only. There was such a beautiful picture of 'Margaret' in the
+Academy of Fine Arts last year, I wanted papa to purchase it, but Evelyn
+and he did not fancy it as much as I did. They prefer copies from the
+old masters. I don't care a cent for Magdalenes and Madonnas and little
+fat cherubs. I prefer illustrations of poetry or fiction; don't you, Mr.
+Bainrothe?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very frankly, Miss Monfort, I don't care for pictures at all, unless
+for good landscapes. I am cloyed with them. And as to German books, I
+never want to see another. The old 'Deer-Stealer' was worth all they
+have ever written put together, in my opinion. I love the vernacular.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, of course, Shakespeare and the Bible; there is nothing like them
+for truth and power. But to leave poetry for its sister art, you must
+have enjoyed the music in Germany. Do you love music, Mr. Bainrothe?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not very much, except in opera; then the scenery and lights and people
+are half the charm. I don't care for science. Such an adventure as I had
+last night,&quot; he murmured low, &quot;was worth a dozen operas to me;&quot; and
+again I met his admiring, steady gaze, almost embarrassing, fixed upon
+me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What are you two talking about?&quot; asked Evelyn, coming suddenly behind
+us. &quot;Papa and Mr. Bainrothe are carrying on a little quiet flirtation,
+as usual, and have quite turned their backs on me, so I came hither,
+asking charity. I declare, Miriam's face is scarlet! What mischief are
+you two hatching?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have been running on at a most unconscionable rate,&quot; I replied,
+&quot;covering up my ignorance with many questions that have bored, rather
+than proved, Mr. Bainrothe, I fear. Take up the dialogue, dear Evelyn,
+for a few moments, while I go to superintend that elderly flirtation
+you speak of, and keep papa in order,&quot; and I left them abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It will all be paid in before then,&quot; I heard Mr. Bainrothe say, as I
+approached them, &quot;and you could not have a safer investment. It is as
+sound as the Federal Government itself. Indestructible as the solar
+system.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I will bring the papers,&quot; papa said, rising. &quot;Excuse me for ten
+minutes,&quot; and I dropped into his empty seat by Mr. Bainrothe.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I hope I shall not interrupt your business meditations while papa is
+gone,&quot; I observed, breaking the silence first.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Business is my pastime, and no food for meditation, my dear girl; for,
+like the Pontic monarch of old days, 'I live on poisons, and they have
+no power, but are a kind of nutriment.' Now, talking to a pretty young
+girl is far harder and more unusual work to me than transacting
+mercantile or financial affairs.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then I will not oppress you with my society,&quot; I said, with a feint to
+rise.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sit still, Miriam, and don't be foolish. You know what I mean, very
+well. Now, how do you like my son?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, very much indeed; he is a little satirical, though, now and then;
+intolerant of youthful greenness, I perceive, and enthusiasm.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;All affectation, I assure you. He is as verdant himself as the Emerald
+Isle. Just from college, and very young; what can he know of life? As to
+enthusiasm, he is full of it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;True, what <i>can</i> he know of life,&quot; I mused, and I glanced at him, as I
+questioned, sitting in front of Evelyn in a sort of humble, devoted
+way, very different from his easy, knightly air with me. She wore a
+cold, imperious expression of face not unbecoming to her haughty style
+of beauty, and fanned herself gently as she listened carelessly to his
+evidently earnest words, bowing superciliously in answer from time to
+time.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The desire of the moth for the star,&quot; burst from my lips involuntarily.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nothing of the kind,&quot; said Mr. Bainrothe, quietly. &quot;If Evelyn Erie were
+the last of her sex, <i>he</i> never could fancy <i>her</i>. She is much too old
+for my son, much too artificial; and, beautiful as she is, she wants
+some nameless charm, without which no woman ever secures the abiding
+love of man;&quot; adding, abruptly, after a little pause, &quot;<i>That charm is
+yours, Miriam</i>.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How strangely you talk, Mr. Bainrothe!&quot; I replied, with evident
+embarrassment, which he pretended not to perceive.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Had you remained one year longer at school, there would have been no
+grace, no perfection wanting. I am sorry to see you thrown so young, so
+unprotected, on the waves of society, as you must be soon.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, not necessarily. I rarely come into the parlor when Evelyn
+receives, rarely go to parties, and my studies are as dear to me as they
+ever were. Besides, Mabel absorbs much of my time, and I am quite
+infatuated with my new accomplishment.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What is that, Miriam?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am studying elocution, learning to read with Mr. Mortimer&mdash;you have
+heard of him&mdash;and he is pleased, so far, with my success. It is a very
+delightful resource.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, you have a good voice, an impassioned face and manner&mdash;all very
+suitable, no doubt; but what will it amount to, after all? You will
+never have to earn your bread in that way, and for a home circle you
+have always read well enough. It is time wasted, I imagine.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But the reading is not <i>all</i>. I learn to know and comprehend so much
+that was sealed from me before; in this way, Shakespeare, Milton, Scott,
+all acquire new beauties. By-the-by, this is what your son meant by
+studying poetry, perhaps.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The puppy! Has he been lecturing you, too? Really, there is no end to
+his presumption;&quot; and he smiled, benignly, upon him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I must defend him from such a charge,&quot; I said, earnestly. &quot;I find him
+very deferential&mdash;he has the courteous European manner, which, when
+high-bred, is so polite. Americans never learn to bow like foreign
+gentlemen. It is a great charm.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you hear that, Claude? Miss Monfort approves of your bow. This is
+all I can extort from her; but she is very hard to please, very
+censorious by nature, so don't be entirely discouraged.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A bow of the approved sort, and wave of the hand across the room, in
+addition, were the only rejoinder elicited by this sally, and again the
+downcast head, the clasped hands, the low, entreating voice denoted the
+character of his conference with Evelyn. He was pleading a desperate
+cause, it seemed to me.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bainrothe became unreasonably nervous, I thought. He fidgeted with
+his hat, and gloves, and cane, which he took from the table near him,
+dropping the last as he did so; he glanced impatiently at the door
+through which my father was to enter, and, when finally his friend came,
+after a brief conference in a corner with regard to the papers he had
+gone out to seek, probably, summoned his son abruptly and darted off in
+true Continental style, followed by his more stately junior.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. Bainrothe amuses me,&quot; observed Evelyn after we were alone again.
+&quot;He is so transparent, dear old butterfly! He need not be alarmed! I
+have put a quietus on all presumptuous hopes in that quarter forever,
+and now, Miriam, I hand him over to you signed and sealed 'Claude
+Bainrothe rejected and emancipated by Evelyn Erie, and ready for fresh
+servitude&mdash;apprenticed, in short.'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you,&quot; I rejoined, dryly, speaking with a tightness at my throat.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He thinks you quite good-looking, Miriam, I assure you; he was
+agreeably disappointed, even after what he had heard of your
+appearance&mdash;from the Stanburys, I suppose&mdash;and observed that there were
+fine elements in your character, too, if properly shaped and combined&mdash;a
+great deal of '<i>come out</i>.'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He is truly gracious and condescending,&quot; I replied, &quot;I thank him
+humbly.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It was very plain that you admired him, Miriam. Any one could see that.
+I noticed his internal amusement at your fluttered manner.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Did he tell you what his thoughts were, Evelyn, or do you merely
+interpret them after your own fashion?&quot; I asked, sternly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, of course he said nothing of the kind; I would not have permitted
+it, had he wished to. Poor fellow! I hope you will be kinder to him than
+I have been,&quot; and she sighed heavily. &quot;He is yours now to have and to
+hold, you know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have not shown your usual good taste, Evelyn,&quot; I remarked, coolly,
+&quot;in rejecting so handsome and fascinating a man, and making him over to
+another, unsolicited. Claude Bainrothe would suit you exactly, I think;
+and, as to money, he will have enough, no doubt, for both. If not&quot;&mdash;I
+hesitated&mdash;colored&mdash;sighed.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If not, what, Miriam?&quot; she urged, stamping her little foot impatiently
+as my answer was delayed. &quot;If not, what then, Miriam? Speak out!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If not, dear sister, <i>I</i> will try to make up the <i>deficiency</i>,&quot; I said,
+embracing her. &quot;Now you understand my intentions.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I was learning to love my sister, and happy in the power to please her,
+unconscious that an invisible barrier was rising from that hour, never
+to be put aside.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="I_CHAPTER_IV"></a><h2>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>For a discarded lover heartlessly played with, as she herself confessed
+he had been, Claude Bainrothe bore himself very proudly and calmly in
+Evelyn Erle's presence, I thought. At first, there was a shade of
+coolness, of pique even in my own manner toward him as the memory of
+Evelyn's insinuations rose between us; but after the lapse of a few
+weeks all thought of this kind was put away, and he was received with a
+pleasure as undisguised, as it was innocent and undesigning on my part.</p>
+
+<p>The repugnant idea of succeeding to Evelyn in his affections had stifled
+the very germs of coquetry, and my manner to him was unmistakable; nor
+was it without evident dissatisfaction that Mr. Basil Bainrothe surveyed
+the ruin of his hopes.</p>
+
+<p>A sudden and painful change took place about midsummer in Claude's
+manner toward me (with Evelyn it was uniform). He became cold,
+restrained, embarrassed in his intercourse with me, hitherto so frank
+and brotherly. He made his visits shorter and at last at greater
+intervals; yet I knew, through others, that he remained strictly at
+home, eschewing all places of amusement, all society&mdash;&quot;all occupation
+even,&quot; as Mr. Basil Bainrothe himself complained.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I can't think what has got into Claude lately,&quot; he said to my father
+one day at our dinner-table. &quot;The boy mopes. He is in love, I believe,
+but with whom I can't conjecture,&quot; and he glanced askance at Evelyn and
+me.&mdash;&quot;Can you assist me, ladies?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not with me, I assure you,&quot; said Evelyn, proudly. &quot;That measure has
+been trodden, and the dance is over.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nor with me,&quot; I faltered, for the careless words had struck to my
+heart. &quot;That fancy dance has yet to be solicited. We both plead
+innocent, you see, Mr. Bainrothe,&quot; and I tried to laugh, but the
+glittering, kaleidoscopic eye was fixed upon me, and my face was
+crimson.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Never <i>blush</i>, Miriam,&quot; whispered Evelyn, maliciously, &quot;it makes you
+look the color of a new mahogany bedstead. You are best pale, child.
+Always remember that.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It must be with Miss Stanbury, then,&quot; said Mr. Bainrothe, evasively.
+&quot;She is a very pretty girl, and I don't wonder at Claude's infatuation.
+The old man is rich, too; it will answer very well, I think. What do you
+say, Mr. Monfort.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, really, I think Claude could scarcely do better,&quot; rejoined my
+ever literal father. &quot;She is an admirable young person, pious, and
+discreetly brought up&mdash;and&mdash;yes, quite pretty, certainly. Let us drink
+to his success in that quarter.&mdash;Ladies!&mdash;Mr. Bainrothe!&mdash;fill your
+glasses.&mdash;Franklin, the sherry.&mdash;Morton, the port. Which will you have,
+Bainrothe? or do you prefer Rhine wines?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A glass of Hockheimer, if you have it convenient, Franklin. Those heavy
+wines are too heating for our summers, I think, Mr. Monfort. You
+yourself would do well to follow my example.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you,&quot; said my father, loftily. &quot;When you feed lions on
+pound-cake you may expect to see Englishmen drink German acidulations
+instead of the generous juice of the grape&mdash;fostered on southern soil,
+above volcanoes even&mdash;to which they have been used since the time of the
+last Henrys. Beer were a better alternative. Give me claret or madeira.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bainrothe had his limits, and usually took care not to exceed them.
+My father's easy good-nature was converted into frozen <i>hauteur</i> at any
+open effort to transcend the boundaries of his independence. He gloried
+in &quot;<i>Magna Charta</i>,&quot; and never knowingly sacrificed his baronial
+privileges, yet he was wax in the hands of a skillful wheedler, and his
+&quot;adamantine will&quot; was readily fused in the fires of flattery.</p>
+
+<p>We drank the proposed toast, much to Mr. Bainrothe's discomfiture. He
+had made the remark as a skillful feeler, and was mortified at my
+father's ready acquiescence in his plans. Of course, Evelyn and I both
+saw through the unskillful <i>ruse</i>, and pledged him with hearty malice;
+but he had yet another shot in reserve, which told with fatal effect.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. Biddle has offered me a cashiership for Claude,&quot; he remarked,
+carelessly, &quot;in a thriving town in Georgia, and I shall accept for him
+forthwith. Then, if Miss Stanbury chooses to accompany him into exile,
+it will be all for the best; but, were he about to remain here, I would
+not suffer him to think of matrimony for years to come. 'A young man
+married is a young man marred,' as Shakespeare says somewhere, I
+believe; and I agree with him. A youth of twenty-one ought to be free
+for a season until he can shape his life.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I felt myself tremble from head to foot. I had never contemplated the
+possibility of his absence, and the conviction of my deep interest in
+him flashed across me for the first time with lightning force and
+vividness. Evelyn did not reproach me for blushing this time; I was pale
+enough to satisfy even her spleen. Indeed, some better feeling than she
+had before manifested seemed to inspire her now, for she filled another
+glass of wine and motioned me to drink it. I had merely sipped from mine
+when papa proposed his toast, and Franklin had borne it away with the
+others in making ready for the dessert.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't let that man read you,&quot; she said, in a low, eager voice, not lost
+on me. I drank the wine, and met his glance steadily this time, and gave
+him look for look. My secret had nerved me well.</p>
+
+<p>That evening Claude Bainrothe came.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;When do you enter the sacred bands of matrimony with Miss Stanbury, Mr.
+Bainrothe?&quot; asked Evelyn, in her usual, cool, provoking way, sipping a
+glass of iced lemonade as she spoke, which Claude had brought her from
+the refreshment-slab and humbly offered.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And when do you assume your office in Georgia?&quot; I asked in the next
+breath, encouraged by her example, and perhaps, alas! eager to know the
+truth, scarcely lifting my eyes to his as I spoke.</p>
+
+<p>He glanced from one to the other with a bewildered air, quite foreign
+from his usual self-possession.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I protest, ladies, I do not understand your allusions,&quot; he replied at
+last, with such an air of truth that, taking pity on him, we explained
+the matter laughingly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My poor father is falling into that sear and yellow leaf, his dotage,&quot;
+he said, &quot;that is evident; what could possess him to maunder so? I
+really believe he is in love with Miss Stanbury himself, and is
+wire-working merely to gain my consent. As to going to Georgia, I would
+as soon bury myself up to my neck in the sea-sand and bear the vertical
+sun for twenty sequent noons, as to dream of such a step. The old
+gentleman is a lunatic, and should be cared for without delay. I will
+get Dr. Parrish to see after him to-morrow.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But I <i>did</i> hear you say you were going to Copenhagen with our
+minister,&quot; said George Gaston, who had swung himself softly up to our
+party on his crutches, unobserved by any one, while Claude was speaking,
+and now stood glaring upon him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, that is a different matter. I <i>may</i> go there, George. I am told it
+is a very gay court; besides, I am curious about Denmark, naturally.
+Every one is who loves Shakespeare and the 'royal Dane,' you know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Again that fatal pallor of mine swept from my heart to brow, and this
+time the large, dark gray eye of the boy was fixed on me with agony
+unspeakable. He dropped it suddenly, wheeled on his supporting-sticks,
+and turned away, ghastly pale himself, to seek the shelter of the
+portico, where I joined him a few minutes later.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Are you ill, George?&quot; I asked. &quot;I felt anxious about you when I saw you
+leave the parlor so suddenly. Have you had one of your spells?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A very severe spell, Miriam; but not of the usual kind.&quot; I understood
+him now. There was a dry anguish in the very tone of his voice that
+smote heavily on my ear, yet I felt impatient with him, provoked beyond
+endurance.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;George, you should be more of a man,&quot; I said, with asperity, &quot;than to
+yield in this way to every impulse that besets you. Your whims are hard
+to bear with lately, and scarcely worth understanding, I am convinced.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Would I were more or less of a man!&quot; he answered, meekly. &quot;I should
+suffer less, probably.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Tell me what <i>does ail</i> you, George Gaston,&quot; I added, with a sudden
+revulsion of feeling, caused by his patient, deprecating manner. &quot;You
+know you always have my warmest sympathy, and affection&mdash;sisterly
+interest.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, Miriam, it is that! You love that man; yes, you love him a
+thousand-fold more than you have ever loved me. I suspected it before&mdash;I
+know it now; and I would rather see you floating a corpse on the river,
+with your dead face turned up to heaven, than married to that man, I
+hate him so!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The last words were ground between his set teeth, and he trembled with
+passion.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;George,&quot; I said, &quot;you are still a child in years, in strength, in
+stature! I, but a few months older, am already a woman in age,
+experience, feeling, character. It is always thus with persons of our
+sexes who contract childish friendships&mdash;one outgrows the other. Then
+there are bitterness, reproach, suffering, resentment, on one part or
+the other. But is this just? Remember Byron and Miss Chaworth&mdash;how was
+it with them? He grasped too much, and lost every thing; he embittered
+his whole nature, his whole life, for the want of common-sense to guide
+him; but, with almost as much genius&mdash;more, in some things, than he
+possessed&mdash;you HAVE this governing principle. I know my dearest George
+will do me justice. I shall be an old, faded woman when you are of an
+age to marry&mdash;unlovely in your eyes, George,&quot;&mdash;I hesitated. &quot;I have
+always hoped you would be our Mabel's husband. You know you have
+promised me.&quot; I smiled tearfully this time.</p>
+
+<p>He bounded off the bench, interrupting me with a low cry. &quot;Do not mock
+me, Miriam Monfort,&quot; he exclaimed, &quot;if you can do no better. My God! a
+baby of five years old suggested as a wife by you, my idol! Oh, yes,
+wildly-beloved Miriam, the noblest, truest, as I have ever thought
+you&mdash;the most beautiful, too, surely, of all God's created beings!&quot; and
+he caught my hand wildly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;George, you are dreaming,&quot; I said; &quot;your vivid fancy misleads you
+utterly. I am not beautiful&mdash;you cannot think so; no one has ever
+thought me so; you must not say such an absurd thing of me. It only
+humiliates me. But I do believe I still deserve your esteem. Let us
+separate now, and to-morrow come to me in a better mood.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If I <i>must</i> give you up,&quot; he murmured, in a low, grieved voice, &quot;let it
+be to a husband who loves and appreciates you&mdash;is worthy of you. I
+cannot tell you all I know&mdash;<i>have heard;</i> but of this I am certain:
+Claude Bainrothe loves you not! It is Evelyn he worships, and you are
+blind not to see it; Evelyn who has goaded him almost to madness already
+for her own purposes. I heard&mdash;but no, I cannot tell you this; I ought
+not&mdash;honor forbids;&quot; and he laid his hand on his boyish breast, in a
+tragic, lofty manner, all his own, that almost made me smile.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I know, I know all this, dear George,&quot; I said. &quot;Claude Bainrothe
+addressed Evelyn before he knew me, and she refused him. Nor have I
+craved the honor, this is all that can be said as yet, of being her
+successor.&quot; I faltered here. &quot;Let this satisfy you for the present. He
+has not spoken to me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But you love him&mdash;love him, Miriam!&quot; he groaned. &quot;Oh, I saw it plainly
+to-night, and, what is far more terrible and hard to bear, he saw it
+too! He was watching you from the corner of his furtive, downcast eye
+when he was speaking of going to Copenhagen, and a smile trembled
+around his mouth when you turned so pale&mdash;white as a poplar-leaf,
+Miriam, when the wind blows it over! If I were a woman I would cut out
+my heart rather than open it thus to the gaze of any man, far less one
+like that, shallow, selfish, superficial. O Miriam! not worthy of you at
+all&mdash;not fit to tie your shoe-latchet!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;George, you overrate me, you always did, and&mdash;and&mdash;you undervalue Mr.
+Bainrothe, believe me; nay, I am sure you do. Let us part now, George.
+My father is calling me, you hear. Go home, my own dear boy, and rest
+and pray. Oh, be convinced that I love you better than all the world,
+except those I <i>ought</i> to love more.&mdash;Yes, yes, papa! I am
+coming.&mdash;Good-night, dear George.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And I kissed his clammy brow, hastening in the next moment to my
+father's side, who, missing me, could not rest in this new phase of his
+until I was forthcoming. Certainly, whatever tenderness I had missed in
+former years was amply lavished on me now. Evelyn, Mabel&mdash;all former
+idols sank out of sight in my presence, and the very touch of my hand,
+the sound of my voice, seemed to inspire him with happiness and a new
+sense of security. Sometime I flattered myself that I had earned this
+affection, since it had not seemed my birthright, nor come to me
+earlier; but no, it was the grace of God, I must believe, touching his
+heart at last, as the rod of Moses brought forth waters from the rock.
+Yet the simile is at fault here: my father's heart was never a stone,
+but tender and true and constant ever, even if locked away.</p>
+
+<p>It may seem strange, but from the very evidences of his carelessness, as
+they seemed to others, I gathered, after a time, the blissful conviction
+that Claude Bainrothe was not indifferent to me. His reserve, his
+moroseness almost, the despairing way in which he spoke sometimes of his
+future life, his want of purpose, of interest in what was passing around
+him, his entire self-possession with Evelyn, so different from his
+embarrassment with me; his manner of pursuing me with his eyes, and
+holding me fast, and the long sidelong glances he often dropped at my
+feet like offerings, as I detected his vigilance&mdash;all persuaded me that
+what I most wished to believe was true, and that I had awakened interest
+if not passion in his heart, for&mdash;at last, I loved him!</p>
+
+<p>The time came when his own lips confirmed my suspicions, my hopes&mdash;when
+faintly, and in broken accents, he related to me the story of his love;
+mine, as he declared, since the evening of our first meeting; and asked
+my troth in turn. I was so inexperienced in matters of this sort, I
+scarcely knew how to behave, I suppose; besides, I never thought of
+giving any other reply than the one he craved, for I too had inclined to
+him from the first. I recognized this now, and did not deny it when he
+urged me for the truth, holding my hands in his, and looking into my
+eyes in a deep and tender and devoted way peculiar to himself, that
+thrilled to my very life&mdash;an adoring expression that I have seen in no
+other gaze than his own, and which cast a glamour about him, I well
+believe, irresistible wherever it was exercised.</p>
+
+<p>It was in September that we became engaged, with the joyful coincidence
+of Mr. Bainrothe, the somewhat reluctant consent of my father, the
+half-derisive approbation of Evelyn, the entire disapproval, expressed
+in eloquent silence, of the whole Stanbury family. For a time, this
+grave coldness on their part alienated me greatly from them all, George
+Gaston especially; and had it not been for Mabel, and the bond she
+proved between us, we might have been divided for life thereafter.</p>
+
+<p>My father's declining health alone threw a bleakness over that rosy time
+of joy, and held in check the exuberance of my happy spirit, brimming
+like sparkling wine above the vase that contained it. Sometimes, when I
+met Evelyn's cold and gloomy eye, I felt myself rebuked for the
+indulgence of my perfect happiness. &quot;She knows that my father is more
+ill than he seems!&quot; I would conjecture&mdash;&quot;Dr. Pemberton has told her what
+he conceals from me. I am making festal garlands in readiness for my
+father's grave, perhaps.&quot; Then with tears and entreaties I would
+question her: &quot;I <i>cannot</i> be mistaken,&quot; I would say; &quot;something is wrong
+with you. Is it about my father? If not of him, what is it, Evelyn, that
+makes your face like a stone mask of late&mdash;once all life and joy?&quot;
+&quot;Miriam, I am not quite well,&quot; she would reply evasively, or say, &quot;I am
+meditating a step that will cost me dear. My uncle, the Earl of Pomfret,
+the head of our house since my grandfather's death, you know, writes me
+to visit him. It is this fatal necessity&mdash;for such for some reasons I
+feel it&mdash;that oppresses me so heavily.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why a necessity, dear Evelyn, why go at all? You certainly can never
+feel to any relative as you do to <i>my</i> father and <i>yours</i>.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your father does not find me as important to his happiness as he once
+did, Miriam. You have absorbed his whole affection of late; even Mabel,
+once his darling and plaything, is put aside.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He surrendered her to me again, Evelyn, when I returned; this is all,
+believe me. He loves, he esteems you as much as ever; he consults you in
+all his arrangements. He has made you the mistress of his house; your
+judgment, your advice, are paramount with, him as to all matters of
+outlay; and, Evelyn, suffer me to speak to you on one subject of great
+delicacy&mdash;sister! I must. Whenever you marry from this house, understand
+well that you shall not go empty-handed.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Fortune is not <i>his</i> to bestow,&quot; she responded, &quot;and large charities
+have absorbed, I know, much of his yearly income, princely as that is.
+Besides, he reinvests all that remains from that source for Mabel, as I
+know. I feel assured he will provide for me, but it must be in a very
+small way, and I must go to England and make my establishment there.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Would you marry for money, Evelyn?&quot; I asked gravely. &quot;O sister, can you
+conceive of no higher happiness than this?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I can,&quot; she said with emotion, while her lips blanched to the hue of
+ashes. &quot;I have dreamed such a dream in days past, but now the dark
+reality alone remains and sweeps all before it. I shall embrace my first
+eligible offer regardless of feeling, and I prefer to cast my destiny
+with my own people, however estranged they may be. Certainly, this
+letter is not very affectionate, nor even a courteous one from so near a
+relative,&quot; and she placed in my hand the cold and supercilious note of
+the Earl of Pomfret, containing a permission to visit his castle, rather
+than invitation.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yet you will go, Evelyn?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miriam, I <i>must</i> go. I should go mad were I to stay here, or die in the
+struggle.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sister, what can this be? Evelyn, hear me: I swear to you, on the day
+of my majority, to endow you richly in your own right. It is
+independence you want&mdash;you shall have it. My father will consent to
+this I know, and consider it no more than your due.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are kind,&quot; she said; &quot;generous, very. You are not like your
+mother's people in that respect, such as they are in these degenerate
+days, at least. She herself was unlike them, I have heard, for her hand
+was princely. But, Miriam, I could not receive such obligations from
+you&mdash;ought not. Besides&mdash;your husband!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, Evelyn, there is nothing he would refuse me&mdash;nothing.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A gloomy mockery transfused itself into her eyes, her lips were fixed in
+a suppressed and sneering smile. Incredulity was written on her aspect.
+Her face at that moment was very repulsive to contemplate.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You do not believe in men,&quot; I said, coldly. &quot;I have always remarked it;
+yet there are <i>some</i> worthy of confidence, believe me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very few, Miriam, and Claude Bainrothe is not unlike the majority of
+his fellows. Men count it no wrong to deceive women.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O Evelyn, you are too severe, I think. Why seek to shake my confidence
+in the man I love? He did not happen to suit your fancy, and you
+rejected him. I took what you cast aside, humbly, thankfully, dear
+Evelyn. Why resent this, and scorn me for my humility? Let not your
+pride for me make you unjust toward him. You, of all women, can best
+afford to be generous to Claude Bainrothe.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>But still the cold shadow veiled her face, and still she looked
+inauspiciously on our betrothal, which, owing to our youth, it was
+understood, should continue a year. In the interval I was to travel with
+my father to the different large cities of the Union which I had never
+seen, and abide awhile in Washington.</p>
+
+<p>His health, Dr. Pemberton thought, required this change, but a darker
+one was in store for him.</p>
+
+<p>On Christmas-day, of that year, he was smitten with paralysis, and his
+decline was sure and rapid from that hour. Let me pass over the agony of
+that period of six weeks, lengthened into years by the dread tension of
+anxiety, most relentless of the furies. But for the confidence I felt in
+Claude's affection, and the vista of hope it opened for me, I think I
+should have succumbed under the unequal struggle.</p>
+
+<p>During this period, his attentions to me and to my helpless father were
+most kind and assiduous. Mr. Bainrothe and Evelyn, too, between whom
+some unexplained alienation had existed for some time, met in apparent
+harmony above his bed of death.</p>
+
+<p>In addition to the services of our own dear and valued physician, we had
+others of eminence coming and going daily, with the knowledge in their
+own breasts that all was vain.</p>
+
+<p>Still I never ceased entirely to hope until the very last. &quot;He is not
+old, he is still vigorous,&quot; I would say to myself. &quot;There may be&mdash;there
+<i>must</i> be&mdash;reaction. I have so often heard him boast of his English
+constitution, I cannot, oh, I cannot think that the end is yet!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I wondered then at the inattention of the Stanburys, in whose
+disinterested friendship I had reposed so much confidence, even though a
+shadow of late had been thrown over our intercourse by my engagement
+with Claude Bainrothe, a shadow of which I thought I saw the substance
+in the bitter jealousy and rancorous, unreasonable love and hatred of
+the morbid George Gaston.</p>
+
+<p>Later I found by the merest accident, through one note of his that had
+been left in a drawer of a desk long disused, that Mr. Gerald Stanbury
+and Evelyn had maintained a rather fierce correspondence on the subject
+of her refusal to accept his services at my father's pillow; founded, as
+she alleged, on the recent unexplained but deep-rooted aversion Mr.
+Monfort seemed to have imbibed for his neighbor and friend, and which
+his physicians said must be regarded.</p>
+
+<p>Allusion was made, not unmixed with bitterness, in Mr. Stanbury's note,
+to this assertion of hers, which he pronounced, if true, to rest on the
+misrepresentations of villains who had interposed between the too
+confiding Mr. Monfort and himself for no good purpose. No names were
+given, but it was easy to see to whom his reference was made, and I had
+every reason to suppose that Evelyn had communicated these opinions to
+those most interested in knowing them long before this record
+accidentally fell into my hands.</p>
+
+<p>On the day of the funeral, however, Mr. and Mrs. Stanbury were present,
+with Laura and George. All seemed deeply affected, and one by one came
+to me in my shadowed chamber with a few words of tender sympathy or
+kindly condolence, for I could not bear to go down into that crowded
+parlor and see <i>him</i> dead amid all that tide of life, who had so lately
+stood there powerful and beloved&mdash;Monfort the master!</p>
+
+<p>It was a superb day, they told me, such as we often have at that season
+in our changeful clime, and the distant peal of military music, the
+chiming of bells, the firing of cannon, the roar of the awakened
+multitude, reached my ear even in that secluded street, that quiet room.</p>
+
+<p>The people were celebrating an anniversary that in all times has brought
+joy and pride to millions of united hearts. It was the birthday of
+Washington.</p>
+
+<p>Laura Stanbury remained with me while all the rest went to the stately
+funeral, Evelyn leading Mabel down-stairs, they told me, attired in her
+little black dress, in sad contrast with her ivory skin, her yellow
+hair, her childish years, and her unconsciousness of the grave loss she
+had sustained; Mrs. Austin following these, her darlings, to go with
+them in the principal mourning-coach, in which Mr. Bainrothe also found
+himself ensconced, by some diplomacy of his own, no doubt, all clad in
+sables, and with his polished aspect fixed in woe!</p>
+
+<p>After the funeral, Dr. Pemberton came up for a few minutes to my
+chamber. He found me reasonably calm and composed, and expressed his
+gratification at my condition.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now, do be very careful of yourself, my dear Miriam, or you may have
+one of your sleepy attacks, and they are exhausting to Nature, trying to
+both body and soul. We must guard against any thing of this sort at this
+time. You know how apt they are to supervene on excitement of any kind
+with you.&quot; He said this in his own kind, encouraging manner.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then they are strictly nervous?&quot; I inquired.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I don't know; can't say, indeed.&mdash;Here, Mrs. Austin, give Miriam one of
+these powders,&quot; and he drew them from his pocket-book, &quot;every six hours
+until I come again, and keep her as quiet as possible. Some light
+nourishment she must take, but let there be no preaching and praying
+about her this evening, and advise Mr. Bainrothe to go quietly home for
+the present. She must not be excited, only soothed. Let Mabel come, of
+course.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He came again on the next day and the next, and so on until he was
+satisfied that all was going on very well, he said, but he would not
+suffer my father's will to be opened for a week, knowing that my
+presence would be necessary at the reading, and he permitted no
+disturbance of any kind to approach me during that interval of
+probation.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you think you could get through with a few business details
+to-morrow?&quot; he asked me on the last day of his visit. &quot;They all seem
+very impatient, though I cannot see why.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I think so, Dr. Pemberton.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, then, notify Mr. Bainrothe to make ready for you in the library
+at any hour you may fix upon. He was your father's attorney, it seems,
+and had the will in his keeping. Of course it will be a very simple
+matter to carry out its provisions, since all was fixed before, as every
+one knows, but there may be some little agitation. Now, don't give way,
+I charge you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How can I help it. Dr. Pemberton?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, with a will like yours, one can do a great deal. I had an obstinate
+patient once determined not to die, and she did not die, though death
+was due. Resistance is natural to some temperaments. Yours is one of
+them. Fight off those attacks, Miriam, in future.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I will try,&quot; I said, half amused at his suggestion, &quot;but, if all
+physicians gave such prescriptions, medicine would be at a discount.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not at all. Medicine is a great aid in any case&mdash;I have never thought
+it more. A doctor is only a pilot; he steers a ship sometimes past
+dangerous places on which it would founder otherwise, but he never
+pretends, unless he is a charlatan, to upheave shoals and rocks, or to
+control tempests. He can only mind his rudder and shift his sails; the
+rest is with Providence. Now, suppose the captain of this ship is calm
+and firm, and coincides with the pilot's efforts, instead of
+counteracting and embarrassing them. Don't you see the advantage to the
+ship?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, certainly, and I admire the ingenuity of your allegory. You must
+have been studying Bunyan, lately.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, Miriam, I have little time for books, save those necessary to my
+profession. I study a mightier volume daily than scholar ever wrote&mdash;the
+wondrous mind and body of man, the one illustrated by the other, and
+both so mutually dependent that short-sighted people have occasionally
+confounded them, yet distinct after all as God and the universe.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am glad to hear you say this; doctors are so often accused of being
+materialists.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No men living have less excuse for being so. The phenomenon of death
+alone ought to set that matter at rest in any reasoning mind. The
+impalpable is gone, and the material perishes. It is so plain that he
+that runs might read, one would think. That sudden change from volition
+to inertia is, in itself, conviction to every right-seeing mind.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yet I wish we knew more,&quot; I mused, aloud. &quot;We ought to know more, it
+seems to me. God has not told us half enough for our satisfaction. It is
+so cruel to leave us in the dark, lit only by partial flashes of
+lightning. If we were certain of the future, we could bear separation
+better from those we love. It would not seem so hopeless.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If we were certain of the future, we would not bear it all,&quot; he
+remarked, &quot;but grow impatient and exacting like children who rise in the
+night to examine the Christmas stocking, rather than wait until morning.
+Most often we should join those we loved rather than bide our time if
+we were certain. Moreover, what merit would there be in faith or
+fortitude? No, Miriam, it is best as it is, believe me. Every thing is
+for the best that God has done; we must not dare to question the ways
+any more than the will of the Eternal.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You ought to have been a preacher, Dr. Pemberton,&quot; I said, smiling
+sadly, &quot;instead of a physician.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, my dear little girl, I ought to have been just what I am, since it
+was God's will. And now be calm and self-sustaining until I come again,
+which will be before long, I think.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I tried as far as in me lay to regard the instructions of my kind friend
+and physician (and happy are those who unite both in one person), but,
+prepare as we may to receive the waves of the sea when we bathe in its
+margin, and skillful as we may believe ourselves in buffeting or
+avoiding them, there comes one now and then with a strength and
+suddenness that sweeps us from our feet, overthrows us, and lays us
+prostrate at the sandy bottom of the ocean, to emerge therefrom half
+stifled with the bitter brine.</p>
+
+<p>Such experience was destined to be mine before many hours.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="I_CHAPTER_V"></a><h2>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>Mr. Gerald Stanbury had been especially invited to attend the reading of
+my father's will, by a polite note from Mr. Bainrothe, in which the
+interest that both bore in this testament was plainly set forth. With
+the exception of our excellent old neighbor and the two Mr. Bainrothes,
+the circle assembled for the solemn occasion was composed entirely of
+Mr. Monfort's household and was truly a funereal one. I wore my
+deep-mourning dress for the first time that day, and Mabel, similarly
+attired, sat beside me. Claude Bainrothe was alone on a distant sofa.</p>
+
+<p>Evelyn assumed my father's chair, and wore, with the weeds customary to
+widows, a demeanor of great dignity and reserve suitable to the head of
+the family. Mr. Gerald Stanbury had a seat near mine, on which he sat
+uneasily, and Mrs. Austin, Franklin, and Morton, were ranged together
+stiffly in chairs placed against the wall, likewise attired in deep
+mourning. Mr. Bainrothe was seated near the study-table, looking
+unusually pale and subdued, from one of the drawers of which he had
+drawn forth the will, unlocking and locking it again with a key
+suspended to his guard-chain.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This key was placed in my hand,&quot; he said, &quot;during my friend's last
+illness, and, although he could not speak to me at the time, his
+expressive eye indicated its importance and to what drawer it belonged.
+This was before he was removed from the study in which he was stricken,
+dear friends, as you may all remember, on Christmas-morning, and which
+he never again reentered. From that day to this the key which I wear has
+not left my charge, nor been placed in the lock to which it belongs, and
+to the guardianship of which this will, as soon as made and legally
+attested, was probably committed. We will now, with your permission,
+break the seal that I see has been placed upon this document since I
+beheld it, the contents of which are already familiar to me.&quot; He then
+opened and read in a clear, monotonous voice my father's will and its
+provisions.</p>
+
+<p>The property, as I knew already, was all mine by marriage contract,
+except such sums as my father had accumulated and set aside from his
+yearly income for his own purposes. With these he richly endowed Evelyn
+Erle, and comfortably the three servants or attendants, as he preferred
+to call them, who had followed him from England, and by their lives of
+fidelity and duty shown themselves worthy of his regard. Half of my
+estate was already in stocks of the United States Bank, and half loaned
+at interest on sound mortgages. This last was to be called in as
+speedily as possible and invested also in stocks of the above-mentioned
+bank, in that peculiar institution known as the Pennsylvania Bank, and
+still supposed to be under Mr. Biddle's superintendence. This was done,
+the testator said, to simplify his daughter's property, and render it
+more manageable to her hand, should she by her own will remain single,
+or by that of Providence be widowed, and he hoped in any case she would
+suffer it to remain in this shape as long as Mr. Biddle or Mr. Bainrothe
+lived.</p>
+
+<p>All this I heard with satisfaction and even indifference, but the part
+that stung me almost to exasperation was reserved for the last. Mr.
+Bainrothe and Mr. Stanbury were named as executors conjointly with
+Evelyn Erie, in the last mentioned of whom all power over my actions was
+to vest until I should be of age, and in whose hands, as guardian, Mabel
+and her property were exclusively intrusted until that time should
+arrive; after that period her sisters were to act jointly, unless my
+marriage were made without consent of Evelyn, in which case Mabel was to
+be her charge alone.</p>
+
+<p>No security was to be required of either executor, but, across Mr.
+Gerald Stanbury's name two lines in ink had been drawn with a wavering
+hand, as if for erasure.</p>
+
+<p>I heard this last clause of the will with a beating, bounding, indignant
+heart. Evelyn, who so hated Claude Bainrothe, had us both completely in
+her power for the present, and might defer our marriage for years if it
+so pleased her. And Mabel, toward whom she did not disguise her
+indifference, was to be hers on this ground perhaps forever! Slavery for
+four of the best years of my life was entailed on me, and bondage
+forever on her, perhaps&mdash;my idol&mdash;my darling&mdash;mine&mdash;all mine by every
+right of man or God!</p>
+
+<p>The injustice was too palpable. It was almost incomprehensible to me how
+he had been wrought upon to do these things&mdash;he, &quot;a just man made
+perfect.&quot; All this flashed stunningly across my brain. Suddenly I threw
+my hand wildly to my head&mdash;the whirl of waters was in my ears; yet I
+struggled against the surging tide, and Claude Bainrothe's grasp upon my
+hand strengthened and revived me. I was roused from my apathy by hearing
+Mr. Gerald Stanbury's loud, sonorous voice speaking out clearly: &quot;I
+decline to serve, Mr. Bainrothe, after that erasure. You understand
+that, of course. It was a farce to send for me to-day, tinder these
+circumstances.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How could I know, my dear sir, that this erasure had been made?&quot; was
+the soft and specious rejoinder. &quot;It must have been done in the last few
+months. This will was drawn up in August last. I was ignorant of the
+whole subsequent proceeding, and at that time Mr. Monfort laid peculiar
+stress on your coincidence as executor. Has any thing occurred since
+that time to mar your good understanding?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nothing of any consequence,&quot; said Mr. Stanbury, coldly&mdash;&quot;nothing
+bearing on the esteem of man for man. Nevertheless, Mr. Monfort, as we
+all know, was a man easy to offend and difficult to appease, and I
+suppose&quot; (he swallowed hard as he spoke) &quot;he weighed old friendship and
+some good offices as nothing against his wounded self-love, and against
+the flatterers who beset him with their snares.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sir, you intend to be insulting, no doubt,&quot; Mr. Bainrothe observed,
+with a semblance of calm dignity; &quot;but it is not on such an occasion as
+this, and in the disinterested discharge of my duty, that I will suffer
+myself to be ruffled by the bitter injustice of an irritable and
+disappointed old man.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Be guarded, Mr. Bainrothe,&quot; Mr. Stanbury rejoined, &quot;in your expressions
+to me, or I will look into that illegal erasure and still stand to my
+oar in this golden galley of yours, in which you expect to float with
+the stream, and so soon to have every thing your own way. I like plain
+sailing, sir; am a plain, straightforward man myself, to whom truth is
+second nature; and, were it not for the violence it might do the
+feelings of the person chiefly concerned in this testament, so soon to
+be allied to you and yours, if I understand things properly and report
+speaks truly, I would defy you, Mr. Basil Bainrothe, in the public
+courts, and claim my executorship under the wing of the law.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bainrothe had turned ashy pale during the deliverance of this fiery
+rebuke. But he controlled himself admirably, merely contenting himself
+with saying, in a low voice: &quot;No threats, if you please, Mr. Stanbury;
+act out your intentions when and where you choose, but have
+consideration just now for the feelings of others.&quot; And he waved his
+hand, trembling with rage, toward me, including in his gesture Evelyn,
+who by this time was beside me with her salts, chafing my hands. &quot;I am
+sure we are all willing to yield our executorships if Miriam desires
+it,&quot; she said. &quot;I, for one, should be glad to lift such a yoke from my
+shoulders, unaccustomed to such a burden. Mr. Stanbury, desirable as you
+seem to think it, this post of mine is no sinecure. But spare Miriam
+this scene, I beg of you; she is much overcome&mdash;much exhausted;
+excitement in her case is very injurious, Dr. Pemberton says. Let me beg
+you, my dear sir, to retire. All shall be done properly and in order.
+Her interest is our chief concern, of course.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Evelyn Erle, I have nothing to say to you,&quot; I heard Mr. Stanbury
+exclaim, in a loud, excited tone. &quot;It is not with women I wish to wage
+war, and so understand me! But there is One above to whom you will have
+to account rigidly some day for your stewardship and guardianship of
+these friendless girls, and be prepared, I counsel you, with your
+accounts, to meet Him when the day of reckoning comes! And it may come
+sooner than you suspect. I, for one, shall keep an unslumbering eye upon
+you and your devices while I live, even though at a distance.&mdash;Miriam, I
+am always ready to assist you, my dear, in any way possible to me&mdash;call
+on me freely. Remember, I am your friend.&quot; He came to me, he took me to
+his breast, he kissed my brow, his tears were on my cheek. I cast my
+arms about his dear, old, noble neck; I leaned my quivering face against
+his bosom. &quot;I always loved you,&quot; I said. &quot;I am so sorry, so sorry, Mr.
+Stanbury!&quot; I knew no more&mdash;the words forsook my lips. Again that wild
+whirl of waters surged upon my ears; I seemed to be falling, falling
+down a black, steep, bottomless shaft, beneath which the sea was
+roaring&mdash;falling head-foremost&mdash;hurled as if with a strong impulse down
+the abyss to certain destruction.</p>
+
+<p>Then all was still. The jaws of my dark malady had opened to receive me.</p>
+
+<p>I woke as from a long, deep, and unrefreshing slumber. I was lying in my
+bed, with the curtains, drawn closely around it&mdash;the heavy crimson
+curtains, with their white inside draperies and snowy tufted fringes. I
+had a vague consciousness that some hand had recently parted them, and
+the tassels on the valance were quivering still with the impulse they
+had thus received. Then I heard voices.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How much longer will it endure, Evelyn?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Five or six hours, I suppose. What time is it now?&quot; The clock in the
+hall struck ten before the question could be answered.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ten! It was about three when she was seized,&quot; rejoined the voice of
+Evelyn; &quot;you can calculate for yourself&mdash;the turns are invariably twelve
+and twenty-four hours in duration; if one period is transcended the
+other is accomplished. Dr. Pemberton himself told me this.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Might not the term in some way be shortened? I was very sure I heard
+her stirring just now, and my heart was in my mouth.&quot; After which a
+pause.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I knew you were mistaken, but I examined to satisfy your mind. No, she
+still lies in a lethargy, and will lie in that comatose condition until
+after noon. Then Dr. Pemberton will be here, and she will revive.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That seizure was very dreadful, but I saw no foam on her lips like most
+epileptics, and I watched narrowly.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There are modifications of the disease, Claude; hers is of a passive
+kind, with very few or no convulsive struggles&mdash;more like syncope. Had
+you not better retire now?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Still, it <i>is</i> epilepsy? No, do not banish me yet.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That is what the doctors call it, I believe, Claude. Dr. Pemberton is
+too guarded or politic, one or the other&mdash;all Quakers are, you know&mdash;to
+give it a name, however. Dr. Physick told papa what it was very plainly,
+years ago.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah I he was good authority, certainly a great physician and a
+philosopher as well; but, Evelyn, it is very awful,&quot; with a groan, and
+perhaps a shudder. &quot;Very hard to get over or to bear.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, and the worst of it is it will increase with age, and the end is
+so deplorable&mdash;idiocy or madness, you know, invariably. Early death is
+desirable for Miriam. Her best friends should not wish to see her life
+prolonged. It is an inheritance, probably. Her mother died of some
+inscrutable incurable disease, I suppose like this.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O God! O God! it is almost more than I can stand.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I heard him pacing the room slowly up and down, and my impulse was to
+part the curtains, to call him to me and comfort him, but I could not;
+I was too weak even to speak as yet, and bound as with a spell, a
+nightmare.</p>
+
+<p>A whirl of vivid joy passed through me like an electric flash, however,
+as I recognized in his disquietude the strength of his affection.
+Evelyn's malignant cruelty and falsehood were lost sight of in the bliss
+of this conviction; yet my triumph was but brief.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Evelyn,&quot; he said, speaking low, and pausing in his slow, continued
+pace.&mdash;&quot;Evelyn, just as she lies there sleeping, I would she could lie
+forever! Then happiness could dawn for us again.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Never, Claude Bainrothe!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are unforgiving, my Evelyn! you have no mercy on me nor my
+sufferings. You make no allowance for necessity, or the desperation of
+my condition. In debt myself, and so long a cause of expense and anxiety
+to my father, whose sacrifices for me have been manifold, and before
+whom ruin is grimly yawning even now, how could I act otherwise,
+consistently with the duty of a son? Nay, what manhood would there have
+been in consigning you to such a fate as awaited penniless wife of mine?</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I did not think of these things, did not know them even, when we first
+met, and when I told you of my sudden passion I was sincere, Evelyn,
+then, as I am now, for it is unchanged, and you know that it is so.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;When the dark necessity was laid bare to me, and I felt it my duty to
+cancel our engagement, you bore it bravely, you kept my counsel, you
+assisted me in my projects; you proved yourself all that was noble and
+magnanimous in woman. What marvel, then, that I more than ever loved
+you, and wished the obstacle removed that divides us, and yearn for my
+lost happiness now dearer to me than before, only to be renewed through
+you, Evelyn! that I still adore!&mdash;woman most beautiful, most beloved!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Claude, this is mockery; release my hand; arise, this position becomes
+you not, nor yet me. Go! I am lost to you forever! your own cowardice,
+your own weak worship of expediency, have been your real obstacles. For
+your sake I was willing to brave poverty, debt, expatriation. It was you
+who preferred the dross of gold, and the indulgence of your own luxury
+and that of the sybarite, your father, to the passionate affection I
+bore you. It is too late now for regret or recrimination. Go, I command
+you! accomplish your destiny; continue to beguile Miriam with the tale
+of your affection, and in return reap your harvest of deluded affection
+and golden store from her! and from me receive your guerdon of scorn.
+For I, Claude Bainrothe, know you as you are, and despise you utterly!&quot;
+Her voice trembled with anger, I knew of old its violent ring of rage.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, Evelyn, you only know me as I <i>seem</i>&quot;&mdash;he spoke mildly,
+humbly&mdash;&quot;not as I <i>am</i>. I am not a very bad man, Evelyn, nor even a very
+weak one; in all respects, vile as I appear to you, only a very unhappy
+wretch, and as such entitled to your respectful compassion at least&mdash;all
+I dare ask for now. I will not receive your scorn as my fit guerdon. Is
+there no strength in overcoming inclination as I have done, in
+compelling words of affection to flow from loathing lips?&mdash;for those
+scars alone, Evelyn, in contrast to your speckless beauty, would of
+themselves be enough to shock a fastidious man like me, those hideous
+livid scars which I have yet to behold, and shudder over, marking one
+whole side as you assure me of neck, shoulder, and arm, things that in
+woman are of such inestimable value, of almost more importance than the
+divine face itself.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, but the other side is statuesque enough to satisfy the
+requisitions of a sensuous sculptor,&quot; she rejoined, coldly; &quot;you are
+wrong, Claude, let us be just! Miriam is very well formed, to say no
+more, and her skin is like a magnolia-leaf, where sun and wind have not
+touched or tanned it; then those scars will turn white after a while
+like the rest, and perhaps scarcely be visible.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O Heavens! hideous white seams!&quot; he exclaimed, passionately. &quot;I have
+seen such, like small-pox marks, only ten times more frightful and
+indelible.&quot; In his impotent weakness he moaned aloud.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Worse and worse! I will tell you frankly, had I known of <i>them</i>, the
+engagement never would have been contracted&mdash;no, not though the
+<i>inferno</i> had opened beneath me as my only alternative&mdash;but honor binds
+me now.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are fastidious truly, and your sense of honor supreme,&quot; she
+sneered.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Beauty there was not,&quot; he continued, without regarding her rejoinder,
+&quot;in any remarkable degree. I could have borne its absence with common
+patience, but absolute disfigurement, deformity, such as you assure me
+those burns have left behind them, is too dreadful! Had not Dr.
+Pemberton bared her arm in bleeding, as he did, I should never have
+known of it at all probably until too late. That one mark was
+suggestive.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You attach too much consequence to mere externals, Claude,&quot; said
+Evelyn, coldly. &quot;I trust such fastidious notions may be laid at rest
+before your marriage, or poor Miriam, with her warm, affectionate, and
+unsuspicious nature will be the sufferer. I pity her fate, sincerely.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, Evelyn, you wrong me there; I respect and esteem her far too much
+ever to wound her feelings. Against this I shall carefully guard. My
+bargain would be broken, otherwise. It is a clear case of barter and
+sale, you see. One's honor is concerned in keeping such an obligation. I
+shall never be ungrateful.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have European ideas, you tell me,&quot; she said, bitterly; &quot;is this one
+of them?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is, and the least among them, perhaps; yet it is, nevertheless, hard
+to overcome positive repulsion.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>There was a pause now, during which I could count every throb of my
+heart, and throat, and temples&mdash;my whole frame was transfigured into an
+anvil, on which a thousand tiny hammers seemed to ring. Yet I could not
+move, nor speak, nor weep&mdash;no wretchedness was ever more supreme than
+this cataleptic seizure. Evelyn was the first to break the transient
+silence.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your path is a plain one, Claude Bainrothe; fulfill your contract,
+sealed with gold, and bear patiently your selected lot.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Evelyn, one word&mdash;let it be sincere: do you hate and scorn me? Answer
+me as you would speak to your own soul.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, Claude, no, yet the blow was hard to bear&mdash;struck, too, as you must
+reflect, so suddenly! Only the day before abandonment, remember, you had
+made protestations of such undying constancy. Your conduct was surely
+inconstant, at least.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I make them still, those professions you scorn so deeply.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Away, false man, lest the sleeper awaken!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You say there is no danger of that, and that in their coffins the dead
+are not more insensible.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;To see you kneeling at my feet might bring the dead even to life,&quot; she
+laughed, contemptuously. &quot;I am sick of this drama; be natural for once.
+We can both afford to be so now.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do not spurn me, Evelyn! Never was my love for you so wild as now.&quot; I
+heard him kissing her hands passionately, and his voice, as he spoke
+these words, was choked with grief.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O Claude, let my hand go; at least consider appearances. Mrs. Austin
+will be here in a moment now; what will she think of you? What am I to
+think of such caprice?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;One word, then, Evelyn&mdash;tell me that you forgive me&mdash;on such conditions
+I will release your hands.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;When I forgive you, Claude, I shall be wholly indifferent to you,&quot; she
+said, gently. &quot;Do you still claim forgiveness? I am not angry, though,
+take that assurance for all comfort. Then, if you will have it&quot; (and I
+heard a kiss exchanged), &quot;this confirmation.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then you are not wholly indifferent to me, Evelyn?&quot; he said, in eager
+tones, &quot;you care for me still&mdash;a little?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A very little, Claude&quot;&mdash;hesitatingly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Say that you love me, Evelyn, just once more&mdash;I can then die happy.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Claude Bainrothe, arise&mdash;unhand me&mdash;this is child's play&mdash;let me
+breathe freely again. Well do you know I love you. O God! why do you
+return to a theme so bitter and profitless to both? Come, let us look
+together on Miriam sleeping, and gather strength and courage from such
+contemplation. Come, my friend!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The curtains were lifted&mdash;still I lay rigidly and with closed eyelids
+before them&mdash;not from any notion of my own, but from the helplessness of
+my agony and the condition into which I was fast drifting. Once or
+twice during the progress of this conversation I had tried to lift my
+voice, my hand&mdash;both were alike powerless. I lay bound, for a while, in
+a cataleptic reverie, and then I passed away once more into darkness and
+syncope.</p>
+
+<p>It was evening when I revived&mdash;Dr. Pemberton was sitting beside me,
+holding my pulse&mdash;Mrs. Austin and Mabel were at the bedside. This was,
+at last, the end I craved; of all, I hoped.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The wine, Mrs. Austin,&quot; the doctor said, in low accents.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Quick! one spoonful instantly. You know how it was before&mdash;you were too
+slow; she fell back before she could swallow it.&mdash;Now another, Miriam.
+Say, are you better?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Most anxiously as my eyes opened and were fixed upon his face, were
+these words spoken:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, dying, I believe&mdash;at least, I hope so!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The shrieks of the child aroused me to a sense of what I owed myself and
+her. &quot;You shall not die, sister Miriam,&quot; she cried. &quot;Papa does not want
+you&mdash;I want you&mdash;I will not stay with Evelyn and Claude&mdash;I will go down
+in the ground too, if you die. My sister, you shall not go to God! I
+will hold you tight, if He comes for you. He shall not have my
+Miriam&mdash;nor His angels either.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Her cries did for me what medicine had failed to do. They tried in vain
+to silence her. My pulse returned under the stimulus of emotion. I put
+out my hand blindly to Mabel.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hush, darling,&quot; I said, &quot;I will live for you if I can&mdash;ask Dr.
+Pemberton to save me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are better, already, Miriam,&quot; he whispered. &quot;Mrs. Austin, take
+Mabel away until she can be quiet and behave like a lady; her sister is
+getting well&mdash;tell her I say so. Call Miss Evelyn here, instantly.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, no!&quot; with an impatient movement of the hand. &quot;Not Evelyn;&quot; again my
+arm fell nervelessly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, then, don't call her, of course. I will stay a while myself; we
+don't want anybody at all, Miriam and I, only each other. Go you and
+make that panada ready, and sent it when I ring. Let Charity bring it,
+she will do. Keep every one else away.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>His word was law in our household in times of illness, and Mabel's cries
+were hushed at once by his assurances, and she was led passively away.
+She was capable of great self-control on emergencies, like her own dear
+sainted mamma, who always thought <i>first</i> what was best for others, and
+<i>afterward</i> for herself, if there was room at all for such latter
+consideration.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You must have revived hours ago,&quot; said Dr. Pemberton, after I had
+rallied sufficiently to prove to him that my crisis was over, and the
+usual symptoms of returning convalescence had been manifested. &quot;I have
+marked your seizures narrowly, the periods are perfect&mdash;have limited
+them to eighteen hours latterly&mdash;nay, sometimes to twelve; they used to
+be four-and-twenty. You were due back again in port, little craft, at
+nine or ten o'clock this morning.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Back again from where, Dr. Pemberton?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How should I know, my dear? Some unknown shore&mdash;Hades, perhaps. Who
+knows what becomes of the soul when the body is wrapped in stupor or
+sleep, any more than when it is dead? You came partially to yourself at
+five this afternoon. I had just come in then, having been unavoidably
+detained. We administered, or tried to administer, wine&mdash;but too
+slowly; you fell back again into unconsciousness&mdash;drifted off to sea
+once more; but this last effort of Nature was successful. It is all very
+mysterious to me. Have you no memory of having revived before?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, I was conscious for some time this morning&mdash;for nearly an hour, I
+think.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;At what hour? Who was with you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;At ten o'clock. I heard the hall clock strike that hour soon after I
+opened my eyes. I counted every stroke. There were persons in the room
+at the time, but no one knew of my recovery of consciousness. I lay as
+if spellbound. I heard conversation and understood it; I remember every
+word of it yet&mdash;I shall ever remember it. But, when they came to me, I
+was unable to speak or make a sign.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Unable, or unwilling? I have said before, Miriam, the will has much to
+do with all this. It is a sort of magnetic seizure, I sometimes think.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Both, perhaps, involuntary; but I certainly did not wish to grow
+unconscious again.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yet you wanted to die a while ago&mdash;child, child, there is something
+wrong here! What is it? Tell me frankly. I heard of the scene with Mr.
+Stanbury&mdash;the passionate old man was very unwise to excite you so; he
+meant well, though, no doubt&mdash;he always does. What more has occurred?
+Now, tell me candidly&mdash;much depends on the truth&mdash;has any one been
+unkind?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Whatever I say to you, Dr. Pemberton, must be under the pledge of
+confidence,&quot; I replied; &quot;otherwise I shall keep my own counsel.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Surely, Miriam.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, then, I overheard some one saying, when I revived this morning,
+that I was epileptic, and it troubled me. Now, I call upon you solemnly
+to answer me truthfully on this point. Of what character is my
+disease?&mdash;speak earnestly.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I do not know&mdash;not epilepsy, certainly; partially nervous, I think&mdash;one
+of Nature's strange safety-valves, I suppose.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You would not deceive me?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not under present circumstances, surely; not at any time after such an
+appeal as yours.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Did Dr. Physick ever pronounce my disease epilepsy? You consulted
+together about it once, I believe. Do tell me the truth about this
+matter,&quot; laying my hand on his arm.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Never, so help me God!&quot; he said, earnestly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have relieved me greatly,&quot; I said, pressing my lips on that dear
+and revered hand which had so often ministered to me and mine in sorest
+agony&mdash;a hand spotless as the heart within&mdash;yet, brown and withered as
+the leaves of autumn.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now you, in turn, must relieve me,&quot; he said, gravely. &quot;Who was it that
+alleged these things? They were slanders, and deserve to be nailed to
+the wall, and shall be if power be mine to do so.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I cannot tell you. Do not ask me. It was not asserted that you
+pronounced my disease epilepsy, but insinuated that you thought so. Dr.
+Physick's opinion was given to confirm this impression.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Have you traitors in your own household, Miriam?&quot; he asked, sternly.</p>
+
+<p>I was silent&mdash;shedding quiet tears, however.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have thought so before,&quot; he said, low, between his set teeth. &quot;But,
+thank God, you can put your foot on them all before very long!&mdash;This
+seems a nice young man you are going to marry, but I never liked his
+father. I say this frankly to you, child; but, in truth, I have had no
+sufficient reason for this distaste or prejudice&mdash;it is no more, I
+confess. You are very much in their hands for the present, I fear; but I
+hope they will do you justice.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I shall not marry Claude Bainrothe,&quot; I rejoined at last, firmly. &quot;Let
+this be perfectly understood between us two, Dr. Pemberton. That
+marriage will never take place!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why, your own father told me you were engaged in October last!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have changed my mind since then. Understand me, I admire Mr.
+Bainrothe for many qualities&mdash;I am attached to him even; and he is
+infinitely to be pitied for some reasons, certainly; but marry him I
+never will!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And this is your resolution?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is. But, on second thoughts, I will ask you to keep your knowledge
+of it strictly to yourself. I cannot tell you my motives of action now,
+but they are good.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miriam, you must not ask me to be your confederate in any scheme of
+coquetry or caprice such as this concealment points to. You must deal
+with this young man openly&mdash;no double dealings, my child, or I shall
+come to the rescue.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Have you ever known me to play fast and loose, Dr. Pemberton? Is that
+my characteristic? Ask Mr. Gerald Stanbury&mdash;ask all who know me&mdash;if I
+have ever been guilty of deceit, or time-serving, or caprice, or
+perfidy. No, Dr. Pemberton, it is on his own account solely that I wish
+to keep this matter quiet for the present. Should <i>he</i> wish to proclaim
+it, I surely shall not object. But I seek only to shield him from
+mortification, from reproach, in the line of conduct that I am
+adopting&mdash;best for both.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And to give yourself margin for a change of mind again&mdash;little fox! Ah,
+Miriam, it is the old story&mdash;a lovers' quarrel! I understand it all
+perfectly now. Don't be too hard on the young fellow; he seemed very
+much in love. Relent in time; he will value your mercy more than your
+justice, perhaps.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Have you ever seen us together, that you pronounce him very much in
+love?&quot; I asked, in a hard, cold, subdued voice that startled my own ear,
+and made him serious at once.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Never. But he wears the absent, dreamy air of a lover; even when alone
+it is noticeable, Miriam. I can always tell when a man is preoccupied in
+that way.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If you could go a little further, and divine the object of such
+preoccupation, you would be better prepared to counsel me, dear friend.
+He is no lover of mine, I assure you!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, the old story again, Miriam! Have patience, my dear child.&quot; And,
+strong in his belief that my change of resolution arose only from pique
+and jealousy, that would soon be over, the good doctor went his way, all
+the more ready to keep my secret for such conviction.</p>
+
+<p>I passed a miserable night. The great bed seemed to inclose me like a
+sepulchre, which yet I was too feeble, too irresolute, to leave. The
+conversation I had heard seemed stereotyped on plates of brass, that
+rang like cymbals in my ears. Toward morning I slept. I dreamed that
+mamma came to me, and said, in tones so natural that they seemed to
+sound in my ears after I had awakened:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miriam, your mother and father have sent me to say to you that they
+are united and happy. I, too, have found my mate at last. It was for
+this I was called. The sea has given up its dead, and I am blessed. Now,
+dearest, Mabel is all yours;&quot; and then she kissed me.</p>
+
+<p>I woke with that kiss upon my cheek.</p>
+
+<p>The brief and distinct vision made a deep impression on me. I awoke
+refreshed and strengthened, as from a magnetic slumber.</p>
+
+<p>At first, a sense of joy alone possessed me, but soon the great bitter
+burden came rolling back upon my soul, like the stone of Sisyphus, which
+my sleeping soul had heaved away.</p>
+
+<p>It is a beautiful law of our being, that we rarely dream of that which
+occupies and troubles us most in the daytime. Compensation is carried
+out in this way, as in many others, insensibly, and the balance of
+thought kept equal. I have heard persons complain frequently that they
+could not dream of their dead, with whom their waking thoughts were ever
+filled. But madness must have been the consequence, had there been no
+repose for the mind from one engrossing image.</p>
+
+<p>Relaxation comes to us in dreams at times when the brain needs it most,
+and to lose the consciousness of a sorrow is to cast off its burden for
+a time, and gain new strength to bear it.</p>
+
+<p>I thought, when I first arose from my bed, that I would write to Claude
+Bainrothe, and thus save myself the trial of an interview. But the
+necessity of secrecy, in the commencement at least of the rupture, on
+his own account, presented itself too forcibly to my mind to permit me
+such self-indulgence. I felt assured in the first bitterness of feeling,
+that he would lay my letters before Evelyn, from whom I especially
+wished, for household peace, to preserve the knowledge of what had
+passed in my chamber between herself and him.</p>
+
+<p>I had no wish either to mortify or wound the man I had loved so
+tenderly, but from whom I felt now wholly severed, as though the shadow
+of a grave had intervened between us.</p>
+
+<p>Never again, never, could he be more to me than a memory, a regret.</p>
+
+<p>Glaring faults, impulsive offenses, <i>crime</i> even it may be, I could have
+forgiven, so long as his allegiance had been mine, and his affection
+proof against change, but coldness, perfidy, loathing, such as he had
+avowed, these could never be redeemed in any way, nor considered other
+than they were, insuperable objections to our honorable union.</p>
+
+<p>My heart recoiled from him so utterly, that I could conceive of no fate
+more bitter than to be compelled again to receive his profession of
+affection, his lover-like caresses; yet, in recoiling, it had been
+bruised against its prison-bars, bruised and crushed like a bird that
+seeks refuge in the farthest limits of its cage from an approaching foe,
+and suffers almost as severely as if given to its fangs.</p>
+
+<p>I determined, after mature consideration, to see him once again,
+privately, and beyond the range of all foreign observation and hearing.
+In order to do this, I might have to wait, and in the mean time how
+should I deport myself, how conceal my change of feeling from his
+observant eyes?</p>
+
+<p>I was relieved by an unlooked-for contingency. Evelyn announced her
+intention of going, as soon as I should be able to spare her, with a
+party of young friends, to hear a celebrated singer perform in an
+oratorio in the cathedral of an adjacent city, her specialty being
+vocal music, and her mourning permitting only sacred concerts. Her own
+highly-cultivated voice, it is true, had ill repaid the care that had
+been lavished on it, sharp and thin as it was by nature. I urged her to
+set forth at once, declaring myself convalescent, but I did not leave my
+room, nor see Claude Bainrothe, save for five minutes in her presence,
+until after she had gone. Then I was at liberty to work my will.</p>
+
+<p>I wrote on the very evening of her departure, requesting him to defer
+his accustomed visit, until the next morning, when I hoped to have an
+hour's private conversation with him in the library, a room most dear to
+me, once as the chosen haunt of my father, but shunned of late as
+vault-like and melancholy, now that his ever-welcome and dear presence
+was removed from it forever.</p>
+
+<p>Punctual as the hand to the hour or the dial to the sun, Claude
+Bainrothe came at the time I had appointed, and I was there to meet him,
+nerved and calm as a spirit of the past, in that great quiet sarcophagus
+of books&mdash;at least, I so deceived myself to believe. I had made up my
+mind, during the time I had been sitting alone in that sombre room, as
+to what I would say to him, and how clearly and concisely I would array
+my wrongs in words, and pronounce his sentence. But, when he came, all
+this was forgotten. A tumult of wild feeling surged through my brain. My
+very tongue grew icy, and trembled in my mouth. My eyes were dimmed, and
+my forehead was cold and rigid. I was silent from emotion. I felt like a
+dying wretch.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are very pale, Miriam,&quot; he said, as he advanced to me with
+outstretched hands, and wearing that beaming, candid, devoted look he
+knew so well how to assume; &quot;are you sure you are not going to be ill
+again, my love? You must be careful of yourself, my own darling; you
+must indeed, for my sake, if not your own.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I was strengthened now to speak, by the indignation that possessed me,
+at his perfidious words, his wholly artificial manner, which broke on me
+as suddenly and as glaringly on the eye as rouge will do on a woman's
+cheek in sunshine, which we have thought real bloom in shadow. I
+wondered then, how I ever could have been deceived. I wonder less now.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sit down, Mr. Bainrothe,&quot; I said, coldly, withdrawing my hands quietly
+from his grasp, and recovering with my composure my strength. &quot;Do not
+concern yourself about my health, I beg. It is quite good just now, and
+will probably remain so for some time. My spells occur at distant
+intervals.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I know how that is, or has been; but we must try to break them up
+altogether. We will go to Paris next year, and have the best advice; in
+the mean time Dr. Pemberton must try some new remedy for you, or call in
+counsel. On this point I am quite determined.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am satisfied that Dr. Pemberton, who understands my constitution
+thoroughly, is my best adviser. I shall decline all other medical aid,&quot;
+I replied. &quot;Nature is on my side&mdash;I am young, vigorous, growing still,
+probably, in strength, and shall fling off my malady eventually, as a
+strong man casts a serpent from his thigh. I have little fear on that
+score. Nor do I think, with some others, that my disease is epilepsy;
+though, if it were, God knows I should have little need for shame.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miriam, what an idea! Epilepsy, indeed!&quot; He was very nervous now, I
+saw. &quot;Epilepsy, indeed!&quot;&mdash;he faltered again.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As to those scars, Claude,&quot; I said, fixing my eyes upon him, &quot;they
+were honorably earned in my sister's service. Your father knows the
+details, which I spare your fastidious ear. I cannot wonder, however,
+that they shocked you, with your previous feelings to me. I do not like
+to look upon them myself, yet I have never felt them a humiliation until
+now.&quot; I knew that my forehead flushed hotly as I proceeded, and my lips
+trembled. The reaction was complete.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miriam, what does all this mean?&quot; he asked, rising suddenly from his
+seat as pale as ashes, and clinging to the mantel-shelf for support as
+he did so.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It means, Claude Bainrothe,&quot; I said, firmly, &quot;it means simply this:
+that our engagement is at an end; that you are free from all claims of
+mine from this moment, and that henceforth we can only meet as friends
+or strangers&mdash;as the first, I trust!&quot; I stretched forth my hand toward
+him kindly, irresistibly. He did not seem to notice it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Who has done this?&quot; he asked, huskily. &quot;Evelyn? This is her work, I
+feel; a piece of her bitter vengeance! Tell me the truth,
+Miriam&mdash;who has done this devil's mischief?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He suffered greatly, I saw&mdash;was terribly excited.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So far from your surmise being just, Claude, I enjoin upon you, as a
+man of honor, never to let her know the subject of this conference, in
+which she has had no voluntary part. Placed as I am by my father's will,
+which I never will gainsay, however bitter it may be to me; bound hand
+and foot; indeed, in her power by its decisions for a term of years, her
+knowledge of the fact that I had overheard her conversation with you in
+my chamber when I lay stricken, helpless, if not unconscious (an
+unwilling listener, I assure you, Claude, to every word you uttered),
+would be a cause of endless misery to me and her. No, Evelyn has told me
+nothing, believe me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He staggered back from the mantel to his chair, sat down again
+helplessly, and covered his face with his hands. The blush of shame
+mounted above his fingers and crimsoned the very roots of his silken
+hair. He trembled visibly.</p>
+
+<p>O God! how I pitied him then! Self sank out of sight at that moment, and
+I thought only of his confusion. Had I obeyed my impulse, I would have
+cast my arms about his neck as about a brother's, and whispered, to that
+stormy nature, &quot;Peace, be still!&quot; But I refrained from a manifestation
+that might have deceived him utterly as to its source. I only said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am very sorry, Claude, for all this; but bear it like a man. Believe
+me, no one shall ever know the occasion of this rupture&mdash;the management
+of which I leave entirely in your hands. Of what I overheard I shall
+never speak, I promise you, even though sorely pressed for my reasons
+for our separation. My own pride would prevent such a revelation, you
+know, putting principle aside.&quot; And again I extended my hand to him
+frankly, with the words, &quot;Let us be friends.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He had glanced up a moment while I was speaking, evidently relieved by
+my voluntary promise. He took my hand humbly now, and reverently kissed
+it, bowing his head above it long and mutely.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My poor, outraged, offended, noble Miriam!&quot; I heard him murmur at last.
+The words affected me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am all these, Claude,&quot; I said, withdrawing my hand gently but firmly,
+&quot;but none the less your friend, if you will have it so. And now let us
+think what will be best for you to do. I wish to spare your feelings as
+much as possible, and I will say all I can with truth to exonerate you
+in your father's eyes. Go to Copenhagen, as you proposed at one time to
+do, and leave the rest to me. That will be best, I think.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;To Copenhagen!&quot; he exclaimed. &quot;You issue thus coldly your edict of
+banishment! Are you implacable then, Miriam?&quot; and the cold dew stood in
+beads on his now pallid brow as he rose before me. He had not fully
+realized his situation until now.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Implacable' is scarcely the word for this occasion, Claude. It implies
+anger or hatred, it seems to me. Now, I feel neither of these&mdash;only the
+truest sympathy.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your anger, your hatred, were far more welcome, Miriam&mdash;more natural
+under the circumstances. This cool philosophy in one so young is
+monstrous! Mock me no longer with your calm compassion&mdash;it maddens
+me&mdash;it sinks me below contempt!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He spoke gloomily, angrily, pushing away the clustering hair from his
+brow in the way peculiar to him when excited, as he proceeded, stamping
+slightly with his foot on the marble hearthstone in his impotent way. I
+could but smile!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I will not offend you further, Claude,&quot; I said, mildly. &quot;Receive your
+ring;&quot; and I gave him back the diamond cross on a black enamel ground
+set on its circle of gold that he had placed upon my finger as a pledge
+of our betrothal; an ominous one, surely&mdash;for another cross was now to
+be borne.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Understand me distinctly, Claude, all is finally at an end between us
+from this forever more! And now, farewell!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Go, Miriam, go!&quot; he murmured. &quot;Leave me to my fate&mdash;I have deserved it
+all, and more. I have been weak and wicked&mdash;you shall not find me
+ungrateful. Go, queenly spirit! go, soul of tenderness, pity, and most
+unselfish faith, that ever folded its wings in human breast! go, and
+find a fitter mate! For me, the world is wide, I shall offend your gaze
+no more.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Without another word I left him. I could not trust myself to speak. Too
+much of the past returned to render any further intercourse between us
+wise, or other than torture at that season. Besides, my confidence in
+him was gone forever, and with it had vanished respect, esteem,
+affection!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="I_CHAPTER_VI"></a><h2>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>&quot;What is this Claude is talking of, Miriam?&quot; asked Mr. Bainrothe a day
+or two after the interview I have described in my last pages.
+&quot;Copenhagen again&mdash;and he seems quite dispirited. He says you have sent
+him into banishment for a year, Miriam&mdash;a long probation truly!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Our engagement was to have been for that length of time from the
+first,&quot; I said, evasively; &quot;my father was not willing for me to marry
+before I had attained my seventeenth year, you remember, and it still
+wants some months of that period.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, yes! but all that is changed now by the force of circumstances. You
+are so well grown, so very womanly for your age, that I cannot see why
+it would not be just as well to shorten rather than lengthen the period
+of your engagement, especially as it seems Claude must go into exile
+until then, by some caprice of yours. You will be at the head of your
+own house too, after that ceremony takes place, which Claude is so
+impatient to have over. Evelyn would go to England for a time under such
+circumstances, for she will not oppose your views&mdash;your father's will
+was made before your betrothal to my son, or he would scarcely have made
+her your absolute guardian&quot; (apologetically spoken). &quot;For the matter of
+that,&quot; he pursued, &quot;I cannot doubt that, were you settled in life, she
+would gladly transfer Mabel to your care. Indeed, I have heard her say
+as much.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A great temptation, truly!&quot; I said, grimly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your manner is peculiar to-day, Miriam. I cannot understand it, I
+confess.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;For all explanation, Mr. Bainrothe, I refer you to your son. I prefer
+not to discuss the matter.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah! it is just as I expected, from his behavior as well as your own.
+Some childish misunderstanding has taken place between you, which, he
+was loath to acknowledge or explain, but which in your womanly candor
+you will reveal at once, and tell me all about it. I am the very best
+mediator you ever saw on such occasions,&quot; with a bland and confident
+air, taking my hand, smiling.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. Bainrothe, your mediation could effect nothing between me and
+Claude; we understand one another perfectly, I assure you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He was very much excited now, evidently; he relinquished my unwilling
+hand coldly&mdash;on which he had, doubtless, missed the conspicuous ring,
+significant of my engagement. His chameleon eyes seemed to emit sparks
+of phosphorescent fire, as if every one of the dull-yellow sparks
+therein had become suddenly ignited. I saw then, for the first time,
+what his ire could be, and what reason I had to dread it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Have I been deceived in believing that you were attached to my son,
+Miriam Monfort, and that you meant to keep faith with him?&quot; he asked,
+stiffly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have not been deceived, Mr. Bainrothe, nor is it my wish to deceive
+you now. Again I beg to refer you to him for all explanation; whatever
+he alleges will be highly satisfactory to me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I will bet my life,&quot; he said, passionately, &quot;that Evelyn Erle is at the
+root of all this! That girl,&quot; he soliloquized, &quot;who knew so well, from
+the first, what our intentions were; to throw herself at his head in the
+shameless way she did! A woman, without a woman's modesty.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Beware, Mr. Bainrothe,&quot; I interrupted; &quot;it is of my sister you speak. I
+will not hear her slandered. Certainly, if propriety ever assumed female
+form, it is in that of Evelyn Erie. This was my father's opinion&mdash;it is
+mine.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Propriety! The pale ghost of it rather,&quot; he sneered; &quot;I thought you
+hated hypocrisy; you do not love that woman&mdash;have little right to; yet
+you praise and defend her. How is this! Are you sincere in such a
+course? Ask your own heart.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. Bainrothe, let us not discuss Evelyn, I beg, either now or
+hereafter; for some reason she is very sacred to me. I cannot say one
+word more on the subject of your son than I have said, without his own
+consent. As to our marriage, let me tell you frankly&mdash;&quot; I hesitated&mdash;the
+stricture of my throat, for a moment, interrupted me, and I was ashamed
+of my weakness.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That it is indefinitely postponed, I suppose you would like to say,
+Miriam,&quot; he added, ironically. &quot;Well, I honor your emotion; don't be
+ashamed of it. Claude is to blame, no doubt; but the poor fellow suffers
+enough already, without prolonged punishment. Suppose I send him up to
+you; he will fall at your feet.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I shook my head silently.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now, don't be hard-hearted; I have never seen any man more devoted
+than he is to you. A woman must forgive a few shortcomings, now and
+then, in one of our faulty sex. You lived so long with a man who was
+almost perfect, that you cannot make allowances for impulsive and
+indiscreet young manhood. What has poor Claude been guilty of?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I will tell you,&quot; I said, recovering myself by the time this speech was
+ended, by a mighty effort. &quot;I will tell you: Guilty only of doing
+violence to his own inclinations, from a mistaken sense of duty to his
+father; that is all. I never felt more kindly&mdash;more affectionately to
+Claude Bainrothe than at this moment. If I can serve him in any way, but
+one, he may always command me. Let him go for the present to Copenhagen,
+I implore you; it will be best for him&mdash;for all of us. He will know his
+own mind better then, than he can now. When he returns, I would like to
+see him happy. I doubt if he will be so, if he remains here,&quot; I
+faltered; &quot;I should dislike, very much, to see him make shipwreck of his
+happiness.&quot; I hesitated, choked again. &quot;I acknowledge&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have cut him off, Miriam, that is plain, for the present, at
+least,&quot; he interrupted. &quot;Yet you speak in enigmas; but, if he be the man
+I think he is, he will make all clear to you at last, for I am sure he
+is incapable of any act radically wrong, and is the soul of chivalrous
+honor; always ready to repair a folly, and avoid it in future. The very
+best fellow living.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I had never seen Mr. Bainrothe so moved before as he now certainly was.
+The glitter of a tear was in his mottled eye, and it stirred me
+strangely. It was as if a snake should weep, and what in Nature could be
+more affecting than such a spectacle? Or, rather, what <i>out</i> of Nature?</p>
+
+<p>There must have been, despite this tender showing, an outbreak of some
+sort between father and son from the time of this call and the next
+visit of Mr. Bainrothe, which occurred some days later.</p>
+
+<p>The expression of concentrated rage on his face was unmistakable on this
+occasion. Its usually placid, polished expression was laid aside, for
+one of unqualified displeasure. He was pale as marble too, which was a
+sign of excitement with him, with his complexion, usually clear and
+florid.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Again I come to you, Miriam,&quot; he said, &quot;and this time with his
+permission to mediate between you and my unhappy son. Believe me, you
+attach too much consequence to hasty and half-comprehended expressions,
+uttered, as he avers, to appease the offended vanity of an angry and
+implacable&mdash;ay, and dangerous woman. There are few things a man will not
+say for such a purpose. He went too far in his anxiety to conciliate
+malice, and allay an evil temper. This is all that can be imputed to
+him. Be reasonable, my dear girl! you are alone in the world; we are
+your truest friends. It shall be our study&mdash;mine, as well as his&mdash;to
+guard your life from every care, every anxiety even&mdash;precaution so
+necessary in your case, and with your peculiar constitution. You love my
+son, or have loved him&mdash;in this I could not be mistaken&mdash;and his
+affection for you is sincere and unaffected, despite the concessions a
+designing woman, who conceives herself slighted, has wrung from his
+unwary lips, on purpose to mar his prospects, and blight your happiness,
+I well believe.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, no, there was no design of this kind on her part, of that I am
+sure. She could not&mdash;did not know that I overheard them. You must do her
+justice there&mdash;I trust she may never know it. Claude promised me&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I know, I know&mdash;it was with this understanding,&quot; he interrupted, &quot;that
+he confided to me the extent of his indiscretion, for which I have rated
+him soundly, I assure you. Evelyn is not to know that you overheard
+them. This is the compact&mdash;a very sensible and politic one on your part,
+under the circumstances, for Evelyn, we all know, is, excuse me my dear,
+the devil, when fairly aroused. Now, as to this overhearing of
+yours&mdash;might not your mind, laboring under recent coma, and a sort of
+mental mirage as it were, have had a tendency to magnify and only
+partially comprehend the conversation thus suddenly forced upon your
+attention? For I understand you were unable to make yourself heard at
+all, or even to give signs of life when the curtains of your bed were
+lifted by the interlocutors.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This last is true&mdash;but that I could not have been mistaken, Claude's
+own admissions confirm. He denied nothing that I suggested&mdash;much was
+left by me unquestioned.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes,&quot; catching wildly at this straw, &quot;he finds himself quite in the
+dark still, I perceive&mdash;as to the accusations brought against him;
+suppose you make your charges one by one, as it were in the shape of
+specifications?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There are no charges, no accusations brought&mdash;nothing of that sort,&quot; I
+said, proudly; &quot;and I must entreat that from this hour, Mr. Bainrothe,
+this subject be dropped between us utterly. It is wholly unprofitable,
+believe me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are a person of extraordinary obduracy,&quot; he said, &quot;for one of your
+years. I should like to know how much the Stanbury influence has had to
+do with strengthening your unwise, unamiable, and stiff-necked
+resolution! If I were Claude Bainrothe, I should lay heavy damages
+against you in the courts of law, for your unjustifiable evasion of a
+formal contract&mdash;one your father sanctioned, one of which all your
+friends are and were cognizant and proud, and which has subjected him,
+in its rupture, to so much distress and mortification; nay, even as I
+can prove, pecuniary loss.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If <i>money</i> can repay your son Claude, for any wrong I have done him, he
+is welcome to a portion of mine,&quot; I said, deeply disgusted, &quot;without
+intervention of law&mdash;painful exposure of any kind. I cherish for him,
+however, even yet, too much regard and respect to believe him capable of
+such proceedings. The idea is worthy of the mind it springs from&mdash;worthy
+of the author of all this sorrow and confusion&mdash;worthy of Mr. Basil
+Bainrothe, the arch-conspirator himself.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He turned upon me with clinched hands and blazing eyes. &quot;You shall
+answer for these words, girl! if not now, years hence,&quot; he said; &quot;the
+seed of your insult has been thrown on fertile soil, I promise you!&quot; and
+he laughed bitterly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I do not fear you,&quot; I replied; all disguise was thrown off&mdash;it was war
+to the knife between us now; &quot;never have&mdash;never can, in spite of your
+unmanly threats. Evelyn must protect me henceforth from any further
+contact with you, however, until I am of age to take in hand my own
+affairs; Evelyn Erie, my guardian, and your fellow-executor, owes me
+this safeguard. I trust, Mr. Bainrothe, we shall meet no more.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I left the room&mdash;left him in possession of the library, in which he
+paced up and down for an hour or more, like a caged panther. There was a
+sealed note for me in his handwriting, under the massive paper-weight on
+the table, when I entered it again, which he had written and left there
+before his departure. It ran thus&mdash;for I read it derisively, and
+remember its contents still:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We have both been wrong, dear Miriam. I, as the elder and more
+experienced offender&mdash;therefore, the more responsible one&mdash;claim it as
+my privilege to be the first to atone. I cannot think, from what I know
+of you, that you will be long in following my example. Let us forgive
+one another. Fate has thrown us together, and we must not afford a
+malicious world the spectacle of our inconsistency, or the satisfaction
+of seeing us quarrel, after so many years of harmony.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As to Claude, you and he must settle your own matters. I wash my hands
+of the whole transaction from this hour, supposing that common-sense
+will triumph at last, and reconcile your differences.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yours as ever, truly and devotedly,</p>
+
+<p>&quot;BASIL BAINROTHE.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I did not answer this note&mdash;I could not discreetly, although I tried to
+do so several times. I could not conquer sufficiently my deep disgust of
+his insupportable behavior to respond kindly, at that time, to any
+overture of Mr. Bainrothe's, nor did I wish to write one rude word to
+him in connection with so delicate a subject as that of our late
+discussion.</p>
+
+<p>He came no more until after Evelyn's return, and then only on necessary
+business; inquiring for her alone, and holding on such occasions secret
+conclaves with her invariably in the library. Whenever we met casually,
+however, whether in the street or my own house, he was polite and easy
+in his deportment, even gracious.</p>
+
+<p>With Claude it was otherwise; he avoided me sedulously, and, although I
+have reason to think he met and joined Evelyn frequently, and even by
+appointment in her long walks, he never called to see her or paid her
+open attentions. Yet I found that he had followed my counsels.</p>
+
+<p>A day or two before he sailed for Copenhagen to join the legation in
+Denmark, an exception to this rule of avoidance was made by both father
+and son, who came in as had been usual with them in other days,
+informally, in the evening.</p>
+
+<p>This was Claude's farewell visit&mdash;a very unpleasant necessity evidently
+on his part. I was unconstrained in the cordiality with which I received
+both his father and himself&mdash;for it was heart-felt on this occasion. Old
+feelings came back to me so vividly that night, and my own dear father
+seemed so visibly recalled by the presence once more of our unbroken
+circle, that I lost sight, for a season, of my wrongs and sufferings in
+the memory of the past, and broke temporarily through the cloud that
+oppressed me and dimmed my existence.</p>
+
+<p>I saw Mr. Bainrothe gazing at me several times, in the course of his
+visit, with an expression of interest and surprise.</p>
+
+<p>He had expected very different manifestations, no doubt, and he told
+Evelyn afterward that &quot;no woman of thirty could have carried off matters
+with a higher hand than did that chit of sixteen, Miriam Monfort.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;All that talk of yours, Miriam, about 'Hamlet,' 'Elsinore,'
+'Wittenberg,' and the 'fiery Dane,' probably imposed on those two
+unsophisticated men; but I saw through the whole proceeding; you were
+afraid of yourself, my dear, that was evident, and ashamed, as you ought
+to have been, of your capricious conduct to poor Claude, who shows,
+however, as uncompromising a spirit as your own, I perceive. What <i>was</i>
+the matter, Miriam? I can get nothing out of him, and I have waited,
+until my patience is exhausted, for a voluntary communication from you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why have you not asked me before, Evelyn?&quot; I questioned, calmly, in
+reply. &quot;You have shown more than your usual forbearance, on this
+occasion.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear child, 'Least said is soonest mended,' is proverbial in
+quarrels of all kinds. I have no wish to pry or play mischief-maker,
+and, if Mr. Basil Bainrothe with his diplomatic talents could do nothing
+to mend the difficulty, I had no right to suppose that I could succeed
+better, with my very direct, straightforward disposition.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You were right, Evelyn, certainly, in your conclusion, and, if you
+please, will never ask for any explanation of the breach between Claude
+and myself. It is irrevocable; but I am sorry to see him so resentful.
+He cannot conceal his displeasure against me, and yet I have never
+offended him willingly, I am sure.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Caprice and coquetry are not so lightly estimated by every one, as you
+hold them, nor yet counted causes for gratitude by most men, let me
+assure you, Miriam.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Who has accused me of these?&quot; I questioned, with a flashing eye, a
+flushing cheek.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Does your own heart acquit you?&quot; she asked, evasively.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It does,&quot; I answered, solemnly, &quot;as does the God who reads all hearts,
+and to whom I am now alone answerable for any motives of mine.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Since when have you grown so independent, Miriam?&quot; she asked,
+ironically.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Since the death of my father,&quot; I replied.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah! you do not accredit delegated allegiance it seems,&quot; turning her
+face aside.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not as far as my own feelings and their sources are concerned. As to my
+acts, I hope never to commit one of which all just men might not
+approve.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We shall see. However, a year more or less makes little difference.
+Claude Bainrothe, improved, will return within a year, probably, and all
+may still be well. Matters will then, I fancy, be in his own hands,
+pretty much.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;All <i>is</i> well, Evelyn, if you could only think so, and now, once for
+all, make up your mind, definitely, to let <i>well</i> alone, for I must not
+be approached again on this subject, I warn you!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I spoke with a decision which, at times, had its effect even on the
+&quot;indomitable Evelyn,&quot; as my father often had called her, playfully, and
+again the broken engagement was consigned to silence.</p>
+
+<p>Yet on my mind, my feelings, the effect of this severe and sudden trial
+was far more bitter and profound than met the outward eye.</p>
+
+<p>I had been sustained at first by a sense of pride, self-respect, and
+womanly indignation, that prevented me from feeling the whole extent of
+the wound I had received; but with reaction came that dull, dumb, aching
+of the heart, which all who have felt it may recognize as more wearing
+than keener pain, or more declared suffering.</p>
+
+<p>I suppose the Spartan who felt the gnawing of the hidden fox was a mere
+type of this species of anguish, which reproduces itself wherever
+wounded pride underlies concealment, or wherever injustice and
+ingratitude render us uncomplaining through a sense of moral dignity.</p>
+
+<p>The first six months succeeding my rupture with Claude Bainrothe went
+by like a leaden dream. My heart lay like a stone in my bosom, and the
+gloss had dropped from life, and the glory from the face of Nature for
+me, in that dreary interval, as though I had grown suddenly old.</p>
+
+<p>In routine, in occupation alone, I found relief and companionship. I
+compelled myself to teach Mabel, and pursue my own studies, lest my mind
+should fall back on my body, and destroy both.</p>
+
+<p>A nervous peculiarity manifested itself about this time, that was
+singularly distressing to me, and which I confided to no one, not even
+that excellent physician who kept a quiet and observant eye fixed upon
+me during all this period of my probation.</p>
+
+<p>I became nervously but not mentally convinced of the want of substance
+in every thing around me, and have repeatedly risen and crossed the
+room, and touched an article on the opposite side, to compel my better
+judgment to the conviction that it was indeed tangible and substantial,
+and not the merest shadow of a shade.</p>
+
+<p>I was sustained in my resolution to conquer this besetting weakness,
+from a vague horror and fear that, should I suffer it to gain further
+ascendency, I might fall back into habitual lethargies, and, remembering
+what Dr. Pemberton had said, I was determined, if possible, to throw off
+that incubus of my being, by the strength of my own will, aided by God's
+mercy.</p>
+
+<p>There were no uttered prayers to this effect, that I remember, but an
+unceasing cry for strength, for light, went up from my heart, as
+continuously as the waters of a fountain, to the ear of my Creator. I
+have thought sometimes that, in this persistent wrestle of mind with
+matter, enduring so many weeks and months, so many weary, woful days
+and sleepless nights, the physical demon was exorcised at last, that had
+ruled my life so long, or was reduced to feeble efforts thereafter.</p>
+
+<p>Once when Dr. Pemberton's attendance had been necessary to me, during a
+severe spell of pleurisy, he said when I was recovering: &quot;There is some
+favorable change at work in your constitution, Miriam, it seems to me.
+We hear no more of the 'obliteration spells,'&quot; for thus he called my
+seizures.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your drops have banished them, dear doctor, I suppose,&quot; I rejoined,
+with a faint smile.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;They may have aided to do so,&quot; he said, gravely, &quot;but I think I have
+observed, Miriam, that you were doing good work lately for yourself. You
+have been struggling manfully, my little girl. Now, I am going for
+recreation to Magara, and the Northern cities, for a few weeks, next
+month, and I want you to go with me, in aid of this effort of yours.
+Quite alone, with Charity as sole attendant. My niece will be with me&mdash;a
+good, quiet girl, you know, some years older than yourself, and also in
+feeble health; and I will see that you are both well taken care of,
+medically at least, while you are absent. How would you like this,
+Miriam,&quot; patting my shoulder, &quot;just for a change?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, very much!&quot; I said, eagerly. &quot;Yes, I will go gladly, in this quiet
+way, for I do not wish to visit gay places, or to make strange
+acquaintance, under the circumstances. My deep mourning must be
+respected, you know, and&mdash;&quot; I hesitated; looked in his kind,
+sympathizing face; then hid mine on his shoulder&mdash;weeping. The first
+tears of relief I had shed for months.</p>
+
+<p>He did not check me, for he knew full well the value of this outlet of
+feeling, to one situated as I was, physically as well as mentally.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I would offer to take Mabel,&quot; he added, after a time, &quot;were I not
+solemnly convinced that it would be better for you both that she should
+stay here. Mrs. Austin seems necessary to her very existence; and that
+old woman is your vampire, I verily believe.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, no, she is very good, indeed. You are mistaken.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, I am not mistaken. There are persons who do sack away,
+unconsciously, the very life of others, from some peculiarity of
+organization in both. I have strong faith in this theory. I have been
+obliged sometimes to decree the separation of wife and husband for a
+time, to save the life of one or the other; of mother and child even.
+Every time you fall ill, I believe Mrs. Austin gains strength and energy
+at your expense. She absorbs your nervous fluid. It was from this
+conviction that I requested you two years ago to change your room,
+which, until then, she had shared on the pretence of your necessities,
+and to substitute a younger and less sponge-like attendant. You remember
+the stress I laid on this?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, yes, one of your crotchets, dear doctor, nothing else. You are
+full of such vagaries&mdash;always were&mdash;but there is not another such dear
+old willful physician in Christendom for all that.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Little flatterer! But here is a piece of cassava bread, I brought you,
+as you thought you would like to taste it. My old West Indian patient
+keeps me well supplied. I fancy to nibble it as I drive about in my
+cabriolet, or whatever they call this French affair of mine.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;For a wonder, you have the word right;&quot; and I laughed in his honest
+face.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am going to France, next spring, when the Stanburys go over, just to
+see what strides medicine is making across the waters, and to rest
+myself a little, improve my Gallic pronunciation, and get the fashions,
+and I will take you as my interpreter, if you promise to be very good
+and obedient in the interval.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, thank you; I would like it of all things. But what takes the
+Stanburys abroad? I have heard nothing of this plan of theirs before.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pleasure and business combined, I believe. They will remain abroad some
+years, for the education of George Gaston. What an idol Mrs. Stanbury is
+making of that boy, to be sure, and Laura is just as foolish about him
+as her mother! By-the-by, she is to be married, they say, to that young
+Prussian nobleman, who was there so much last winter. I forget his
+unpronounceable name. They will reside in Berlin, I understand, should
+the marriage be '<i>unfait accompli</i>,' as the French have it. Is not that
+right, Miriam?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, admirably pronounced! You are becoming quite a Gaul in your old
+age.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I hope I shall never become gall and wormwood, in any event, like some
+old folks. Now, is not that being literal, Miriam?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And witty, as well! You must have been associating with Dr. C&mdash;&mdash;n,
+lately.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So you can't give me credit for a little originality, because my
+facetious vein is new to you. Now, do your old friend justice, and
+believe even in his puns; if not pungent, he is self-sustaining and
+independent; but, remember, I count on you absolutely, next week. One
+trunk apiece and no bandboxes or baskets. A green-silk travelling-bonnet
+and pongee habit. This is my uniform, for my female guard. Carry Grey
+knows my whims, and will observe them. By-the-by, you will like my
+niece.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>We made a delightful tour, which occupied the whole month of August, and
+I came back refreshed, soul and body; as for Carry Grey, she revived,
+like a plant that had been newly tended and watered after long neglect.
+For the poor girl had been making a slave of herself for two years in
+her widowed brother's household, consisting of many little children, and
+needed repose from her multifarious duties.</p>
+
+<p>He was going to marry again soon, she told me, and then she hoped to
+feel at liberty to fulfill her own engagement of five years' standing.
+Carry Grey was quite this many years over twenty-one, and was going to
+emigrate with her husband to Missouri, and to settle in the thriving
+young town of St. Louis, fast growing up then into a city. He was to
+have a church there, and they might be so happy, she thought, if God
+only smiled upon them! But all depended upon that.</p>
+
+<p>It was a wholesome lesson to my morbid discontent and pride to hear what
+trials she had surmounted already, and how many more she was ready to
+encounter.</p>
+
+<p>She had once been engaged to a very brilliant young man, she told me,
+but he was dissipated and careless of her feelings, and she let him go;
+since that he had drifted fast to destruction, and sometimes she
+reproached herself for not having held to him through thick and thin. It
+was just possible she might have saved him, she thought, but her friends
+had persuaded her that he would only drag her down, and so she broke
+with him forever.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Did he love you?&quot; I asked, eagerly. &quot;Were you sure that he was not
+perfidious?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, I believe he was true to me&mdash;however false to himself.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then you were wrong,&quot; I said. &quot;Wrong, believe me. Carry Grey! A woman
+should bear every thing but infidelity of heart for the man she
+loves&mdash;every thing!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am sorry to hear you say so,&quot; she replied, somewhat coldly. &quot;There is
+a great deal more than blind affection needful for a woman's happiness,
+Miss Monfort&mdash;so experience tells us. What I mean is, perhaps he <i>might</i>
+have reformed had I not broken with him; but it was the <i>merest</i>
+chance&mdash;one too feeble to depend on; and I did wisely to discard him, I
+am convinced.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Forgive me! I did not mean to censure you,&quot; I said; &quot;I was only
+speaking generally&mdash;too generally, perhaps, for individual courtesy.
+This is a theory of mine which as yet I have had no opportunity to put
+in practice, for I have never been attached to a dissipated man.&quot; I
+smiled. &quot;I dare say I too should drop such a man like a pestilence.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I hope so. But the best way is to avoid all intimacy with such men from
+the first. You are very young. Let me give you my advice on this subject
+before you form any attachment: keep your affections for a worthy
+object, if you keep them locked up forever. Better be alone than
+mismated.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This is to shut the cage after the bird has flown,&quot; I thought, sadly;
+but I thanked her, and promised to profit by her good counsel.</p>
+
+<p>We were fast friends ever after, and, when she went away to her distant
+Western home, Carry Ormsby bore some memorials of her summer friend away
+with her, in the shape of books, plate, and jewels, such as her simple
+means could have ill afforded. I felt that I could not have devised any
+means more sure to gratify her worthy uncle, to whom such gifts had been
+dross. He was a widower&mdash;the father of sons&mdash;indifferent to show, and,
+besides that, unwilling to incur obligations from any one, such as gifts
+entail on some minds.</p>
+
+<p>There are persons made to give and others to receive, and neither can do
+the work of the other gracefully. He and I were both of the same order,
+so we accorded perfectly.</p>
+
+<p>The autumn and winter passed very quietly. In Mrs. Stanbury and Laura I
+again found my chief consolation. George Gaston was in the South, for
+his health, on his own decayed plantation, with his uncle, who took
+charge of it. But, in the spring, as Dr. Pemberton had stated, they were
+all to go to Europe for some years. Laura would be married in Paris, if
+at all. Every thing depended on some investigations Mr. Gerald Stanbury
+was to make in person as to the character and position of her betrothed.
+&quot;For a Prussian nobleman may be a Prussian boot-black for aught I know,&quot;
+he observed, &quot;and without derogation to his dignity, no doubt, in that
+land of pipes and fiddlers. But an American sovereign requires something
+better than that when he gives away the hand of the princess, his
+relative, and endows her with a goodly dowry. Every man, we feel, is a
+king in America.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Our circle of society was much enlarged by Evelyn after our first year
+of mourning had expired. She insisted on taking me with her in turn to
+Washington, Boston, and Saratoga Springs, then at their acme of fashion.
+Mr. Bainrothe, who had by this time glided back into his old grooves of
+apparent sociability in our household, accompanied us, and did all in
+his power, it seemed, to promote our enjoyment and success.</p>
+
+<p>Yet it was astonishing what an icy barrier still remained between us
+two, and how perfectly I managed, without a conscious effort, to set a
+limit to his approaches, even while treating him with apparent courtesy
+and confidence.</p>
+
+<p>Something in his eye, his manner, had become extremely unpleasant to me
+since our social relations had been resumed. There was a controlled
+ardor in his expression of face and even in his demeanor that I could
+not reconcile with his position toward me nor understand, and yet which
+froze my blood in spite of my best endeavors to repel the thoughts
+suggested.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am very morbid and fanciful, certainly,&quot; I said to myself, &quot;even to
+think such a thing possible. At his age, and knowing full well my
+opinion of him, my sentiments toward him&mdash;he surely would not dare&mdash;!&quot; I
+could not even in my own heart finish out a conjecture that dyed my face
+and throat crimson, or mahogany-color, as Evelyn would have averred
+contemptuously could she have witnessed my solitary confusion.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have clung to him too much,&quot; I thought; &quot;it is my own fault if he
+throws too much of the tone of tenderness in his manner, when,
+distasteful as he is to me, his arm, his protection, have seemed to me
+preferable to those of a stranger, and I have accepted them merely to
+avoid the advances of others.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am not in the mood to be sentimental, or susceptible either, after my
+bitter experience, and the idea he so carefully instills is ever present
+to me&mdash;strive as I will to repel it&mdash;the thought that I am sought
+alone for my fortune!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yet I am not wholly unattractive, probably, though less beautiful than
+Evelyn. But what, after all, is beauty? Plainer women than I are loved
+and sought in marriage, who possess no gift of fortune or
+accomplishment.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why should I suffer him to fill my mind with suspicions that embitter
+it against all approaches? Why should I seal my soul away in endless
+gloom, because one man, out of all Adam's race, was faithless and
+falsehearted?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Thus reasoning, I gained strength and self-reliance to receive other
+attentions and mingle with the multitude. Nor should I have known to
+what extent Mr. Bainrothe had carried his injustice and perfidy toward
+me, but for the loquacity of Lieutenant Raymond, a young adorer of mine,
+who revealed to me, the very evening before I left Saratoga, along with
+his passion&mdash;a hopeless one of course, which, but for this connection,
+would not be noted here&mdash;the strategic course of my guardian.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I ought to have been warned, by what I saw and heard, that my suit was
+a hopeless one,&quot; he said; &quot;I had been told of your engagement, but could
+not believe it possible, although confirmed by Mr. Bainrothe's manner. A
+rival of his age and experience, possessed too of such physical
+attractions, and such charm of manner, seldom fails to carry the day
+over a raw, impulsive youth&mdash;who can only adore&mdash;bow down and worship
+his idol, and who possesses no arts of conquest.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pause there, Lieutenant Raymond; of what are you speaking?&quot; I asked,
+coldly; &quot;you have probably confounded matters, names, and&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, no, it is all too evident now to admit of a doubt I You are
+affianced to Mr. Bainrothe&mdash;your own timid and dependent manner might
+have enlightened me long ago, as well as his devoted one&mdash;but a man in
+love is blinder than the blindest bat even! He is the maddest fool
+certainly! Forgive me for my presumption, and forget it if you can;&quot;
+and he turned away, smiting his brow impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>I laid my hand on his arm&mdash;I drew it down from his face again, which he
+turned upon me with an expression of surprise. I felt that I was pale
+with rage and scorn as he looked at me. He misunderstood my feelings
+evidently, for he said, earnestly: &quot;I am sorry to have caused you so
+much pain, Miss Monfort! I was premature, I have been indiscreet in my
+remarks. Your engagement is surely no concern of mine. I should have
+confined myself to my own disappointment exclusively, and respected your
+reserve;&quot; adding, &quot;I beg that you will pardon and look less angrily upon
+me, in this our parting.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am not offended with you, Mr. Raymond.&quot; (His boyish passion had,
+indeed, swept over me as lightly as the wing of a butterfly across a
+rose. I felt that it amounted to nothing but pastime on either hand&mdash;a
+careless throw of the dice on his part, that might, or might not, have
+resulted to his advantage. He probably staked but little feeling in the
+enterprise&mdash;I certainly none at all.)&mdash;&quot;I am not angry with you,
+Lieutenant Raymond, nay, grateful rather for your impulsive homage,
+which I regret not to be able to reward as you deserve; but this you
+must tell me, as a true, as an honorable man, if you care one iota for
+my regard, or the cause of truth and justice: what has that man been
+saying about me?&quot; And I laid my hand upon his arm and shook it slightly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What man, Miss Monfort? I&mdash;I, scarcely understand you! You surely do
+not mean Mr. Bainrothe&mdash;your&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Guardian, nothing more, scarcely that,&quot; I interrupted, almost fiercely;
+thus finishing out his sentence as he probably might not have done.
+&quot;Answer me truthfully, honorably, as you are a gentleman, has he
+propagated this vile slander, for as such I feel it, and as such shall
+resent it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I do, do&mdash;not know positively&mdash;but I have reason to think that, either
+directly or indirectly, the rumor comes from him. You know some men have
+a way of insinuating things. I&mdash;I&mdash;cannot recall any thing positive or
+definite. I cannot, indeed. He never spoke to me on the subject at all.
+There was only an expression at times, as he bore you off, that seemed
+to tell me that all my efforts to win you were vain. I can't see why you
+lay such stress on the matter at all, Miss Monfort.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He had evidently the gentleman's true reluctance to make mischief.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Lieutenant Raymond, I simply dislike to be placed in a false position,
+or grossly misinterpreted or misrepresented. Do you see that unfortunate
+person there?&quot; I asked suddenly, &quot;with his head drawn completely to one
+side, and his arms and legs swathed in flannel bandages, hobbling feebly
+along, followed by a youth (a relation, probably, bearing a camp-stool)
+and a dingy little terrier-dog, on his way to the pool of Bethesda?&quot; As
+if he knew that he was the object of our attention, the man alluded to
+stopped, and turned just then a face grotesquely hideous in our
+direction, and, seeing me, smiled, and nodded feebly&mdash;disclosing, as he
+did so, long, fang-like teeth, yellow, as if cut from lemon-rind, and
+fantastically irregular.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have the oddest acquaintance, Miss Monfort, for a young lady of
+fashion, certainly! This old man keeps a little one-horse book-store
+somewhere, I am told, and makes it his constant theme of conversation.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, he has his hobby, like more distinguished men. I have known him
+from my childhood, however, and esteem him truly. He kept the choicest
+collection of children's books I ever saw in former days, and was a
+child at heart himself, and an especial crony of mine. But I have other
+reasons for asking you to remark him now. He is old, diseased, and poor;
+yet, just as good and honorable as he is, I would rather put my hand in
+his as betrothed or married a thousand-fold, than become the wife of
+Basil Bainrothe. Repeat this, if you please, whenever you hear this very
+unpleasant and absurd report and subject agitated. It will be a simple
+act of justice to me, and a tribute to truth, such as I am sure you will
+be pleased to render and illustrate.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I will do so,&quot; he said, quietly; &quot;but I confess, you surprise me. I
+have always refused to give credit to the matter myself, blinded, I was
+assured, by my own impetuosity, but I acknowledge this engagement is
+very generally canvassed and believed at Saratoga; nor has Miss Erie in
+any instance refuted the impression. Of this I am quite certain, and
+deem it my duty now to tell you so.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is it possible,&quot; I thought, &quot;that this can be one of Evelyn's subtle
+schemes, reacting on Mr. Bainrothe? The father for me, the son for
+herself! My God! the grave would be preferable to me, to marriage with
+either one or the other, the loathed or the loathing! O papa, papa! why
+was I ever placed in hands like these? It must be so sweet, so
+delightful, to trust and love one's associates, whether natural or
+accidental! I feel as if Fate had raised up for me this band of mocking
+fiends, to guard me from my kind, and mar my happiness. Day by day I
+hate and distrust them more and more&mdash;nay, learn to tremble through them
+at myself.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are silent. Miss Monfort,&quot; he said; &quot;will you not bid me a kind, a
+pardoning farewell?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, surely, Mr. Raymond; and let me beg that, when you are near me, you
+will come freely to my house. I shall be most happy to entertain you.&quot;
+And I gave him my hand, frankly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;One word more, Miss Monfort. Are you engaged to any other and more
+fortunate man than Mr. Bainrothe and myself? Is it for another's sake
+you have felt so very indignant? Forgive a sailor's frankness, and a
+sailor's interest, even if bestowed in vain. I fear you will add to
+these, a sailor's undue curiosity.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, Mr. Raymond, neither engaged nor likely to be. But hinge no hope on
+this declaration of mine. I am probably destined to walk through life
+alone, and, like many better women, to live for the good of others, in
+self-defense, if for good at all. I shall never marry, Lieutenant
+Raymond.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The hand that held mine, trembled slightly, relaxed, relinquished its
+eager hold, and fell listlessly to his side. He believed me, evidently,
+as I believed myself.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have loved you,&quot; he said, hoarsely, &quot;far more than you will ever
+understand. Do not forget me!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That is scarcely probable,&quot; I murmured; &quot;but we shall meet again,&quot; and
+I spoke cheerfully and aloud, &quot;and under happier auspices, I trust. The
+world is fair before you, Mr. Raymond; this much let me counsel, and the
+counsel is drawn from experience: do not surrender your freedom too
+lightly&mdash;it is a precious gift to man or woman, and those who drag
+broken fetters wear woful hearts. Farewell!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>We left Saratoga on the following day. It was autumn when we reached our
+home again&mdash;sad and strange September&mdash;my birth-month, and the grave of
+many hopes. Mabel was well, and finely grown for a child of her years;
+and the joy of seeing her, and holding her to my heart again, made me
+oblivious of all else for a season. After our brief separation even, her
+loveliness struck me afresh. How beautiful she was! not with the white
+radiance of Evelyn, but lovely as a young May rose, blushing among its
+leaves and peerless in grace, sweetness, and expression. She had her
+sainted mother's great blue, soulful eyes, with finer features and more
+brilliant coloring, and her father's gleaming teeth and clustering hair,
+&quot;brown in the shadow, gold in the sun,&quot; falling, like his, over a brow
+of sculptured ivory. I was not alone in my appreciation of her
+loveliness. It was a theme of universal remark. Even Mr. Bainrothe, who
+could never forgive my father for having married his children's
+governess, confessed that she had the &quot;air noble,&quot; which he valued far
+above beauty. &quot;And where she got it from, Miriam, is sufficiently
+plain,&quot; he said, one day, glancing at me with undisguised admiration as
+he spoke. &quot;Her mother was simple and unpretending enough, Heaven above
+knows, but you Monforts, and you, especially, Miriam, are truly
+<i>distingu&eacute;</i>, which is a word that cannot often be justly applied in any
+land to man or woman either.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;By-the-by, Miriam,&quot; he continued, &quot;you are growing into a very
+beautiful woman, after a somewhat unpromising childhood. You surpass
+Evelyn as rubies do garnets, or diamonds <i>aqua marine</i>, or sapphires the
+opaque turquoise. You do, indeed, my dear,&quot; and he attempted to take my
+hand in the old fashion. I murmured something indicative of my
+disapprobation.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is an exquisite hand!&quot; he remarked, as I coldly drew it away; &quot;I
+have an artist's eye, and can admire beauty in the abstract, even though
+I am an old man, you know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Admire it also at a distance, I beg, hereafter,&quot; I said, bowing coldly,
+smiling very bitterly, I fear, with lips white with anger and disgust.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Those scars, Miriam!&quot; he went on, as if unobservant of my manner, yet
+with the old sarcastic gleam in his eyes, in the most audacious way,
+&quot;have nearly disappeared, have they not? I think I understood so from
+Dr. Pemberton. Let me see that on your arm, my dear,&quot; and he extended
+his hand to grasp it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;They are indelible, Mr. Bainrothe,&quot; I replied, folding my arms tightly
+above my heart, &quot;as are some other impressions; never allude to them
+again, I request you. It offends me.&quot; And I left him, coldly and
+abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>I give this little scene only as a specimen of his occasional behavior
+at this period, and of the humiliation to which his presence so often
+subjected me. But matters had not yet culminated.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="I_CHAPTER_VII"></a><h2>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>Evelyn's fortune and Mabel's were, like much of my own, invested in the
+Bank of Pennsylvania, and deemed secure in that gigantic bubble. At
+twenty-three Evelyn, of course, consulted no one as to the disposition
+of her income, which she spent freely and magnificently on herself
+alone. Her jewels, silks, laces, were of the finest quality and fabric;
+she drove a peerless little equipage, had her own ponies and tiger and
+maid; travelled frequently, entertained splendidly, though this last, it
+must be confessed, was not at her expense, if redounding to her credit.</p>
+
+<p>To her my father had decreed the first position in his household until
+my marriage (with her sanction) or majority should occur, and she kept
+it bravely. She possessed a leading spirit, and loved to rule whether by
+right or sufferance. Lovers she had in plenty; suitors, such as they
+were, manifold; yet she preferred so far her single estate to aught that
+could be or had been offered. I began to think that her constancy
+deserved to be rewarded, and to withdraw on such score the objection I
+had felt so strong in the outset against her union with Claude
+Bainrothe.</p>
+
+<p>He had been already more than a year in Copenhagen when I discovered how
+it was between them, or rather thought I had done so, from seeing one
+night when she came into my room in her night-dress, which was
+accidentally parted at the bosom, the betrothal-ring, so peculiar as not
+readily to be mistaken, which Claude Bainrothe had once given to me,
+suspended from the button of her chemisette by a small gold chain, so as
+to lie constantly against her heart. How her pride had ever stooped to
+receive and wear the pledge originally given to another it was difficult
+for me to conceive, and little less bitter, I confess, at first to know.
+I thought all care was over as to Claude Bainrothe and his affairs, but
+a qualm of anguish surged through my whole being, the dying throe, I
+well believe, of trust and affection, when I beheld this
+carefully-guarded token.</p>
+
+<p>As Evelyn raised her hand to fasten her night-robe, through the
+accidental opening of which I had caught sight of my repudiated
+treasure, I noticed on one of her slender fingers, from which all other
+incumbrances in the way of rings had been removed for the night, a
+circlet of plain gold such as is generally used for the symbol of the
+marriage-rite, an engagement-ring, I then supposed it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Let me see your wedding-ring, Evelyn,&quot; I said, laughingly, to conceal
+my embarrassment. She colored slightly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What, that little affair of a philopoena?&quot; she rejoined. &quot;Oh, I
+promised not to take it off until certain things were accomplished, nor
+to tell the name of the giver either, so don't question about it, 'an
+you love me, Hal!'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Was it sent from beyond the seas?&quot; I questioned, seriously, &quot;I shall
+ask nothing more.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What an idea! No, on my honor, it was not. There! I will not tell you
+another word about it, so don't bore me, Miriam. I thought you,
+yourself, despised a catechist, and undue curiosity. What I came here,
+to-night, for, was not to be catechised, or 'put to the question,' but
+to ask a favor which you must grant, dear prophetess, whether you will
+or no. Now, don't refuse your Eva,&quot; and she kissed me affectionately; &quot;I
+am going to give a grand fancy ball, or rather, <i>we</i> are, the same thing
+of course, and I want you to lay off your deep mourning for a time&quot;
+(hers had been already entirely put aside), &quot;and appear as night. You
+can still wear black, you know; I shall be Morning, and Mabel, Hesper.
+Now, won't it be a lovely idea? Hesper, you know, is both morning and
+evening star, and can hover between us, bearing a torch, and dressed <i>&agrave;
+la Grecque</i>. Is not that appropriate&mdash;our little link of sisterhood? It
+cannot fail to make an impression. I consider it, myself, a capital
+idea. You can wear your mother's diamonds at last, which Mr. Bainrothe
+means to hand over to you to-morrow as your birthday gift&mdash;not that,
+exactly, either,&quot; seeing my rising scorn, &quot;but as a token of respect
+suitable for the occasion. He might hold on to them two years longer you
+know, legally,&quot; she added, carelessly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He is very magnanimous,&quot; I remarked, coldly; &quot;I shall be glad to have
+my diamonds though, in my own possession, I acknowledge, but why does he
+make any parade about it at all? They are mine all the same, whether in
+his hands or my own. Every thing that man does seems theatrical and
+affected to me!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I thought you were beginning to incline very favorably to Cagliostro! I
+am sure this was the opinion of all who saw you together at Saratoga,
+and I believe, between ourselves, it is his own.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Evelyn Erie, you know better than this! People, of themselves, would
+never have dreamed of such a thing, and he, too, knows my sentiments
+thoroughly. He only feigns ignorance.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear, dear girl! worse things than this have been said frequently,
+and stranger ones have come to pass. Mr. Bainrothe is certainly a
+splendid financier, that was your own father's opinion. You will never
+marry any man who will take better care of your money, and that is a
+consideration with you, or ought to be, Miriam. Your estate is your
+chief distinction, child, if you only knew it; besides, with a knowledge
+of your constitutional malady, you should be very careful what hands you
+fall into. No woman that I know of demands such peculiar care and
+tenderness from a husband, nor such choice in her surroundings. After
+all, Mr. Bainrothe is still a very handsome man, and admirably well
+preserved if not exactly young; he does not look forty, he has not a
+gray hair, a false tooth, nor a wrinkle.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Have you done, Evelyn Erie?&quot; I asked, almost ferociously. &quot;Have you
+completed your catalogue of insult? Then listen, in turn, to my counsel.
+Marry him yourself by all means; he would suit you, body and soul, far
+better than me. Indeed, I have never seen any one else who seemed so
+thoroughly your counterpart, match and mate, as Cagliostro!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you,&quot; she said, furiously; &quot;if I thought you were in
+earnest&quot;&mdash;here she hesitated, clinching her hand, and biting her white
+lips.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am in earnest,&quot; I rejoined, quietly; &quot;what then?&quot; and I looked
+coldly, resolutely in her face.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why I would perhaps marry the son, just to correct your fallacious idea
+about the father, that is all! This course is shut out from you,
+however, entirely, by your own folly, so <i>you</i> must take what you can
+get now, for Claude Bainrothe, let me assure you, is lost to you
+forever.&quot; And she went out, smiling triumphantly.</p>
+
+<p>I suspected from that hour what I knew later, and I had suffered the
+last pang to agonize my heart that my broken troth should ever cost me.
+The corpse of my dead love had bled at the touch of its murderer, in
+accordance with ancient superstition. Now, calm and quiet oblivion and
+the sepulchre should surround and enshroud it forever more.</p>
+
+<p>I think I kept my determination bravely from that hour, but others must
+judge of this for me. We are not gods, to say to the tide of feeling,
+&quot;Thus far, and no farther shalt thou come.&quot; We are only mortal Canutes
+at best, to lift back our chairs as the tide advances, and seat
+ourselves securely thereon beyond the surf. We all remember how it fared
+with the quaint old monarch and moralist when he tried the plan of the
+immortals, and commanded the sea to obey him&mdash;we perish if we arrogate
+too much when the surges sweep around us; but we can, we must avoid them
+if we hope to escape their force, and plant ourselves beyond them firmly
+on the shore.</p>
+
+<p>Evelyn's fancy ball was a magnificent affair, and a complete success, as
+the word goes. She chose to call it my <i>d&eacute;but</i> party, but I never felt
+that it was so, or that I was more than any other guest. I would not
+have chosen a fancy dress for my first appearance, and she certainly was
+the queen of the occasion.</p>
+
+<p>She was dressed as Aurora, in exquisite, fleecy gauze draperies of
+white, azure, and rose color, so artistically arranged as irresistibly
+to remind the observer of those delicate, transparent tints of morning
+that greet the rising sun. On her brow was a diadem of opals and
+diamonds arranged in a crescent form, from beneath which, her fleecy
+white veil flowed backward to the hem of her garments like a mist of the
+early day-spring; a rosy exhalation of the dawn enveloping but not
+obscuring the radiance of her raiment, over which dew-drops seemed to
+have been shed by the lavish hand of wakening Nature.</p>
+
+<p>Her face, so fair as to gain from this marble-like radiance its chief
+characteristic, was delicately tinted to-night on either cheek so as to
+emulate the early blushes of Aurora. Her colorless hair, of a tint so
+neutral as to defy description, curling in light spiral ringlets so as
+to drop profusely on her bosom, had been richly powdered with gold-dust
+for this occasion, and glistened like the sunlight, or, to fall in my
+comparison, the tresses of Lucretia Borgia, as her historians portray
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing could be more refined, more refulgent, more ethereal, than her
+whole appearance, nor had I ever seen the light-blue eyes so clear and
+brilliant, the thin, writhing lips so scarlet and smiling, the pearly
+teeth so glistening by contrast with the first, as on this occasion.</p>
+
+<p>Her arms and neck, which wanted contour, and yet were of snowy
+whiteness, were skillfully draped in her many-colored robe so as to
+cover all defects; and a chaplet of pearls, mingled with diamonds,
+concealed the slight prominence of the collar-bones, and descended low
+on the white and well-veiled bosom. Every eye was turned on her with
+admiration, and the low murmur that followed her through the halls she
+trod so proudly, proclaimed her triumph far more loudly than more open
+flattery could have done.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You, too, look well to-night, in your black-velvet robe and diamonds,
+Miriam, better than I have ever seen you!&quot; said a low voice in my ear,
+as I echoed the passing praises lavished on Evelyn's beauty by one of
+her admirers. &quot;It is scarcely a fancy costume though, after all.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you, Mr. Bainrothe,&quot; I replied coldly. &quot;For reasons of my own, I
+have preferred to make my costume as subdued as possible.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;By Jove! I wish our young exile could see you this evening,&quot; he went
+on, disregardful of my brief explanation. &quot;He would strew his hair with
+ashes, and wear sackcloth in penance for the past, I doubt not; for I
+tell you frankly, Miriam, you have improved wonderfully of late, and you
+bear inspection far better than Evelyn with all her beauty; your figure
+is absolutely faultless; your face the most attractive woman ever wore,
+if not the most absolutely regular. I tell you simple truths. I am a
+disinterested critic, you see, and stand apart gazing upon women simply
+as specimens. Your hands and feet are models, your smile enchanting,
+your voice musical, your manner witchery itself, when you choose to let
+out your nature; what more could heart desire?&quot; and he gazed steadily in
+my face, insolently I felt it!</p>
+
+<p>I had been listening indignantly to this cool summary of my attractions,
+and the arrogant idea manifestly uppermost, that Sultan Claude Bainrothe
+had only to appear on the scene, and throw his handkerchief, for me to
+succumb, and I had been so confounded by this tirade of compliment and
+commonplace that I scarcely knew how to stay its tide without absolute
+rudeness, such as no lady should ever be guilty of&mdash;when he coolly
+continued his remarks as if wholly unobservant of my displeasure.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Evelyn, with all her arts, is a little faded already; don't you see it,
+Miriam? There is no corrosive poison equal to envy, and that, by-the-by,
+is her specialty. She is bitterly envious by nature. Most of those
+thin-lipped, sharp-elbowed, sharp-nosed women are, if you observe.
+Faded at twenty-three! Sad, but true of half our American morning-glory
+beauties. For my part, I love the statuesque in women, the enduring!
+those exquisitely-moulded proportions on which the gaze reposes with
+such delight, and that set a man to dreaming, whether he will or not.&quot;
+And his eye dwelt on me from throat to waist in a manner that made my
+flesh crawl as if the worms that tortured Herod were passing over it. At
+this point I rebelled&mdash;I ground my teeth resolutely&mdash;my face flushed to
+the temples&mdash;I could willingly have stricken that audacious scrutinizer
+in the face with my clinched hand, and he knew it! How coarse coarseness
+makes us, even when most disinclined to it naturally! His sensuous
+brutality made me almost fiercely brutal in turn. As it was, I could
+only put him away with a gesture of contempt I sought not to command,
+and with which I swept past him into the thickest of the crowd, cursing
+at heart the bitter fate that had cast me bound and helpless, for a
+season, into such unscrupulous hands.</p>
+
+<p>There was no one to turn to now. I knew Mr. Lodore thought Evelyn
+perfect, and me a sinner, because in the matter of church duties she was
+the more observant. Besides, my Jewish pedigree had always been a
+barrier between us. Dr. Pemberton, Mr. Stanbury, Laura, George Gaston,
+all that truly loved and believed in me, were gone for an indefinite
+time to Europe. I had not been suffered to accompany them, on many pleas
+and pretences, as I had wished to do, and this was the end of it all.
+Licentious persecution!</p>
+
+<p>Evelyn, too! a blinded confederate in such schemes as should have nerved
+her woman's heart to indignation rather! Marry that man! I would have
+cut off my own right hand, or burnt it to a cinder like Scaevola;
+sooner gone out to service&mdash;played chambermaid on the boards, or the
+tragedy-queen of the commonest melodrama, far rather! It was all insult,
+injury, degradation, in whatever light I could view it, and every
+feeling in my nature was stung to exasperation.</p>
+
+<p>It was well understood that I was an heiress, and I did not want for
+adulation. I was surrounded by fashion and beauty, and wreathed with
+approbation from the noblest and most exalted, on that night of festal
+splendor; and again that beautiful face that had cast its spell above me
+in my inexperienced childhood, and that age never seemed to change nor
+chill, bent above me with its gracious and genial sweetness, and the
+princely banker on this occasion condescended to manifest his kindly and
+approving interest in the daughter of his dead friend. At any other
+time, such tribute would have been most grateful and acceptable to me,
+for this man was almost my <i>beau id&eacute;al</i> at this period, but now the
+bitterness with which my heart was filled, permeated my whole being, and
+dashed every draught of enjoyment untasted from my lips.</p>
+
+<p>Yet the memory of that time&mdash;that face&mdash;returned to me later with
+emotions irresistible, when the being who was then the idol of society,
+became its ostracized outcast, and, among all who bowed before him in
+his pride of place and power, were found, before two years had elapsed
+from this period,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">&quot;None so poor<br /></span>
+<span>To do him reverence.&quot;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Already is the injustice of that decision forced on the convictions of
+his fellow-men. Our scales are not wisely balanced in this world&mdash;we
+cannot weigh motives against acts, thought against deeds, with atom-like
+precision, nor measure the tempted with the temptation grain by grain,
+hair by hair. Ambition was the fault of the seraphim in the
+commencement&mdash;be well assured that some of the old angelic leaven
+lingers still about all of its votaries and victims.</p>
+
+<p>Ay&mdash;victims!&mdash;for he who was said to have made so many, was himself the
+victim of the society that spoiled and flattered him, and fostered his
+foibles, in the beginning, with its false and fawning breath, and,
+later, blew on him a blast of ice from its remorseless, pestilent jaws,
+that froze him out of his humanity.</p>
+
+<p>He could not live&mdash;moulded, as he was, of all sweet elements&mdash;apart from
+social influences, from the regard, the affection, the approbation of
+his kind&mdash;and he died of heart-starvation; fortunate, indeed, in that he
+was mercifully permitted so to die, rather than have lived, as less
+fervent natures might have done, in cold and cheerless apathy.</p>
+
+<p>I do not defend his errors; I only seek to extenuate them. Pity and
+justice are not the same; but one may still so temper the other that
+Mercy, the appointed angel of this earth, may be the result.</p>
+
+<p>Let us, who are mortal and fallible, be wary how we condemn one whose
+head was rendered giddy by his very pinnacle of power! Peace be his!</p>
+
+<p>I have diverged so widely from my subject&mdash;a most bitter and revolting
+one to me, eventually&mdash;that I will not return to it just now; nor,
+indeed, do I even in thought revert to it with any thing like patience
+or pardon. There are some things, paradoxical as this may seem, we must
+forget, in order to forgive.</p>
+
+<p>I am lingering too long on this period of my story, uneventful as it is
+just yet, and circumscribed as I am in space; but, as the boldest rider
+draws rein with a beating heart beside the dark abyss over which he must
+fling his horse, or perish, so I pause here, on the threshold of
+despair, and take breath for a flying leap&mdash;for I shall clear it,
+reader, believe me!</p>
+
+<p>It will be remembered that, at my father's death, half of my means were
+invested in the stocks of the Bank of Pennsylvania; and that his
+directions were that, as the different loans he had made became due,
+they should, one after the other, be drawn in and invested in like
+manner by Mr. Bainrothe.</p>
+
+<p>No details of my business had ever been discussed before me, nor had I
+any insight into the periods at which these loans were due, or how the
+money was cared for when paid in by my father's executors, of whom, to
+my regret, Mr. Gerald Stanbury had refused to be one.</p>
+
+<p>One thing alone I had heard them say, and it was said, I doubt not,
+expressly for my hearing. All debts should be paid in gold, as,
+according to law, this was the only legal tender. Paper, however
+excellent, should never be received in discharge of any liability of my
+estate, since it might render the executors responsible to me, to depart
+a hair's-breadth from the very letter of the law, which enjoined specie
+payment.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But why not receive bank stocks instead?&quot; I had ventured to suggest, a
+little indignantly, &quot;seeing all moneys are to be immediately reinvested
+in that form. Pennsylvania Bank stocks, I mean.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You know nothing about the matter, Miriam,&quot; Evelyn had remarked, with
+some asperity. &quot;Had your father deemed you capable of conducting your
+own affairs, he would not have appointed <i>us</i> to manage and direct them
+during your minority. No sinecure, I assure you!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>But Mr. Bainrothe had only laughed, and turned away tapping his boot
+with his rattan cane, amused, it appeared to me, by my sister's
+assumption of importance, and, probably, as well by her entire ignorance
+of his true motive in exacting gold, of which secret spring of action
+she, knowing nothing, still tried to make so profound a mystery.</p>
+
+<p>Yet he flattered Evelyn very much, I saw, on her business
+qualifications, and her insight into financial matters, of which
+abilities, indeed, she was more proud than of her accomplishments, or
+even beauty.</p>
+
+<p>The last she took as a matter of course; but it was something new and
+unexpected to her to be considered sagacious and strong-minded, and very
+gratifying to her arrogant and exacting spirit&mdash;ever alive to the
+delight of controlling the affairs of others, as well as her own&mdash;to
+have the reins of government given apparently into her hands.</p>
+
+<p>My father had placed an iron chest in a secure niche in the dining-room,
+behind the great central mirror, made for the purpose of concealing it,
+and to which he alone had access. Here he had kept a store of plate,
+money, jewels, and papers, so as to defy all burglarious interference or
+foreign scrutiny, and, in dying, had bequeathed the secret of the patent
+lock to Mr. Bainrothe alone. Old Morton even was ignorant of the
+contrivance.</p>
+
+<p>I knew of the niche and the iron chest by the merest accident, and had
+been requested, nay, commanded, by my father, not to speak of either;
+so, in silence the mystery had almost died out of my recollection, when
+it was rather singularly revived again in this wise:</p>
+
+<p>During one of the hottest nights early in September, after our return
+from Saratoga, I descended, parched with thirst, to the dining-room,
+about four o'clock in the morning, to seek a glass of iced-water,
+always to be found there, I knew, by night or day, on the sideboard, in
+a small silver cistern.</p>
+
+<p>The dawn was dimly breaking through the great window in the hall as I
+passed down the broad stairway, still in my night-dress and unslippered
+feet; but, on approaching the dining-room, I was surprised to see the
+gleam of a candle falling athwart the mirror, which had been swung from
+its place (as I had seen it once before swung by my father), so as to
+screen my advancing form from the person evidently at work behind it.
+The massive shutters of the room were closed and securely barred, as was
+the habit of the house, and the room was, consequently, still in
+darkness, or deep shadow.</p>
+
+<p>As I stood half hidden now, by the arch of the hall, behind which I
+shrank instinctively, and uncertain how to proceed, I saw Mr. Bainrothe
+suddenly emerge from behind the mirror, and take from the table near it
+a canvas bag, small but evidently weighty, from the manner in which he
+carried it to its place of concealment.</p>
+
+<p>Then I heard the slow, heavy fall of a shower of gold coins, dropping on
+others, the same sound that had greeted my ear on the day when I first
+detected this treasure-cave of my father, and as different from the
+sound of falling silver as is the gurgling of rich old wine from the
+dash of crystal water.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The wretch is faithful to his trust, after all. So this is where he
+keeps my gold,&quot; I thought; &quot;but how did he find ingress into our castle,
+supposed at least to be inaccessible by night? Has he a false key I
+wonder, and are we above-stairs, with unlocked doors, subject to his
+visitations, should it occur to him to make them?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I shuddered at the suggestions of my own fancy. Women only, who have
+been similarly situated, can know how dark these may become, even in an
+innocent mind, from circumstances like those that surrounded me, and
+what a nameless horror there is about the insidious and licentious
+approaches of the man we would fain dash away from us, and trample under
+foot like a serpent, did we dare openly to do so.</p>
+
+<p>Yet I lingered under the archway, determined to observe to the last Mr.
+Bainrothe's proceedings. When he had locked the chest and replaced the
+mirror, which swung out from its place, as I have said, like a door on
+invisible hinges and fastened with a spring, he passed hastily out of
+the dining-room into the pantry beyond, opening for convenience on a
+covered paved court, which divided the kitchen from the house and which
+led directly into the yard beyond. After that, all was silent.</p>
+
+<p>Yet, the next day, Franklin assured me that he had carried the key of
+the pantry away with him, when he went home at night (he was a married
+man, and slept at his own house usually), and that he found it locked in
+the morning just as he had left it.</p>
+
+<p>This was in answer to a question which I tried to make as careless as
+possible, with regard to some burglaries that had lately been committed
+in a neighboring street, adding, by way of caution: &quot;Don't forget to
+lock us up carefully at night, Franklin; remember we are all women in
+the house, except Morton, and he is old and sleeps like a top, no doubt
+having a good conscience for his pillow.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If you would have an <i>inside</i> bolt put upon the pantry-door, it would
+be best, Miss Miriam,&quot; he remarked; &quot;that is, if your mind is really
+troubled about robbers. Then you could draw it yourself in my absence at
+night.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And who would let you in, in the morning, Franklin, if I did this? Our
+household would sleep until noon, were it not for your early summons, I
+verily believe.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I will throw a pebble at the cook's window, miss, if she is not on foot
+by that time. But she usually is; cooks has to stir earlier than the
+rest, you know, by reason of the light rolls and muffins.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, yes! true, I had forgotten this. Go at once, then, Franklin, for a
+smith, and let him put a massive bolt on the pantry-door, and I will be
+jailer of Monfort Hall in future, in your absence, for I am quite sure
+some one was trying that lock last night. I came to the dining-room for
+water just before daylight, and heard it distinctly.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;One of your lady-like notions,&quot; said Franklin, shaking his head, with
+an incredulous smile; &quot;young ladies is always nervous like, and fearful
+about robbers, all but Miss Evelyn Erle&mdash;I never seen the like of her,
+for true grit! All was safe when I came, Miss Miriam, any way, and, if
+robbers had been about, it stands to reason the silver chest, setting
+out in the pantry, would have stood a poor chance.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Again he smiled provokingly. &quot;There are all sorts of robbers in this
+world,&quot; I said, a little sternly; &quot;some come for one purpose, some for
+another. Attend to the bolt, Franklin, at once; I am very sure of what I
+have said.&quot; And so the parley ended.</p>
+
+<p>I am certain that Mr. Bainrothe came no more by night to his
+treasure-cave, but there was a mocking smile on his lip&mdash;when Evelyn
+told him, before me, some time later, that I had caused a bolt to be
+placed on the pantry-door, for fear of burglars&mdash;that was significant to
+my mind.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What is the use of this mystery with me,&quot; I thought, &quot;when I alone am
+concerned? Why not reveal to me at once the secret of the spring and the
+lock, as I only am to be the beneficiary of all this gold? The man's
+cunning is short-sighted. Suppose he were to die suddenly, how does he
+know that I would ever be the wiser or the better of these deposits?
+Years hence, when the house was crumbling to decay, some stranger might
+be enriched by this concealed gold, for aught he knows, which is
+legitimately mine. Evelyn, too, is in complete ignorance of this hidden
+chest, I am convinced, and, as far as I am concerned, will probably
+remain so. After all, does Bainrothe mistrust her honesty or mine? Good
+Heavens! what a mole the man is by nature, how darkly, deeply underhand,
+even in his responsibility! And there are two long years yet, nay more
+to wait, before I can openly defy him and put him away forever. Loathing
+him as I do, patience, patience! Rome was not built in a day. I shall
+still prevail.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Months after this occurrence, months that passed swiftly because
+monotonously to me, for by events alone we are told we measure time, I
+was roused one night from my early slumber by the sound of bitter
+weeping in Evelyn's chamber. I had left her engaged over accounts with
+Mr. Bainrothe, having withdrawn rather than spend a long, lonely evening
+in the parlor, somewhat indisposed as I felt.</p>
+
+<p>I rose from my bed and went to her precipitately. I found her indulging
+in a passionate burst of grief, almost choking with sobs of hysterical
+indignation.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;All gone&mdash;all gone!&quot; she exclaimed, wildly, as I entered the room.
+&quot;Your estate&mdash;mine&mdash;Mabel's&mdash;all swept away with one fell swoop, Miriam!
+The Bank of Pennsylvania has failed; it is discovered that Mr. Biddle
+has proved defaulter, and we are ruined!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I will never believe it, Evelyn!&quot; I exclaimed, vehemently, &quot;until he
+tells me so with his own lips. This is one of Mr. Bainrothe's fictions;
+he is trying to wake us up a little, that is all. Mr. Biddle is the
+Bayard of bankers&mdash;'<i>sans peur et sans reproche</i>.' As to that bank, did
+not my father believe it to be as indestructible as the United States,
+the government itself? Nay, did not Bainrothe himself do all he could to
+convince him of it, and induce him to invest in its stocks? The wily fox
+had his motive, no doubt, but it surely could not have been our ruin!
+Our own fortunes are too intimately involved in his prosperity for this.
+Besides, why have not the newspapers told us of this?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>All this time Evelyn was sobbing convulsively, and what I have told
+continuously here was said by me in a far more fragmentary way between
+her bursts of grief. She ceased now, and looked up, with some effort at
+calmness.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The newspapers <i>have</i> been discussing it for months past, all but Mr.
+Biddle's organ, and that alone was permitted to enter our doors. Mr.
+Bainrothe acknowledges this now. Have you not noticed the irregularity
+of our Washington papers?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No; I so rarely read them, you know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. Bainrothe, with mistaken charity,&quot; she resumed, &quot;I fear, sought to
+shield us as long as possible from the blow, which was inevitable sooner
+or later; or perhaps he hoped still for an adjustment of affairs, that
+might have left us a competence at least. But he was deceived, Miriam;
+we are worth nothing&mdash;a round naught&mdash;&quot; and she suited the action to the
+word by the union of the tips of her thumb and finger&mdash;&quot;is the figure
+whereby to describe our fortunes now; and the heiress and her once
+dependent friend and sister are alike&mdash;beggars! All brought to one level
+at last&mdash;there is comfort in that thought, at least! Ha! ha! ha!&quot; and
+she laughed wildly, horribly. I never before heard such laughter.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Beggary is a word I repudiate, Evelyn, in any case,&quot; I said, firmly;
+&quot;and we, it seems, if this frightful thing be true, are not alone in
+ruin. Be calm, dear Evelyn! Learn to bear with dignity our fate. We must
+sustain each other now&mdash;be all in all to one another, as we have never
+been before. Thank God! let us both thank God, Evelyn, from our inmost
+hearts, that we still have this shelter&mdash;and&mdash;yes&mdash;I have reason to
+believe, much more.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And, kneeling beside her bed, I told her impulsively of our concealed
+treasure behind the mirror (though I had once determined never to reveal
+this to her or any one)&mdash;treasure guarded so long by me with bolt by
+night and vigilance by day!</p>
+
+<p>Oh, fatal error, never to be repaired or sufficiently repented of! Oh,
+utter misplacement of confidence, not warranted, surely, by any thing
+that had gone before, and the results of which I had subsequently such
+bitter cause to deplore!</p>
+
+<p>She listened to me with an interest and zeal that were unmistakable. She
+sat up in her bed, with her large, blue, distended eyes fixed on mine,
+turning paler and paler, brighter and brighter, as she gazed, until
+their lustre seemed opaline rather than spiritual, and with her slender
+white hands wreathed together like the interlacing marble snakes in the
+grasp of the Laocoon, so long, and lithe, and sinuous, seemed the
+polished, flexile fingers. Her lips were livid, but on her cheek burned
+two flame-like spots, indicative ever with her of intense excitement.
+Surely the god Mammon has rarely possessed so sincere a worshiper! Let
+us do her this justice, at least. So far she was consistent; so far she
+was devout!'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are sure of the truth of what you utter, Miriam?&quot; she questioned,
+eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sure as that I live,&quot; I replied.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is wonderful! Why did he not mention this to me? I cannot conjecture
+his motive. But perhaps he has already removed and invested this gold,
+Miriam, of which you say there was such a quantity as to have
+represented a large portion of your landed estate, I think!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, no; that is simply impossible. By night he has never done this, I
+know. By day he could not effect this unseen or unsuspected. That
+dining-room is so public, you know, that Morton sees every thing;
+besides, I gave him directions which he blindly obeyed, I am certain
+(you know his almost canine obedience to me, Evelyn), to remain, when
+engaged with the plate, in the adjoining pantry, with the door ajar
+between, and to be always on guard. Papa always allowed him the
+privilege of that room, and I love to continue it, you know, since we
+never use it except for meals. You remember I said this when you
+objected to his sitting there, Evelyn, and remarked that he might as
+well sit with the other servants, to whom he is so superior. But of
+late, I confess, I have had a motive, and Morton knew this&quot;&mdash;I
+hesitated&mdash;&quot;must have known it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you mean to say you confided the secret of the mirror to Morton, and
+kept it from me? Thank you, Miriam!&quot; loftily. &quot;I might have expected
+this, however.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not wholly this,&quot; I replied, with embarrassment, for I saw how the
+matter looked externally. &quot;Morton simply knew that I wanted, for
+purposes of my own, to exclude every one except himself from solitary
+possession of the dining-room as much as possible, Mr. Bainrothe
+especially. Yes, I told him this, but I kept papa's secret. Believe me,
+Evelyn, I did this, and you know well enough what Morton's devotion is
+to me not to believe that he religiously fulfilled my request without
+asking for an explanation.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes,&quot; she mused, &quot;I saw him perched up there tonight, as usual, with
+his old English newspapers, and I have observed that he never leaves his
+post there, while Mr. Bainrothe remains. You could not have procured a
+better watchman, surely; but why have you watched at all?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Because,&quot; I said, &quot;I felt sure that mystery lurked behind those
+nocturnal visits. You cannot doubt this yourself, Evelyn, and, with your
+opinion of Mr. Bainrothe, must see that I felt I had good reason for
+mistrust. I was determined to be present when that chest should next be
+opened by him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A smile quivered across her face. &quot;I had not suspected you of so much
+diplomacy,&quot; she observed, dryly; &quot;but, after all, Miriam, how does this
+change the posture of affairs to me? I shall be all the same, poor and
+dependent.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, Evelyn, no indeed! I promise you faithfully.&mdash;But what is this?&quot; I
+exclaimed, rising hastily from my knees, &quot;I am faint&mdash;blind! Quick, the
+drops Dr. Pemberton left for me, Evelyn, or I am lost again.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I threw myself across the foot of her bed, sick and bewildered, yet
+feeling myself gradually&mdash;after a few moments of oppression&mdash;growing
+better, in spite of the dark effort of my evil genius to gain his fatal
+ascendency.</p>
+
+<p>When she came with the drops, after some delay, I was, to her surprise,
+able to sit up and look around me. The spell was over.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I believe I have troubled you uselessly,&quot; I said; &quot;I will go to bed
+without medicine to-night, I think, and strive to be calm, as Dr.
+Pemberton enjoined me to do, and there was good sense in his advice,
+certainly. We have so much to do to-morrow, Evelyn&mdash;we two must remove
+these deposits ourselves. But not a word to Bainrothe!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miriam,&quot; she said, eagerly, &quot;can you doubt my discretion when you know,
+too, what your own promises have been now and long ago&mdash;to divide with
+me, ay, to the last cent, like a sister? Now, I insist on the drops! You
+are pale again, Miriam&mdash;collapsing visibly in my sight. Do take your
+remedy&mdash;so efficacious of late in warding off these distressing attacks.
+I have taken the trouble, too, to go after them. I was at some pains in
+hunting them up; they were not in the usual place. Come, now, as a
+punishment for your carelessness, I proclaim myself dictator, and
+command you to swallow them at once,&quot; and she poured the medicine into a
+spoon.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, Evelyn,&quot; I averred, putting the spoon aside, &quot;I am better without
+the drops. I wish to see what my unaided <i>will</i> and constitution can do,
+this time.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There is too much at stake to depend on these, Miriam. We must unearth
+this treasure-trove to-morrow at daylight, and defeat Bainrothe on his
+own grounds, or he may be beforehand with us. Take your drops, dear, and
+have a good night's rest, and be ready for the contest. There, now, that
+is a good sister,&quot; embracing me tenderly.</p>
+
+<p>Persuasion and reason accomplished with me what <i>commands</i> could not
+have done. I took the drops, went quietly to bed, and was soon lost to a
+sense of misfortunes, hopes, and the world itself.</p>
+
+<p>I slept profoundly and long. When I awoke, the slant rays of the evening
+sun were pouring through the blinds of my window, in lines of moted
+light. Mrs. Austin was sitting close to the sash, with her invariable
+knitting-work, her aquiline profile and frilled cap strongly relieved
+against the jalousied shutters.</p>
+
+<p>On the mantel-piece were the inevitable spirit-lamp and bowl of panada,
+recognized at once as part and parcel of my malady. In the chamber the
+usual smell of ether, the remedy so often ineffectually administered
+during the period of my lethargic attacks.</p>
+
+<p>I understood everything now&mdash;I had experienced another seizure, and I
+had lost a day.</p>
+
+<p>Whether it was this conviction that cleared my brain at once of those
+mephitic fogs that usually clung around it after a spell of lethargy,
+long after my consciousness returned, I never knew, but certain it is, I
+sat up in my bed like one refreshed by sleep, instead of feeling
+exhausted, and, greatly to her surprise, accosted Mrs. Austin in clear,
+strong accents.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How long have I slept? And where is Evelyn?&quot; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have not opened your eyes to-day, dear child, until just this
+moment; and Miss Evelyn has not been able to sit up in her bed since she
+went to it last night, that shock yesterday overcame her so completely.&quot;
+By this time she was standing by my pillow, after laying aside her
+knitting, in a leisurely manner peculiar to her at all seasons. &quot;But
+Mabel is in the next room; let me call her to you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Let her stay there,&quot; I interrupted, in a manner so unusual with me,
+whose first inquiry on reviving from illness had always been for Mabel,
+instead of Evelyn, that Mrs. Austin looked surprised and startled.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What ails you, Miss Miriam? I thought Mabel was always your first
+thought; the little angel! She has been hanging over you tearfully all
+day; never going near Miss Evelyn at all. It is so strange she shows
+such partiality!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Strange that one being on earth, and that one my sister, should love me
+better than Evelyn, in the eyes of her partial affection; and yet Evelyn
+treated her with positive disrespect every day of her life, as I never
+did; and often with severity as well. It was incomprehensible!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Give me the panada,&quot; I said, grimly; &quot;I am half starved, and must grow
+strong again to do my work. I am not nearly so weak as I usually am,
+though, after one of my seizures.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You see you are outgrowing them, as Dr. Pemberton predicted you would.
+I declare, you <i>are</i> hungry, poor child; you have not left a
+drop&mdash;pint-bowl too&mdash;with a gill of wine in it. Not going to get up,
+Miss Miriam? Oh, no; you must not venture to do that yet.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And she tried gently to restrain me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, I must get about again; I have much to do, and Evelyn must aid me,
+if able. Is she ill or only nervous?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very ill, I think; she wrote a note to Dr. Craig and sent it last
+night, after you went to sleep; but he did not come.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Quite naturally, since he had been absent some weeks. I could have told
+her,&quot; I said, sententiously; &quot;indeed, I thought she knew it. Who carried
+her note?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Morton.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Poor old man! The idea of sending him on such a wild-goose chase, after
+night. Papa would turn in his grave could he know he had been forced out
+in the rain at such an hour, for a woman's whim. I would have suffered
+tortures till morning first. Where was Franklin?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Franklin had gone home earlier than usual, and did not return to-day.
+He is sick with a chill, we hear, and his wife is again ill.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Who did the marketing?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Morton.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Morton again! Why, the old man seems to be becoming a <i>factotum</i> in his
+declining years&mdash;he whose duties have always been so few, so simple! I
+am provoked, for some reasons, that he should have been sent away
+to-day. Fortunately, I bolted the pantry-door myself, before I came to
+bed last night,&quot; I murmured, &quot;and the front door is self-fastening. The
+house was well secured, at least, by night.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How long did Morton remain absent?&quot; I asked, recommencing my system of
+cross-questions, very abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;About an hour, I believe; but what makes you so particular, all at
+once, Miss Miriam?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Some day you shall know, perhaps. In the mean while tell me, has Mr.
+Bainrothe been here to-day?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He called about one o'clock, but, as all were poorly, went away again
+without entering the house at all. I saw him go down-street, after
+dinner, in his phaeton, with another gentleman, and have not heard
+wheels since.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are sure he was not here, this morning&mdash;while&mdash;while Morton was
+absent?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Quite sure; he breakfasted later than usual, I think, for I saw him
+throw open his side bedroom window at nine o'clock, and he was in his
+shirt-sleeves then. He sleeps in a large room in the ell, you know. I
+was standing at the pantry-door, and saw him distinctly, and he nodded
+to me, and called something, but I could not hear what it was at that
+distance.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Where was Charity at that time, Mrs. Austin?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Cleaning the house, Miss Miriam&mdash;hard at work in the parlors, washing
+windows&mdash;this is her cleaning-day, you know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And cook, what was she about?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She got breakfast early, for us people, and went to mass, but was back
+by ten. Miss Evelyn had her breakfast after she returned, with Miss
+Mabel, and there was no one to eat dinner down-stairs so she thought&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Never mind what she thought,&quot; I interrupted, &quot;or who went and came, so
+that all be well.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You do ask such strange questions, this morning, Miss Miriam, and your
+eyes are so big! Do you feel light-headed at all after your turn&mdash;maybe
+you have fever?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not at all&mdash;hard-headed, rather, Mrs. Austin&mdash;not even
+heavy-headed&mdash;though leaden-hearted enough, God knows! We are ruined,
+you know&mdash;or at least Evelyn tells me so. The rest I have still to
+learn&mdash;I must see Mr. Bainrothe this evening. There is a positive
+necessity for me to exert myself now, but first I have some examinations
+to make. Give me a shawl and wrapper, good nurse, and my slippers. Don't
+disturb Evelyn, or call Mabel till my return; and stay where you are
+until then, if you wish to serve me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I sped rapidly down-stairs, and entered the dining-room so noiselessly
+that old Morton, who was a &quot;little thick of hearing,&quot; did not hear my
+steps nor move from his position by the fire, where he sat apparently
+absorbed by his newspapers. &quot;Morton,&quot; I said, and laid my quivering hand
+upon his arm, &quot;the time has come to act. Come help me to secure my
+treasure.&quot; He rose silently to obey me.</p>
+
+<p>I touched the spring of the mirror; it swung silently open, and revealed
+to the astonished old man a square niche built in the wall&mdash;unsuspected
+before by him&mdash;in which fitted an iron chest, the existence of which he
+had never dreamed of until now. But the contents were gone&mdash;gone since
+yesterday! The chest was empty, with its lid propped open. There was not
+even a paper within.</p>
+
+<p>With a bitter groan I tottered back against the wall, while the cold dew
+stood on my brow, and my limbs trembled under me. This was indeed
+despair!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What ails you, Miss Miriam?&quot; he asked, with an expression of anguish
+upon his kind, old, quivering face. &quot;Do you miss any thing&mdash;what have
+you lost, Miss Miriam?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You left your post, Morton,&quot; I said, at last, &quot;and this is the
+consequence&mdash;I have lost every thing! Old man! old friend! did you
+think I charged you to watch every one who came, so earnestly, to stay
+here so constantly, without a good and sufficient reason? Some one has
+been here before us&mdash;my gold is gone! we are ruined, Morton!&quot;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="I_CHAPTER_VIII"></a><h2>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>Whatever my flash of conviction might have been, all suspicions against
+Evelyn must have been allayed by the manner in which she received the
+information of the loss of the deposits behind the mirror.</p>
+
+<p>Her shrieks filled the house; another physician was hastily summoned in
+Dr. Craig's absence, who gave her disease or seizure a Latin name&mdash;wrote
+a Greek or Hebrew prescription&mdash;or something equally unintelligible, and
+vanished ghost-like, in the manner most approved of by modern
+practitioners.</p>
+
+<p>There was no hard epithet that Evelyn did not apply to Mr. Basil
+Bainrothe during her hysterical mania, and before the doctor's arrival;
+but, on her recovery, she begged me to repeat nothing of the sort, if
+she had been indiscreet enough to let out her true opinion of him and
+his measures, in a moment of irrepressible emotion. &quot;For,&quot; she pursued,
+&quot;it is expedient for us to keep on terms with the man, at least for the
+present, and in no way harass or exasperate him&mdash;we are completely in
+his hands now, Miriam&mdash;we must watch our opportunity&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I do not see that,&quot; I interrupted; &quot;less now than ever, it seems to me.
+What more can he do for or against us now? Our property is all
+gone&mdash;except this house, plate, and furniture, and my mother's
+diamonds&mdash;all of winch are tangible and visible, and in our own
+possession. We have no debts&mdash;you pay house-bills monthly, and I,
+fortunately, have just settled off every account I have in the world,
+and have five hundred Spanish dollars to start anew with&mdash;my savings
+during papa's lifetime. I hoarded it, fortunately, in this form for a
+missionary purpose you remember, Evelyn, but afterward changed my mind.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, I remember; merely because the person it was intended for prayed
+that the Jews might finally be exterminated.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Was not that enough, Evelyn? The man who could utter such a prayer was
+no Christian, and unfit for religious teaching. Since then I have come
+to the conclusion that there is a great deal of undue and very
+impertinent meddling with the heathen; who are entitled to their own
+mode of worship as well as of government, and who I think are not yet
+ripe for Christianity.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have strange notions, Miriam; you talk like an old French
+philosopher.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I never knew there was such a thing&mdash;a French sophist I am afraid you
+mean. No, I am not a sophist, Evelyn; any thing else than that! I wish
+sometimes I did not see so clearly. I love, I idolize the truth alone!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She colored&mdash;sighed. God knows I was not thinking of her at that moment,
+or speaking with that reference, however I may have had reason to do so.</p>
+
+<p>Is it not strange that our dreams often present to us, in our own
+despite, the vivid, photographic pictures struck by sleep from the dim,
+unconscious negative of our waking judgment, which we refuse to
+recognize as verities in the light of our open-eyed, daytime
+responsibility? I, who had declared myself no sophist, knew later that I
+had deceived my own heart, which spoke out so truthfully in dreams of
+sleep, and refused to be silenced in the dead hour of night, however I
+might stifle its suggestions by day.</p>
+
+<p>In one of these suggestive, or rather reflected, visions, I saw Evelyn
+groping through darkness to the side-gate which gave into the grounds of
+Mr. Bainrothe from our own, made years before by my father's permission
+for the convenience of his friend; the night was a dark and stormy one,
+yet she went forth alone, or seemed to, in my vision, to seek a man she
+detested, and with him connive the destruction of the fortunes of the
+child of her benefactress, whose confidence she abused.</p>
+
+<p>Then I saw them returning together, through that pantry-door which she
+had left unbolted, though locked when she went out by another egress,
+and which the man, who returned with her, readily unlocked with the
+duplicate key he carried, <i>not</i> by my father's permission. This last I
+knew.</p>
+
+<p>Now the scene was changed to the dining-room. Again I saw the mirror
+swing back on its invisible and noiseless hinges, and now the glare of a
+shaded lamp fell in bands of light across its surface. But I was inside
+this time, by the glamour of my dream, and I saw them emptying the open
+chest painfully, laboriously, stealthily; stopping now and then to
+listen, to breathe, again working silently, industriously, at their
+vocation of theft and crime!</p>
+
+<p>At last all seemed accomplished. A large, covered basket was partially
+loaded with the contents&mdash;heavy as lead&mdash;and, between them, they bore it
+out into the storm and darkness again, and I heard the sound of the
+spade and mattock at work on the graveled road.</p>
+
+<p>Presently Evelyn came in again. Her air was wild and frightened; her
+trembling hands were stained with mud, seen by the light of the lantern
+she bore, and which she again hung in its accustomed place, stealing
+quietly away into the darkened hall, to grope her way up-stairs. All
+this while the farce of sending for Dr. Craig was being enacted, and
+Morton was out on his fruitless mission in the rain!</p>
+
+<p>Again it was morning, and I saw them together in the library, while I
+still slept, consulting, planning, plotting, writing, erasing,
+whispering; soon to separate, however, this time. Their arrangements
+being completed without restraint, for again the old man was absent,
+doing the duties of another, who, knowing not the motive of such request
+or bribe, was content to work the will of a conspirator, and pass the
+day in idleness at home, for the sake of a purse of gold. Here ended my
+clairvoyance, if such it was.</p>
+
+<p>All this may have been imaginary&mdash;part of it probably was&mdash;but the sense
+of the dream was no doubt what my untrammeled judgment would have
+suggested as truth, and what later&mdash;but let me not digress or anticipate
+here, in the thickest of my troubles, the jungle-pass of my story as it
+were, but strike on through a self-made path, it may be, to the light
+that shines beyond the forest, even if it lead into the desert!</p>
+
+<p>Something in Evelyn's suggestion had struck me as the best to pursue
+under the circumstances, although at first I so boldly repudiated the
+idea of Mr. Bainrothe's power. Unless I could prove that he had removed
+the treasure for unworthy uses&mdash;why speak of it at all? I should only
+irritate and set him on his guard by such allusions; whereas, by a
+course of reticence, I still might learn, as she had suggested, the
+truth when he least suspected my purpose.</p>
+
+<p>It would be so easy for him to deny all knowledge of the concealed
+chest&mdash;so easy to lay the robbery on Morton, even if the first were
+proved&mdash;or even on Evelyn!</p>
+
+<p>I had sent impulsively for Mr. Bainrothe to come to me on the evening
+of my discovery, but his visit was delayed by a necessity that kept him
+from home all night, so that I had time to revolve and resolve on my
+course of action before I saw him, which was not until the following
+afternoon, and by this time my mind had undergone a change. He came, but
+not alone&mdash;his son accompanied him.</p>
+
+<p>I have reason since then to think that Evelyn and Claude Bainrothe had
+met before their cold and measured interview in my presence. It was to
+me a painful and embarrassing one, and this time the graceful ease was
+all on the other side&mdash;I was preoccupied and agitated, Claude courteous
+and self-possessed, Evelyn lofty and confident, as though she had lived
+or trodden down her emotions, and, to my surprise, Mr. Basil Bainrothe
+wore his accustomed deliberate and self-poised demeanor, making no
+reference, not even by his expression of face or a glance of his
+kaleidoscopic eyes, to the sad catastrophe with which by this time I was
+but too well acquainted.</p>
+
+<p>I had been reading newspapers eagerly all day, when he came, and, from a
+contradictory mass of evidence, had gleaned some grains of truth. One
+fact was beyond contradiction&mdash;a second Samson had drawn down the ruins
+of a temple, not on the heads of his foes alone, but his friends as
+well, blinded, as he of old, by the treachery of that basest of all
+Delilahs, a fawning public!</p>
+
+<p>Yes, we were ruined; the only hope now was in the honesty of Mr. Basil
+Bainrothe. Should the gold I saw him hiding away not have been
+appropriated to the purchase of bank-stocks&mdash;should it have been saved
+for me&mdash;we might still rejoice in wealth beyond our deserts, and equal
+to our desires.</p>
+
+<p>We still might keep the old, beloved roof above our heads, preserve one
+unbroken circle of family domestics&mdash;live without labor, or terror of
+the future. But would this be? I waited, as I still think I should have
+done, for Mr. Bainrothe to take the initiative in this proceeding.</p>
+
+<p>Impatient and sick-hearted, I saw day after day glide past, without an
+effort on his part to explain or ameliorate my condition&mdash;one now of
+excessive and wearing anxiety.</p>
+
+<p>At last he came. For the first time in his life when a matter of
+business was in question, he asked for me. I went to him alone at my own
+instance, and somewhat to Evelyn's chagrin, I thought.</p>
+
+<p>I found him in the library, of late our sole receiving-room; the rest
+were closed and fireless. For, since the certainty of our misfortune, we
+had received no society, and would not long be obliged to <i>decline</i> it,
+Evelyn thought. Her opinion of the world little justified the pains she
+had taken to conciliate it.</p>
+
+<p>I found Mr. Bainrothe buried in the deep reading-chair, always in his
+lifetime occupied by my father, his hand supporting his head, his hat
+and delicate ivory-headed cane thrown carelessly on the floor beside
+him&mdash;his whole attitude one of deep dejection.</p>
+
+<p>He started a little when I addressed him by name, as if reviving from
+deep reverie&mdash;then arose and extended his hand to me, grasping mine
+firmly when I gave it to him, which I did unwillingly I confess.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miriam,&quot; he said, &quot;this is all very dreadful!&quot; subsiding into his seat
+again with a groan, and looking steadily and silently into the fire for
+some minutes afterward. &quot;Very dreadful!&quot; he repeated, shaking his head
+dismally; &quot;wholly unforeseen!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He glanced at me furtively once or twice to observe the effect of his
+words&mdash;his manner. Disappointed probably by my silence and coolness, he
+again affected to be absorbed in contemplation.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Have we any thing left?&quot; I asked quietly, at last&mdash;weary as I was of
+this histrionic performance of his, and anxious for the truth.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nothing,&quot; was the gloomy reply that fell on my ear&mdash;on my heart like
+molten lead; &quot;nothing but what you know of. This house, this furniture,
+well preserved it is true, but old and out of style. Your carriage and
+horses&mdash;diamonds&mdash;in short, what you have in hand. That is all you have
+left of the great estate of your mother.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is enough to keep the wolf from the door, at all events,&quot; I remarked
+quietly, &quot;and I am thankful for a bare competence; but why, under
+existing circumstances, were you in such haste to remove the contents of
+the iron chest behind the mirror, a portion of which you added to in
+September?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He rose with dignity and advanced to the corner of the mantel-shelf, on
+which he leaned in a perfectly self-possessed position, one foot crossed
+lightly over the other, I remember, and one hand at his side&mdash;a favorite
+attitude of his. He interrupted my interrogatory with another, ever an
+effectual aid in browbeating.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How did you become possessed of the knowledge that I kept gold there?&quot;
+he asked, coolly; &quot;I had meant to have preserved the secret of that
+spring until your majority, but you women penetrate every thing. No, my
+dear Miriam,&quot; he continued, without waiting for an answer,
+&quot;unfortunately, the gold you refer to was exchanged for worthless
+bank-stocks in September last, according to the requisitions of your
+father's will; and, as that was the latest paid in of the loans he had
+made, and as all other means had been invested in like manner (and with
+a promptness characteristic of me, I believe I may say without vanity),
+as they fell into my hands. You will perceive, very clearly, that every
+thing, beyond the property I have here pointed out to you, is swept
+away.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I sat confounded by his consummate mendacity. His manner was entirely
+changed now&mdash;from one of gloomy depression, and absence of mind, to
+jaunty self-complacency, and even a degree of defiance was blended with
+his habitual coolness. It was only from his lurid and kaleidoscopic
+eyes, on which the light from an opposite window fell sharply, as he was
+speaking, that a glimpse of the inner man could be obtained. There was
+something confused and excited in their expression that did not escape
+me, but I kept my counsel, bewildered as I was.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She has betrayed me!&quot; was my involuntary reflection; &quot;he was on his
+guard for my question or accusation; unconscious of my daily
+examination, he has borne away my gold, and it is lost to me forever!&quot;
+And I clasped my hands more closely.</p>
+
+<p>All that I have stated in the last two paragraphs, of my observation and
+reflections, passed through my mind like a flash&mdash;so that there seemed
+scarce a momentary interruption between his last remarks and those which
+followed&mdash;although so much had been recognized in the interval.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is unfortunate&mdash;&quot; I said, merely eying him calmly.</p>
+
+<p>For the first time during our interview, his eyes
+quivered&mdash;drooped&mdash;fell before mine; but, recovering instantly, he gave
+me a clear, cool stare in return for the quiet look of scorn he
+encountered. I saw at once the hopeless nature of the case.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You will show me your accounts, Mr. Bainrothe,&quot; I observed, haughtily;
+&quot;I require this at least!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;When you have attained your majority, certainly, Miriam, not before. At
+present, I have only Evelyn Erle to satisfy on that score, and the law;
+I refer you to your guardian.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Or whomsoever I choose to substitute as my guardian,&quot; I said; &quot;I
+believe that privilege vests in me, being over eighteen.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There are outside provisions in your father's will that debar you,
+unfortunately, from that usual privilege of minors of your age,&quot; he
+rejoined, quietly. &quot;I regret this for many reasons: I should be glad to
+quiet any doubts you may entertain at once, but it is impossible that,
+compatibly with self-respect, I can do this, after what you have
+insinuated this morning; so you must wait, with what patience you can
+command, for the coming of your majority.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nearly two years to wait!&quot; I cried; &quot;I should die before then, if only
+of impatience. No, I will know at once. I will write to Mr. Gerald
+Stanbury&mdash;I will go to the president of the bank&mdash;nay, to Mr. Biddle
+himself. I will resolve this matter.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You will do no such thing, my very dear young friend,&quot; said Mr.
+Bainrothe, advancing and laying his hand lightly on my arm&mdash;I shook it
+off, as if it had been a cold, crawling serpent. He retreated quietly
+but quickly. &quot;You will do no such thing, Miriam,&quot; he repeated, resuming
+his post by the mantel-shelf, without evincing the least discomposure at
+my behavior to him; &quot;your own good sense, your own good feeling will
+come to your assistance when you look this matter fully in the face, and
+dispassionately, which I must say you are not doing now. I have not
+earned at your hands mistrust and obloquy like this, Miriam; but, for
+the sake of the past, I shall strive and bear with the present. Who has
+inspired you with such opinions of me?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Accomplished hypocrite! He tried to assume a much-injured air, to mingle
+forbearance with his reproachful words; but my heart was as hard toward
+him as a nether millstone, and his words made no impression on my flinty
+feelings, not even enough to strike fire therefrom, or sparks.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No one,&quot; I replied, &quot;no one; I judge for myself in all instances. Why
+did you secrete gold in the dead hour of the night, which, unless you
+bore it away in the same mysterious, or even more subtle manner, ought
+still to be in its hiding-place? Why did you preserve, even from Evelyn,
+your knowledge of that retreat, and the payment of the loan, which she
+asserts you have never communicated to her, from first to last? Why make
+mysteries of business transactions which, by the tenor of my father's
+will, she had a right to participate in, and be consulted about. Why?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I will tell you,&quot; he interrupted, gravely, and not without emotion.
+&quot;Pause, and I will explain my reasons, painful as it is to me to do
+this, and greatly as I compromise myself by so doing, for, should you
+choose to be indiscreet, I shall have gained a dangerous enemy. I have
+no confidence in Evelyn Erie, in her truth, her sincerity, her honesty,
+even. I would not place temptation in her way. There, that is why I
+concealed the secrets of the spring-lock and recess in the wall from
+her, to secure them for you. As to the depositing of gold in that iron
+chest, I did it simply because I knew of no other place so safe and
+secret. In my own house none such exists, and, as I never kept gold for
+more than a few days after it was received, I thought it scarcely worth
+while to place it in the vaults of the bank. As I tell you, it was
+removed in September.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Surely no art was ever greater of its kind than that he manifested on
+this trying occasion, yet it fell to the earth, like the shedding scales
+of a serpent, before my simple discernment. Yet his words, his manner,
+did in some strange and unexplained way greatly exonerate Evelyn in my
+estimation, at least for a time, of complicity.</p>
+
+<p>How could I consistently believe that two persons, entertaining of each
+other such similar and degrading opinions, could trust one another
+sufficiently to become confederates? Alas! I did not reflect that it is
+of such conflicting elements conspirators and conspiracies themselves
+are usually made, and that union of guilt creates eternal enmity.</p>
+
+<p>I could not penetrate such depths of guile! I surrendered myself
+readily, I confess, to these fresh convictions. Evelyn was narrow,
+selfish, scheming, but, at all events, was not in league with this
+vampire. That was much. We might still make common cause against
+him&mdash;she with her injuries to avenge, I with mine&mdash;and preserve intact,
+and without his hated interference, that which was left to us at least.</p>
+
+<p>There was comfort in the thought.</p>
+
+<p>While these considerations were photographing themselves on my brain,
+with that indescribable rapidity of process whereby the action of the
+mind excels even that of light, Mr. Bainrothe was again settling himself
+down in my father's deep chair, and now once more addressed me in a sad
+and broken voice, perfectly well suited to the occasion.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miriam,&quot; he said, &quot;I too have been an extensive loser through the
+failure of the Bank of Pennsylvania. Like yourself, with the exception
+of the house I now reside in, and some few small tenements I hold for
+rent, I find every thing swept away from me. Claude, it is true, is
+comfortable, and on his slender estate we must both now manage to
+support ourselves. You see marriage on his part is now simply out of the
+question. He has his father to take care of.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He said this last in so significant a tone, and apologetic a manner,
+that its intent was unmistakable, little dreaming how transparent my
+conviction of his crime had made his motives.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As far as I am concerned, it was so eighteen months ago,&quot; I responded,
+and the blood rushed indignantly to my brow. &quot;Yet I hope,&quot; I added,
+after a moment's hesitation, &quot;that Claude may still marry and be happy.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are still vexed with that boy of mine, Miriam, I see that. Oh, you
+are wrong, there! It was not for him, unfledged and inexperienced, to
+weigh the precious diamond against the paste pretense! He could not see
+you with the eyes of riper judgment and deep feeling accorded to those
+who have studied life, and learned its loftiest lessons. Had he looked
+through my eyes, Miriam&mdash;&quot; (he was standing before me now, his arms
+extended, his eyes blazing, his cheeks and lips strangely aglow), &quot;he
+would have seen you as you are, the rose, the ruby of the world.&quot; He
+seized my hand impetuously, and pressed it to his lips, then rushed
+wildly away. A moment later, he returned, silently. I was standing
+before the silver cistern, I remember, washing away with my handkerchief
+an invisible stain from my hand, child-fashion, a loathsome impress,
+when I felt his audacious arms thrown suddenly around me, and his hot,
+polluting kisses on my face.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I love&mdash;I love you!&quot; he hissed in my ear, &quot;and sooner or later I will
+possess you!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Before I could strike him, spit upon him, strangle him with my
+hands&mdash;the thief, the midnight robber, the slave of lust&mdash;he was gone
+again. I heard my own wild shrieks resounding through the house, like
+those of some strange lunatic. I was for a time frantic with rage and
+shame. But no one came to my succor, except poor old Morton. He crept
+feebly from the pantry, and found me sobbing in my father's chair. As he
+stood meekly before me, leaning on his staff, and looking in my face, my
+only friend, so powerless to aid, the whole desolateness of my position
+burst upon me, like an overpowering avalanche, I bowed my head and wept.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Bear up, bear up, my lamb,&quot; he said, in his weak, tremulous voice; &quot;we
+have the promise of the Lord to rely on. Has he not said the seed of the
+just man should never know want or beg bread? We must believe in the
+Gospel, and be strengthened, Miss Miriam.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And he laid his quivering hand lightly on my head. I took it between
+both of my own, and kissed it fervently, bathing it with my tears.
+&quot;Morton,&quot; I said, &quot;dear old Morton, I have had such a terrible blow to
+bear&mdash;shame!&quot; and again I was choked with sobs.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Shame! Oh, no, my dear young mistress! my birdie child; ruin is not
+shame! This could never come near a Monfort, poor or rich! See! such as
+these old hands are, they shall work for you to the bone, and, if I
+understand matters aright, we still have the good roof left over our
+heads, and some little means for all immediate wants. God will put some
+good thought in your mind before long. Consult with Miss Evelyn; she is
+wise. You are not the first high-born young ladies who have had to teach
+a school.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, bless you, bless you, Morton, for the thought!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>All idea of telling him (helpless, as he was, to avenge it) of the
+degrading treatment I had received was now laid at rest, and the
+practical good sense of a suggestion, that, if successfully carried out,
+would take us so completely out of the hands of Mr. Bainrothe, and
+insure such complete independence, was felt at once.</p>
+
+<p>At a glance I saw the expediency as well as the feasibility of the
+scheme.</p>
+
+<p>Our large and secluded establishment was well fitted for a
+boarding-school. Our father's spotless name, and our undeserved
+misfortunes, were calculated to enlist popular respect and sympathy.</p>
+
+<p>Evelyn's decided manners and liberal accomplishments, my better
+principles and more solid attainments (I viewed things with the naked
+eye of truth that day, and thus the balance was struck in its rapid
+survey), might all be brought to bear on our new vocation.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This is the very thing for us to do, Morton,&quot; I said, after a pause,
+wiping my eyes, and smiling up into his dear, old, withered face, &quot;I
+will acquaint Evelyn with it before I sleep. Ay, and with other matters
+as well,&quot; I added, mentally. &quot;God help me now!&mdash;upon her verdict every
+thing depends.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I met Mabel on the stairway as I ascended to my chamber. She hung about
+my neck, in a childish way she had, and kissed me fondly. Perhaps she
+had observed my agitated face, in which many emotions contended,
+probably (as in my heart), but I only said, &quot;Let me pass now,
+darling!&mdash;One thing will,&quot; I thought, &quot;be secure, under the
+contemplated circumstances&mdash;your welfare and education, whatever else
+betide&mdash;beautiful, and good as an angel, you shall be wise as well.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh! I forgot to tell you, sister Miriam,&quot; she cried, running up-stairs,
+after we had parted, &quot;Evelyn has gone out, and left this note for you;&quot;
+and she placed one in my hand, adding:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. Claude Bainrothe was here, while you were in the library with his
+father, and they went away together.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Where did she receive him, Mabel?&mdash;the parlors are closed, you know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, but she was all ready when he came. It was an appointment, I think
+he said, to take a walk, and he stood at the front-door, until she went
+down, only five minutes, sister Miriam. He did not mind it at all. He
+sent her up the letter he had brought from the office, and she read it
+out loud to Mrs. Austin. I was there&mdash;it was very short.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What letter, Mabel?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, about her aunt! This note tells you, I suppose. Evelyn is rich now;
+but she had to go to New York to see the lawyer, so Mr. Claude Bainrothe
+said, before she could claim the fortune.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>More and more bewildered, I made haste to tear open the sealed note
+which Mabel had given me. Its contents were scanty, and not fully
+satisfactory.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;MY DEAR MIRIAM: The ways of Providence are truly strange and
+inscrutable, and its balance ever shifting. This morning I rose in
+despair, to-night I shall lie down rejoicing; for a way is again opened
+to us that will put it beyond <i>his</i> power to annoy or oppress us
+further. God knows we have both suffered enough, already, at his hands!
+My maiden aunt, Lady Frances Pomfret, is dead, and makes me her heir. I
+will show you the lawyer's letter when I return. The legacy is spoken of
+in the letter as small, because English people compute property so
+differently from ourselves. The attorney lives in New York, who is
+empowered by my aunt's English executor to transact this business, and
+it seems I; must go to him, Mohammed-like, as this mountain cannot come
+to me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Claude Bainrothe is polite enough to offer to escort me to the boat,
+which I shall barely reach in time; so, farewell for the present, dear
+Miriam. I shall stay with Emma Gilroy, and return in a very few days.
+Write to me, however, if I should be detained, to her father's care, and
+keep a good heart, until the return of your fortunate</p>
+
+<p>&quot;EVELYN.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;P. S.&mdash;You know it is little matter, between sisters, which possesses
+the property, so all share it. E.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Claude Bainrothe called that afternoon, and placed in my hand the copy
+of the codicil that had been sent to Evelyn, together with the lawyer's
+letter to which she had alluded, and which, on consulting with him, she
+found it unnecessary to take with her to New York, her identity being
+already established, beyond a doubt, with that of the legatee, in the
+eyes of the American agent in possession of all the facts of the case
+from the London attorney. I examined the codicil closely, and could find
+no flaw! It purported to be the last will of the Lady Frances Pomfret,
+who revoked all other bequests, in order to bestow her whole property on
+her niece, Evelyn Erle.</p>
+
+<p>I confess I had felt some doubts as to the existence at all of such a
+person, of whom I had never before heard mention made, until I read her
+last bequest, and saw with my own eyes the business-like letter,
+confirming the whole transaction of Mr. James Mainwaring, the London
+attorney, with its foreign post-mark, and huge office seal. This was
+accompanied by one from a legal gentleman of New York, whose name was
+familiar to me, as my father's agent, and which confirmed the truth of
+the matter in the most effectual way; for, in his letter, Evelyn was
+advised to come to New York and receive her legacy.</p>
+
+<p>There was nothing more to be said, certainly; still I had strange
+misgivings even then, which I felt to be both unjust and ungenerous, yet
+could not wholly banish, and again I examined the codicil.</p>
+
+<p>Claude Bainrothe smiled; it was the first time, let me state <i>en
+passant</i>, that we had found ourselves alone together since his return.
+&quot;You scrutinize that will as if you were a legal flaw-finder, Miss
+Monfort, instead of a very confiding young lady of poetical
+proclivities.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is very short!&quot; I said, sententiously, comparing at the same time
+the handwriting with that of Mr. Mainwaring, who had in his letter
+declared himself the copyist, the original codicil remaining in his
+hands, together with the will it had annulled, and finding them the same
+unmistakably.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Short, but sweet,&quot; he remarked curtly, yet smiling again, and extending
+his hand for it. &quot;I suppose one of Earl Pomfret's children had trodden
+on the tail of the old maid's poodle&mdash;she lived with him it seems&mdash;and
+offended her beyond repair, or something similar had occurred, to make
+her change her intentions, which were at first all in his favor, and
+revoke her first bequest.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. Mainwaring does not say so,&quot; I remarked, again glancing over his
+letter. &quot;He merely observes that it is only important to send a copy of
+the codicil, since it revokes all previous bequests. How did you know
+her first intentions&mdash;have there been other letters?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I suppose so,&quot; he replied, coloring slightly, &quot;but what a lawyer you
+are! I scarcely know how I got the idea, to be frank with you; it may be
+incorrect after all, but Evelyn will tell you every thing, of course,
+when she comes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Let me see the codicil again, Mr. Bainrothe,&quot; and I examined it once
+more closely, as if by some fascination I could not resist. I remarked
+only one peculiarity in the document. One word was written in a cramped
+manner, as though space had been wanting&mdash;yet much of the sheet of paper
+on which it appeared was unoccupied&mdash;this was the word &quot;thirty,&quot; at the
+beginning of the enumeration of moneys, for thirty thousand pounds
+(repeated below in figures) was the sum set forth in the codicil as the
+bequest of the Lady Frances Pomfret to her niece Evelyn Erle! The five
+numerals that represented the same idea as the written words occupied
+half of the last portion of the last line, and seemed to my invidious
+eyes to make an ostentatious display of the power that may lie in a
+cipher, or an array thereof.</p>
+
+<p>I gloated over the record, with something perhaps of that spirit which
+may have lurked in my blood, from the time of Jacob, and which, so far,
+had not evinced itself, except perhaps on that occasion when my ear
+thrilled to the music of falling gold.</p>
+
+<p>As I gazed, I mused on the strange fate that took from one sister to
+enrich the other so providentially, as it might have seemed.</p>
+
+<p>The paper had fallen from my nerveless hand before I knew it, and I was
+aroused from reverie by Claude's action in stooping for it, and his
+voice saying:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I will fold up this record, Miriam; it seems to render you gloomy.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thoughtful, certainly,&quot; I said, recovering myself, with that impulse of
+self-command that belonged to me by nature; &quot;no more&mdash;not envious,
+Claude, I assure you, however appearances may be against me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Of such a feeling no one could suspect Miriam Monfort,&quot; he said,
+gallantly; whispering low in the next moment, &quot;one year has made strange
+improvement in your beauty, Miriam&mdash;you are hardly the same little dark,
+quick, yet quiet girl, I parted with when I went to Copenhagen. There is
+so much more pose and majesty&mdash;more sweetness about you now&mdash;and Evelyn
+too is changed&mdash;oh! sadly&mdash;sadly!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have sometimes feared,&quot; I said, keeping down, as best I might; the
+emotions conflicting in my bosom&mdash;&quot;feared that she might be delicate,
+and that her energies consumed her; you must control these, Claude!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I!&mdash;why, what on earth can I have to do with Miss Erle and her
+energies? you speak in enigmas, Miriam!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He was evidently embarrassed by the cool, incredulous look I dropped
+upon him. &quot;I had supposed every thing was settled some time ago,&quot; I
+observed, quietly; &quot;however, I will not bore you with conjectures or
+questions, I shall hear every thing, of course, when the proper time
+comes; until then, I shall hope to act out Milton's noble line, and
+'stand and wait.' And now, if you have a few minutes to spare, do give
+me the <i>r&eacute;sum&eacute;</i> of your experience at Copenhagen. What of the
+climate&mdash;what of the people&mdash;what of the court? Are the women pretty or
+plain, as a general thing&mdash;and had Hamlet light or dark hair, think you,
+from present indications in the royal family? Or is it the same blood?
+For you know that I have an enthusiasm about Denmark! It is such a
+little, valiant, fiery, dominant state, and their <i>sagas</i> of the
+sea-kings set my blood on flame. This always was a weakness of mine, you
+remember.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, I recollect perfectly how you used to run on about Elsinore. Well,
+I went there frequently, Miriam, and can tell you all about the dreary,
+decayed old town, to your utmost satisfaction. Even your romance would
+fail, could you behold it now.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And Claude evinced considerable power, as a word-painter, in the hour
+that followed, during the early part of which Mabel appeared at the
+door, was silently beckoned in by me, to remain a quiet and delighted
+listener, almost to the end of the interview, when Mrs. Austin suddenly
+summoned her away; and again Claude Bainrothe and I were left for a few
+minutes <i>t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te</i>. When my visitor departed, or rose to do so, we
+shook hands frankly; and I thought, on the whole, he seemed grateful for
+my mode of treatment, and the interest I had shown in his narrative&mdash;so
+entire a proof of the disinterested nature of my feelings, could he only
+have thought so! It had probably been his intention to test and probe
+them in the beginning, and he had succeeded.</p>
+
+<p>He lingered a moment, however, on the threshold, gazing at me earnestly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miriam,&quot; he said, re&euml;ntering and closing the door, &quot;Miriam, I wish I
+could be certain of your friendship. I may put it to fiery proof before
+long. Can I rely on you to support me then?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Claude,&quot; I rejoined, gravely, &quot;if I can assist you in any useful or
+honorable way, I shall be glad to do so, on general principles alone.
+You did not respond fairly to my friendly manifestations in times past,
+after&mdash;after a certain explanation, and the impulse has died away since
+then, I confess. Our future lives can have very little in common, I
+imagine.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Would you not help me to break a loathed chain?&quot; he asked, almost
+fiercely. &quot;Bonds are often forced upon a man,&quot; he continued, &quot;by the
+very reason of his superior strength. It is so hard to resist a pleading
+woman! O Miriam! more than any one living, I respect&mdash;revere&mdash;love&mdash;yes,
+love you. Pity me! You can assign no secondary reasons now to
+professions like these. You are no longer rich&mdash;no longer&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miss Kilmansegg, with the golden leg,&quot; I interrupted, derisively.
+&quot;Truly you surprise me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O Miriam! how can you treat me with such heartless levity?&quot; and he
+wrung his hands bitterly. &quot;I am pushed to desperation already. I never
+knew, until I lost you, what you were to me; how superior to all other
+women, how pure, how unworldly, how strong, how rich in all mental and
+womanly endowments! Hear me, Miriam,&quot; and he attempted to take my hand,
+an error of which he was soon made conscious.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Claude Bainrothe,&quot; I said, sternly, &quot;I can tolerate you on one
+condition alone&mdash;that you respect me. You cease to do this, you, the
+betrothed husband of another woman! the moment you sully my ear with
+your addresses, your effusions of sentiment. They are no more, I know;
+but even these I will not endure from you, nor yet from&mdash;&quot; I hesitated;
+a hated name had risen to my lips, but I repressed it. He, the son,
+surely was not the father's keeper.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You do me injustice; before Heaven, you do!&quot; he exclaimed, flinging
+back his long curling locks impetuously, by a toss of his superb head,
+and bending his blazing eyes upon me. &quot;Hear me, Miriam, I hold the clew
+to a secret by means of which I can compel wealth to flow back to your
+feet, in the old channels, if you will be mine. You would not have
+thought this condition hard a year ago. What has occurred to change you?
+You loved me then&mdash;by Heaven you love me still! Oh, say so, Miriam, and
+make me doubly blessed! Am I deceived in the expression of that beaming
+eye? You will pardon, bless me;&quot; and he knelt humbly at my feet, and
+clasped my hand.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Rise, Claude,&quot; I said, &quot;and forgive me if a momentary feeling of
+triumph, that may have lit my eye, was mingled with the feeling of
+entire emancipation from all past weakness, which this hour so surely
+proves, and so satisfactorily, to my own spirit. You are to me like any
+other stranger.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He was standing sullenly before me now, his head dropping on his breast,
+his hands loosely clasped before him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are deceived,&quot; I pursued, calmly, &quot;if you imagine from any
+expression of mine that one ray of love survives the ruin of other days.
+I told you the truth when I said all was over between us forever. Did
+you suppose me a woman to sit down in the ashes because one man&mdash;one
+woman of all God's manifold creation&mdash;had proved false, or treacherous,
+or ungrateful? I should have wronged my youth, my soul, my descent, my
+God, had I so yielded. Go and fulfill your contract faithfully this
+time; a second rupture might not go so well with you as the first. There
+are persons who are singularly tenacious of their possessions, and who
+number their bondsmen as a principal portion of their property. Beware
+how you anger such! Your father too. He would be conciliated now, by
+what would once have incensed him. Evelyn Erie is rich, Miriam Monfort
+is poor; why need I add another word? The suggestion is perfect.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Coldly, silently, angrily, he left the room. I heard him stamp
+impatiently at the hall-door, at some delay apparently in undoing its
+fastenings&mdash;his childish habit when provoked&mdash;such was his haste to be
+gone.</p>
+
+<p>Yet I could scarcely judge, from what had just occurred, taking this,
+too, in connection with what had passed long before, when I alone was
+the injured and forgiving one, that I had drawn down upon my head his
+eternal enmity.</p>
+
+<p>But thus it proved.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="I_CHAPTER_IX"></a><h2>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>Months passed away&mdash;months of dreary, monotonous despondency, through
+which ran a vein of anxiety that banished peace. During all this time
+matters went on pretty much as they had done before, with one exception,
+I held no further intercourse with Mr. Basil Bainrothe. Claude was
+absent most of this time on business, for a firm with which he had
+lately connected himself, and on the few occasions of his presence at
+Monfort Hall treated me with marked formality.</p>
+
+<p>Evelyn had affected to make light of Mr. Bainrothe's outrage toward me,
+though far from defending him. &quot;Men of his years do these things
+sometimes,&quot; she said, &quot;under the mask of playfulness and fatherly
+feeling, and, however unpleasant it may be to bear them, one has to pass
+them over. You are right, of course, to be reserved with him henceforth,
+Miriam. By-the-by, dear child, your prudery is excessive, I fear, and it
+makes a young girl, especially if she is not beautiful, so ridiculous!
+But, of course, that even is far better than the opposite extreme. Now,
+I flatter myself, I know how to steer the <i>juste milieu</i>, always so
+desirable.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But, Evelyn,&quot; I had rejoined, &quot;his manner was atrocious! I could not&mdash;I
+would not if I could&mdash;give you any idea of its <i>animality</i>; yes, that is
+the very word! it makes my blood creep to think of it, even!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And I hid my face in my hands, crimson as it was from the
+retrospection.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then don't think of it at all. That will be the best way, decidedly,&quot;
+she had said, tapping me playfully with her fan, then whispering: &quot;This
+lover of yours may be useful to us, you know; let us not goad him to
+rebellion. You can be as cool as you please, Miriam, but be civil all
+the same.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I surveyed her with flashing eyes. &quot;Such advice,&quot; I retorted, &quot;falls but
+poorly from your lips, Evelyn Erle, whom my mistaken father dubbed
+'propriety personified.' One woman should feel for another's wounded
+delicacy, even if a stranger; but, when it comes to sisters, O Evelyn!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And such insolence falls very absurdly from you, Miriam Monfort, under
+the circumstances. Sisters, indeed!&quot; she sneered. &quot;It was a claim you
+repudiated once!&quot; and, with a sweeping bow, she left me, to repeat
+&quot;sisters, indeed!&quot; in my bitter solitude.</p>
+
+<p>What were these circumstances to which she so haughtily referred? With
+my heavy head resting on my weary hands, I sat and contemplated
+them&mdash;ay, looked them fully in the face! Outwardly, matters stood just
+as they had ever done.</p>
+
+<p>The same circle of servants&mdash;of acquaintances&mdash;revolved around us. The
+house was unchanged, the living identically the same, even to the one
+bottle of fine wine per day, carefully withdrawn from the cobwebbed
+cellar by Morton, and as carefully decanted for our table.</p>
+
+<p>But this alone, of all the viands set before us, was furnished at my
+expense. My own small hoard of silverpieces had, it is true, from the
+time of our ruin, more than sufficed for my absolute wants and Mabel's,
+confined, as they were, to mere externals of necessary dress; but all
+other outlay, even to the payment of Mabel's masters (I taught her
+chiefly myself, however), was met by Evelyn.</p>
+
+<p>We, the children of a proud man, were dependent on strangers. Look upon
+it as I would, the revolting fact stared me out of countenance. Charity,
+the chambermaid, had more right to lift an opposing front to Evelyn than
+I had; for she earned the bread she ate, while I&mdash;there was no use
+concealing the mortifying truth any longer&mdash;served the apprenticeship of
+pauperdom!</p>
+
+<p>True, the house was legally mine&mdash;the furniture I used, the plate I was
+served from, the carriage I occasionally drove out in, were all my own
+possessions&mdash;though, with a slow and moth-like process, I was gradually
+consuming these. For, at my majority, it was my determination to pay for
+my support in the intervening years, even if I sacrificed every thing in
+order to wipe out obligations. Ay, the very corn my horses were eating
+(what mockery to keep them at all!) was now furnished by another, and
+must eventually be paid for, with interest.</p>
+
+<p>Then, how would it fare with me, beggared indeed? I would take time by
+the forelock; I would begin at once.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Evelyn,&quot; I had said, not long after the conversation reverted to, &quot;is
+there no way in which my property may be fixed, so as to leave the
+principal untouched, and still yield an income sufficient for my
+support, and that of Mabel? The bread of dependence is very bitter to
+me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I ate it long,&quot; she said, &quot;and found it passing sweet. You are only
+receiving back the payment for an old debt, Miriam. Your father's lavish
+generosity can never be repaid, even to his children, by me, who was so
+long its happy recipient.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The words seemed unanswerable at the time, inconsistent as they were
+with her past reproaches. Again she said&mdash;when the same murmur left my
+lips upon a later occasion&mdash;looking at me sorrowfully as she spoke, and
+with something incomprehensible to me in her expression that affected me
+strangely: &quot;Wait until you are of age, Miriam: all can be arranged
+definitely then; but now, the waves might as well chafe against the
+rocks that bind them in their bed, as you against your condition;&quot;
+adding with a tragic look and tone, half playful, of course, &quot;Votre
+sort, c'est moi. You remember what Louis XIV. said, 'L'&Eacute;tat, c'est moi;'
+now be pacified, I implore you&mdash;all will still be well,&quot; and she patted
+my shoulder kindly, and kissed my forehead.</p>
+
+<p>Her forbearance touched me; but the time came when all this was thrown
+aside. It was the old fable again of the bee and the bee-moth. Having
+failed in her first efforts, she was now very gradually gluing me
+against the hive.</p>
+
+<p>Evelyn, as I have said, had always been at the head of my father's house
+and mine, and, by his will, was still to remain so until my marriage, or
+majority&mdash;one, usually, in the eyes of the law, in most respects. So it
+pained me infinitely less than it must have done had a different order
+of things ever existed, to see her supreme at Monfort Hall, and to feel
+that every thing emanated from her hand.</p>
+
+<p>Of all the servants, old Morton alone seemed to feel the difference.
+Mrs. Austin had always openly preferred Evelyn to me, and Mabel to
+either&mdash;so that matters worked very well between those three. For,
+though I do not think Evelyn loved Mabel, nor Mabel Evelyn, yet, with
+this link between them of servile affection, they managed very well,
+without much feeling on either side.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Austin certainly spoiled Mabel, yet she only rendered her
+self-indulged, not selfish&mdash;for this difference arises out of
+temperament and disposition&mdash;and no mother could have been more tender
+or vigilant of her comfort or welfare, than was this ancient and
+attached nurse and servitor. I mention this here, for it reconciled me
+later, somewhat, to an inevitable separation, that must have been else
+thrice bitter. But the culmination approaches!</p>
+
+<p>I was lying, one evening, on a deep velvet couch in the library, now
+rarely used except for business purposes&mdash;for, again, fires and lights
+sparkled, in their respective seasons, in the several receiving-rooms of
+Monfort Hall, maintained by Evelyn's bounty&mdash;when, overpowered by the
+influence of the hour, and the weariness of my own unprofitable
+thoughts, and perhaps the dreary play of Racine's that I was reading, I
+dropped asleep.</p>
+
+<p>The sofa was placed in a deep embrasure, surrounded with sweeping
+curtains, for the convenience of reading in a reclining posture, by the
+light of the window, and quite shut away, by such means, from the
+remainder of the room.</p>
+
+<p>To-night, a chilly one in August, very unusual for that season, the
+window was down, and the drawn curtains kept off the light of the dim
+lamp that swung from the centre of the apartment immediately above the
+octagon centre-table.</p>
+
+<p>I was roused to full consciousness by the sound of voices, which I had
+heard indistinctly mingling with my dreams for some time before.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bainrothe and Evelyn were conversing or discussing some subject,
+somewhat angrily.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You had the lion's share,&quot; I heard him say; &quot;you have no reason to
+complain. The rest came in afterward, and was all merged in that
+sinking ship, and went down with it into the deep waters. It would not
+have been as much as you received, had it been saved, which it was not.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That is not my concern,&quot; she rejoined, dryly; &quot;but for my
+communication, Miriam would have secured all next morning. She was bent
+upon it. You ought never to forget this.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nor do I; but, after all, you are the chief beneficiary, Evelyn.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And your son&mdash;do you count his welfare as nothing? Will he not share
+with me? Nay, was it not for his sake, chiefly, I warned you, knowing
+how implacable else you might be toward us both, and how 'gold would
+gild every thing' in your estimation.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;True, true; but still something is due to me. Undertake this
+office&mdash;succeed&mdash;and command me, eternally. I love that girl, as you
+know, as Claude could never love any one, and it will go hard with me if
+I do not still inspire her with somewhat of the same sentiment&mdash;that is,
+with your coincidence.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Never, never!&quot; she exclaimed with asperity; &quot;her hatred is too
+implacable&mdash;the Judaic principle is too firmly grafted in her life.
+Truly, she is one of a stiff-necked generation. Her heart is especially
+hard toward you, Basil Bainrothe&mdash;and, I confess, you were precipitate.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I know, I know&mdash;but that error can be repaired. I did not think of
+marriage <i>then</i>, I confess; after her bankruptcy and scorn to me, things
+had not gone so far; her own severity has made me consider the subject
+seriously. She is not one to be treated lightly, Evelyn!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your son found that out to his cost!&quot; was the bitter rejoinder, and I
+heard her draw in her breath hard between her closed teeth, with the
+hissing sound so familiar to me, and peculiar to her when she labored
+under excitement&mdash;a sound like that of a roused serpent.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, to his cost; but there is no question of that now. Though, I must
+say, I think he erred. He, like the base Judean, cast away a pearl
+richer than all his tribe!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you!&quot; was Evelyn's curt, ungracious reply.</p>
+
+<p>I rose from the couch, my hand was on the curtain; painful as it was to
+me, I would go forth and confront them both with the acknowledgment of
+their conspiracy, their fraud. I would not again listen to bitter truths
+as I had done before, involuntarily, when bound hand and foot by the
+weakness of my condition. I was strong and courageous now. I had no
+excuse for hearing another syllable&mdash;I would defy them, utterly!</p>
+
+<p>All this passed like a flash through my mind.</p>
+
+<p>On what slight pivots our fate turns sometimes! How small are the
+guiding-points of destiny! A momentary entanglement of my bracelet, with
+one of the tassels of the curtain, delayed me an instant, inevitably, in
+my impulsive endeavor to extricate myself from its meshes, and what I
+then heard, determined me to remain where I was, at any cost to my own
+sense of pride and honor.</p>
+
+<p>Fear, abject fear, obtained complete ascendency over every sense, and
+personal safety became my sole consideration. I, who had boasted so
+lately of my courage, felt the cold dew of cowardice bathe my brow, its
+tremor shake my frame.</p>
+
+<p>They were plotting&mdash;deliberately plotting, as the price of secrecy on
+one part&mdash;to shut me up in a lunatic asylum until my consent could be
+obtained to that ill-starred marriage!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Every thing is favorable to this undertaking,&quot; I heard Mr. Bainrothe
+say; &quot;her own moody and excitable condition of late&mdash;the absence of her
+physician (meddlesome people, those conscientious medical men sometimes
+prove, even when not asked for an opinion!)&mdash;Mrs. Austin's testimony as
+to those lethargies, which would be conclusive of itself&mdash;our own
+disinterestedness, so fully proved by our devotion to her and Mabel,
+under difficulties&mdash;her mother's mysterious malady&mdash;all these things
+will make it easy to carry out this plan in which your cheerful
+coincidence, and perhaps Claude's even, will be essential.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I doubt whether you succeed in gaining him over,&quot; she remarked, coldly;
+&quot;and, as to me, I shall act as you desire, perhaps, but any thing but
+'cheerfully,' I assure you. I consider it a mighty price to pay for&mdash;&quot;
+she hesitated.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A fortune and a husband?&quot; he queried. &quot;Claude has his suspicions, I
+well know, but they rest on me alone so far. Could he be convinced of
+your part in distracting Miriam's gold from its legitimate channel,
+believe me, he would turn his back on you forever! I know the man.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yet he saw me&mdash;he must have seen me&mdash;alter that word in the codocil to
+my aunt's legacy&mdash;asking no explanation at the time, receiving none
+thereafter.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That was different; he thought it a piece of vainglory on your part
+alone, amounting to nothing, if, indeed, he observed it at all. No, no,
+Evelyn Erle! if you expect to carry out your views, you must aid me in
+executing mine. I shall keep your secret from my son on no other
+conditions. We are confederates or nothing in this matter, you see.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And suppose, in return, I publish yours to the world,&quot; she suggested,
+coolly; &quot;brand you with baseness? What then, Basil Bainrothe&mdash;what
+then?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You dare not!&quot; was the prompt reply. &quot;I hold written propositions of
+yours on the subject&mdash;you have not a scratch of a pen of mine to show. I
+should declare simply that you were a frustrated rogue, that is all. Who
+could prove otherwise?&quot; He laughed in his derisive way. There was a
+bitter pause.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What is it you want me to do?&quot; she asked, hoarsely, at its expiration.
+&quot;State definitely what you exact from me in return for your
+forbearance&mdash;your <i>honorable</i> secrecy?&quot; There was exquisite irony in her
+tone.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Simply this,&quot; he said, calmly, taking no notice of her emphasis&mdash;&quot;you
+are to accompany Miriam to the asylum and act as her nurse and guardian
+until my point is gained. You shall be present at every interview, and
+you shall both be made perfectly comfortable&mdash;treated like ladies; in
+short, every propriety shall be sacredly observed, and, on the day on
+which her marriage with me is solemnized, you may both return to Monfort
+Hall&mdash;you as its head, and Claude as its master; Miriam will go home
+with me, her husband, of course, and all will be settled. Now, I give
+you twenty-four hours wherein to consider this proposition. At the end
+of that time, if you still hesitate, Claude shall know every thing. You
+can then take your chances with him&mdash;he may be ready to take a felon for
+a wife, for aught I know, after all!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come, then, to-morrow evening,&quot; she acceded, after a second pause, and
+in low, angry accents, &quot;and I will acquaint you with my
+determination&mdash;my necessity rather.&quot; They parted thus and there.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="I_CHAPTER_X"></a><h2>CHAPTER X.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>Nearly dead with terror and indignation, I crept stealthily to my own
+chamber, in which I locked myself up securely, resisting all friendly
+overtures of the enemy, except one cup of tea, received from the hand of
+a servant through the half-opened door (which was instantly relocked) of
+my citadel.</p>
+
+<p>My resolution was formed that night. I would leave Monfort Hall, and
+even forsake Mabel, until I could return and legally claim both. At my
+majority, Mabel would be of age to select between her guardians, by that
+time, according to law, and&mdash;we should see! As for poor Morton, I would
+write to him and claim his prayers alone. Age like his is so
+irresponsible. I dared not trust him farther!</p>
+
+<p>It was all very brief and bitter!</p>
+
+<p>As yet I had digested no plan of action. I would go westward, I thought,
+but just as far away as my money would carry me from these fiends,
+trusting to God for the rest, just as a boat puts off from a blazing
+ship.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, I must adopt another name&mdash;what should it be? I should need
+clothing; and <i>how</i> secure and convey away my trunk unseen by Evelyn? My
+diamonds must be secreted or disposed of&mdash;how should this be done? Could
+I trust Mrs. Austin&mdash;Mabel?</p>
+
+<p>No, the suggestion was discarded at once as unworthy of consideration.</p>
+
+<p>One was too old, too self-indulged, too selfish; and in age people
+usually worship expediency alone. The other far too young not to be
+necessarily indiscreet and impulsive. To have been otherwise at her
+tender age would have been simply monstrous!</p>
+
+<p>No, I must forego even the sweet satisfaction of saying farewell to
+Mabel; we must part perhaps forever, as we might meet again within an
+hour, and all her distress and anxiety must pass unshared and unheeded.</p>
+
+<p>There was no one else I cared very much about leaving, but the love of
+locality was a strong feature in my disposition, and every room in my
+father's house was dear to me, as was every book in his study, and every
+plant in our deep-green, shadowed garden.</p>
+
+<p>The very streets were sacred in my sight, that I had trodden from
+childhood, but my liberty was more precious to my heart than scenes of
+old associations, and to gain one the other must be sacrificed. There
+was no hesitating now: I was on the tread-mill of fate, and must
+proceed, or fall and be crushed beneath.</p>
+
+<p>And here again I repeat, what I have said so recently: &quot;On what slight
+pivots our destiny often turns!&mdash;through what small channels Providence
+works its wondrous ways!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A pair of shoes had been sent home for me that day, which still lay on
+the table, wrapped and corded. In truth, they came very opportunely; &quot;I
+shall want these soon,&quot; I thought, as I examined the strong and elastic
+bootees, which had been made for me in view of my morning walks, a part
+of dear Dr. Pemberton's regimen, which I strenuously and advantageously
+carried out.</p>
+
+<p>As I spoke, the paper in which they had been enveloped rustled down on
+the floor by my side. I stooped, languidly, to pick it up, merely from a
+sense of order, and my eye fell on a long column, headed &quot;Wanted,&quot; and,
+almost for lack of resolution to withdraw it, wandered down its
+paragraphs, step by step.</p>
+
+<p>It was a Democratic paper, such as was never patronized by
+Evelyn&mdash;herself a zealous conservative in politics, as our father had
+been before us&mdash;and, as I cared little for newspaper-reading, I had
+never suggested a subscription to any sheet that she did not fancy,
+although I inclined to democracy.</p>
+
+<p>I was somewhat amused by the quaintness of some of the advertisements of
+this sheet for the people, that style of literature being new to me; and
+found myself smiling over the perfections set forth as necessary, by the
+paragons of the earth, in both wife and servant, when I came to a dead
+stand. Here was the very thing I should have selected, could I have
+chosen my own destination instead of depending on <i>chance</i> (as if,
+indeed, there were such a thing <i>possible</i> with God&mdash;the predestinator
+of the universe), or necessity (is the name a much better one as applied
+to the all-seeing Deity?), or fate (a more comprehensive but little
+less-abused term, perhaps), to do this for me!</p>
+
+<p>The advertisement ran thus, and quite fascinated me with its
+eccentricity, as well as congeniality to my condition:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A gentleman and lady, now sojourning for a short time at the Mansion
+House, wish to employ, immediately, for the benefit of their children,
+an instructress, who must be, <i>imprimis</i>, a lady&mdash;and young; secondly,
+soundly constituted and well educated; thirdly, a good reader, and able
+to teach elocution, and entertain a circle; fourthly, willing to reside
+with cheerfulness on a Southern plantation; fifthly, content with a
+moderate <i>modicum</i> as salary. None other need apply&mdash;no references given
+or asked. Inquire for <i>Somnus</i>.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I laid down the paper, and drew a long, free breath; then rang a peal of
+merriment, startling under the circumstances. It was the first hearty
+laugh that had left my lips for many days. &quot;What an oddity, one or the
+other of these people must be!&quot; I thought, &quot;the man most probably&mdash;yes,
+I am sure it is he&mdash;no woman ever was so independent of references, or
+made youth a <i>sine qua non</i>, nor elocution either. But am I soundly
+constituted? ay, there's the rub! suppose my terrible foe sees fit to
+interfere, 'Epilepsy,' as Evelyn called it, and perhaps with reason&mdash;God
+alone knows!&mdash;what then? Well, I will hazard it&mdash;that is all&mdash;I will
+charge nothing for lost days, and try to be zealous in the interval;
+besides, it is a long time since one of these obliteration spells
+occurred; for I shall ever believe Evelyn dosed me for her own purposes
+on that last occasion! Fiend!&mdash;fiend!&mdash;and yet my little sister <i>must</i>
+remain in such hands for a season, protected by her guardian angel
+only.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I passed a feverish night, employing the first part of it in quilting my
+diamonds into a belt which I placed about my waist; and the remainder in
+putting together as many useful, as well as a few handsome clothes, as
+my travelling-trunk would contain; bonnets, evening-dresses, which
+require room to dispose of, and the like vanities, I abandoned to
+Evelyn's tender mercies. I rose early and, as usual whenever the weather
+permitted, sallied forth before breakfast, but this time unaccompanied
+by my usual attendant, Charity.</p>
+
+<p>The &quot;Mansion House&quot; was at no great distance from our own residence.
+The beautiful home of the Bingham family, then converted into an hotel,
+destroyed by fire at a later period, like our own house, was situated in
+the ancient part of the city, from which fashion had gradually emerged,
+and shrank away to found new streets and dwellings.</p>
+
+<p>I rang at the private door, and asked the porter for &quot;<i>Somnus</i>;&quot; at the
+same time sending up a card, on which was written:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Miriam Harz,' applicant for the post of teacher.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A few moments later a grave, copper-colored servant, respectably clad,
+and with an air of responsibility about him that was almost oppressive,
+invited me solemnly to follow him up the winding marble stair&mdash;so often
+trodden by the feet of Washington and his court, when a gracious
+assemblage filled the halls above&mdash;and ushered me into a small but lofty
+parlor at its head, in which a gentleman sat reading the morning
+journal.</p>
+
+<p>Very wide awake, indeed, seemed he who affected the title of the god of
+sleep, as he arose courteously from his chair, still holding his paper
+in one hand, and waved me to a seat on the worn horse-hair sofa between
+the windows.</p>
+
+<p>He was a tall, thin, sallow, hooked-nosed gentleman, of middle age, with
+a certain air of distinction about him in contrast with his singular
+homeliness.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miss Harz?&quot; he said, interrogatively, glancing at the card over the
+mantel-shelf&mdash;near which he had been sitting&mdash;above an unseasonable,
+smouldering coal-fire.</p>
+
+<p>I bowed affirmatively for all reply. &quot;And I,&quot; he continued, &quot;am Prosper
+La Vigne, of the '<i>Less durneer</i>' settlement&quot; (for thus he pronounced
+this anglicized French name) &quot;Maurice County, Georgia,&quot; with an air
+that seemed to say, &quot;You have heard of me, of course!&quot; and again I
+bowed, as my only alternative.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Lay off your bonnet, if you please,&quot; he said, coolly; &quot;I would like to
+see the shape of your head before proceeding further. Mine, you see, is
+an ill-balanced affair,&quot; smiling quizzically in his effort to be
+condescending, perhaps. &quot;This is a mere business transaction, you know,&quot;
+seeing that I hesitated to comply, &quot;and your phrenological developments
+must atone for my deficiencies, or all will go wrong at once&mdash;but do as
+you like. Now that you have thrown back your veil, I can see that the
+brow is a good one. That will suffice, I suppose. I will take the moral
+qualities on trial for the nonce. My wife is wholly occupied with her
+domestic and private affairs, you must understand, when we are at home,
+and much will devolve on you; that is, if we suit one another, which is
+dubious. That reminds me! I have not heard the sound of your voice yet;
+I am much governed by intonation in my estimates of people, and usually
+form a perfect opinion at first sight. Be good enough to read this
+item,&quot; and he handed me the morning paper, formally indicating it with
+his long, lithe forefinger. It was from one of Mr. Clay's speeches. I
+did as he requested, without hesitation.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;People trot out horses and negroes when they wish to purchase; why not
+governesses?&quot; I questioned, dumbly. &quot;He did well to ask no references;
+his examination is thorough, I perceive,&quot; and I laid the paper down,
+half amused, half provoked, when I had finished. He was gazing at me
+open-mouthed&mdash;no unusual thing with him, I found later&mdash;and was silent
+for a few moments.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Splendid! admirable!&quot; he exclaimed, suddenly; &quot;both, voice and
+elocution perfect&mdash;you possess the greatest of all accomplishments,
+madam, next to conversational excellence,&quot; rising to his feet, and
+bowing low and seating himself again, in a formal way of his own. &quot;Music
+is a mockery compared to such reading! as well set a jew's-harp against
+the winds of heaven! You understand my meaning, of course; it is not
+precisely that, however. Now let us converse a little.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The advertisement did not refer to that, I believe, as a condition,&quot; I
+said, somewhat indignantly, and flushing hotly as I spoke. &quot;I really
+cannot converse to order. I am a person of moods, and do not feel always
+like talking at all,&quot; and I rose and prepared to draw down my veil, take
+up my parasol, and depart.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I like you none the worse for a proper exhibition of spirit,&quot; he said,
+nodding kindly, and settling himself once more to his paper composedly.
+&quot;Sit still, miss, and compose yourself by the time Madame La Vigne comes
+in, or she <i>may</i> think you high-tempered, and I am sure you are nothing
+of the kind&mdash;only very properly proud. There, now, that is right! You
+seem to be a very sensible, well-conditioned young person indeed, and I
+think you will suit. You are the tenth since yesterday morning,&quot; smiling
+and bowing blandly, &quot;and the only one that could read intelligibly.
+Elocution, you see, is my hobby. I forgot to say,&quot; looking up from his
+paper, after a pause, &quot;the salary is six hundred dollars&mdash;not enough,
+perhaps, for a lady of your merit&mdash;but quite as much as we can afford to
+give. This I call a <i>modicum</i>.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is not very important,&quot; I remarked, &quot;what I receive in the shape of
+money, so that I am at no expense beyond my clothing, and other personal
+matters, and that I find myself well situated. My engagement will, in
+no case, extend beyond a year. You have your peculiarities, I see, and
+I have mine. The question is, might they not jar occasionally?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, never, never! '<i>noblesse oblige</i>,' you know,&quot; with a wave of the
+hand, soft and urbane. &quot;I hope I shall know how to treat a lady and a
+teacher, both in one, and a member of my household. Besides that, I
+shall have very little to do with you, indeed. Just now it is
+different&mdash;we are coming to terms; we have not made them yet, however. I
+always save my wife this trouble, if possible.&mdash;Ah! there she comes, at
+last,&quot; as a mild, lady-like looking woman emerged from an adjoining
+chamber, somewhat elaborately dressed for that early hour, and followed
+by a stream of pale, pretty little girls. &quot;Madame La Vigne,&quot; he said,
+rising ceremoniously, &quot;permit me to introduce to you Miss Miriam Harz,&quot;
+reading the name slowly from the card again, which he took from the
+wall, &quot;'a candidate for the position of instructress at
+Beauseincourt.'&mdash;Say, how do you like her looks?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I had come to the conclusion by this time that Mr. La Vigne was
+decidedly as eccentric as his advertisement, and that his vagaries and
+personalities were not worth minding or estimating in the consideration
+in question.</p>
+
+<p>So, when Madame La Vigne replied to his abrupt query, &quot;Oh, very, <i>very</i>
+much, indeed!&quot; and held out her kind hand to me, I took it without
+misgiving, and the first glance we interchanged contained freemasonry.
+From that time Colonel Prosper La Vigne fell gracefully back into his
+proper position, and I talked away fluently enough with his lady, as he
+pompously called his wife. In short, at the end of an hour it was
+settled that I was to join them the same evening, at their hotel, and
+proceed with them thence to New York, there to take the packet for
+Savannah (their first destination) on the same night. The plantation on
+which they lived, they informed me, was nearly a day's journey, by
+carriage-conveyance, beyond that city, but eligibly situated for health
+(though not for productiveness), among a low range of hills known as the
+&quot;Les Dernier&quot; Mountains, the name being anglicized into &quot;Less derneer,&quot;
+with the accent on the last syllable, so as to metamorphose it
+completely to the ear, instead of translating it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is a very lonely place though, Miss Harz, in the winter-time&mdash;mamma
+ought to tell you that,&quot; whispered Marion, the eldest daughter, as she
+nestled so closely to me, and looked so kindly in my face, that the
+intruding thought of her unwillingness for my society was instantly
+banished. &quot;In the summer it is pleasant enough, so many people come to
+their cottages in the hills; but, during eight months of the year, we
+have but one near neighbor, and not a very social one either.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;From circumstances alone unsocial, Marion,&quot; said Madame La Vigne,
+flushing slightly (her usual complexion was of a fair sallowness, common
+to Southern ladies). &quot;Cousin Celia is certainly devoted at heart to
+every one of us, but she cannot, you know, leave home often.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, I know, mamma! I only meant to keep Miss Harz from being
+disappointed.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miss Harz has internal resources, I have no doubt,&quot; rejoined Madame La
+Vigne; &quot;and, even if she had not, I fear her duties would preclude much
+longing for excitement.&mdash;It is a very onerous task you are undertaking,
+my dear young lady, certainly,&quot; turning kindly to me. &quot;Five ignorant
+little Southern girls, well disposed but imperfectly trained, will fill
+your hands to positive overflowing, I fear. You will find me exacting,
+too, sometimes. I am sure I shall enjoy your society whenever you
+choose to bestow it on me, and Colonel La Vigne as well.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>To which declaration on the part of his wife, that gentleman responded
+by laying his hand on his breast, complacently, and bowing profoundly
+from his chair, ending the ceremony by a flourish of his delicate
+cambric handkerchief, and the exhibition at the same time of a slender,
+sickly, and peculiarly-shaped hand, decorated with an onyx seal-ring. He
+looked the gentleman, however, unmistakably plain and peculiar as his
+appearance was, and pompous and pretentious as was his manner.</p>
+
+<p>If words could do the work of the photographer, I should like to show
+him to my readers, as he appeared to me on that first interview; though
+later his whole aspect underwent a change in my sight, reflected from
+the cavernous depths within, so that, what seemed somewhat ludicrous in
+the beginning, came to be solemnly serious and even sophistically
+tragical and awful on later acquaintance.</p>
+
+<p>We have all more or less witnessed this phenomenon of transformation in
+some familiar aspect, either through love or hatred, respect or
+contempt, fear or admiration, until we find ourselves marveling at past
+impressions, received, in ignorance of the truth, in the commencement of
+our observations.</p>
+
+<p>I remember that Mr. La Vigne struck me on that occasion as a superficial
+man in every way, but kindly, courteous, and vivacious, though certainly
+eccentric and somewhat absurd. One would have supposed him even a
+flippant, whimsical person, seen casually; but, on later examination,
+the droop of his eyelids and under lip, and the depressed corners of his
+mouth, gave to the close observer a surer indication of his character.</p>
+
+<p>The shape of his narrow, conical, and somewhat elegantly-placed head,
+denoted an inclination to fanaticism, which had been skillfully combated
+by a perfectly skeptical education, so as to turn this stream of
+character into strange channels.</p>
+
+<p>Hobbyism was his infirmity, perhaps, and he was essentially a man of one
+idea at a time. The word &quot;odd&quot; applied to him peculiarly, which is in
+itself a sort of social ostracism when attached to any one, and raises a
+barrier at once between a man and his fellow-bipeds that not even
+superiority could surmount.</p>
+
+<p>He was emphatically a tawny man as to coloring&mdash;hair, skin, and eyes,
+being all pretty much of the same hue of &quot;the ribbed sea-sands.&quot; Yet
+there were vestiges about him of an originally fair complexion. His
+wrists and temples were white as those of a woman. His face was long,
+lank, and cadaverous; his eyes shone with a clear, amber, and steady
+light, and had an abstracted expression usually, accompanied with a not
+unfrequent and most peculiar warp of the pupils.</p>
+
+<p>His hair was singularly shaggy and picturesque in its tawny grayness,
+and wavy, wiry length. Above his eyes his heavy brows of the same
+texture and color seemed to make a pent-house, from which the high, pale
+brow receded gradually; his profile was aquiline to absolute
+grotesqueness. The idea of &quot;Punchinello&quot; presented itself irresistibly
+at the sight of his parrot-like nose and suddenly-upturned chin.</p>
+
+<p>His gait was as peculiar as his countenance and manner; he glided, in
+walking, carrying himself erectly, with his arms closely pinioned to his
+sides. He was altogether so extraordinary looking that I felt myself
+staring almost rudely at him on our first interview; yet his dress was
+in no way remarkable except for an air of old-fashioned and speckless
+neatness.</p>
+
+<p>Madame La Vigne was a pretty and well-preserved woman, of about
+thirty-five, a fair brunette, originally, to whom most of her daughters
+bore a close resemblance. One alone, the plainest of the band,
+presenting a resemblance, most unfortunately for her, of &quot;Colonel La
+Vigne,&quot; as his wife called him, with scrupulous punctilio.</p>
+
+<p>One son, the eldest of their family, they spoke of as the pride of their
+hearts even on that first interview. He was in the navy, and,
+consequently, much from home. They regretted this for many reasons, they
+said, and, among others, on my account. He was so genial, so
+companionable&mdash;their own dear Walter&mdash;&quot;such a delightful fellow,&quot; as his
+sister Madge declared exultingly&mdash;the second of this band of
+sisters&mdash;and, as far as I could observe, on first acquaintance, the
+brightest. Marion, the elder, was extremely pretty and gentle; and
+Bertie, the third, taciturn and unprepossessing, yet evidently sensible.
+She it was who alone resembled her father.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Fortunately, for the uninterrupted success of my scheme, Evelyn had one
+of her sick turns that day, and remained closely shut up in her room. At
+one o'clock, I summoned Franklin to my chamber.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There is a trunk,&quot; I said, &quot;that I wish you would take to the Mansion
+House&mdash;to the care of a Mr. Somnus lodging there&mdash;here is the card
+attached, with his name; place it with his baggage. It is to go to New
+York, for a Miss Harz, a relation of mine&mdash;a teacher, I believe, who has
+applied to me for assistance; but he understands all that, so you need
+not be at, any trouble to explain. Be quiet, Franklin, in removing it,
+as Evelyn is very nervous to-day, and dislikes noise; and go with the
+drayman yourself to insure its safe delivery.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>So passed my first lesson in deception, but I schooled lip and eye to
+obedience, so that Franklin suspected nothing, and, being a discreet
+servant, who never let his right hand know what his left was doing,
+especially when gold crossed the palm, I was sure of silence on the
+subject, at least until after my own departure.</p>
+
+<p>Mabel and I dined <i>t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te</i> at two; I had caused dinner to be served
+earlier than usual for my own convenience, though indeed I found it a
+mere form&mdash;for how could I swallow a morsel, choked as I was with grief,
+while the fair child I worshipped, yet was forsaking, sat so calmly and
+unconsciously in my sight!</p>
+
+<p>After dinner I sought Mrs. Austin, leading Mabel by the hand. I had been
+kissing her, almost wildly, every foot of the way up-stairs, and she
+gazed on me, I could not help perceiving, with a sort of fond surprise,
+for it was not my habit to lavish such passionate caresses, even on her,
+without occasion.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am obliged to go out now,&quot; I said, in a broken voice, which I vainly
+tried to command. &quot;Take our darling, Mrs. Austin, and keep her very
+safely until I come again. Promise me this!&quot; I added, eagerly seizing
+her hand.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;La! Miss Miriam, what's the use of promising for one afternoon, when I
+have taken the best of care of her all her life? You act so singularly
+to-day!&quot; she added, pettishly, and she began to smooth Mabel's hair,
+grumblingly. I turned away without another word, murmuring blessings in
+my heart on that dear head.</p>
+
+<p>There was no time to be lost now! The carriage was already at the door
+of the Mansion House to convey us to the steamboat when I reached it,
+and Colonel La Vigne standing, rather anxiously, on the pavement,
+looking up and down.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was afraid you had rued your promise and were not coming,&quot; said
+Marion, springing forth from the door-way eagerly, to greet me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And we had forgotten to ask your address,&quot; added Madame La Vigne, &quot;or
+we might have called for you, and saved you a long walk, perhaps.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We should not have carried off your trunk, even had you not appeared,
+Miss Harz,&quot; said Colonel La Vigne, blandly. &quot;There it is you see,
+distinctly labeled, on the baggage-wagon in front, directed to the care
+of 'Mr. Somnus!'&mdash;a good deal of waggery about you, I perceive, or had
+you forgotten my name?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, no! I had reasons&mdash;but, you remember, no questions were to be
+asked; you must wait for voluntary communications.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am so glad&mdash;so glad you are going with us!&quot; said little Louey La
+Vigne, pressing my hand, as she sat before me in the carriage by Aunt
+Felicit&eacute;, her nurse&mdash;Colonel La Vigne and three of his daughters having
+been consigned to another hack&mdash;Louey and her sable attendant, stately
+with her large gold ear-hoops, and brilliant cotton handkerchief, being
+inseparable accompaniments of his wife.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have banished Mr. La Vigne, I fear,&quot; I said, in a broken voice; &quot;it
+would have been best for me, perhaps, to have gone with the young
+ladies. Let me begin at once.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, it is much best as it is,&quot; she answered, affectionately; &quot;think of
+yourself just now, and take no charge until we all get home. You are
+our guest until then, remember. I know it is a sad trial to go with
+strangers, but you will find us friends, I hope;&quot; and she clasped my
+hand in hers, and so held it until we reached the wharf.</p>
+
+<p>Tears rained down my face, beneath the friendly shelter of my veil, but
+Madame La Vigne, with the tact of good-breeding, affected not to remark
+them. Once little Louey, a child of eight years old, the youngest and
+prettiest of all, leaned forward, as if to soothe or question me, but
+she was plucked quickly back into her place by the decorous Aunt
+Felicit&eacute;, who had not lived so long with quality without acquiring some
+delicacy of behavior, at least, even if it struck no deeper root.</p>
+
+<p>I had commanded myself, before the carriage stopped beside the panting
+steamboat, and soon we were gliding along the placid river toward the
+point whence the railroad was to carry us on to our goal. At New York,
+we found ourselves hurried for time to reach the packet Magnolia, and
+went directly from the depot to the quay, for embarkation.</p>
+
+<p>By the pilot, who left us at the Narrows, I sent back a few lines to
+Mabel, also enjoining him, with the gift of a piece of gold, to mail my
+letters on the following day, and receiving his promise to do so.</p>
+
+<p>In this brief communication, I promised my dear child that we should
+meet at my majority, and enjoined her to patience. &quot;You will hear from
+me again before long,&quot; I said, in conclusion; &quot;and I will try and
+arrange some plan of correspondence. Bad people have obliged me to this
+step. Do not forget me, my darling, nor my lessons and counsel, and
+believe ever in the honor and devotion of your sister. <i>Pray for me,
+Mabel</i>! MIRIAM.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>My letter to Evelyn Erie, without date, written on the ship, and sent
+back by the pilot to be mailed also at New York, revealed my
+acquaintance with a portion of her duplicity, and Mr. Bainrothe's dark
+design.</p>
+
+<p>I promised her my forgiveness on two conditions alone: one was, that she
+should not seek to trace me, since all effort to regain me would be
+fruitless; another, that she would be kind to Mabel, and my father's
+ancient servants until my return, and, of these last, especially Morton.</p>
+
+<p>I uttered no threats nor reproaches&mdash;asked no favors, beyond those which
+I had a right to demand at her hands as my father's ward&mdash;long supported
+by him, and even cherished with paternal tenderness&mdash;and the guardian of
+his child. I knew that the use of my house and furniture would amply
+compensate her for all Mabel's expenses, among the principal of which
+would be that liberal education which I demanded for her, as her right.</p>
+
+<p>I was very nearly twenty, now; Mabel, ten. There was still time to
+redeem the past, and carry out all my frustrated intentions, after the
+expiration of one year of abeyance and exile. Yes! I would &quot;stand and
+wait,&quot; trusting so &quot;to serve.&quot;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="LIFE_AT_quotLESDERNIERquot"></a><h2><i>LIFE AT &quot;LESDERNIER.&quot;</i></h2>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>&quot;Break the dance and scatter the song,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Some depart, and some remain;<br /></span>
+<span><i>These</i> beyond heaven are borne along,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Others the bonds of earth retain.&quot;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>SHELLEY.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>PART II.</h2>
+
+<h2><i>LIFE AT &quot;LESDERNIER.&quot;</i></h2>
+
+<a name="AN_INTERLUDE"></a><h2>AN INTERLUDE.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>I purpose here to give only a brief sketch of my sojourn under the roof
+of the La Vignes. In another book, and at another time, when some that
+now live shall have passed away, or years shall have made dim the memory
+of results rather than events (for until <i>then</i> the last must continue,
+with their causes, to be <i>mysteries</i>), I may unfold the tissues of a
+dire tragedy enacted, by some strange providence, under my peculiar view
+alone, and thus inexplicable to others.</p>
+
+<p>Of this no more, not even a hint, at present; lest, dropping the
+substance for the shadow, the reader should cease to find interest where
+I most wish to concentrate it for a season. The heroine so far of my own
+story, I cannot yet voluntarily relinquish the privilege of sympathy, so
+dear to the narrator of adventure, though I did, indeed, for a time
+forget my own identity in the dark shadow, the mysterious crimes, the
+unprecedented and speedy retributions that followed quickly on the heels
+of guilt at Beauseincourt.</p>
+
+<p>The picturesque old place, with its quaint French name and architecture
+and antique furniture, did truly at first enchant my fancy (which
+learned to shudder at its aspect later), as did, in the beginning, the
+contiguous estates of &quot;Bellevue&quot; with its exquisite grounds, fountains,
+and white-stuccoed mansion closely simulating the finest Italian marble.
+Later, in accordance with the law of associations, this, too, became as
+sorrowful in my sight as was the Hall of Vathek to those who mingled in
+its mournful yet magnificent pageantry.</p>
+
+<p>The denizens of this lonely abode were a most interesting couple. Still
+young comparatively, virtually childless, and bearing the name (also a
+Huguenot appellation) of &quot;<i>Favraud</i>&quot; the husband was bright,
+intelligent, frivolous&mdash;the wife, an invalid of rare loveliness and
+sweetness of character, who seldom emerged from her solitude. Both were
+perfectly well bred.</p>
+
+<p>These were relatives of Colonel La Vigne, whose son Walter was the
+residuary legatee of Bellevue, with but one imbecile life, after that of
+Madame Favraud, between him and enormous wealth. Great intimacy existed
+between the families, although from circumstances&mdash;nameless here&mdash;the
+ladies seldom met, and never at Bellevue.</p>
+
+<p>Major Favraud was a constant visitor at Beauseincourt, when on his
+estates. He was, however, of a roving disposition, and, though tenderly
+attached to his wife, was often absent, negligent, and careless of her
+feelings. He was a renowned duelist, and deemed a challenge the
+essential element and result of every unsettled discussion. A typical
+Southerner of his day, I felt keen interest in the scrutiny of his
+character, until events developed those venomous tendencies which came
+very near destroying my peace of mind forever, with the life of the
+noble man whom, after a brief acquaintance, I had learned to love
+against my own desires.</p>
+
+<p>The occasion of this belligerent demonstration was afforded at the
+Christmas festival, held yearly at Beauseincourt, by Colonel and Mrs. La
+Vigne&mdash;in the great, many-windowed drawing-room with its waxed
+parquet&mdash;its ebony-framed mirrors, its pier consoles, and faded damask
+furniture.</p>
+
+<p>There were assembled around the bright pine-fire, on the occasion of
+this universal anniversary, neighbors, and guests from a distance,
+invited specially for a certain number of days, among whom the
+unexpected advent of a troop of engineers, of Northern extraction, made
+a desirable variety.</p>
+
+<p>One of these gentlemen only, the chief-engineer, who came to make new
+roads for Lesdernier,<a name="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1"><sup>[1]</sup></a> by order of government, had already been a
+visitor of some weeks, and a strong attachment, vital from the first,
+had sprung up between us; so far, unacknowledged by either.</p>
+
+<p>During the dessert which succeeded the sumptuous Christmas-dinner, where
+old and young took part, and &quot;all went merry as a marriage-bell,&quot; the
+health of John C. Calhoun, then heading the nullification party, was
+formally proposed by Colonel La Vigne, as &quot;first of men, and greatest of
+statesmen.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>This toast Captain Wentworth (the chief of the corps of engineers)
+tacitly refused to drink, and was seconded in this resolve by all of his
+party. There was, however, no active demonstration of unwillingness.</p>
+
+<p>The representatives of government contented themselves with pressing
+their hands above their glasses, and so refusing to fill them with the
+wine that flowed freely to the welcome pledge, standing rigidly and
+silently while it was drunk with enthusiasm by the remaining guests&mdash;all
+Southern and sectional.</p>
+
+<p>This defalcation to the common cause was apparently unnoticed at the
+time, but was made the subject of remark, and subsequently of a
+challenge by the Mars of the family, as Gregory denominated Major
+Favraud&mdash;a challenge which circumstances compelled Captain Wentworth
+reluctantly to accept.</p>
+
+<p>No fire-eater, yet truly brave, he weighed the matter well, and decided
+on his course; the one most expedient, if not absolutely necessary for a
+stranger whose character for courage had still to be proved. In the
+interval of the pending duel, of which all the inmates of Beauseincourt
+were unconscious, save its master, who considered it as a mere matter of
+course, Gregory (to whom I have alluded, the evil genius of the house
+henceforth) arrived to re&euml;nforce the engineering corps.</p>
+
+<p>Subtle, accomplished, versatile, graceful even in his singular
+homeliness, and peculiar insolent style of address, he yet made himself
+so acceptable to the family as to dare to seek the hand of the second
+daughter of Colonel La Vigne, and, though at first tolerated by her
+parents only, at last came to be well received.</p>
+
+<p>At the very time that he was enlisting the innocent heart of Madge, he
+was making to me, the governess, whenever he could find the slightest
+opportunity, avowals of a desperate and audacious passion, which waxed
+the stronger for the absolute loathing vouchsafed in return. In this
+place it may be as well to reveal the end of this ill-fated and
+unsuitable courtship, which never had my sanction, nor even toleration.
+When the cloud gathered over Beauseincourt, so soon to burst in fury and
+destruction, when ruin was imminent, Gregory withdrew on frivolous
+pretexts, and turned his back on Lesdernier, and her who had so loved
+him, forever!</p>
+
+<p>While pretending to be the devoted friend and even abject servant of
+Captain Wentworth, he was seeking, in every way, and on every hand,
+secretly to undermine him. This effort produced in my mind only mistrust
+and disdain; but with others it was, unfortunately, more successful.</p>
+
+<p>Soon after my arrival at Lesdernier, I found, in one of the papers that
+I had ordered to be sent there from my native city to the address of
+&quot;Miss Harz,&quot; an atrocious advertisement, describing me personally as an
+escaped lunatic, and offering a reward for my apprehension. Fortunately,
+these papers were not objects of interest to the family in which I found
+myself, where periodicals of all sorts were rife, as well as books,
+ancient and modern, and newspapers were thick as leaves in Vallambrosa.</p>
+
+<p>In the silence of my chamber I read and destroyed, or concealed this
+evidence of enmity, malice, and all uncharitableness. I would trust no
+one with my identity&mdash;none save God&mdash;until the hour should come of my
+majority and emancipation; then, armed with Judaic vengeance, I would
+return to claim my sister, my fortune, and my rights.</p>
+
+<p>Soon afterward I read in the same sheet, sent weekly to Lesdernier, the
+notice of the marriage of Claude Bainrothe and Evelyn Erle. This was the
+test of truth! I bore it bravely. Not a heart-beat gave tribute to the
+love of other days. The fire was dead, and ashes alone remained on the
+deserted hearth-stone. Lower down in the columns of the same paper,
+however, was something that smote my soul. The Parthian dart was there,
+and it quivered in its target! I saw that the wedding-party had sailed
+for Europe on the same day of the nuptials, to be absent a year, and had
+taken with them my dear one!</p>
+
+<p>So far away! Seas rolling between us! Foreign lands, foreign laws
+intervening, which might, for all I knew, deprive me of her presence
+forever, who was my hope, my life!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O little sister,&quot; I groaned, &quot;was I right, after all, in forsaking you
+for a season? Should I not have dared every thing, rather than have so
+openly yielded my authority?&quot;</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p>In the mean while, the sanguinary preparations went silently on. In the
+gray of a foggy February morning the duel was fought, and Captain
+Wentworth fell, as it was at first thought, mortally wounded.</p>
+
+<p>At the request of his excellent physician, Dr. Durand, when the watchers
+were exhausted, and vigilance was all-essential in his case, I accepted,
+rather than proposed to take, the post of watcher for one night, in
+company with his devoted friend and coadjutor Edward Vernon, and
+discovered, in my anguish, and in my power over his distracted senses,
+my so-far-hidden gift of magnetism.</p>
+
+<p>Insomnolency was destroying him; opiates had been tried in vain to
+compose him, and now, under my waving fingers and strained will, he
+slept the sweet, refreshing magnetic slumber. He lived, some were
+pleased to say, and among others, his physician, through my agency&mdash;my
+admirable nursing&mdash;for none save Vernon ever knew the secret of my sway.
+We became engaged during his convalescence, simply, quietly,
+unostentatiously.</p>
+
+<p>In due time we made our troth-plight known to the household of
+Beauseincourt, all of whom, from its formal master to my best-beloved,
+brightest, and ever-tantalizing pupil, Bertie, accorded me their
+heart-felt congratulations. Gregory alone&mdash;the evil genius of the
+place&mdash;cast his poisonous sneers and doubts above our happiness&mdash;a
+structure too firmly based, too far removed from him, however, for his
+arrows to reach or destroy. Circumstances seemed later to favor his
+malicious designs, as shall be shown in the conclusion of this work;
+but, together, and in the full flush of our happiness, we were
+invincible.</p>
+
+<p>A sudden summons from the seat of government compelled Captain Wentworth
+to leave Lesdernier a few hours after its reception&mdash;hours of which he
+passed, through the necessity of speedy preparation, but one with me. So
+far I had delayed the revelation of my true history and name, preferring
+to postpone this to my majority and our marriage-day; but, after his
+departure, I rued my resolution, and concluded to write to him a hasty
+summary of my life and motives of action. This letter was, as a matter
+of necessity, confided to the care of Luke Gregory (never a chosen
+depositary of mine in any way), who followed him to Savannah to receive
+some parting instructions for the conduct of their work, and who was to
+return to Lesdernier after the interval of a week.</p>
+
+<p>In the ardor of my impulse, I could not slight an opportunity of so soon
+receiving a reply to my somewhat startling and, I felt now,
+too-long-delayed communication, and thus testing my lover's trust and
+confidence in me. When Gregory returned to Beauseincourt, he assured me
+he had delivered my letter punctually (I never doubted this, for he knew
+the man he had to deal with), adding, carelessly, that it was well
+Wentworth had said he would write soon, as he had been unfortunate
+enough to lose the hastily-pencilled reply, with his own pocket-book, at
+the Lenoir Landing, where both were food for fishes.</p>
+
+<p>My disappointment was extreme, and many weeks of constrained silence
+passed before I received the promised letter from Captain Wentworth&mdash;so
+gloomy, so incomprehensible, so portentous, that it filled me with
+despair. In this letter he spoke of obstacles between us&mdash;in which blood
+bore part&mdash;of the wreck of all earthly happiness for him&mdash;perchance for
+me. Yet he conjured me to be calm and patient, as he could not be, and
+alluded to my silence as conclusive of his misery. He referred
+frequently to the letter he had intrusted to the care of Gregory as
+explanatory of all that might otherwise seem inexplicable&mdash;that letter
+at rest beneath the dark waters of the Bayou Noir&mdash;if&mdash;if, indeed! But
+no! not even of Gregory could I harbor on slight grounds such
+suspicions. &quot;Let the devil himself have the full benefit of&mdash;doubt!&quot;
+says Rabelais. I wrote to Wentworth that I would come and make all
+plain, as he desired, in June.</p>
+
+<p>Suffering severely myself, I saw clouds gathering and rising around a
+happy household that for a time drew me from the depths of my own
+affliction in the vain effort to solace their woes.</p>
+
+<p>Father and son and infant in one house, wife and imbecile daughter in
+another, at last fell at one dread swoop. To dishonor was added the
+crime of suicide, and poverty and breaking hearts were there, for the
+heritage of Beauseincourt was, by reason of debt and mismanagement, to
+pass, after the death of its master, into strange hands&mdash;the cruel hands
+of creditors!</p>
+
+<p>Walter La Vigne was dead, and the succession of Bellevue passed over the
+daughters of the house, to vest in a distant kinsman. He came, toward
+the last of my stay, to take his own; and, unexpectedly, George Gaston,
+the playmate of my childhood, the lover of my first youth, stood before
+me in the residuary legatee of Armand La Vigne!</p>
+
+<p>His advent was a revelation of my secret, through the necessity of
+surprise; and as, when the banquet is announced and the ball draws near
+its close, the maskers, so far unknown to each other, lay by their
+disguises, glad to be so relieved, draw breath and clasp hands once more
+in the freedom of social reality, so I, who had played too long a weary
+part, felt a new life infused into my veins when my mask was suddenly
+laid aside, and the necessity of disguise was over.</p>
+
+<p>The time was so near at hand now, I felt, when I could claim my own from
+Bainrothe, and cast off all shackles of guardianship and minority, that
+I no longer feared the consequences of this revelation. In September we
+should meet on new ground. I, no more a minor, would be beyond the reach
+of his subtle mastery; and, until then&mdash;the time assigned for the
+expiration of his year of trust&mdash;he would remain in Europe, with the
+wide sea between us, and little probability of information through the
+medium of public rumor.</p>
+
+<p>I would be secret, cautious, abide in the shadow, until the hour arrived
+to emerge therefrom, and, with the aid of God and Wardour Wentworth,
+defeat his schemes and vindicate the truth!</p>
+
+<p>Alas for human foresight! Alas for Fate!</p>
+
+<p>FOOTNOTES:</p>
+
+<a name="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1">[1]</a><div class="note"><p> Pronounced popularly &quot;<i>Less der-neer</i>.&quot;</p></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="SEA_AND_SHORE"></a><h2><i>SEA AND SHORE</i></h2>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>&quot;No fears hath she! Her giant form<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Majestically calm would go<br /></span>
+<span>O'er wrathful surge, through blackening storm,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">'Mid the deep darkness, white as snow!<br /></span>
+<span>So stately her bearing, so proud her array,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">The main she will traverse forever and aye!<br /></span>
+<span>Many ports shall exult in the gleam of her mast&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Hush! hush! thou vain dreamer, this hour is her last!&quot;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>WILSON, &quot;<i>Isle of Palms</i>.&quot;</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">&quot;Then hold her<br /></span>
+<span>Strictly confined in sombre banishment,<br /></span>
+<span>And doubt not but she will ere long, full gladly,<br /></span>
+<span>Her freedom purchase at the price you name.&quot;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">&quot;No, subtle snake!<br /></span>
+<span>It is the baseness of thy selfish mind,<br /></span>
+<span>Full of all guile, and cunning, and deceit,<br /></span>
+<span>That severs us so far, and shall do <i>ever</i>.&quot;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">&quot;Despair shall give me strength&mdash;where is the door?<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Mine eyes are dark! I cannot find it now.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">O God! protect me in this awful pass!&quot;<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>JOANNA BAILLIE, <i>Tragedy of &quot;Orra.&quot;</i><br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>PART III.</h2>
+
+<h2><i>SEA AND SHORE</i>.</h2>
+
+
+<a name="III_CHAPTER_I"></a><h2>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>It was a calm and hazy morning of Southern summer that on which I turned
+my face seaward from the &quot;keep&quot; of Beauseincourt, never, I knew, to see
+its time-stained walls again, save through the mirage of memory. There
+is an awe almost as solemn to me in a consciousness like this as that
+which attends the death-bed parting, and my straining eye takes in its
+last look of a familiar scene as it might do the ever-to-be-averted face
+of friendship.</p>
+
+<p>The refrain of Poe's even then celebrated poem was ringing through my
+brain on that sultry August day, I remember, like a tolling bell, as I
+looked my last on the gloomy abode of the La Vignes; but I only said
+aloud, in answer to the sympathizing glances of one who sat before
+me&mdash;the gentle and quiet Marion&mdash;who had suddenly determined to
+accompany me to Savannah, nerved with unwonted impulse:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Madame de Sta&euml;l was right when she said that 'nevermore' was the
+saddest and most expressive word in the English tongue&quot; (so harsh to her
+ears, usually). &quot;I think she called it the sweetest, too, in sound; but
+to me it is simply the most sorrowful, a knell of doom, and it fills my
+soul to-day to overflowing, for 'never, never more' shall I look on
+Beauseincourt!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You cannot tell, Miss Harz, what <i>time</i> may do; you may still return to
+visit us in our retirement, you and Captain Wentworth,&quot; urged Marion,
+gently, leaning forward, as she spoke, to take my hand in hers.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Time the tomb-builder'&quot; fell from my lips ere they were aware. &quot;That
+is a grand thought&mdash;one that I saw lately in a Western poem, the
+New-Year's address of a young editor of Kentucky called Prentice. Is it
+not splendid, Marion?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Very awful, rather,&quot; she responded, with a faint shudder. &quot;Time the
+'comforter,' let us say, instead, Miss Miriam&mdash;Time the
+'veil-spreader.'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why, Marion, you are quite poetic to-day, quite Greek! That is a sweet
+and tender saying of yours, and I shall garner it. I stand reproved, my
+child. All honor to Time, the <i>merciful</i>, whether he builds palaces or
+tombs! but none the less do I reverence my young poet for that
+stupendous utterance of his soul. I shall watch the flight of that
+eaglet of the West with interest from this hour! May he aspire!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not if he is a Jackson Democrat?&quot; broke in the usually gentle Alice
+Durand, fired with a ready defiance of all heterodox policy, common, if
+not peculiar, to that region.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, but he is not; he is a good Whig instead&mdash;a Clay man, as we call
+such.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not a Calhoun man, though, I suppose, so I would not give a snap of my
+fingers for him or his poetry! It is very natural, for you, Miss Harz,&quot;
+in a somewhat deprecating tone, &quot;to praise your partisans. I would not
+have you neutral if I could, it is so contemptible.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A little of the good doctor's spirit there, under all that exterior of
+meekness and modesty, I saw at a glance, and liked her none the less for
+it, if truth were told. And now we were nearing the gate, with its
+gray-stone pillars, on one of which, that from which the marble ball had
+rolled, to hide in the grass beneath, perchance, until the end of all, I
+had seen the joyous figure of Walter La Vigne so lightly poised on the
+occasion of my last exodus from Beauseincourt. A moment's pause, and the
+difficult, disused bolts that had once exasperated the patience of
+Colonel La Vigne were drawn asunder, and the clanking gates clashed
+behind us as we emerged from the shadowed domain into the glare and dust
+of the high-road.</p>
+
+<p>Here Major Favraud, accompanied by Duganne, awaited us, seated in state
+in his lofty, stylish swung gig (with his tiny tiger behind), drawn
+tandem-wise by his high-stepping and peerless blooded bays, Castor and
+Pollux. Brothers, like the twins of Leda, they had been bred in the
+blue-grass region of Kentucky and the vicinity of Ashland, and were
+worthy of their ancient pedigree, their perfect training and classic
+names, the last bestowed when he first became their owner, by Major
+Favraud, who, with a touch of the whip or a turn of the hand, controlled
+them to subjection, fiery coursers although they were!</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Durand, too, with his spacious and flame-lined gig, accompanied by
+his son, a lad of sixteen, awaited our arrival, and served to swell the
+cavalcade that wound slowly down the dusty road, with its sandy surface
+and red-clay substratum. A few young gentlemen on horseback completed
+our <i>cort&eacute;ge</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Major Favraud sat holding his ribbons gracefully in one gauntleted
+hand, while he uncovered his head with the other, bowing suavely in his
+knightly fashion, as he said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come drive with me, Miss Harz, for a while, and let the young folks
+take it together.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, no, Major Favraud; you must excuse me, indeed! I feel a little
+languid this morning, and I should be poor company. Besides, I cannot
+surrender my position as one of the young folks yet.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nay, I have something to say to you&mdash;something very earnest. You shall
+be at no trouble to entertain me; but you must not refuse a poor, sad
+fellow a word of counsel and cheer. I shall think hard of you if you
+decline to let me drive you a little way. Besides, the freshness of the
+morning is all lost on you there. Now, set Marion a good example, and
+she will, in turn, enliven me later.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>So adjured, I consented to drive to the Fifteen-mile House with Major
+Favraud, and Duganne glided into the coach in my stead, to take my place
+and play <i>vis-&agrave;-vis</i> to Sylphy, who, as usual, was selected as
+traveling-companion on this occasion, &quot;to take kear of de young ladies.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am so glad I have you all to myself once more, Miss Harz! I feel now
+that we are fast friends again. And I wanted to tell you, while I could
+speak of her, how much my poor wife liked you. (The time will come when
+I must not, <i>dare</i> not, you know.) But for circumstances, she would have
+urged you to become our guest, or even in-dweller; but you know how it
+all was! I need not feign any longer, nor apologize either.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It must have been that she saw how lovely and <i>spirituelle</i> I found
+<i>her</i>,&quot; I said, &quot;and could not bear to be outdone in consideration, nor
+to owe a debt of social gratitude. She knew so little of me. But these
+affinities are electric sometimes, I must believe.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, there is more of that sort of thing on earth, perhaps, 'than is
+dreamed of in our philosophy'&mdash;antagonism and attraction are always
+going on among us unconsciously.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am inclined to believe so from my own experience,&quot; I replied,
+vaguely, thinking, Heaven knows, of any thing at the moment rather than
+of him who sat beside me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your mind is on Wentworth, I perceive,&quot; he said, softly; after a short
+pause, &quot;now give up your dream for a little while and listen to this
+sober reality&mdash;sober to-day, at least,&quot; he added, with a light laugh.
+&quot;By-the-way, talking of magnetism, do you know, Miss Harz, I think you
+are the most universally magnetic woman I ever saw? All the men fall in
+love with you, and the women don't hate you for it, either.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How perfectly the last assertion disproves the first!&quot; I replied; &quot;but
+I retract, I will not, even for the sake of a syllogism, abuse my own
+sex; women are never envious except when men make them so, by casting
+down among them the golden apple of admiration.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I know one man, at least, who never foments discord in this way!
+Wentworth, from the beginning, had eyes and ears for no one but
+yourself, yet I never dreamed the drama would be enacted so speedily; I
+own I was as much in the dark as anybody.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I could not reply to this <i>badinage</i>, as in happier moments I might have
+done, but said, digressively:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;By-the-by, while I think of it, I must put down on my tablet the order
+of Mr. Vernon. He wants 'Longfellow's Poems,' if for sale in Savannah.
+He has been permeating his brain with the 'Psalms of Life,' that have
+come out singly in the <i>Knickerbocker Magazine,</i> until he craves every
+thing that pure and noble mind has thrown forth in the shape of a song.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And I scribbled in my memorandum-book, for a moment, while Major Favraud
+mused.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Longfellow!&quot; he said, at last, &quot;Phoebus, what a name!&quot; adding
+affectedly, &quot;yet it seems to me, on reflection, I <i>have</i> heard it
+before. He is a Yankee, of course! Now, do you earnestly believe a
+native of New England, by descent a legitimate witch-burner, you know,
+<i>can</i> be any thing better than a poll-parrot in the poetical line?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Have we not proof to the contrary, Major Favraud?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What proof? Metre and rhyme, I grant you&mdash;long and short&mdash;but show me
+the afflatus! They make verse with a penknife, like their wooden
+nutmegs. They are perfect Chinese for ingenuity and imitation, and the
+resemblance to the real Simon-pure is very perfect&mdash;externally. But when
+it comes to grating the nut for negus, we miss the aroma!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you pretend that Bryant is not a poet in the grain, and that the
+wondrous boy, Willis, was not also 'to the manner born?' Read
+'Thanatopsis,' or are you acquainted with it already? I hardly think you
+can be. Read those scriptural poems.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A very smooth school-exercise the first, no more. There is not a
+heart-beat in the whole grind. As to Willis&mdash;he failed egregiously, when
+he attempted to 'gild refined gold and paint the lily,' as he did in his
+so-called 'Sacred Poems.' He can spin a yarn pretty well, and coin a new
+word for a make-shift, amusingly, but save me from the foil-glitter of
+his poetry.&quot; <a name="FNanchor_2_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_2_2"><sup>[2]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>&quot;This is surprising! You upset all precedent. I really wish you had not
+said these things. I now begin to see the truth of what my copy-book
+told me long ago, that 'evil association corrupts good manners,' or I
+will vary it and substitute 'opinions.' I must eschew your society, in a
+literary way, I must indeed, Major Favraud.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now comes along this strolling Longfellow minstrel,&quot; he continued,
+ignoring or not hearing my remark, &quot;with <i>his</i> dreary hurdy-gurdy to cap
+the climax. Heavens! what a nasal twang the whole thing has to me. Not
+an original or cheerful note! 'Old Hundred' is joyful in comparison!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You shall not say that,&quot; I interrupted; &quot;you shall not dare to say that
+in my presence. It is sheer slander, that you have caught up from some
+malignant British review, and, like all other serpents, you are venomous
+in proportion to your blindness! I am vexed with you, that you will not
+see with the clear, discerning eyes God gave you originally.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But I do see with them, and very discerningly, notwithstanding your
+comparison. Now there is that 'Skeleton in Armor,' his last effusion, I
+believe, that you are all making such a work over&mdash;fine-sounding thing
+enough, I grant you, ingenious rhyme, and all that. But I know where the
+framework came from! Old Drayton furnished that in his 'Battle of
+Agincourt.'&quot; Then in a clear, sonorous voice, he gave some specimens of
+each, so as to point the resemblance, real or imaginary.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are content with mere externs in finding your similitudes, Major
+Favraud! In power of thought, beauty of expression, what comparison is
+there? Drayton's verse is poor and vapid, even mean, beside
+Longfellow's.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I grant you that. I have never for one moment disputed the ability of
+those Yankees. Their manufacturing talents are above all praise, but
+when it comes to the 'God-fire,' as an old German teacher of mine used
+to say, our simple Southern poets leave them all behind&mdash;'Beat them all
+hollow,' would be their own expression. You see, Miss Harz, that
+Cavalier blood of ours, that inspired the old English bards, <i>will</i>
+tell, in spite of circumstances.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But genius is of no rank&mdash;no blood&mdash;no clime! What court poet of his
+day, Major Favraud, compared with Robert Burns for feeling, fire, and
+pathos? Who ever sung such siren strains as Moore, a simple Irishman of
+low degree? No Cavalier blood there, I fancy! What power, what beauty in
+the poems of Walter Scott! Byron was a poet in spite of his condition,
+not because of it. Hear Barry Cornwall&mdash;how he stirs the blood! What
+trumpet like to Campbell! What mortal voice like to Shelley's? the
+hybrid angel! What full orchestra surpassed Coleridge for harmony and
+brilliancy of effect? Who paints panoramas like Southey? Who charms like
+Wordsworth? Yet these were men of medium condition, all&mdash;I hate the
+conceits of Cowley, Waller, Sir John Suckling, Carew, and the like. All
+of your Cavalier type, I believe, a set of hollow pretenders mostly.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;All this is overwhelming, I grant,&quot; bowing deferentially. &quot;But I return
+to my first idea, that Puritan blood was not exactly fit to engender
+genius; and that in the rich, careless Southern nature there lurks a
+vein of undeveloped song that shall yet exonerate America from the
+charge of poverty of genius, brought by the haughty Briton! Yes, we will
+sing yet a mightier strain than has ever been poured since the time of
+Shakespeare! and in that good time coming weave a grander heroic poem
+than any since the days of Homer! Then men's souls shall have been
+tried in the furnace of affliction, and Greek meets not Greek, but
+Yankee. For we Southerners <i>only bide our time</i>!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And he cut his spirited lead-horse, until it leaped forward suddenly, as
+though to vent his excitement, and, setting his small white teeth
+sternly, with an eye like a burning coal, looked forward into space, his
+whole face contracting.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The Southern lyre has been but lightly swept so far, Miss Harz,&quot; he
+continued, a moment later, &quot;and only by the fingers of love; we need
+Bellona to give tone to our orchestra.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I could not forbear reciting somewhat derisively the old couplet&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>&quot;'Sound the trumpet, beat the drum,<br /></span>
+<span>Tremble France, we come, we come!'<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>&quot;Is that the style Major Favraud?&quot; I asked. &quot;I remember the time when I
+thought these two lines the most soul-stirring in the language&mdash;they
+seem very bombastic now, in my maturity.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He smiled, and said: &quot;The time is not come for our war-poem, and, as for
+love, let me give you one strain of Pinckney's to begin with;&quot; and,
+without waiting for permission, he recited the beautiful &quot;Pledge,&quot; with
+which all readers are now familiar, little known then, however, beyond
+the limits of the South, and entirely new to me, beginning with&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>&quot;I fill this cup to one made up<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Of loveliness alone,<br /></span>
+<span>A woman of her gentle sex<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">The seeming paragon&quot;&mdash;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>continuing to the end with eloquence and spirit.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now, that is poetry, Miss Harz! the real afflatus is there; the bead on
+the wine; the dew on the rose; the bloom on the grape! Nothing wanting
+that constitutes the indefinable divine thing called genius! You
+understand my idea, of course; explanations are superfluous.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I assented mutely, scarce knowing why I did so.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now, hear another.&quot; And the woods rang with his clear, sonorous accents
+as he declaimed, a little too scanningly, perhaps&mdash;too much like an
+enthusiastic boy:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>&quot;Love lurks upon my lady's lip,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">His bow is figured there;<br /></span>
+<span>Within her eyes his arrows sleep;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">His fetters are&mdash;her hair!&quot;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>&quot;I call that nothing but a bundle of conceits, Major Favraud, mostly of
+the days of Charles II., of Rochester himself&mdash;&quot; interrupting him as I
+in turn was interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But hear further,&quot; and he proceeded to the end of that marvelous
+ebullition of foam and fervor, such as celebrated the birth of Aphrodite
+herself perchance in the old Greek time; and which, despite my perverse
+intentions, stirred me as if I had quaffed a draught of pink champagne.
+Is it not, indeed, all <i>couleur de rose?</i> Hear this bit of melody, my
+reader, sitting in supreme judgment, and perhaps contempt, on your
+throne apart:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>&quot;'Upon her cheek the crimson ray<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">By changes comes and goes,<br /></span>
+<span>As rosy-hued Aurora's play<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Along the polar snows;<br /></span>
+<span>Gay as the insect-bird that sips<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">From scented flowers the dew&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span>Pure as the snowy swan that dips<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Its wings in waters blue;<br /></span>
+<span>Sweet thoughts are mirrored on her face,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Like clouds on the calm sea,<br /></span>
+<span>And every motion is a grace,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Each word a melody!'&quot;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, that is true poetry, I acknowledge, Major Favraud,&quot; I exclaimed,
+not at all humbled by conviction, though a little annoyed at the pointed
+manner in which he gave (looking in my face as he did so) these
+concluding lines:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>&quot;Say from what fair and sunny shore,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Fair wanderer, dost thou rove,<br /></span>
+<span>Lest what I only should adore<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">I heedless think to love?&quot;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>&quot;The character of Pinckney's genius,&quot; I rejoined, &quot;is, I think,
+essentially like that of Praed, the last literary phase with me&mdash;for I
+am geological in my poetry, and take it in strata. But I am more
+generous to your Southern bard than you are to our glorious Longfellow!
+I don't call that imitation, but coincidence, the oneness of genius! I
+do not even insinuate plagiarism.&quot; My manner, cool and careless,
+steadied his own.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are right: our 'Shortfellow' <i>was</i> incapable of any thing of the
+sort. Peace be to his ashes! With all his nerve and <i>vim</i>, he died of
+melancholy, I believe. As good an end as any, however, and certainly
+highly respectable. But you know what Wordsworth says in his
+'School-master'&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>&quot;'If there is one that may bemoan<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">His kindred laid in earth,<br /></span>
+<span>The household hearts that were his own,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">It is the man of mirth.'&quot;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>He sighed as he concluded his quotation&mdash;sighed, and slackened the pace
+of his flying steeds. &quot;But give me something of Praed's in return,&quot; he
+said, rallying suddenly; &quot;is there not a pretty little thing called 'How
+shall I woo her?'&quot; glancing archly and somewhat impertinently at me, I
+thought&mdash;or, perhaps, what would simply have amused me in another man
+and mood shocked me in him, the recent widower&mdash;widowed, too, under such
+peculiar and awful circumstances! I did not reflect sufficiently,
+perhaps, on his ignorance of many of these last.</p>
+
+<p>How I deplored his levity, which nothing could overcome or restrain; and
+yet beneath which I even then believed lay depths of anguish! How I
+wished that influence of mine could prevail to induce him to divide his
+dual nature, &quot;To throw away the worser part of it, and live the purer
+with the better half!&quot; But I could only show disapprobation by the
+gravity of my silence.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So you will not give me 'How shall I woo her?' Miss Harz?&quot; a little
+embarrassed, I perceived, by my manner. &quot;I have a fancy for the title,
+nevertheless, not having heard any more, and should be glad to hear the
+whole poem. But you are prudish to-day, I fancy.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, there is nothing in that poem, certainly, that angels might not
+hear approvingly; but it would sadden you, Major Favraud.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I will take the chance of that,&quot; laughing. &quot;Come, the poem, if you care
+to please your driver, and reward his care. See how skillfully I avoided
+that fallen branch&mdash;suppose I were to be spiteful, and upset you against
+this stump?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Any thing was preferable to his levity; and, as I had warned him of the
+possible effect of the poem he solicited, I could not be accused of want
+of consideration in reciting it. Besides, he deserved the lesson, the
+stern lesson that it taught.</p>
+
+<p>As this could in no way be understood by such of my readers as are
+unacquainted with this little gem, I venture to give it here&mdash;exquisite,
+passionate utterance that it is, though little known to fame, at least
+at this, writing:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>&quot;'How shall I woo her? I will stand<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Beside her when she sings,<br /></span>
+<span>And watch her fine and fairy hand<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Flit o'er the quivering strings!<br /></span>
+<span>But shall I tell her I have heard,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Though sweet her song may be,<br /></span>
+<span>A voice where every whispered word<br /></span>
+<span class="i4"><i>Was more than song to me</i>?<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span>&quot;'How shall I woo her? I will gaze,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">In sad and silent trance,<br /></span>
+<span>On those blue eyes whose liquid rays<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Look love in every glance.<br /></span>
+<span>But shall I tell her eyes more bright,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Though bright her own may beam,<br /></span>
+<span>Will fling a deeper spell to-night<br /></span>
+<span class="i4"><i>Upon me in my dream</i>?'&quot;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>I hesitated. &quot;Let me stop here, Major Favraud, I counsel you,&quot; I
+interpolated, earnestly; but he only rejoined:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, no! proceed, I entreat you! it is very beautiful&mdash;very touching,
+too!&quot; Speaking calmly, and slacking rein, so that the grating of the
+wheels among the stems of the scarlet <i>lychnis</i>, that grew in immense
+patches on our road, might not disturb his sense of hearing, which,
+by-the-way, was exquisitely nice and fastidious.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As you please, then;&quot; and I continued the recitation.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>&quot;'How shall I woo her? I will try<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">The charms of olden time,<br /></span>
+<span>And swear by earth, and sea, and sky,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And rave in prose and rhyme&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span>And I will tell her, when I bent<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">My knee in other years,<br /></span>
+<span>I was not half so <i>eloquent</i>;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">I could not speak&mdash;<i>for tears</i>!'&quot;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>I watched him narrowly; the spell was working now; the poet's hand was
+sweeping, with a gust of power, that harp of a thousand strings, the
+wondrous human heart! And I again pursued, in suppressed tones of
+heart-felt emotion, the pathetic strain that he had evoked with an idea
+of its frivolity alone:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>&quot;'How shall I woo her? I will bow<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Before the holy shrine,<br /></span>
+<span>And pray the prayer, and vow the vow,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">And press her lips to mine&mdash;And<br /></span>
+<span>I will tell her, when she starts<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">From passion's thrilling kiss,<br /></span>
+<span>That <i>memory</i> to many hearts<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Is dearer far than bliss!'&quot;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>It was reserved for the concluding verse to unnerve him completely; a
+verse which I rendered with all the pathos of which I was capable, with
+a view to its final effect, I confess:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>&quot;'Away! away! the chords are mute,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">The bond is rent in twain;<br /></span>
+<span>You <i>cannot</i> wake the silent lute,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Or clasp its links again.<br /></span>
+<span>Love's toil, I know, is little cost;<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Love's perjury is light sin;<br /></span>
+<span>But souls that lose what I have lost,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">What have they left to win?'&quot;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>&quot;What, indeed?&quot; he exclaimed, impetuously&mdash;tears now streaming over his
+olive cheeks. He flung the reins to me with a quick, convulsive motion,
+and covered his face with his hands. Groans burst from his murmuring
+lips, and the great deeps of sorrow gave up their secrets. I was sorry
+to have so stirred him to the depths by any act or words of mine, and
+yet I enjoyed the certainty of his anguish.</p>
+
+<p>I checked the horses beneath a magnolia-tree, and sat quietly waiting
+for the flood of emotion to subside as for him to take the initiative. I
+had no word to say, no consolation to offer. Nay, after consideration,
+rather did I glory in his grief, which redeemed his nature in my
+estimation, though grieved in turn to have afflicted him. For, in spite
+of all his faults, and my earlier prejudices, I loved this impulsive
+Southron man, as Scott has it, &quot;right brotherly.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>At last, looking up grave, tearless, and pale, and resuming his reins
+without apology for having surrendered them, he said, abruptly:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;All is so vain! Such mockery now to me! She was the sole reality of
+this universe to my heart! I grapple with shadows unceasingly. There is
+not on the face of this globe a more desolate wretch. You understand
+this! You feel for me, you do not deride me! You know how perfect, how
+spiritual she was! You loved her well&mdash;I saw it in your eyes, your
+manner&mdash;and for that, if nothing else, you have my heart-felt gratitude.
+So few appreciated her unearthly purity. Yet, was it not strange she
+should have loved a man so gross, so steeped in sensuous, thoughtless
+enjoyment&mdash;so remote from God as I am&mdash;have ever been? But the song
+speaks for me&quot;&mdash;waving his gauntleted hand&mdash;&quot;better than I can speak:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>&quot;'Away! away! the chords are mute,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">the bond is rent in twain.'&quot;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>&quot;I shall never marry again&mdash;never! Miss Miriam, I know now, and shall
+know evermore, in all its fullness, and weariness, and bitterness, the
+meaning of that terrible word&mdash;alone! Eternal solitude. The Robinson
+Crusoe of society. A sort of social Daniel Boone. 'Thus you must ever
+consider me. And yet, just think of it. Miss Harz!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, but you will not always feel so; there may come a time of
+reaction.&quot; I hesitated. It was not my purpose to encourage change.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, never! never!&quot; he interrupted, passionately; &quot;don't even suggest
+it&mdash;don't! and check me sternly if ever I forget my grief again in
+frivolity of any sort in your presence. You are a noble, sweet woman,
+with breadth enough of character to make allowances for the shortcomings
+of a poor, miserable man like me&mdash;trying to cheat himself back into
+gayety and the interests of life. I have sisters, but they are not like
+you. I wish to Heaven they were! There is not a woman in the world on
+whom I have any claims&mdash;on whose shoulder I can lean my head and take a
+hearty cry. And what are men at such a season? Mocking fiends, usually,
+the best of them! I shall go abroad, Miss Harz. I am no anchorite. You
+will hear of me as a gay man of the world, perhaps; but, as to being
+happy, that can never be again! The bubble of life has burst, and my
+existence falls flat to the earth. Victor Favraud, that airy nothing, is
+scarcely a 'local habitation and a name' now!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Let him make a name, then,&quot; I urged. &quot;With military talents like yours,
+Major Favraud, the road to distinction will soon be open to you. Our
+approaching difficulties with France&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, that will all be patched up, or has been, by this time. Van Buren
+is a crafty but peace-loving fox! Something of an epicurean, too, in his
+high estate. What grim old Jackson left half healed, he will complete
+the cure of. Ah, Miss Harz, I had hoped to flesh my sword in a nobler
+cause!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I knew what he meant. That dream of nullification was still uppermost
+in his soul&mdash;dispersed, as it was, in the eyes of all reasonable men. I
+shook my head. &quot;Thank God! all that is over,&quot; I said, gravely,
+fervently; &quot;and my prayer to Him is that he may vouchsafe to preserve us
+for evermore an unbroken people!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;May He help Israel when the time comes,&quot; he murmured low, &quot;for come it
+will, Miss Harz, as surely as there is a sun in the heavens! 'and may I
+be there to see!' as John Gilpin said, or some one of him&mdash;which was
+it?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And, whipping up his lagging steeds as we gained the open road, we
+emerged swiftly from the shadows of the forest&mdash;between nodding
+cornfields, already helmed and plumed for the harvest, and plantations
+green with thrifty cotton-plants, with their half-formed bolls,
+promising such bounteous yield, and meadows covered with the tufted
+Bermuda grass, with its golden-green verdure, we sped our way toward
+Lenoir's Landing.</p>
+
+<p>This peninsula was formed by the junction of two rivers, between which
+intervened a narrow point of land, with a background of steep hills,
+covered with a growth of black-jack and yellow-pine to the summit. Here
+was a ferry with its Charon-like boat, of the primitive sort&mdash;flat
+barge, poled over by negroes, and capable of containing at one time many
+bales of cotton, a stagecoach or wagon with four horses, besides
+passengers <i>ad libitum.</i></p>
+
+<p>This ferry constituted the chief source of revenue of Madame Grambeau,
+an old French lady, remarkable in many ways. She kept the stage-house
+hard by, with its neat picketed inclosure, its overhanging live-oak
+trees and small trim parterre, gay at this season with various annual
+flowers, scarce worth the cultivation, one would think, in that land of
+gorgeous perennial bloom. But Queen Margarets, ragged robins, variegated
+balsams, and tawny marigolds, have their associations, doubtless, to
+make them dear and valuable to the foreign heart, to which they seem
+essential, wherever a plot of ground be in possession.</p>
+
+<p>Mignonette, I have observed, is a special passion with the French exile,
+recalling, doubtless, the narrow boxes, fitted to the stone window-sill
+of certain former lofty lodgings across the sea, perhaps, situated in
+the heart of some great city, and overlooking roofs and court-yards&mdash;the
+street being quite out of the question in such a view, distant, as it
+seems, from them, as the sky itself, though in an opposite direction.</p>
+
+<p>I have used the word &quot;exile&quot; advisedly with regard to Madame Grambeau,
+and not figuratively at all. She was, I had been told, a <i>bourgeoise</i>,
+of good class, who had taken part in the early revolution, but who, when
+the <i>canaille</i> triumphed and drenched the land in blood, in the second
+phase of that fearful outburst of volcanic feeling, had fled before the
+whirlwind with her child and husband to embark for America. At the point
+of embarcation&mdash;like Evangeline&mdash;the husband and wife had been separated
+accidentally, and on her arrival in a strange land she found herself
+alone and penniless with her son, scarce six years old. Her husband had
+been carried to a Southern port, she learned by the merest chance, and,
+disguising herself in man's attire, and leading her little son by the
+hand, she set forth in quest of him, carrying with her a violin, which,
+together with the clothes she wore, had been found in the trunk of
+Monsieur Grambeau, brought on the vessel in which she came, but which
+depository she had been obliged to abandon, when setting forth on her
+pilgrimage.</p>
+
+<p>She was no unskillful performer on this instrument, and solely by such
+aid she gained her food and lodging to the interior of Georgia. Reaching
+her destination after a long and painful journey and delays of many
+kinds, she found her husband living in a log-hut, on the border of
+Talupa River, a hut which he had built himself, and earning his bread by
+ferrying travellers across that stream.</p>
+
+<p>Yet here, with the characteristic contentment of her people under all
+circumstances, she settled down quietly to aid him and make his home
+happy; bore him many children (most of whom were dead at the time I saw
+her, as those living were separated from her at that period), reared and
+educated them herself, toiled for and with them, late and early,
+strained every nerve in the arduous cause of duty, and found herself, in
+extreme old age, widowed and alone, having amassed but little of the
+world's lucre, yet cheerful and energetic even if dependent still on her
+own exertions.</p>
+
+<p>All this and much more I had heard before I saw Madame Grambeau or her
+abode&mdash;a picturesque affair in itself, however humble&mdash;consisting
+originally of a log-house, to which more recently white frame wings had
+been attached, projecting a few feet in front of the primitive building,
+and connected thereto by a shed-roofed gallery, which embraced the whole
+front of the log-cottage, along which ran puncheon-steps the entire
+length of the grand original tree-trunk, as of the porch itself. It was
+a triumph of rural art.</p>
+
+<p>Over this portico, so low in front as barely to admit the passage of a
+tall man beneath its eaves, without stooping, a wild multiflora rose,
+then in full flower, was artistically trained so as to present a series
+of arches to the eye as the wayfarer approached the dwelling; no
+tapestry was ever half so lovely.</p>
+
+<p>The path which led from the little white gate, with its swinging chain
+and ball, was covered with river-pebbles and shells, and bordered by
+box, trimly clipped and kept low, and the two broad steps, that led to
+the porch, bore evidence of recent scouring, though rough and unpainted.</p>
+
+<p>Framed in one of those pointed natural cathedral-windows of vivid green,
+gemmed with red roses, of which the division-posts of the porch formed
+the white outlines, stood the most remarkable-looking aged woman I have
+ever seen. At a first glance, indeed, the question of sex would have
+arisen, and been found difficult to decide. Her attire seemed that of a
+friar, even to the small scalloped cape that scantily covered her
+shoulders, and the coarse black serge, of which her strait gown was
+composed, leaving exposed her neatly though coarsely clad feet, with
+their snow-white home-knit stockings, and low-quartered, well-polished
+calf-skin shoes, confined with steel buckles, and elevated on heels,
+then worn by men alone.</p>
+
+<p>She wore a white habit shirt, the collar, bosom, and wristbands of which
+were visible; but no cap covered her silver hair, which was cropped in
+the neck, and divided at one side in true manly fashion. It was brushed
+well back from her expansive, fair, and unwrinkled forehead, beneath
+which large blue eyes looked out with that strange solemnity we see
+alone in the orbs of young, thoughtful children, or the very old.</p>
+
+<p>Scott's description of the &quot;Monk of Melrose Abbey&quot; occurred to me, as I
+gazed on this calm and striking figure:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>&quot;And strangely on the knight looked he,<br /></span>
+<span>And his blue eyes gleamed wild and wide.&quot;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>She stood watching our approach, leaning with both hands on her ebony,
+silver-headed cane, above which she stooped slightly, her aged and
+somewhat severe, but serene face fully turned toward us, in the clear
+light of morning, with a grave majesty of aspect.</p>
+
+<p>Above her head in its wicker cage swung the gray and crimson parrot, of
+which Sylphy had spoken, and to which, it may be remembered, she had so
+irreverently likened her master on one occasion; bursting forth, as it
+saw us coming, into a shrill, stereotyped phrase of welcome&mdash;&quot;<i>Bien
+venu, compatriote</i>,&quot; that was irresistibly ludicrous and irrelevant.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Tremble, France! we come&mdash;we come,&quot; said Major Favraud; &quot;there's your
+quotation well applied this time, Miss Harz! It is impressive, after
+all.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hush! she will hear you,&quot; I remonstrated, quite awed in that still,
+majestic presence, for now we stood before our aged hostess, who, with a
+cold but stately politeness after Major Favraud's salutation and
+introduction, waved us in and across her threshold. As for Major
+Favraud, he had turned to leave us on the door-sill, to see to the
+comfort and safety of his horses; not liking, perhaps, the appearance of
+the superannuated ostler, who lounged near the stable of the inn, if
+such might be called this rustic retreat without sign, lodging, or
+bar-rooms.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Are we in the mansion of a decayed queen, or the log-hut of a wayside
+innkeeper?&quot; I questioned low of Marion.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Both in one, it seems to me,&quot; was the reply. &quot;But Madame Grambeau is no
+curiosity, no novelty to me, I have stopped here so frequently. I ought
+to have told you, before we came, not to be surprised.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Pausing at the door of a large, square room, from which voices
+proceeded, she invited us with a singularly graceful though formal
+courtesy to enter, smiling and pointing forward silently as she did so,
+and then, like Major Favraud, she turned and abandoned us at the
+door-sill, on which we stood riveted for a moment by the sound of a
+vibrant and eager voice speaking some never-to-be-forgotten words.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;For the slave is the coral-insect of the South,&quot; said the voice within;
+&quot;insignificant in himself, he rears a giant structure&mdash;which will yet
+cause the wreck of the ship of state, should its keel grate too closely
+on that adamantine wall. '<i>L'&eacute;tat c'est moi</i>,' said Louis XIV., and that
+'slavery is the South' is as true an utterance. Our staple&mdash;our
+patriarchal institution&mdash;our prosperity&mdash;are one and indissoluble, and
+the sooner the issue comes the better for the nation!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Standing with his hand on the back of a chair near the casement-window
+of the large, low apartment, in close conversation with two other
+gentlemen, was the speaker of these remarkable words, which embraced the
+whole genius and policy of the South as it then existed, and which were
+delivered in those clear and perfectly modulated tones that bespeak the
+practised orator and the man of dominant energies.</p>
+
+<p>I felt instinctively that I stood in the presence of one of the anointed
+princes of the earth&mdash;felt it, and was thrilled.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you know that gentleman, Marion?&quot; I whispered, as we seated
+ourselves on the old-fashioned settle, or rather sofa, in one corner of
+the room, gazing admiringly, as I spoke, on the tall, slight figure,
+with its air of power and poise, that stood at some distance, with
+averted face.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, I have no idea who it is, or who are his companions either,&quot; she
+replied; &quot;unless&quot;&mdash;hesitating with scrutiny in her eyes&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;His companions, I do not care to question of them!&mdash;but that man
+himself&mdash;the speaker&mdash;has a sovereign presence! Can it be possible&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The entrance of Major Favraud interrupted further conjecture, for at the
+sound of those emphatic boots the stranger turned, and for one moment
+the splendor of his large dark eyes, in their iron framing, met my own,
+then passed recognizingly on to rest on the face of Major Favraud, and
+advancing with extended hands, made more cordial by his voice and smile,
+he greeted him familiarly as &quot;Victor.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Major Favraud stood for a moment spell-bound&mdash;then suddenly rushing
+forward, flung his hat to the floor, caught the hand of the stranger
+between his own and pressed it to his heart. (To his lips, I think, he
+would fain have lifted it, falling on one knee, perchance, at the same
+time, in a knightly fashion of hero-worship that modern reticence
+forbids.) But he contented himself with exclaiming:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. Calhoun! best of friends, welcome back to Georgia!&quot; And tears
+started to his eyes and choked his utterance. Thus was my conjecture
+confirmed. I never felt so thrilled, so elated, by any presence.</p>
+
+<p>There was a momentary pause after this fervent greeting, emotional on
+one part only.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But why did you not meet me at Milledgeville?&quot; asked Mr. Calhoun. &quot;Most
+of my friends in this vicinity sustained me there. I have been
+discussing the great question<a name="FNanchor_3_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_3_3"><sup>[3]</sup></a> again, Favraud, and I should have been
+glad of your countenance.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have been detained at home of late by a cruel necessity,&quot; was the
+faltering reply, &quot;or I should never have played recreant to my old
+master.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Good fortune spoiled me a fine lawyer in your case, Victor! But
+introduce me to your wife. Remember, I have never had the pleasure of
+meeting Madame Favraud,&quot; advancing, as he spoke, toward me, with his
+hand on Major Favraud's shoulder (above whom he towered by a head),
+courteously and impulsively.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miss Harz, Miss La Vigne, Miss Durand&mdash;Mr. Calhoun,&quot; said Major
+Favraud, pale as death now, and trembling as he spoke. &quot;These ladies are
+friends of mine&mdash;one, a distant relative&quot;&mdash;he hesitated&mdash;&quot;within the
+last six weeks I have had the misfortune to lose my wife, Mr. Calhoun.
+You understand matters better now.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>All conversation was cut short by this sudden announcement. Deeply
+shocked, Mr. Calhoun led Major Favraud aside, with a brief apology to me
+for his misapprehension, and they stood together, talking low, at the
+extreme end of the apartment, affording me thus an admirable opportunity
+for observing the <i>personnel</i> of the great Southern leader, during the
+brief space of time accorded by the change of stage-horses. For, with
+his friends, he was then <i>en route</i> for another appointment. He was
+canvassing the State, with a view to a final rally of its resources,
+preparatory to his last great effort&mdash;to scotch the serpent of the
+North, which finally, however, wound its insidious folds around the
+heart of brotherly affection, stifling it, as the snakes of fable were
+sent to do the baby Hercules.</p>
+
+<p>No picture of Mr. Calhoun has ever done him justice<a name="FNanchor_4_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_4_4"><sup>[4]</sup></a>, although his
+was a physiognomy that an artist could scarcely fail to make an extern
+likeness of, from its remarkable characteristics. It was truly an
+iron-bound face, condensed, powerful in every nerve, muscle, and
+lineament, and fraught, beyond almost all others, with intellect and
+resolution. But the glory and power of that glance and smile no painter
+could convey&mdash;those attributes of man which more fully than aught else
+betray the immortal soul!</p>
+
+<p>Just as I beheld him that day, bending above Major Favraud in his
+tender, half-paternal dignity and solicitude combined, soothing and
+condoling with him (I could not doubt, from the expression of his
+speaking countenance), I see him still in mental vision; nor can I
+wonder more at the depth and strength of enthusiasm he awakened in the
+hearts of his friends.</p>
+
+<p>It belongs not to every great man to excite this devotion, yet, where it
+blends with greatness, it is irresistible. Mohammed, Cyrus, Alexander,
+Darius, Pericles, Napoleon, were thus magnetically gifted. I recall few
+instances of others so distinguished in station who possessed this
+power, which has its root, perhaps, after all, in the great
+master-passion of mortality, the yearning for exalted sympathy, so
+seldom accorded.</p>
+
+<p>This observation of mine was but a glimpse at best, for the winding of
+the stage-horn was the signal for Mr. Calhoun's departure, and I never
+saw him more. But that glimpse alone opened to my eyes a mighty volume!</p>
+
+<p>A few days before I should have rejected as wearisome the details to
+which I listened with eagerness now, and which I even sought to elicit
+as to Mr. Calhoun&mdash;his mode of life, his mountain-home, and his passion
+for those heights he inhabited, and which, no doubt, contributed to
+train his character to energy and strengthen his <i>physique</i> to endure
+its brain-burden. I heard with pleasure the account of one who had
+passed much of his youth beneath his roof, and who, however
+enthusiastic, was, in the very framing of his nature, strictly truthful
+with regard to the mutual devotion of the master and slaves, the
+invariable courtesy and sweetness of his deportment to his own family,
+his justice and regard for the feelings of his lowest dependant, his
+simplicity, his cheerfulness.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A grave and even gloomy man in public life, he is all life and interest
+in the social circle,&quot; said Major Favraud. &quot;His range of thought is the
+grandest and most unlimited, his powers of conversation are the rarest I
+have ever met with. Yet he never refused, on any occasion, to answer
+with minuteness the inquiries of the smallest child or most
+insignificant dependant. 'Had he not been Alexander, he must have been
+Parmenio.' Had fortune not struck out for him the path of a statesman,
+he would have made the most impressive and perfect of teachers. As it
+was, without the slightest approach to pedagogism, he involuntarily
+instructed all who came near him, without effort or weariness on either
+side.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Does he love music&mdash;poetry?&quot; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, yes; Scottish songs and classic verse, especially, are his
+delights. He has no affectation. His tastes are all his own&mdash;his
+opinions all genuine. He is, indeed, a man of very varied attainment, as
+well as great grasp of intellect. Yet, as you see, he likes his
+opposites sometimes. Miss Harz,&quot; and he laid his hand proudly on his
+own manly breast.</p>
+
+<p>Talking thus in that large, low, scantily-furnished parlor, with its
+split-bottomed chairs, in primitive frames (and in somewhat strange
+contrast to its well-polished mahogany tables, dark with time, and walls
+adorned with good engravings), with its floor freshly scoured and
+sanded, while a simple deal stand in the centre bore a vase filled with
+the rarest and most exquisite wild-flowers I had ever seen (from the
+gorgeous amaryllis and hibiscus of these regions, down to wax-like
+blossoms of fragile delicacy and beauty, whose very names I knew not),
+and its many small diamond-paned casement-windows, all neatly curtained
+with coarse white muslin bordered with blue, time passed unconsciously
+until the noonday meal was announced.</p>
+
+<p>We followed the Mercury of the establishment, a grave-looking little
+yellow boy, who seemed to have grown prematurely old, from his constant
+companionship, probably, with his preceptor and mistress, into a long,
+low apartment in the rear of the dwelling, where a table was spread for
+our party, with a damask cloth and napkins, decorated china and
+cut-glass, that proved Madame Grambeau's personal superintendence; and
+which elicited from Major Favraud, as he entered, a long, low whistle of
+approval and surprise, and the exclamation &quot;Heh! madame! you are
+overwhelming us to-day with your magnificence.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I was amused with the response. &quot;Sit down, Victor Favraud, and eat your
+dinner Christian-like, without remarks! You have never got over the
+spoiling you received when you lay wounded under this roof. I shall
+indulge you no longer.&quot; Shaking her long forefinger at him. &quot;Your
+familiarity needs to be checked.&quot; Her manner of grave and kindly irony
+removed all impression of rebuke from this speech, which Major Favraud
+received very coolly, spoiled child that he really was, rubbing his
+hands as he took the foot of the table. At the sight of the <i>bouilli</i>
+before him, from which a savory steam ascended to his epicurean
+nostrils, he said, notwithstanding: &quot;Soup and <i>bouilli</i> too! Ah, madame,
+I see why you absented yourself so cruelly this morning. You have been
+engaged in good works!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Only the sauces, Favraud!&mdash;<i>seulement les sauces</i>&quot; &quot;The sauces&mdash;it's
+just that!&mdash;Tide is a mere charlatan in comparison,&quot; turning to me.
+&quot;Miss Harz, you never tasted any thing before like madame's soup and
+sauces. I wish she would take me in partnership for a while, if only to
+teach me the recipes that will otherwise die with her. What a restaurant
+we two could keep together!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are too unsteady, Favraud, for my <i>ma&icirc;tre d'h&ocirc;tel.</i> Your mind is
+too much engrossed by the bubbles of politics, you would spoil all my
+materials, and realize the old proverb that 'the devil sends cooks.' But
+go to work like a good fellow, and carve the dish before you; by that
+time the soup will be removed. I have a fine fish, however, in reserve
+(let me announce this at once), for my end of the table.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Here are croquets too, as I live,&quot; said Duganne, lifting a cover before
+him and peeping in, then returning it quietly to its place. &quot;Are you a
+fairy, madame?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Much more like a witch,&quot; she said, with gayety. &quot;You young men, at
+least, think every old, toothless gray-haired crone like me ready for
+the stake, you know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not when they make such steaks,&quot; said Dr. Durand, attacking the dish,
+with its savory surroundings, before him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah! you make calembourgs, my good doctor.&mdash;What do you call them,
+Favraud? It is one of the few English words I do not know&mdash;or forget. I
+believe, to make them, however, is a medical peculiarity.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Puns, madame, puns, not pills. Don't forget it now. It is time you were
+beginning to master our language. You know you are almost grown up!&quot; and
+Favraud looked at her saucily.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A language which madame speaks more perfectly than any foreigner I have
+ever known,&quot; I remarked. She bowed in answer, well pleased.</p>
+
+<p>In truth, the accent of Madame Grambeau was barely detectable, and her
+phraseology was that of a well-translated book&mdash;correct, but not
+idiomatic, and bearing about it the idiosyncrasy of the language from
+which it was derived. She was evidently a person of culture and native
+power of intellect combined, and her finely-moulded face, as well as
+every gesture and tone, indicated superiority and character.</p>
+
+<p>In that lonely wild, and beneath that lowly roof, there abode a spirit
+able and worthy to lead the <i>coteries</i> of the great, and to preside over
+the councils of statesmen, and (to rise in climax) the drawing-room of
+the <i>grande monde.</i> But it was her whim rather than her necessity to
+tarry where she could alone be strictly independent, a <i>sine qua non</i> of
+her being.</p>
+
+<p>The son she had led by the hand from New York to Georgia, and who,
+standing by her side, distinctly remembered to have seen the head of the
+Princess Lamballe borne on a pole through the streets of Paris, was now
+a prominent member of the Legislature, and, through his rich wife, the
+incumbent of a great plantation.</p>
+
+<p>But the teachings of Jean-Jacques Rousseau, that philosophic sign-post,
+still influenced his mother, in her refusal to live under his splendid
+roof, and partake of his bounty, however liberally offered.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have a home of my own,&quot; she said, &quot;a few faithful servants, brains,
+and energy still, besides a small account with General Curzon, in his
+bank at Savannah, wherewith to meet emergencies; while these things
+last, I will owe to no man or woman for bread or shelter. And, when
+these depart, may the grave cover my bones, and the good God receive my
+soul!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Books alone she accepted as gifts from her son, and of these, in a
+little three-cornered library, she had a goodly store in the two
+languages which she read with equal facility, if not delight.</p>
+
+<p>She showed us this nook before we left, and I saw, lying face downward,
+as she had recently left it, the volume she was then perusing at
+intervals&mdash;one of Madame Sand's novels, &quot;Les Mauprats,&quot; I remember, a
+singular and powerful romance, then recently issued, whose root I have
+always thought might be found in Walter Scott's &quot;Rob Roy,&quot; and more
+particularly in the Osbaldistone family commemorated in that work.</p>
+
+<p>On suggesting this to Madame Grambeau, she too saw the resemblance I
+spoke of, and she agreed, with me, that the coincidence of genius
+furnished many such parallels, where no charge of plagiarism could be
+attached to either side.</p>
+
+<p>A few bottles of &quot;wild-berry wine,&quot; as Elizabeth Barrett called such
+fluids, were added to the dinner toward its close, and Marion begged
+permission to have her basket of cakes and fruits brought in for
+dessert, which else had been wanting to our repast; to which request
+Madame Grambeau graciously acceded.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I make no confections,&quot; she said, &quot;but I have lived on the juices of
+good meats, well prepared, with such vegetables as the Lord lets grow in
+this poor region, many years, and behold I am old and still able to do
+his service!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And a little good wine, too, occasionally&mdash;eh, madame?&quot; added Major
+Favraud, impertinently.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;When attainable, Favraud. You drank good wine yourself, when you were
+here, and I partook with you moderately. But I buy none such. I drown
+not, Clarence-like, even in butts of malmsey, my hard-earned gold; and I
+own I am not fond of the juices of the muscadine of your hills;&quot; and she
+tapped her snuffbox.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are going to hear her talk now,&quot; whispered Favraud; &quot;that is a
+sign&mdash;equal to General Finistere's&mdash;the snuffbox tapping, I mean. The
+oracle is beginning to arouse! Come! let me stir her further!&quot; and he
+inclined his head before her.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'll tell you what, madame, you must take a little cognac to keep off
+the chills of age. I have some of the best, and will send you down a
+demijohn, if you say the word; and in return you shall pray for me. I am
+a great sinner, Miss Harz thinks.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miss Harz is correct; and we will both promise you our prayers. She,
+too, is Catholic, I hope. No? I regret so, for her own sake; but your
+brandy I reject, Victor; remember that, and offend me not by sending it.
+You must not forget the fate of your malvoisie.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, madame, that was cruel! but I have forgiven you long since. I
+think, however, that the grape-vines bore better that year than ever
+before&mdash;thus watered, or wined, I mean.&mdash;Just think of it, Miss Harz! To
+pour good wine round the roots of a Fontainebleau grape, rather than
+replenish the springs of life with it! Was there ever waste like that
+since Cleopatra dissolved her pearl in vinegar?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miss Harz will agree with me that a principle that could not resist the
+gift of a dozen bottles of choice wine was little worth. Of such stuff
+was made not the fathers of your Revolution. But stay, there is an
+explanation due to me, yet unrendered,&quot; she pursued. &quot;I am a puzzled
+<i>bourgeoise</i>, I confess,&quot; she said, shaking her head. &quot;Come, Favraud,
+explain. Who is this young lady?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A <i>bourgeoise</i> also,&quot; I replied for him, anxious to turn the tide of
+conversation into another channel for some reasons. &quot;I had thought you
+an expatriated marquise, at least, madame!&quot; I continued. &quot;As for me, I
+am simply a governess.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is my glory, mademoiselle, to have been of that class to which
+belonged Madame Roland herself, and which represented that <i>juste
+milieu</i> which maintained the balance of society in France. When the
+dregs of the <i>bas peuple</i> rose to the surface of the revolution,
+commenced by the sound middle classes, we regarded the scum of
+aristocracy as the smaller of the two evils. As soon as the true element
+had ceased to assert itself in France, I fled forever from a land of
+bloodshed and misrule, and took shelter under the broad wing of your
+boasted American eagle.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Which still continues to flap over you shelteringly, madame,&quot; I
+rejoined, somewhat flippantly, I fear, &quot;and will to the end, no doubt;
+for, in its very organization, our country can never be subjected to the
+fluctuations of other lands&mdash;revolt and revolution.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am not so certain of this,&quot; she observed, shaking her white head
+slowly as she spoke, and, lifting a pinch of snuff from her
+tortoise-shell box (the companion of her whole married life, as she
+acquainted us), she inhaled it with an air of meditative
+self-complacency, then offered it quietly to the gentlemen, who were
+still sitting over their wine and peaches; passing by Marion, Alice
+Durand, and myself, completely, in this ovation.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Good snuff is not to be sneezed at,&quot; said Major Favraud. &quot;None offered
+to young ladies, it seems,&quot; taking a huge pinch, and thrusting it
+bravely up his nostrils, as one takes a spoonful of unpleasant medicine.
+Then contradicting his own assertion immediately afterward, he succeeded
+in expelling most of it in a series of violent sternutatory spasms,
+which left him breathless, red-faced, and watery-eyed, with a
+handkerchief much begrimed.</p>
+
+<p>But Madame Grambeau seemed not to have noticed this ridiculous
+proceeding, which, of course, created momentary mirth at the expense of
+the penitent Favraud, to whom Dr. Durand repeated the tantalizing
+saying, that &quot;it is a royal privilege to take snuff gracefully&quot;&mdash;giving
+the example as he spoke, in a mock-heroic manner, quite as absurd and
+irrelevant as Favraud's own.</p>
+
+<p>Lost in deep thought, and gently tapping her snuffbox as she mused&mdash;the
+tripod of her inspiration, as it seemed&mdash;Madame Grambeau sat silently,
+with what memories of the past and what insight into the future none can
+know save those like herself grown hoary with wisdom and experience.</p>
+
+<p>At last she spoke, addressing her remarks to me, as though the careless
+words I had hazarded had just been spoken, and the attention of her
+hearers undiverted by divers absurdities&mdash;among others the affected
+gambols of Duganne&mdash;anxious to place himself in an agreeable aspect
+before both of his <i>inamoratas</i>, past and present.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I do not agree with you, mademoiselle. I am one of those who think
+that in the very framing of this Constitution of ours the dragon's teeth
+were sown, whose harvest is not yet produced. Mr. Calhoun, with his
+prophetic eye, foresees that this crop of armed men is inevitable from
+such germs, as does Mr. Clay, were he only frank, which he is not,
+because he deludes himself&mdash;the most incurable and inexcusable of all
+deceptions.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And she applied herself again assiduously to her snuffbox, tapping it
+peremptorily before opening it, and, with a gloomy eye fixed on space,
+she continued:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;In all lands, from the time of Cassandra and Jeremiah up, there have
+been prophets. Prophets for good and prophets for ill&mdash;of which some few
+have been God-appointed, and the sayings of such alone have been
+preserved. The rest vanish away into oblivion like chaff before the
+wind&mdash;never mind what their achievement, what their boast.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;In this nation we have only two true prophets, Calhoun and Clay&mdash;both
+men of equal might, and resolution, and intellect&mdash;gifted as beseems
+their vocation, masterful and heroic; and to these all other men are
+subordinate in the great designs of Providence.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Where do you leave Mr. Webster, John Quincy Adams, General Jackson
+himself, in such a category, madame?&quot; I asked, eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;They are doing, or have done, the work God has appointed for them to
+do, I suppose, mademoiselle; but they are accessories merely of the
+times, and will pass away with the necessities of the moment.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'The earth has bubbles as the water hath, and these are of them,'&quot; said
+Major Favraud aside, between his short, set teeth, nodding to me as he
+spoke, and lending the next moment implicit attention to what Madame
+Grambeau was saying; for the brief pause she had made for another pinch
+of snuff was ended, and she continued impetuously, as if no interval had
+occurred:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Clay is, unconsciously, I trust, for the honor of mankind, fulfilling
+his destiny&mdash;this great prophet who still refuses to prophesy. He is
+entering the wedge for what he declines to admit the possibility of&mdash;yet
+there must be moments when that eye of power pierces the clouds of
+prejudice and party, wherewith it seeks to blind its kingly vision, and
+descries the horrors beyond as the result of the acts he is now
+committing; and when such moments of clear conviction come to him, the
+ambitious tool of a party, I envy not his sensations,&quot; and she shook her
+head mournfully. &quot;Not Napoleon at St. Helena, not Prometheus on his
+rock, were more to be pitied than he! the man whose ambition shall never
+know fruition, whose measures shall pass and leave no trace in less than
+fifty years after he has ceased to exist&mdash;the splendid failure of our
+century!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She ceased for a moment, with her eye fixed on space, her hands clasped,
+her whole face and manner uplifted, as if, indeed, on her likewise the
+prophet's mantle had dropped from a chariot of fire.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As to Calhoun&mdash;he is God-fearing,&quot; she continued, fervently. &quot;In the
+solitudes of a spiritual Mount Sinai, he has received the tablets of the
+Lord, and bends every energy to their fulfillment. He, too,
+foresees&mdash;not with an eye like Clay's, clear only at intervals&mdash;and
+clouded by vanity, ambition, and sophistry, at other seasons&mdash;he, too,
+foresees the coming of our doom! His clear vision embraces anarchy,
+dissension, civil war, with all its attendant horrors, as the
+consequence of man's injustice; and, like Moses, he beholds the promised
+land into which he can never enter! Would that it were given to him to
+appoint his Joshua, or even to see him face to face, recognizingly! But
+this is not God's will. He lurks among the shadows yet&mdash;this Joshua of
+the South, but God shall yet search him out and bring him visibly before
+the people! Not while I live,&quot; she added, solemnly, &quot;but within the
+natural lives of all others who sit this day around my table!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She is equal to Madame Le Normand!&quot; said Major Favraud, aside, nodding
+approvingly at me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If one waits long enough, most prophecies may be fulfilled,&quot; I
+ventured; &quot;but, madame, your words point to results too terrible&mdash;too
+unnatural, it seems to me, ever to be realized in these enlightened
+times or in this land of moderation.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Child,&quot; she responded, &quot;blood asserts itself to the end of races. There
+are two separate civilizations in this land, destined some day to come
+in fearful conflict; and the wars of Scylla, of the Jews themselves,
+shall be outdone in the horror and persistence of that strife of
+partners&mdash;I will not say brothers&mdash;for there is no brotherhood of blood
+between South and North, of which Clay and Calhoun stand forth to my
+mind as distinct types. No union of the red and white roses possible.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But you forget, madame, that Mr. Clay is a Western man, a Virginian, a
+Kentuckian, and the representative of slave-holders,&quot; I remonstrated.
+&quot;His interests are coincident with those of the South. His hope of the
+presidency itself vests in his constituents, and the wand would be
+broken in his hand were he to lend himself to partiality of any kind.
+Mr. Clay is a great patriot, I believe, Jacksonite though I am&mdash;he knows
+no South nor North, nor East nor West, but the Union alone, solid and
+undivided.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;All this is true,&quot; she answered, &quot;in one sense. It is thus he speaks,
+and, like all partial parents, even thinks he feels toward his
+offspring; but observe his acts narrowly from first to last. He has a
+manufacturer's heart, with all his genius. He loves machinery&mdash;the sound
+of the mill, the anvil, the spinning-jenny, the sight of the ship upon
+the high-seas, or steamboat on the river, the roar of commerce, far more
+than the work of the husbandman. We are an agricultural people, we of
+the South and West&mdash;and especially we Southerners, with our poverty of
+invention, our one staple, our otherwise helpless habits, incident to
+the institution which, however it may be our curse, is still our wealth,
+and to which, for the present time, we are bound, Ixion-like, by every
+law of necessity. What does this tariff promise? Where will the profit
+rest? Where will the loss fall crushingly? The slow torture of which we
+read in histories of early times was like to this. Each day a weight was
+added to that already lying on the breast of a strong man, bound on his
+back by the cords of his oppressors, until relief and destruction came
+together, and the man was crushed; such was the <i>peine forte et dure</i>.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Calhoun is patriarchal,<a name="FNanchor_5_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_5_5"><sup>[5]</sup></a> and is now placing all his individual
+strength to the task of heaving off this incubus from the breast of our
+body politic, but with small avail, for he has no lever to assist
+him&mdash;no fulcrum whereon to rest it; otherwise he might say with
+Archimedes, 'With these I could move a world.' He is unaided, this
+eagled-eyed prophet of ours, looking sorrowfully, sagaciously down into
+the ages! South Carolina is the Joseph, that his cruel brothers, the
+remaining Southern States, have sold to the Egyptians, as a bond-slave.
+But they shall yet come to drink of his cup, and eat of his bread of
+opinion, in the famine of their Canaan. Nullification shall leave a
+fitting successor, as Philip of Macedon left Alexander to carry out his
+plans. The abolitionist and the slave-holder are as distinct as were
+Charles I. and Cromwell, or Catharine de Medicis and Henry of Navarre.
+The germ that Calhoun has planted shall lie long in the earth, perhaps,
+but when it breaks the surface, it shall grow in one night to maturity,
+like that in your so famous 'Mother Goose' story of 'Jack and his
+Bean-stalk,' forming a ladder wherewith to scale the abode of giants and
+slay them in their drunken sleep of security. But he who does this deed,
+this Joshua of the Lord's, this fierce successor of our gentle Moses,
+shall wade through his oceans of blood to gain the stone. God
+knoweth&mdash;He only&mdash;how all this shall end, whether in success or
+overthrow. It is so far wrapped in mystery.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>As if she saw from some spiritual height the reign of terror she
+predicted, she dropped her head upon her hands and closed her eyes, and
+I felt my blood creep slowly through my veins as I followed her in
+thought across the waste of woe and desolation. For there was something
+in her manner, her voice (august and solemn with age and wisdom as these
+were), that impressed all who heard, with or in spite of their own
+consent, and for a time profound silence succeeded this harangue.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Durand was the first to recover himself. &quot;I trust, my dear madame,&quot;
+he remarked, &quot;that the substantial horrors realized in your youth still
+cast their dark shadows over the coming years, and so deceive you into
+prophecies that it is sad to hear from lips so reverent, and which, let
+us all pray, may never be realized. You yourself will say amen to that,
+I am convinced.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Amen!&quot; she murmured.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nonsense, Durand! don't play at hypocrite in your old age, after having
+been a true man all your life,&quot; broke in Major Favraud. &quot;What is a
+conservative, after all, but a social parrot, who repeats 'wise saws and
+modern instances,' until he believes himself possessed of the wisdom of
+all the ages, and is incapable of conceiving of the existence even of an
+original idea?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;By-the-by,&quot; digressed Duganne, weary of discussion, &quot;hear that old
+fellow outside, how he is going on, Favraud, <i>&agrave; propos</i> of poll parrots,
+you know, as if all else, but the name of the bird, had been lost on his
+ear. Just listen!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, hear him, and be edified,&quot; was the sarcastic response of Favraud
+to Duganne, who took no other notice, even if he understood the point,
+than to lead the way to the portico, where swung the cage of the jolly
+bird in question; and, headed by Madame Grambeau leaning on her cane, we
+followed simultaneously, with the exception of Major Favraud, who
+continued at the table with his cigar and cognac-flask, in sullen and
+solitary state.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nutmegs and nullification!&quot; shrieked the parrot, as we stood before
+him. &quot;Ha, ha, ha!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That is condensing the matter, certainly,&quot; I observed.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;<i>Bienvenu, compatriote!</i>&quot; he repeated many times, laughing loudly, the
+next moment, as if in mockery.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What a fiend it is!&quot; said Marion, timidly; &quot;only look at its black
+tongue, Miss Harz! Then what a laugh!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Danton! Danton! have you nothing to say to this strange lady?&quot; said
+Madame Grambeau, addressing her bird by name; &quot;you must not neglect my
+friends, Danton Pardi!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Bird of freedom, moulting&mdash;moulting!&quot; was the whimsical rejoinder.
+&quot;Jackson! give us your paw, Old Hick&mdash;Hick&mdash;Hickory!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This is the stuff Major Favraud taught him,&quot; she apologized, &quot;when he
+used to lie on his porch day after day, after his hostile meeting with
+Juarez, which took place on that hill,&quot; signifying the site of the duel
+with her slender cane. &quot;It was there they fought their duel, <i>&agrave;
+l'outrance</i>, and I knew it not until too late! His wife was too ill to
+come to him at that time, and the task of nursing him devolved on me,
+since when, on maternal principles, the lad has grown into my
+affections.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The lad of forty-odd!&quot; sneered Duganne, unnoticed, apparently, by the
+aged lady, however, at the moment, but not without amusing other hearers
+by this sally. Dr. Durand was especially delighted.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;For he is a boy at heart,&quot; she said later, &quot;this same Victor Favraud of
+ours,&quot; gazing reprovingly around. &quot;Indeed, he is the only American I
+have ever seen who possessed real <i>gaiet&eacute; de coeur</i>, and for that, I
+imagine, he must thank his French extraction.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Calhoun and cotton!&quot; &quot;Coal and codfish!&quot; shouted the parrot at the top
+of his voice. &quot;Catfish and coffee!&quot;&mdash;&quot;Rice cakes for breakfast&quot;&mdash;&quot;All in
+my eye, Betty Martin&quot;&mdash;&quot;Yarns and Yankees&quot;&mdash;&quot;Shad and shin-plasters&quot;&mdash;&quot;Yams
+and yaller boys,&quot; and so on, in a string of the most irrelevant alliteration
+and folly, that, like much other nonsense, evoked peals of laughter, by its
+unexpected utterance, and which at last mollified and brought out Major
+Favraud himself, from his dignified retirement.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have ruined the morals of my bird,&quot; said Madame Grambeau,
+reproachfully. &quot;Approach, Favraud, and justify yourself. In former times
+his discourse was discreet. He knew many wise proverbs and polite
+salutations in French and English both, most of which he has discarded
+in favor of your profane and foolish teachings. He is as bad as the
+'Vert-vert' of Voltaire. I shall have to expel him soon, I fear.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Danton, how can you so grieve your mistress?&quot; remonstrated Major
+Favraud, lifting at the same time an admonitory finger, at which
+recognized signal, a part of past instructions probably, the parrot
+burst forth at once in a series of the most grotesque and <i>outr&eacute;</i> oaths
+ear ever heard, ending (by the aid of some prompting from his teacher)
+by dismally croaking the fragment of a popular song thus travestied:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>&quot;My ole mistis dead and gone,<br /></span>
+<span>She lef to me her ole jawbone.<br /></span>
+<span>Says she, 'Charge up in dem yaller pines,<br /></span>
+<span>And slay dem Yankee Philistines!'&quot;&mdash;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>ending with the invariable <i>&quot;Bon jour</i>,&quot; or &quot;<i>Bienvenu, compatriote&quot;</i>
+and demoniac &quot;Ha! ha! ha!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The memory of the creature is perfectly wonderful,&quot; I said. &quot;Many
+parrots have I seen, but never one like this before. It must have sprung
+out of the Arabian Nights.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I can teach any thing to every thing,&quot; digressed Major Favraud, &quot;and
+without severity; it is my specialty. I was meant for a trainer of
+beasts, probably. I will get up an entertainment, I believe, in
+opposition to the industrious fleas, called the 'Desperate Doves,' and
+teach pigeons to muster, drill, and go through all the military motions.
+I could do it easily, and so repair my broken fortunes. I have one
+already at home that feigns death at the word of command. I have amused
+myself for hours at a time with this bird.&mdash;Don't say a word, Miss
+Harz,&quot; speaking low, &quot;I see what you think of it all, but I have had to
+cheat misery some way or other. It was a wretched device and waste of
+existence, though. And when I see that great, distinguished man, who had
+such hopes of me as a boy, I feel that I could creep into an auger-hole
+for sheer shame of my extinguished promise.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not extinguished!&quot; I murmured, &quot;only under a cloud, still destined to
+be fulfilled.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Only in the grave,&quot; he said, sadly, &quot;with the promise common to all
+mankind;&quot; and thus by gloomy glimpses I caught the truth.</p>
+
+<p>We staid that night at the house of an aunt of Madame La Vigne's, who
+received us cordially, entertained us sumptuously, and dismissed us
+graciously.</p>
+
+<p>The next morning at sunrise we again set out for Savannah, into which
+city we entered before the noonday heat, finding cool shelter and warm
+welcome at once under the roof of General Curzon, the South's most
+polished gentleman and finished man of letters, of whom it may be truly
+said that, &quot;Take him for all in all, we ne'er shall look upon his like
+again.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>FOOTNOTES:</p>
+
+<a name="Footnote_2_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_2_2">[2]</a><div class="note"><p> It need not for one moment be supposed that the opinions of
+the author are represented through the extremist Favraud. To her Mr.
+Bryant stands forth as the high-priest of American poetry.</p></div>
+
+<a name="Footnote_3_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_3_3">[3]</a><div class="note"><p> The tariff.</p></div>
+
+<a name="Footnote_4_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_4_4">[4]</a><div class="note"><p> Since writing the above, the admirable picture of Mr.
+Healey has filled this void; and those who have seen good copies of this
+work, executed for and by the order of Louis Philippe, may have a clear
+idea of that glorious countenance, the like of which we shall not see
+again.
+</p><p>
+Perhaps it was from this very personal magnetism of which I have spoken
+that Healey succeeded better with the portrait of Mr. Calhoun than any
+of the others he was sent to this country to paint.</p></div>
+
+<a name="Footnote_5_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_5_5">[5]</a><div class="note"><p> It was about this time that Mr. Calhoun made his famous
+anti-tariff crusade throughout the land, it may be remembered by some of
+my readers.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="III_CHAPTER_II"></a><h2>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>Before leaving the hospitable roof of General Curzon&mdash;beneath which I
+tarried for several days&mdash;awaiting the tardy sailing of the
+packet-steamer Kosciusko, bound for New York, circumstances determined
+me to leave in the hands of my host a desk which I had intended to carry
+with me, and which contained most of my treasures. First among these,
+indisputably, in intrinsic value were my diamonds&mdash;&quot;sole remnant of a
+past magnificence;&quot; but the miniatures of my father and mother, and
+Mabel, in the cases of which locks of twisted hair&mdash;brown, and black,
+and golden, and gray&mdash;were contained and combined (dear, imperishable
+memorials of vitality in most instances when all the rest was dust and
+ashes), and the early letters of my parents, together with the
+carefully-kept diary I had written at Beauseincourt, ranked beyond these
+even in my estimation.</p>
+
+<p>The cause of this deposit of valuables was simply owing to the unstable
+lock of my trunk, the condition of which was detected too late to have
+it repaired before sailing. Madame Curzon had suggested to me the unsafe
+nature of such custody for objects of price, if, indeed, I possessed
+such at all. I told her then of my diamonds, and it was agreed between
+us that these, at least, had better be deposited in the bank of her
+husband, who would bring them to me himself a few months later&mdash;and on
+reflection I concluded to add my desk, pictures, and papers, to my more
+substantial treasures. These, at least, I felt assured no accident
+should throw into the hands of Bainrothe.</p>
+
+<p>On my way to the ship I left the carriage for a moment, in pursuance
+with this idea, and, followed by King, the bearer of my large and
+weighty desk, entered the banking-house of my host, and was shown at
+once, by attentive clerks, to his peculiar sanctum. I told him my errand
+in a few words.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Keep it until called for, unless you hear from me in the interval,&quot; I
+had said in allusion to my deposit, for he acknowledged the chances were
+slight of his leaving home until the following year, notwithstanding
+Madame Curzon's convictions.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Called for by whom?&quot; he asked, calmly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;By Miriam Monfort in person or her order,&quot; I replied, laughingly, &quot;This
+is a mystery that, by-and-by, shall be explained to you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I understand something of that already,&quot; he rejoined. &quot;Marion has been
+whispering to the reeds, you know, or Madame Curzon, the same thing
+nearly; but let us be earnest, as your time is short, and mine precious
+to-day. Life is uncertain, and, young and strong as you are, or seem to
+be, you cannot foresee one hour even of the future, or of your own
+existence. Suppose Miriam Monfort neither comes in person nor sends her
+order for its restoration&mdash;what, then, is to become of this
+treasure-chest of hers?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You shall keep it then,&quot; I replied, unhesitatingly, &quot;until my little
+sister reaches her majority, and cause it to be placed in her own hands,
+none other&mdash;or, stay, let her have it on the day before her marriage,
+should this occur earlier than the time mentioned, or when she reaches
+her eighteenth year in any case; but, above all things, be careful.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So many conflicting directions confuse and mystify me, I confess. Come,
+let me write down your wishes, and the matter can be arranged formally,
+which is always best in any case. There, I think I have the gist of your
+idea,&quot; he said a few moments later, as he pushed over to me a slip of
+paper to read and sign, which done, I shook hands with him cordially,
+preparing to go. &quot;But your receipt&mdash;you have forgotten to take it up!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O General Curzon! the whole proceeding seems so ominous,&quot; I said,
+turning back at the door to receive the proffered scrap, which, in
+another moment, dropped from my nerveless fingers, while these, clasped
+over my streaming eyes, forgot their office.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My dear young lady,&quot; he remonstrated, &quot;I am shocked. What can have
+occurred to impress you thus? Not this mere routine of affairs,
+surely?&mdash;Duncan, a glass of water here for Miss Monfort.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I do not know, I am sure, why I should be so weak for such a trifle,&quot; I
+said, after a few swallows of ice-water had somewhat restored my
+equilibrium; &quot;but I do feel very dismally about this voyage&mdash;have done
+so ever since I left Beauseincourt. This is the last straw on the
+camel's back, believe me, General Curzon. You must not reproach yourself
+in the least&mdash;nor me; and now let me bid you farewell once more, perhaps
+eternally!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>These words of mine were remembered later in a very different spirit
+from that in which they were then received (one of incredulous
+compassion)&mdash;remembered as are ever the last utterances of the doomed,
+whether innocent or guilty, in solemn awe and reverential tenderness,
+not unmingled with a superstitious faith in presentiment.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why, you look bluer than your very obvious veil, bluer than your
+invisible school-marmish stockings, bluer than the skies, or a blue bag,
+or Madame de Sta&euml;l's 'Corinne,' or Byron's 'dark-blue ocean,'&quot; said
+Major Favraud, as he assisted me again into the carriage, where Dr.
+Durand and Marion awaited me, for, as I have said, we were now on our
+way to the vessel which was to bear me and my destinies forever from
+that lovely Southern land in which I had seen and suffered so much.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Durand looked serious at the sight of my woful aspect, and Marion
+mutely proffered her <i>vinaigrette</i>, gratefully accepted, as was the good
+doctor's compassionate silence; but, as usual, Favraud, after having
+once gotten fairly under weigh, ran on. &quot;What is the use of bewailing
+the inevitable?&quot; he pursued. &quot;We have all seen your <i>penchant</i> for
+Curzon, and his for you, for three days past; but Octavia is as tough as
+<i>lignum-vitae,</i> I regret to assure you, my dear Miss Harz, and your
+chance is <i>as blue</i> as your spirits, or the flames of snap-dragon, or
+Marion's eyes. You will have to just put up with the captain, I fear,
+for even the doctor there is in harness for life. Southern women, you
+know, proverbially survive their husbands; and, as the suttee is out of
+fashion, they sometimes have to marry Yankees as a <i>dernier ressort</i> of
+desperation! Of course, there are occasional sad exceptions&quot;&mdash;looking
+grave for a moment, and glancing at the black hat-band on the Panama hat
+he was nursing on his knees, so as to let the breeze blow through his
+silky, silver-streaked black hair&mdash;&quot;but&mdash;but&mdash;in short, why will you all
+look so doleful? Isn't it bad enough to feel so?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The loveliest fade earliest, we all know,&quot; and the tears were in his
+honest, frivolous eyes, dashed away in the next moment as he exclaimed,
+eagerly, &quot;Why, there goes the Lamarque equipage, as I live! I had
+forgotten all about it. The pleasantest woman in Savannah, young or old,
+is to be your <i>compagnon de voyage</i>, Miss Harz, and the most determined
+widower on record her escort; a perfect John Rogers of a man, with nine
+little motherless children, her brother Raguet ('Rag,' as we called him
+at school, on account of his prim stiffness, so that 'limber as a rag'
+seemed a most preposterous saying in his vicinity). He is handsome,
+however, and intelligent, a perfect gentleman, but on the mourners'
+bench just now, like some others you know of&quot;&mdash;heaving a deep sigh. &quot;His
+wife, poor thing, died last autumn&mdash;a pretty girl in her day was
+Cornelia Huger! I was a little weak in that direction once
+myself&mdash;before&mdash;that is, before&mdash;O doctor! what a trouble it is to
+remember!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And again the small, fleet hand was dashed across the twinkling, tearful
+eyes of this April day of a middle-aged man of the world&mdash;this modern
+Mercutio&mdash;merry and mournful at once, as if there were two sides to his
+every mood, like the famous shield of story. When we reached the quay
+the Kosciusko was already getting up her steam, and, in less than an
+hour afterward, the friends I loved were gone like dreams, the bustle of
+departure was over, and, with lifted canvas and a puffing engine, we
+were grandly steaming past the noble forts (poor Bertie's broach and
+buckle, be it remembered) on our path of pride and power toward the
+broad Atlantic.</p>
+
+<p>The weather was oppressively hot, and, for the first thirty-six hours,
+scarcely a breath of wind lifted us on our way, so that the engine,
+wholly incompetent to the work of both sails and machinery, bore us very
+slowly on our northward ocean-flight. Indeed, the failure of this
+engine to do its duty, at first, had sorely disheartened both captain
+and crew as we found later, for upon its execution and energies, in the
+beginning, had rested our entire dependence.</p>
+
+<p>On the evening of the second day's voyage, a sudden and violent
+thunder-storm occurred, not unusual in those latitudes; during the
+raging of which our mainmast was struck by lightning, and wholly
+disabled.</p>
+
+<p>The fire was extinguished in the only possible manner, by cutting it
+away from the decks, letting it gently down upon them, deluging it, so
+that our mast lay charred and blackened after its bath of sea-water,
+like a mighty serpent stretched along the ship, from stem to stern, and
+wrapped loosely in its shrouds. It did us good service later, though not
+by defying the winds of heaven, nor spreading forth its snowy sails to
+catch the tropic breezes.</p>
+
+<p>Before many hours, it was destined to ride the waves in a shape that was
+certainly never intended by those who chose it among many others&mdash;taper
+and stately in its group of firs&mdash;to be the chief adornment of a gallant
+ship, and lift a pointing finger to the stars themselves, as an index of
+its might, and, with this exception, the hope of those it served&mdash;that
+of a charred and blackened life raft.</p>
+
+<p>The renewed freshness of the atmosphere, and the joyful upspringing of
+the breezes, alone remained, at midnight, to tell the story of the
+recent hurricane.</p>
+
+<p>These tropic breezes came like benevolent fairies, to aid our groaning
+Titan in his labors.</p>
+
+<p>I can never rid myself for one moment of the idea that an engine really
+works, with weary, reluctant strength like a genii slave, waiting
+vengefully for the time of retaliation, which sooner or later is sure to
+come; or of the visionary notion that a graceful, gliding ship, with
+all sails set, receives the same pleasure from its own motion and beauty
+that a snow-white swan must do &quot;as down she bears before the gale,&quot; with
+her white plumage and stately crest.</p>
+
+<p>I think, if ever I am called to give a toast, it shall be &quot;Sail-ships;
+may their shadows never be less!&quot; They are, indeed, a part of the
+romance of ocean.</p>
+
+<p>The moon was full, in the balmy summer night that succeeded the tempest,
+and the ship's quarter-deck was crowded with the passengers of the
+Kosciusko, enjoying to the utmost, as it seemed, the delicious,
+newly-washed atmosphere, the moonlit heavens and sea, the
+exquisitely-caressing softness of the tardily-awakened breezes that
+filled the white sails of the vessel, and fluttered the silken scarf of
+the maiden, with the same wooing breath of persuasive, subtle strength.</p>
+
+<p>Around Miss Lamarque, the lady of whom Major Favraud had spoken so
+admiringly, and to whose kindness he had committed me, a group had
+gathered, chiefly of the young, not to be surpassed in any land for
+manly bearing, graceful feminine beauty, gayety, wit, and refinement.</p>
+
+<p>There was Helen Oscanyan, fair as a dream of Greece, in her serene,
+marble perfectness of form and feature; and the lovely Mollie Cairns,
+her cousin, small, dark, and sparkling&mdash;both under the care of that
+stately gentleman, their uncle, Julius Severe, of Savannah; and there
+were the sisters Percy, twins in age and appearance, with voices like
+brook-ripples, and eyes like wood-violets, and feet of Chinese
+minuteness and French perfection&mdash;the darlings and only joys of a mother
+still beautiful, though sad in her widowhood, and gentle as the dove
+that mourns its mate.</p>
+
+<p>There was the brilliant Ralph Maxwell, whose jests, stinging and
+slight, just glanced over the surface of society without inflicting a
+wound, even as the skater's heel glides over ice, leaving its mark as it
+goes, yet breaking no crust of frost; and there was the poetic dreamer
+Dartmore, with his large, dark eyes, and moonlight face, and manner of
+suffering serenity, on his way to put forth for fame, as he fondly
+believed, his manuscript epic on the &quot;Sorrows of the South.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>All these, and more, were there gathering about the leader of their
+home-society, on that alien deck, as securely as though they were
+sitting in her own drawing-room at &quot;Berthold,&quot; on one of her brilliant
+reception-evenings.</p>
+
+<p>How could they know&mdash;how could they dream the truth&mdash;or descry the
+hidden skeleton at the festival, wreathed in flowers and veiled with
+glittering, filmy draperies, which yet put forth its bony fingers to
+beckon on and clutch them?</p>
+
+<p>I too was joyous and unconscious as the rest, and for the first time for
+many days felt the burden literally heaved rather than lifted away that
+had oppressed me.</p>
+
+<p>Was I not on my way to him in whose presence alone I lived my true life?
+and what feeling of his morbid fancy was there that my hand could not
+smooth away, when once entwined in his? Beauseincourt, and all its
+shadows, had I not put behind me? The sunshine lay before, and in its
+light and warmth I should still rejoice, as it was my birthright to do.</p>
+
+<p>I was &quot;fey&quot; that night, as the Scotch say, when an unaccountable
+lightness of mood precedes a heavy sorrow, which it so often does, as
+well as the more usual mood, the presage of gloom. I felt that I had the
+power to put aside all ills&mdash;to grapple with my fate, and compel back
+my lost happiness. Truly my bosom's lord sat lightly on her throne, as
+of late it had not been her wont to do.</p>
+
+<p>Against my inclination had I been drawn into the current of that
+youthful gayety, and now my bark floated without an effort on the
+stream. I was in my own element again, and my powers were all
+responsive.</p>
+
+<p>The small hours came&mdash;the happy group dispersed&mdash;not without many
+interchanges of social compliment, much <i>badinage</i>, and merry plans for
+the morrow. The monster Sea-sickness had been defied on the balmy
+voyage, save in the brief interval of tempest, and his victors mocked
+him, baffled as he was, with their purpose of amusement.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We shall get up the band to-morrow evening,&quot; said Major Ravenel, &quot;and
+have a dance; the gallop would go grandly here. See what reach of
+quarter-deck we have! There are Germans on board who play in concert
+violins and wind-instruments.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Suppose we dress as sea-nymphs,&quot; said Honoria Pyne; &quot;enact a masque for
+old Neptune's benefit? It would be so complimentary, you know; bring
+down the house, no doubt. I have a sea-green tarlatan lying so
+conveniently. Colonel Latrobe looks exactly like a Triton, with that
+wondrous beard. A little alum sprinkled over its red-gold ground would
+do wonders in the way of effect&mdash;would be gorgeous&mdash;wouldn't it, now,
+Miss Harz?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But all that could be done on shore as well, Miss Pyne,&quot; I replied, in
+the way of reminiscence. &quot;It is a pity to waste our opportunities of
+observation now, in getting up costumes; and, for my part, I confess
+that I have a wholesome dread of these sea-deities, and fear to
+exasperate their finny feelings by reducing them to effigies. Thetis is
+very spiteful, sometimes; and jealous, too, you remember.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Miss Pyne did not remember, but did not mean to be baffled either, she
+would let Miss Harz know, even if that lady <i>did</i> know more about
+mythology than herself; and, if no one else would join her, meant to
+play her <i>r&ocirc;le</i>, of sea-nymph all alone, with Major Latrobe for her
+Triton in waiting, tooting upon a conch-shell, and looking lovely! At
+which compliment, open and above-board, poor Major Latrobe, who was over
+head and ears in love with her, and a very ugly man, only bowed and
+looked more silly than before, which seemed a work of supererogation.</p>
+
+<p>After the rest were gone, Miss Lamarque and I concluded to promenade on
+the nearly-deserted deck, in the moonlight, and let the excitement of
+the evening die away through the medium of more serious conversation.
+She was a woman of forty-five, still graceful and fine-looking, but
+bearing few traces of earlier beauty, probably better to behold, in her
+overripe maturity, than in the unfolding of her less attractive time of
+bud and blossom. Self had been laid aside now (which it never can be
+until the effervescence of youth and hope are over). She had accepted
+her position of old maid and universal benefactress; and sustained it
+nobly, gracefully. She was thoroughly well-bred and agreeable, very
+vivacious, astute, and intelligent, rather than intellectual, yet she
+had the capacity (had her training been different) to have been both of
+these.</p>
+
+<p>I remember how it chanced that, after a long promenade, during which we
+had discussed men, manners, books, customs, costumes, and politics, even
+(that once tabooed subject for women, now free, to all), with infinite
+zest and responsiveness that charmed us mutually, so that we swore
+allegiance on the strength of this one day's rencontre, like two
+school-girls or knights of old&mdash;remember how the dropping of her comb at
+his feet caused Miss Lamarque to pause, compelling me to follow her
+example, by reason of our intertwined arms, in front of the man at the
+wheel, as he stooped to raise it and hand it to her with a seaman's bow.
+His ready politeness, unusual for one in his station, determined us to
+cultivate his maritime acquaintance, and in a short time we had drawn
+forth the outlines of his story, simple and bare as this was of
+incident.</p>
+
+<p>His picturesque appearance had impressed us equally during the day, but
+until now we had not met in concert about Christian Garth, for such we
+soon found was the name of our polite pilot.</p>
+
+<p>He was a Jerseyman, he told us, of German descent, married to the girl
+of his heart, and living on the coast of that adventurous little State,
+famous alike for its peaches and wrecks.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sall had a stocking full of money,&quot; he informed us, &quot;silver, and
+copper, and gold, when he married her, for her mother had been a famous
+huckster&mdash;and never missed her post in the Philadelphia market for
+thirty years, and this was her child's inheritance, and with this money
+he had fixed up his old hut, till it looked 'e'en a'most inside like a
+ship-captain's cabin.'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And now Sall wanted him to stay at home, he informed us, with her and
+the children, but somehow or other he could never tarry long at the
+hearth, for the sea pulled him like it was his mother, and the spell of
+the tides was on him, and he must foller even if he went to his own
+destruction, like them men that liquor lures to loss, or the love of
+mermaids.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;All land service is dead when likened to the sea,&quot; he said, shaking his
+great water-dog head, and looking out lovingly upon his idol. &quot;But ships
+a'n't like they oncst was, ladies,&quot; he added, &quot;before men put these here
+heavy iron ingines to work in 'em&mdash;it's like cropping a bird's wing to
+make a river-boat of a ship, and a dead, dead shame to shorten sails
+till it looks like a young gal dressed in breeches or any other
+onnatural thing&mdash;for a sailing-ship and a full-flowing petticoat always
+rise up in a true man's mind together&mdash;God bless them both, I say.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;To which we cordially say amen, of course,&quot; said Miss Lamarque,
+laughing. &quot;We should have been at a loss, however, Mr. Garth, but for
+our engine during the dead calm preceding the storm, when our ship's
+sails flapped so lazily about her masts, and she rocked like a baby's
+cradle without making progress. It is well the engineer manoeuvred so
+successfully while we lay fireless on the low rolling waves; but we are
+speeding along merrily enough now, to make up for it all&mdash;I take comfort
+in that&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But not exactly in the right direction, though, to suit my stripe,&quot; he
+said, turning his quid in his mouth as he looked out to leeward,
+revealing, as he did so, a fine yet rugged profile relieved against the
+silvery purple sheen of the moonlit sky.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you see that dark object lying beyond&quot; (our eyes mechanically
+followed his), &quot;so still on the water?&quot; and he indicated it with the
+pipe he held in one sinewy hand&mdash;for the native courtesy of the man had
+involuntarily proffered us the homage of removing it from his lips, when
+we addressed him.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes&mdash;what is it? a wreck? a whale? a small volcanic island? Do
+explain, Mr. Garth,&quot; said Miss Lamarque.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nothing but an iceberg, and we are bearing down upon it rather too
+rapidly, it seems to me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And so speaking, he turned his wheel in silence warily.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But you have the command of the helm, and have nothing to do but&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Obey orders,&quot; he interrupted, grimly. &quot;Ef the captain was to tell me to
+run the ship to purgatory, I'd have to do it, you know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But surely the captain would not jeopardize the lives of a ship's
+company, even if he likes warm latitudes, by ordering you to run foul of
+an iceberg; and, if he did, you certainly would not dare to obey him
+with the fear of God before your eyes?&quot; remonstrated Miss Lamarque,
+indignantly. &quot;For my part I shall go to him immediately and desire him
+to change his course&mdash;but after all I don't believe that dingy black
+thing is an iceberg at all&mdash;an old hencoop rather, thrown over from some
+merchant-ship, or a vast lump of charred wood. You are only trying to
+alarm us.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ef you was to see it close enough, you would find it to shine equal to
+the diamond on your hand; but I hope you never will, that's all&mdash;I hope
+you never will, lady! I sot on a peak of that sort oncst myself for
+three days in higher latitudes than this here&mdash;me and five others, all
+that was spared from the wreck of the schooner Delta, and we felt our
+convoy melting away beneath us, and courtesying e'en a'most even with
+the sea, before the merchant-ship Osprey took us off, half starved, and
+half frozen, and half roasted all at oncst! Them is onpleasant
+rickollections, ladies, and it makes my blood creep to this day to see
+an iceberg in konsikence; but a man must do his dooty, whatsomever do
+betide. It was in the dead of night, and Hans Schuyler had the wheel, I
+remember, when we went to pieces on that iceberg, all for disregarding
+the captain's orders; you see, he meant to graze it like!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Graze it!&quot; almost shrieked Miss Lamarque. &quot;Did he think he was driving
+a curricle? Graze it&mdash;Heaven, what rashness!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't&mdash;don't! Mr. Garth,&quot; I petitioned; &quot;I shall never sleep a wink on
+this ship if you continue your narrative.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do&mdash;do! Mr. Garth,&quot; entreated Miss Lamarque, whose penetration showed
+her by this time that the pilot was only playing on our fears, for want
+of a better instrument for his skill. &quot;I quite enjoy the idea that you
+have actually been astride a fragment of the arctic glacier, and that we
+may perhaps make the acquaintance of a white bear ourselves when we get
+near our iceberg, or a gentle seal. Wouldn't you like one for a pet,
+Miss Harz?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is very cold,&quot; I said, digressively. &quot;I feel the chill of that
+fragment of Greenland freeze my marrow. I must go fetch my shawl; but
+first reassure us, Mr. Garth, if possible.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He laughed. &quot;I have paid you now for making fun of me to-day,&quot; he said,
+saucily. &quot;I saw your drawing of me in your books, and heerd the ladies
+laughing. I peeped as I passed when Myers took the helm, and I wanted to
+see what all the fun was about; then I said to myself, 'I will give her
+a skeer for that if I have a chance'&mdash;but, all the same, the chill you
+feel is a real one, for as sure as death that lump of darkness is an
+iceberg. I have told you no yarn, as you will find out to-morrow when
+you ask the captain. I'll steer you clear of the iceberg though, ladies,
+never fear. Hans Schuyler has not got the wheel to-night&mdash;you see he was
+three sheets in the wind anyhow, and the captain, says, 'Hans,' says he,
+'don't tech another drop this night, or we'll never see another mornin'
+till we are resurrected,' and so he turned into his hammock and swung
+himself to sleep&mdash;a way he had, for he didn't keer for nothin' where his
+comfort was concerned, having been raised up in the Injies.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Come, Miss Lamarque,&quot; I interrupted. &quot;I must not hear another word.
+'Macbeth doth murder, sleep,' and I shall be nervous for a month after,
+this. So, good-night, Mr. Garth, and be sure you merit your first name
+by taking good care of us while we imitate the example of your worthy
+captain and 'swing ourselves to sleep,' or rather let the waves perform
+that office for us. I shall make it my care to-morrow morning early, if
+you still hold the helm, to show you my sketch, and convince you that it
+was never made for fun at all, but that it is a real portrait of a very
+fine-looking seaman, a real viking in appearance, and somewhat better
+than one at heart, I trust. I shall hope to earn your good opinion
+instead of ill-will, when you have only seen my sketch.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have it already, you have it already, young gal&mdash;young miss, I
+mean,&quot; he said, with a wave of the hand, which meant to be courteous, no
+doubt, but seemed only defiant. &quot;An' this much I kin say without injury
+to Sall&mdash;that I'd rather hear you talk and see you smile, as I has been
+watchin' of you constant do to-day, than go to the circus in New York,
+or even to a Spanish bull-fight, or hear a Fourth-of-July oration,
+or'tend camp-meetin'&mdash;and that's saying no little&mdash;an' no iceberg shall
+come near you while Christian Garth lays a hand upon this helm. But
+don't be skeered, ladies; no harm will come to the good ship Kosciusko.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I declare our pilot is quite chivalrous, as far as you are concerned,
+for I marked his glance, Miss Harz,&quot; said Miss Lamarque, archly, as we
+turned our faces cabin-ward, under the protection of our helmsman's
+promised vigilance. &quot;See what it is to be young and pretty, and remark
+the truth of the old proverb, as exemplified in his case, that 'extremes
+meet.' Victoria herself is not more independent of me or my
+position&mdash;established facts as both are in the eyes of some&mdash;than is
+Christian Garth. To him, this outsider of the world of fashion, I am
+only a homely old woman; no prestige comes in to garnish the unvarnished
+fact&mdash;a plain old maid, my dear&mdash;with not even the remembrance of beauty
+as a consolation, nor its remnant as a sign of past triumphs, 'only this
+and nothing more,' as that wonderful man Poe makes his raven say. We
+never find our level until we go among people who know and care nothing
+about us, who have never 'heard of us'&mdash;that exordium of most greetings
+from folks of our own class. It is absolutely refreshing to be so
+unaffectedly despised and slighted&mdash;it does one a world of good, there
+is no doubt of that, especially when one's grandfather was a
+Revolutionary notability, and other antecedents of a piece&mdash;but men are
+all alike at heart, only the worldly ones wear flimsy masks, you know,
+and pretend to adore intellect and ugliness, when beauty is the only
+thing they care for&mdash;all a sham, my dear, in any case.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, all alike,&quot; I repeated, making, as I spoke, one mental entire
+reservation. &quot;All <i>vain</i> alike, I mean; flatter their vanity ever so
+little and they are at your very feet, asking 'for more,' like Oliver
+Twist; more bread for <i>amour propre</i>, the insatiable! It was that sketch
+of mine that wrought the spell, though unintentionally, of course, and
+the sly fellow knew very well that it was no caricature&mdash;that is, if he
+peeped, as he pretends&mdash;but a tolerably correct likeness that might have
+satisfied Sall herself. By-the-by, I have a great mind to bestow it upon
+him as a 'sop for Cerberus,' should her jealousy ever be aroused by your
+reports of his devotion to me, or admiration rather, most unequivocally
+avowed, it must be acknowledged. I really had no intention of injuring
+Sally, and, if you think it best, will make the <i>amende honorable</i> by
+being as cross as possible to him to-morrow.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, no, carry out your first intention and conciliate him; for,
+remember, he has us in the hollow of his hand. Bestow the picture, by
+all means, and just as many smiles and compliments as he can stand, or
+you can afford to squander; for you are worse than a mermaid, Miss Harz,
+for fascination, all the gentlemen say so; and, as to Captain
+Falconer&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;They are malignants,&quot; I rejoined, ignoring purposely the last clause of
+the sentence which I had interrupted; &quot;and you are perfidious to hear
+them slander me so. I hate fascinating people; they always make my flesh
+crawl like serpents. The few I have known have been so very base.&quot; &quot;Good
+specimens of '<i>thorough</i> bass,'&quot; she interpolated, laughing.&mdash;&quot;I am sure
+I am glad I have no attributes of fascination, if a strange old work I
+met with at Beauseincourt may be considered responsible. Did you ever
+see it, Miss Lamarque, you who see every thing? Hieronymus Frascatorius
+tells of certain families in Crete who fascinated by praising, and to
+avert this evil influence some charm was used consisting of a magic
+word (I suppose this was typical of humility, though related as
+literal). This <i>na&iuml;vet&eacute;</i> on the part of the old chronicler was simply
+<i>impayable</i>, as Major Favraud would say, with his characteristic shrug.
+One <i>Varius</i> related (you see my theme has full possession of me, and
+the book is, a collation of facts on the subject of fascination of all
+kinds, even down to that of the serpent) that a friend of his saw a
+fascinator with a look break in two a precious gem in the hands of a
+lapidary&mdash;typical this, I suppose, of some fond, foolish, female heart.
+Fire, according to this author, represents the quality of fascination;
+and toads and moths are subject to its influence, as well as some higher
+animals&mdash;deer, for instance, who are hunted successfully with torches;
+and he relates, further, that in Abyssinia artificers of pottery and
+iron are thus fearfully endowed, and are consequently forbidden to join
+in the sacred rites of religion, as fire is their chief agent. Isn't
+this a strange, quaint volume, to set before a king? and how do you like
+my lecture delivered <i>extempore?</i>&quot;.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, vastly! but I did not know that was your style before. Don't
+cultivate it, dear, if you hope to win manly hearts. Men like to do all
+the lecturing themselves, and I find it diplomatic to feign profound
+ignorance on all subjects, outside of a bandbox; it delights them so to
+enlighten us. No wonder they fancy us fools when we feign foolishness so
+admirably&mdash;lapwings that we are!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But I never do, in such society. My experience is different from yours.
+I always pretend to know twice as much as I do, when they are about; it
+bluffs them off, and they are credulous sometimes as well as ignorant,
+notwithstanding their boasted acumen.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your lamp of experience needs trimming, my pretty Miriam,&quot; she said,
+shaking her head, &quot;if you really believe this. They never forgive
+superiority, assumed or real; none but the noble ones, I mean; who, of
+course, are in the minority. Give a pair of tongs pantaloons, and it
+asserts itself. Trousers, my dear, are at the root of manly presumption.
+I discovered that long ago. A man in petticoats would be as humble as a
+woman. This is my theory, at least; take it for what it is worth. And
+now to sleep, with what heart we may, an iceberg being in our vicinity;&quot;
+and, taking my face in her hand, she kissed me cordially. &quot;It is very
+early in our acquaintance for such manifestations to be allowable,&quot; she
+said, kindly, &quot;but I am a sort of spoiled child of society, and dare to
+be natural. I consider that the best privilege that attaches to my
+condition, that of the 'bell-wether' of Savannah <i>ton</i>&mdash;the
+universally-accepted bore! You know&mdash;Favraud has told you, of course; he
+always characterizes as he goes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He has called you the most agreeable woman in Savannah, I remember,
+young or old, and was truly glad, on my account, to know that you were
+on board. Of your brother he spoke very kindly also, even admiringly.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, yes, I know; but of Raguet there is little question now. His wife's
+death has crushed him. I never saw so changed a man; he is half idiotic,
+I believe; and I am with him now just to keep those children from
+completing the work of destruction. Six little motherless ones&mdash;only
+think&mdash;and as bad as they can possibly be; for poor Lucilla was no
+manager. Isn't it strange, the influence those little cottony women get
+over their husbands? You and I might try forever to establish such
+absolute despotism, all in vain. It is your whimpering sort that rule
+with the waving of a pocket-handkerchief; but poor, dear little woman,
+she is powerless now; and I suppose the next will be like unto her.
+Raguet would never look at any thing feminine that hadn't white eyes and
+pink hair (yellow, I mean, of course)&mdash;his style, you know, being dark
+and stern, he likes the downy, waxy kind. All this is shockingly
+egotistical; but the question is, who that has a spark of individuality
+is otherwise? Good-night, again, and may all sweet dreams attend you;
+for my part, I never dream, being past the dreaming age, and realities
+fortunately disappear with daylight; even cross children are wheedled
+into quietness, and servants forget to fidget and giggle; and, for
+mosquitoes, there are bars. Adieu.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And thus we parted, never to meet again in mutual mood like this!</p>
+
+<p>Yet, had the free agency of which some men boast been ours, we had
+scarcely chosen to face the awful change&mdash;to look into each other's eyes
+through gathering death-doom!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="III_CHAPTER_III"></a><h2>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>Before my dreaming eyes was the terror of a hungry, crunching tooth,
+fixed in the vessel's side, that of the iceberg, lying black in the
+moonlight like a great coal crystal, grimly awaiting our approach, but
+the reality, as well as the figment, had disappeared when I emerged at
+sunrise from the suffocating cabin, to the atmosphere of the cool and
+quiet quarter-deck, which had just undergone its matutinal.</p>
+
+<p>Armed with an orange and a biscuit for physical refreshment, I depended
+on sea and sky for my mental entertainment; and in my hand I bore a
+slender scroll, destined as a propitiatory offering to our offended
+helmsman.</p>
+
+<p>I was glad to find again at the wheel our pilot of yesterday.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your iceberg has disappeared, Mr. Garth,&quot; I said, as I extended to him
+the sketch I had made of his noble <i>physique</i> the day before, &quot;and here
+is a picture for your wife, which she will see was not drawn for fun.
+Women are sharper than men about such matters. There, I bestow it not
+without regret.&quot; He received my offering with a smile, and nod of his
+great curly head, opened it, gazed long and seriously upon it, and, with
+the single word &quot;Good,&quot; rolled it up again, and consigned it to some
+bosom pocket in his flannel shirt, into which it seemed to glide as a
+telescope into its case, revealing, as he did so, glimpses of a hairy
+breast, and vigorous chest, more admirable for strength than beauty,
+certainly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I will keep it there,&quot; he said, &quot;young miss,&quot; pressing it closely
+against his side with his colossal hand, &quot;until I get safe home to the
+Jarseys, and to Sall, or go to Davy's locker, one or other, but which it
+will be, young gal&mdash;young miss, I should be saying&mdash;is not for me to
+know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nor for any one,&quot; I rejoined, solemnly; &quot;all rests with God.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;With God and our engineer,&quot; he resumed, tersely; &quot;them sails is of
+little account, now the mainmast is struck away; them floppen
+petticoats, wat the wind loves to play in and out, layin' along like a
+lazy lubber that it is, and leaving its work for others to do. It was a
+noble mast, though, while it stood&mdash;and you could smell the turpentine
+blood in its heart to the very last. It was as limber as a sapling, and
+never growed brittle, like some wood, with age and dryness. No storm
+could splinter it, and it would fling itself over into the high waves
+sometimes, rayther than snap and lash them like a whip. But there it
+lies, burned with the fire of heaven's wrath, at last, and leaving its
+fires of hell behind, in the heart of the Kosciusko.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have changed your mind on the subject of engines, Mr. Garth, I am
+glad to see. Truly, ours seems to be doing giant's work; now we are
+flying, to be sure.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Rushing, not flying, young lady&mdash;that's the word; our wings are little
+use to-day, you see, such as are left to us. Runnin' for dear life, we'd
+better say, for that's the truth of the matter, and may the merciful
+Lord speed us, and have in his care all helpless ones this day!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The lifted hand, the bared head, the earnest accents, with which these
+words were spoken, gave to this simple utterance of good-will all the
+solemnity of a benediction or prayer.</p>
+
+<p>I noticed that, after replacing his tarpaulin, the lips of Garth
+continued to move silently, then were compressed gravely for a time,
+while his eye, large, clear, and expressive, was fixed on space.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you still see an iceberg, Mr. Garth? Do you really apprehend danger
+for us now?&quot; I asked, after studying his countenance for a moment; &quot;or,
+are you again desirous to try the nerves of your female passengers? I
+think I must apply to the captain this time for information.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, danger,&quot; he replied, in low, sad tones, ignoring my last remark,
+or perhaps not hearing it at all&mdash;&quot;danger, compared with which an
+iceberg might be considered in the light of a heavenly marcy. There is a
+chance of grazing one of them snow-bowlders, or of its drifting away
+from a ship, when the ripples reach it, or, if the wust comes, a body
+can scramble overboard, and manage to live on the top of one of them
+peaks, or in one of their ice-caves, with a few blankets, and a little
+bread and junk and water, fur a space, so as to get a chance of meetin'
+a ship, or a schooner; but, when there is something wrong in a ship's
+heart, there ain't much hope for rescue, onless it comes from above.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He hesitated, smiling grimly, rolled his quid, crammed his hat down over
+his eyes, and again addressed himself to his wheel, and, for a few
+moments, I stood beside him silently.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The ship is leaking, I suppose,&quot; I said at last, &quot;so that you apprehend
+her loss, perhaps,&quot; and my heart sank coldly within me, as I spoke;
+&quot;but, if this be true, why does not the captain apprise us? No, you are
+quizzing me again, and very cruelly this time, very unwarrantably.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Yet I did not think exactly as I spoke, strive as I might to believe the
+man in jest. Too much solemnity and sorrow both were discernible in his
+worn and rugged features, hewn grandly as if from granite, to admit of a
+hope like this. His words were earnest, and some great calamity was in
+store, I could not doubt, or at least he apprehended such. For some time
+he replied not, then, slowing pointing to the base of the stricken
+mainmast, which still showed an elevation of some inches above the deck,
+he revealed to me the truth without a word.</p>
+
+<p>As my eyes followed his guiding finger, I saw, with terror unspeakable,
+a thin blue wavering smoke-wreath, float upward from the floor, and,
+after curling feebly about the truncated mast, disappear in the clear
+sunlit atmosphere, again to arise from the same point, that of the
+juncture of the mast and deck, creeping through some invisible crevice,
+as it seemed to form itself eternally in filmy folds, and successively
+elude the eye as soon as it shaped to sight. I understood him then.
+There was fire in the heart of the ship, and I knew the hold was filled
+with cotton; it was smouldering slowly, and our safety was a question of
+time alone!</p>
+
+<p>Pale, transfixed, frozen, I lifted my eyes to the man, who seemed to
+represent my fate for the moment. &quot;Was it the lightning?&quot; I asked, after
+a pause, during which his pitying eye rested on me drearily. &quot;Did the
+fire occur in that way?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, the lightning it was; and God's hand, which sent the shaft direct,
+alone can deliver us.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I seemed to hear the voice of Bertie speak these words. Things grew
+confused; I wavered as I stood, lifted my hand to my head; the face of
+Christian Garth grew large and dim, then, faded utterly. I knew no more
+until I found myself seated on a coil of rope, leaning against the
+bulwark, while a young girl stood beside me, fanning and bathing my
+face, and offering me a glass of water.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are better now,&quot; she said, kindly; &quot;the man at the wheel called me
+as I was passing, and pointed out your condition, and I led you here,
+and ran for water. Being up so early is apt to disagree with some
+people.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What are these people crawling about the deck for? Is all hope over, or
+was it only a dream?&quot; I asked.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, you are quite wild yet from your swoon; it is only the calkers
+stopping up the seams, one of the captain's queer whims they say; but
+how they are to dance to-night, those <i>magnificos</i> I mean, without
+ruining their slippers with this pitch, I cannot see! Thank Goodness! I
+belong to a church, and am not of this party, and don't care on my own
+account, nor does the captain, I believe. I was placed under his care at
+Savannah, and I suppose it is only to stop the ball that&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She was interrupted by the approach of the officer under discussion, but
+he passed us gloomily and went on to inspect the workmen so unseasonably
+employed, as it seemed, in a labor that, save in a case of long voyages,
+is always performed in port.</p>
+
+<p>His melancholy air, and the preoccupation of his manner, confirmed my
+worst fears.</p>
+
+<p>Again I sought the Ixion of the vessel, who calmly and stolidly
+performed his duty as if, indeed, Fate directed, without a change of
+feature now, or expression.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Has the captain no hope of rescue, Mr. Garth?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh yes; he thinks we shall meet a ship or two between now and noon&mdash;we
+'most always do, you know&quot;&mdash;rolling his quid slowly, and hesitating for
+a while; &quot;keep heart, keep heart! I had thought from your face you were
+stronger; besides, the pumps are doing good work in the hold: who knows
+what may come of it, who knows?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Alas! alas! I could not rise to the level of this dim hope. &quot;Think of
+the burning crowd, the sheet of flame, the terrible destruction!&quot; I
+murmured; &quot;I must go now and apprise those poor wretches below that
+their time is short; they have a right to know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>His vice-like hand was on my arm. &quot;You do not go a step on such an
+errand,&quot; he muttered. &quot;It is the captain's business; he will 'tend to it
+when the time comes, for he is a true man, and, the bravest sailor on
+the line. He means to do what's right, never fear. It is my dooty to
+hold you here until he comes, onless you promise me to be discreet.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I shall be discreet, never fear&mdash;&quot; and his grasp relaxed. I sped me
+back to the coil of rope on which I had left my young companion,
+intending to partake with her there my biscuit and orange, so needed now
+for strength.</p>
+
+<p>I found in her stead (for she had departed in the interval) a
+delicate-looking young woman, plain and poor, a widow evidently from the
+style of her shabby mourning and sad expression of face, bearing in her
+arms a weird and sickly-looking child, evidently a sufferer from spinal
+disease&mdash;an infant as to size, but preternaturally old in countenance.</p>
+
+<p>The steady gaze of its large and serious eyes affected me
+magnetically&mdash;eyes that seemed ever seeking something that still eluded
+them, and which now appeared to inquire into my very soul.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is your little boy ill, madam?&quot; I asked at last; and at the sound of my
+voice a smile broke over his small, sallow features, lending them
+strange beauty, but dying away instantly again into an expression of
+startled suspicion.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, very ill,&quot; she answered, clasping him tenderly as he clung to her
+suddenly. &quot;He has some settled trouble that no medicine reaches, and you
+see how small and light he is. Many a twelve months' babe is heavier
+than he, yet he is three years old come Monday next, and he is 'cute
+beyond his years, it seems to me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You seem very weak and weary,&quot; I rejoined. &quot;I noticed you yesterday
+with interest, sitting all the time with your boy on your knee. You must
+need exercise and rest. Go and walk now a little, while you can;&quot; and I
+stretched my arms for her baby.</p>
+
+<p>To her surprise, evidently, he came to me willingly&mdash;attracted, no
+doubt, by the gleam of the watch-chain about my neck, and still further
+propitiated by a portion of my orange, which he greedily devoured.</p>
+
+<p>In the mean time the poor, pale mother took a few turns on the
+quarter-deck, and, disappearing therefrom a moment, returned with a
+small supply of cakes and biscuits which she had sought in the steward's
+room.</p>
+
+<p>An inspiration of Providence, no doubt, she thought this proceeding
+later, which at the moment was only intended to anticipate the delay
+attendant on all second-class meals.</p>
+
+<p>These cakes, with a pains-taking diligence, if not
+fore-thought&mdash;peculiar to all feeble animals, squirrels, sick children,
+and the like&mdash;did he one by one cram, and compel into my pocket,
+unconscious as I was at the moment of his miser-like proceeding
+(instinctive, probably), which later I detected, to his infinite
+rejoicing. In company with my slender purse, and bunch of useless keys,
+a pencil, and a small memorandum-book, they remained <i>perdu</i> until that
+moment of accidental discovery arrived which was to test their value and
+place it &quot;far above that of rubies.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Light as a pithless nut seemed this little creature in my strong,
+energetic arms, and yet his mother staggered beneath his weight.</p>
+
+<p>She insisted, however, after a time, on resuming her charge of him, as
+it was proper she should do, and then sat beside me, delivering herself
+of a long string of complaints and grievances, after the fashion of all
+second-rate, solitary people when secure of sympathy.</p>
+
+<p>She overrated my benevolence on this occasion, however. I was lost in
+painful reverie, and scarcely understood a word of her communication,
+which I was obliged at last to cut short, for I had resolved, now that
+my strength was recruited, on the only visible course remaining to me&mdash;I
+would seek Miss Lamarque, confide to her the statement of Christian
+Garth, relate to her what my eyes had seen, and be guided by her
+determination and judgment, with those of her brother, a man of sense, I
+saw, and whose instincts, no doubt, would all be sharpened by the
+jeopardy of his children.</p>
+
+<p>She was sitting up in her state-room when I knocked at the door, still
+in her berth, the lower one&mdash;from which the upper shelf had been lifted
+so as to afford her room and air&mdash;looking very Oriental and handsomer
+than I ever had seen her, in her bright Madras night-turban and fine
+white cambric wrapper richly trimmed.</p>
+
+<p>Her face broke into smiles as soon as she beheld me; and she invited
+me, in a way not to be resisted, so resolute and yet so kindly was it,
+to partake with her of the hot coffee her maid was just handing her in
+bed, in a small gilded cup, a portion of the service on the stand beside
+her.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is our Southern custom, you know, Miss Harz&mdash;always our <i>caf&eacute; noir</i>
+before breakfast, as a safeguard against malaria. To be sure, there is
+nothing of that sort to be apprehended at sea, but still habits are
+inveterate; second nature, as the moralists and copy-books say, as if
+there ever could be more than one. What nonsense these wiseacres talk,
+to be sure! But there is cream, you see, for those who like it&mdash;boiled
+down and bottled for the use of the children before leaving home&mdash;one of
+Dominica's notions;&quot; and here the smiling maid, with her little,
+respectful courtesy, tendered me a reviving cup of Miss Lamarque's
+morning beverage, Mocha, made to the last point of perfection, dripped
+and filtered over a spirit-lamp by Dominica, the skillful and
+neat-handed.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But you are very pale to-day, my child&mdash;what on earth can be the
+matter?&mdash;There, Dominica, I thought I heard Florry cry! Go and help
+Caliste get the children ready for a trot upon deck before breakfast,
+and don't forget to give each one a gill of cream and a biscuit&mdash;or,
+stay, twice as much for the two elder before they go up. It may be some
+time before they get their regular morning meal.&mdash;They have to wait, you
+know, Miss Harz, which is such rank injustice where children are
+concerned. Patience never belongs to unreasoning creatures, unless an
+instinct, as with animals; men have to learn its lessons through the
+teachings of experience&mdash;that strictest of school-masters. Now, you see,
+I have my lecturing-cap on, and am almost equal to you or Dr. Lardner
+in my way. But it takes you to define fascination! I suppose Mrs.
+Heavyside, however, could help you there&mdash;for nothing short of
+witchcraft could account to me for her elopement with that dreary man!
+To leave her sweet children, too, as if all the men on earth could be
+worth to a true mother her teething baby's little toe or finger!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Would she never stop&mdash;never give one loop-hole for doubt to enter?&quot; I
+thought.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But what in the world ails you&mdash;has Dunmore, the disconsolate, been
+making love again? Has Captain Falconer declared himself too soon? and
+do you hesitate, on account of Miss Moore? Don't let that consideration
+influence you, I beg, for she is the greatest flirt in Savannah, the
+truest to the vocation, and I like her for that, anyhow. Whatever a man
+or woman has to do, let him or her do earnestly. That isn't exactly
+Scripture, but near enough, don't you think so?&quot; and she laughed
+merrily.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have been on deck this morning,&quot; I commenced, &quot;Miss Lamarque, and saw
+Christian Garth, and&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He has been terrifying and electrifying you again with his tale of
+horrors&mdash;there, it is all out. Why, he is as sensational as 'Jane Eyre,'
+this new English novel I am just reading,&quot; drawing it from under her
+pillow and holding it aloft as she spoke. &quot;Currer Bell is not more
+mysteriously awful, but Garth is not artistic. I detected his intention
+by the inconsistency of his expression of face, which bore no part in
+his narrative, and at once exposed him, you must remember&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, yes&mdash;but this time&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nonsense, Miriam Harz! the iceberg is gone, I know. Why, what a nervous
+coward you are, to be sure, with all that assumed bravery! I am twice
+as courageous, I do believe, despite appearances; I really begin to be
+of opinion that it is safer to be at sea than on land&mdash;now what do you
+think of that for a heterodoxy?&mdash;A second cup? why, of course, and a
+third, if you want it; I am delighted you like it. These little S&egrave;vres
+toys are but thimbles, but I always carry them about with me by sea and
+land, and have for years; I feel as if there were luck in them, not one
+of the original three has been broken&mdash;there&mdash;there!&mdash;just as I was
+boasting, too!&mdash;never mind, such accidents <i>will</i> occur; but your pretty
+pongee dress is sadly stained with the coffee; besides, as <i>you</i> dropped
+the cup, it is <i>your</i> luck, not mine; and I want an odd saucer, anyhow,
+to feed Desir&eacute;e out of; she sleeps in that willow basket you see in the
+corner of the state-room, Miss Harz, and is lazy, like her mistress, of
+mornings.&mdash;Desir&eacute;e! Desir&eacute;e! peep out, can't you, now you have your
+long-desired S&egrave;vres saucer to lap milk from?&mdash;She won't touch delft,
+Miss Harz. She is the most fastidious little creature!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Alas! alas!&quot; and I groaned aloud.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not taking on about that silly cup, I hope&mdash;no; what can it be then, a
+megrim? No. Well, I can't imagine any thing worse, to save my life.
+Here, let me read you this, it is fine&mdash;it is where Jane Eyre feels
+herself deserted, and this comparison about 'the dried-up channel of a
+river' thrills one. Just hear it;&quot; and she was about commencing&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not now&mdash;not now, Miss Lamarque; stern realities demand our attention.
+Lay your book aside, be calm, be firm, but listen to me seriously.
+Christian Garth informs me, nor he alone&mdash;my own eyes have done the
+rest&mdash;that the cotton in the hold has taken fire from the lightning
+yesterday; has been slowly smouldering ever since the mast was
+struck&mdash;and that the ship's hours are numbered!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O God! O God!&quot; and she bowed her head upon her clasped and quivering
+hands. &quot;But, Captain Ambrose&mdash;he did not tell you so?&quot; looking up
+suddenly. &quot;Christian Garth, indeed! his impudence is surprising&mdash;another
+hoax, I suppose,&quot; and she tried to smile; &quot;such a coarse creature, too!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We shall see, but for the present say nothing; only get up and dress as
+quickly as you can, but it is important to be very quiet, for fear of
+causing confusion. I have promised discretion.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Call Dominica, then, for me, Miss Harz,&quot; gasping and stretching forth
+her arms. &quot;I can do nothing for myself&mdash;nothing&mdash;I am so weak, so
+helpless. Yet I must believe he is&mdash;you are mistaken!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I trust it may prove so. But let me assist you; Dominica is best
+employed making ready the little ones and giving them food&mdash;strengthening
+them for the struggle. She will be nerveless if she knows the truth, and
+you are not in a condition to conceal it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Just as you will, then. My trunk&mdash;will you be so kind as to unlock it
+and give me out the tray&mdash;that picture? After that I can get along
+alone.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I silently did as she desired, and saw her place a covered miniature
+about her neck before she arose. Very few minutes sufficed this morning
+for her toilet&mdash;usually a tedious and fastidious one&mdash;her dress, her
+bonnet, her shawl, were hastily thrown on, her watch secured with the
+few jewels lying upon the night-table; the rest of her valuables were
+with other boxes in the hold, the repository of all unneeded baggage,
+and these, of course, she could scarcely hope to save in case of fire,
+even if lives were rescued.</p>
+
+<p>Then, together, we went out, just in time to join the little troop of
+young children and nurses on their way to the deck. Miss Lamarque did
+not reply to their tumultuous greeting, but, silently taking the baby
+Florry, her namesake, in her arms, kissed her many times. I had told her
+while, she was dressing, of the smoke-wreaths about the base of the
+broken mast, and she believed in the testimony my eyes had afforded me
+far more than in the reports of Christian Garth. We did not encounter
+Mr. Lamarque when we first went on deck; he had gone forward to smoke,
+some one said; but Captain Ambrose was standing alone, telescope in
+hand, and to him we addressed ourselves, quietly.</p>
+
+<p>He seemed startled when I disclosed the result of my observation&mdash;for I
+did not choose to commit the pilot&mdash;but he did not attempt to deny the
+truth of the condition of things, and conjured us both to entire quiet
+and composure, and, if possible, to absolute silence. The safety of five
+hundred people, he said, depended on our discretion; the ship might not
+ignite for days, if at all, he thought, so carefully had the air been
+excluded from the cotton by the process of tight calking, so as to seal
+it almost hermetically; indeed, the fire might be wholly extinguished by
+the pumps, which were constantly at work, pouring streams of water
+around and through the hold; and a panic would be equal to a fire in any
+case. Such were his calmness and apparent faith in his own words, that
+they did much to allay Miss Lamarque's fears. My own were little
+soothed&mdash;I never doubted from the beginning what the end would be.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Lamarque approached us while the conference with the captain was
+going on, and, under the seal of secrecy, the condition of affairs was
+communicated to that gentleman.</p>
+
+<p>I never saw a man so crushed and calm at the same time. His handsome
+face seemed turned to stone&mdash;he scarcely spoke at all, and made no
+inquiries. I think his mind, like mine, was made up to the worst. Yet he
+commanded himself so far as to go to the breakfast-table and superintend
+the meal of his little children, about whom he hung, like a mother-bird
+who sees the shadow of a hawk above her brood, from that moment until
+the <i>d&eacute;no&ucirc;ment</i> of the drama separated us two forever.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Lamarque and I sat down together on a bench, while the host of
+hungry passengers crowded down to the cabin at the welcome summons of
+the bell, and I was aware again of the pale widow and her patient child
+standing near me.</p>
+
+<p>A sudden thought occurred to me. This woman, more than any one among us,
+needed the strengthening stimulus of good food, and this meal might be
+her last on shipboard&mdash;on earth, perhaps&mdash;for a dull, low, ominous sound
+began to make itself heard to my ear as soon as the murmur of the crowd
+subsided.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Trust me with your child again while you go down and eat your breakfast
+in my place to-day. It is a whim of mine. I have had coffee with this
+lady in her state-room, and shall not appear at the table. You may bring
+me a slice of bread, if you choose, when you come back, and one for
+baby. Do not refuse me this favor.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Much pleased at my attention, as I could see, she went to the grand
+first table, with its high-heaped salvers of snowy rolls and biscuit,
+its delicate birds and fowls, its fragrant coffee and tea, so different
+from the dregs of the humble board at which her second-class ticket
+alone entitled her to appear; and, to save her from possible
+humiliation, I wrote a line to the steward; so she feasted, no doubt, in
+state.</p>
+
+<p>Again I enacted the <i>r&ocirc;le</i> of self-appointed nurse to a creature that
+looked more like a fairy changeling than a flesh-and-blood creation.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are a strange woman, Miriam Harz! At such an hour as this, what
+matters the quality of food?&quot; said Miss Lamarque, sententiously. &quot;After
+all, what can that invalid and her child be to you in any case? They are
+essentially common and mean. You never saw them before, and may never
+see them again.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;In view of such a catastrophe as that before us, all distinctions fade,
+Miss Lamarque. This is the last meal any one will take on the ship
+Kosciusko&mdash;she is doomed! The woman might as well get strength for the
+chance of saving herself and child. I doubt whether any second table
+will be spread to-day!&quot; I spoke with anguish.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You cannot believe this! Why, after what the captain said, days may go
+by before any real danger manifests itself! Ships must pass in the
+interval&mdash;many ships may pass to-day, within a few hours, ready for our
+relief, if needed; and see, the smoke has ceased to curl about your
+broken main-mast! That shows convincingly that the fire is being gotten
+under&mdash;extinguished, probably.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, no! no! no! not with that low, terrible roaring in the hold. The
+fire is gaining strength, and our agony will soon be over.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I sat with clasped hands and bowed head before her, insensible to her
+words. I suppose she strove to strengthen me. I think she tried to
+soothe. Failing in both, she rose and went away, and in her place came
+Christian Garth, relieved from the helm, and stood a moment beside me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't be down-hearted, young gal, an' wait for me. Ef the Lord lets me,
+I will save you, and the old lady, too; that is, ef she is your aunt or
+mother or near of kin.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I shook my head drearily.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have no hope, then, Mr. Garth?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hope? yes; the best of hope&mdash;the Christian's hope. God can do any thing
+He pleases, we all know, and He may stretch forth his hand when all
+seems dark; but Captain Ambrose is not one to run a risk of that sort,
+so he has sent me to work upon a raft&mdash;one of two he is making for the
+seamen if the wust comes to the wust. But you see, I have been on lost
+ships afore now, an' I know there is no larboard nor starboard rules
+when men are skeered. So I shall make my raft to hold the womenfolk, for
+the boats will be for the sailors&mdash;mark my word&mdash;and them that's wise
+will wait till the press is over and take the rafts.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There are little children,&quot; I said; &quot;six of them belonging to that lady
+and Mr. Lamarque. Don't forget them, Mr. Garth, and the poor little
+widow coming now to claim her baby; this miserable little creature I am
+holding until she breakfasts. Don't lose sight of these, either, in the
+crowd, if, indeed, we are obliged to have recourse to your raft.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pray rayther that it may float us all to safety,&quot; he said, sternly,
+&quot;for your best chance of being saved will be on that raft, if matters go
+as I think they will. Trust me, for I will come;&quot; and he passed away
+just before the little widow came to my side again.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I came up as soon as I could, to relieve you. I know how cross baby is
+when he gets restless, and I was afraid you might tire of him. See! I
+have brought his bread, and this waiter of tea and toast for you; now
+you must take a mouthful.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She knew nothing of our danger, it was plain. &quot;Did you leave the other
+passengers at table?&quot; I asked; &quot;the captain, was he there?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The question was never answered, for the attention of my interlocutor
+was riveted now, as was my own, on the companion-way, from which a wild
+and frightened-looking crowd was densely emerging, with a confused hum
+of voices that announced their recognition of their impending danger.
+The change of age, of pain, of woe, seemed sealed upon each aspect, as
+one by one, and phantom-like, in rapid succession, those who had so
+lately gone down to feast returned to the upper day, like grim ghosts
+coming from a church-yard carnival.</p>
+
+<p>It was a sight to stir the stoutest spirit.</p>
+
+<p>At the close of the repast, the captain had announced the truth to his
+passengers, and followed them now to enjoin them to firmness and
+efficiency, both so greatly needed at this crisis.</p>
+
+<p>Mounted on the capstan, he addressed them briefly, and not without
+influence. Such was the power of his simple and manly bearing over these
+distracted souls, that even the wildest listened with decorum.</p>
+
+<p>This was no immigrant-ship, loaded with stolid or desperate men,
+insensible of high teachings, and alone desirous of personal safety. Yet
+the universal instinct asserted itself, and for the time courtesies were
+set aside, and family affections were all that were regarded.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Lamarque, pale, yet collected, now stood surrounded by the children
+of her brother, leaning upon his arm while the captain spoke. Husbands
+and wives were together, sisters and brothers, servants and their
+masters&mdash;each group revealed its several household affinities. We only
+were alone&mdash;the dreary little widow, whose name I never knew, and Miriam
+Monfort; and on natural principles we clung together.</p>
+
+<p>It is true that Miss Lamarque, by many signs, implored me to come to
+her, but I would not. It was like intruding on a bed of death, I felt,
+to break through ties of blood at such a time, by thrusting a foreign
+presence amid devoted relatives; and I was too proud, or perhaps too
+selfish, to intrude where I must be secondary, unless I took away
+another's rights.</p>
+
+<p>The captain had promised, in his brief address, to protect his
+passengers to the utmost of his power&mdash;leaving the result with God. He
+had entreated them to be calm, and to preserve order&mdash;so essential to
+safety; had mentioned his confidence that a ship must pass before the
+catastrophe could possibly occur; but added that, to prepare for the
+worst, he had ordered the construction of two rafts&mdash;one for the use of
+the seamen, the other for the reception of food and necessaries.</p>
+
+<p>His plan was to attach these to the larger boats, and so provide against
+want; in the certainty, however, that on such a route relief must soon
+present itself, in the shape of ship or steamer.</p>
+
+<p>He called on all able to abet his exertions to present themselves
+forthwith, so that universal safety might be insured; not only by making
+the rafts, but the securing of food upon them, and comforts for the
+women and children, who represented so large a portion of the
+passengers. He answered for the fidelity of his seamen with his life.
+There was not one among them, he knew, who would lift a finger to
+disobey him. He said these words in conclusion:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And now, if there is any one present sufficiently imbued with the grace
+of God to fix the anxious minds of these voyagers in prayer, such at
+least of them as are powerless otherwise to aid our exertions, let him
+appear and minister to their tribulation. This task is not for me,
+although the holiest. My duties call me elsewhere.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>So adjured, a man, whose wild, fanatical appearance had given rise to
+the rumor that the famous &quot;Lorenzo Dow&quot; was on board, sprang on a
+bulkhead, and commenced to exhort the crowd about him, from which a file
+of pale, determined-looking men was slowly emerging to join the seamen
+at the other end of the vessel in their efforts for the public weal. But
+many lingered, either overcome and paralyzed by the stringency of
+circumstances, or unequal to exertions from personal causes&mdash;aged men,
+women, and children, chiefly&mdash;and to these the frenzied speaker
+continued to address his words of exhortation and warning.</p>
+
+<p>Such a tirade of terrible objurgation I felt was entirely out of place
+in a scene like this, and calculated to excite the worst passions of the
+human mind, instead of persuading it to serenity and submission, so
+essential now; for to me the captain's last words represented the final
+grace of the preacher, when, with closed eyes and outspread hands, he
+dismissed his flock from the temple at the close of the services. From
+that vessel and all that concerned it we were virtually enfranchised
+from that moment&mdash;dismissed to destruction, so to speak, by fire or
+flood, or rescue from beyond, as the case might be, to life or death, as
+God willed&mdash;for the ship's mission was accomplished.</p>
+
+<p>I shrank as far as possible from the wild, waving arms, the frenzied
+eyes, the gaunt and wolfish aspect, the piercing, agonized voice of the
+fanatic, who had assumed to himself the solemn office of soul-comforter
+in a time of extremity. I saw from a distance his long, lank figure
+writhing like a sapling in a storm, as it overtopped the crowd; but his
+words were lost on my ear, and I sat leaning back against the bulwark
+with folded hands, absorbed in my own thoughts, when a young girl,
+bursting from the throng, came and threw herself down before me, and
+buried her face in my lap, convulsed with sobs. When she looked up, I
+recognized the young person who had bathed my face in the morning during
+my partial swoon&mdash;a fair and lovely-looking girl of about eighteen
+years, pallid and ill now with excitement.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, it is so terrible!&quot; she cried; &quot;I cannot&mdash;cannot bear it, and he
+says we are all hopelessly lost unless we have repented; that there is
+no death-bed salvation; and this is our death-bed, you know, for the
+Spanish ship passed us without stopping, and we scarcely hope to see
+another. O cruel, cruel fiends! to pretend they did not understand our
+signals, and leave us to destruction.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And she clasped her hands in mute and bitter despair&mdash;no actress was
+ever so impressive.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We must make up our minds to the worst,&quot; I said, as calmly as I could.
+&quot;Then, if God sees fit to deliver us, we shall be all the more thankful.
+You must not believe what this ignorant and panic-stricken man tells
+you. Think of the thief on the cross whom Christ pardoned in dying.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then you hope to be permitted to see God! You dare to hope this?&quot; she
+asked, gazing into my very eyes, so closely did she come to me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, surely in his own good time! I have done nothing so very wicked, I
+hope, as to exclude me from my Father's face forever&mdash;have you? Now,
+don't be frightened; speak calmly.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I don't know&mdash;I don't know. I should be afraid not to call myself
+desperately wicked at such a time; he says we all are, you know. We are
+all miserable sinners.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is very abject to talk and feel thus, and I don't believe that God
+approves of it,&quot; I said, indignantly. &quot;He gives us self-respect, and
+commands us to cherish it. Such abasement is unworthy of Christian
+souls. It is very bitter to die, as young as we are; but, if we have
+done our best to serve Him, we need&mdash;we ought not to be afraid to meet
+our God.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She clung to my outstretched hand. She strengthened my spirit by the
+fullness of her need. The feeble widow with her child, too, crept close
+to me, weeping and trembling.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do not leave me,&quot; she entreated; &quot;let us stay together to the very
+last.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nay, that may be a long time,&quot; I answered, smiling feebly, and nerved
+for the first time to encouragement; &quot;for the captain will do his best
+to save his passengers&mdash;the women especially, I cannot doubt; and see
+what bounteous provision he is making for their support!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And I pointed to the piles of flour and sugar barrels, the boxes of
+crackers and of hams; of figs and raisins, the hampers of wine and ale,
+which were profusely piled on the quarter-deck ready for lowering to the
+rafts.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He means to take care of us, you see, by the permission of Providence,&quot;
+I said, almost strengthened by this dependence, &quot;and we will remain
+calmly together, and drink whatever cup God offers us&mdash;humbly, I hope.&quot;
+Yet, even as I spoke, my heart rebelled against the fiat of my fate, and
+the young life within me rose up in fierce conflict with its doom.</p>
+
+<p>At this moment of bitter strife of heart, Mr. Dunmore, the youthful poet
+of whom I have already spoken, stood before me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have found you at last,&quot; he said, &quot;deputed as I am to do so by Miss
+Lamarque. It is a point of honor with her to care for you personally in
+this crisis. You know Major Favraud placed you under her care; besides
+that, her regard for you impels this request. She bids me say&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I interrupted him hastily.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;This is no time for ceremonials, truly, Mr. Dunmore; yet, had family
+concurrence been perfect, it seems to me that her brother might have
+undertaken this mission. I have no wish to thrust myself undesired into
+any household circle at such a crisis.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He is wholly absorbed with his children.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As he ought to be, Mr. Dunmore, and, when the time of peril comes, it
+is of their needs alone that he will and must think. I am alone in this
+vessel, as I shall remain. I did not leave Savannah under Miss
+Lamarque's care. She is very generous, very considerate, but I will not
+embarrass her motions, nor yours, nor any one's. It is the duty of
+Captain Ambrose to see to the welfare of his female passengers. I shall
+not be forgotten among these&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He stood before me with his knightly head uncovered, his handsome face
+as calm as though he were a guest at a festival instead of a patient and
+interested watcher at a funeral-pyre. His birth, his breeding, his
+genius even, asserted themselves in that mortal hour. He was calm,
+collected, serious, but not afraid.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The peril will be great to all, of course,&quot; he said, quietly, &quot;but no
+gentleman will prefer his own safety to that of the most humble and
+desolate woman on the ship. To you, Miss Harz, I devote my energies
+to-day, to you and these ladies of your party, whoever they may be&mdash;,&quot;
+bowing gently as he spoke. &quot;I may fail in delivering you from danger,
+but it shall not be for want of effort on my part. Believe my words, I
+have less care for life than most people, and now let me offer you my
+escort through that maddened crowd (the rest may follow closely), to
+reach Miss Lamarque.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, Mr. Dunmore, I <i>must</i> remain just where I am, I have promised
+myself to do so; this is much; and these unhappy women&mdash;they, like
+myself, are alone, or seem to be. Should you see fit to do so, and be
+willing to be so encumbered, you can return after a lapse of time; but
+make no point of this, I entreat you. I think that Captain Ambrose will
+observe good order and save his helpless ones first. You know he
+promised this&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>There was a moment's pause, and movement of eye and hand, and then he
+spoke again, very softly:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, and much more that can never be fulfilled, for already the cabin
+is in flames, the companion-way is closed, and the fire in the hold is
+making fearful headway. I have heard the seamen have sworn to secure the
+boats; you are strong and resolute&mdash;be prepared for the very worst.&quot;
+Then, speaking in his usual tone, he added: &quot;Since the banner of Spain
+passed near enough to show us the rampant lions and castles on its
+crimson shield, and yet made no sign, I have had little hope of rescue
+from a ship. It was ominous!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not intended, then,&quot; I said, eagerly. &quot;Oh, I am glad of this, at
+least, for the honor of human nature.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A strange consideration at such a time! You are a study to me, Miss
+Harz; yours is not apathy, like mine, but true courage, even in this
+death-struggle, and I will save you if I can, for you have a noble
+soul!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>All further dialogue was cut short by the wild shout that rose from the
+crowd, the delusive cry of &quot;A sail, a sail!&quot; and Dunmore rushed with the
+rest to descry its myth-like form, if possible. It was some moments
+before hope again died down to a flat level of despair.</p>
+
+<p>Too remote for signal or trumpet was that distant, white-winged vessel
+gliding securely on its path of peace, unconscious of the extremity of
+the mighty steamer it distinguished dimly, no doubt, by the aid of
+telescopes.</p>
+
+<p>However this might have been, for the second time on that day of direst
+exigency, a ship went by, observed yet unobserving.</p>
+
+<p>Fainter and fainter grew the accents of the fierce, fanatical preacher;
+his excitement forsook him as the danger became more and more imminent.</p>
+
+<p>The crowd broke into groups. Pale, stern men, with rigid features, who
+had been employed aiding in the construction of the rafts, returned now
+to the sides of their wives and children.</p>
+
+<p>Through a vista on the deck I discerned Miss Lamarque, sitting quietly
+with her youngest nursling in her arms, beside her brother. His children
+and slaves were gathered around her knees. Dunmore was giving her my
+message, I could not doubt, from the glances she cast in my direction,
+as he stood near by. I knew that he would soon turn to come again, but
+my resolution was fixed.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Ambrose, with a face grown old in half a day, gray, abstracted,
+wretched, passed and repassed me several times, telescope in hand.</p>
+
+<p>Ralph Maxwell on the round-house kept constant watch, his attitude
+dauntless, his face uplifted and keen, field-glass in hand. His
+West-Point training stood him in good stead now. Captain Falconer, a
+naval officer, had returned to the side of Miss Oscanyan, the woman he
+had loved hopelessly for years, and, before the scene closed between us
+forever, I saw him clasp her to his bosom; so that trying hour had for
+some high spirits its crowning consolations, its solace and reward, and,
+whatever else was in store, the martyrdom of love was over.</p>
+
+<p>An eager hand caught my shawl. &quot;He is coming back, coming to persuade
+you to leave us,&quot; said the young girl; &quot;but you have promised not to
+part from us, and I feel that God will remember us if we remain together
+firm and fast, we three.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Then the pale widow spoke in turn: &quot;Let me stay beside you too,&quot; she
+entreated; &quot;it makes me feel stronger, I am so desolate&mdash;&quot; and she bowed
+her head and wept.</p>
+
+<p>I would have said in the strange, calm bitterness that possessed my
+soul: &quot;What value has life to you and your deformed one? Poor, widowed,
+sickly, and despised, why should you wish to live? Why encumber me?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>But thoughts like these were not for human utterance now, and we sat
+together, hand locked in hand for a time, waiting for the end, as men
+may wait in years to come, when the earth is gray with sin, for the
+coming of the fiery comet that they know is destined to consume them.</p>
+
+<p>For was not this ship our world, penned in as we were on every side, and
+separated from all else by an ocean inexorable and illimitable as space,
+and were not we likewise looking forward to a fiery doom&mdash;our finite,
+perhaps final, day of judgment?</p>
+
+<p>I could understand then, for the first time, how condemned criminals
+feel&mdash;well, strong, yet dying! I knew how Walter La Vigne, the
+self-doomed, had felt, and some passages of Madame Roland's appeal rose
+visibly before me, as if written on the air rather than in my memory. I
+had read the book at Beauseincourt, and it had powerfully impressed me;
+and this, I remember, was the passage that swept across my brain:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And thou whom I dare not name, wouldst thou mourn to see me preceding
+thee to a place where we can love one another without wrong&mdash;where
+nothing will prevent our union&mdash;where all pernicious prejudices, all
+arbitrary exclusions, all hateful passions, and all tyranny, are silent?
+I shall wait for thee, then, and rest!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>So centred were my dying thoughts on Wentworth&mdash;so calmly did I await
+the great change that men call sudden death!</p>
+
+<p>All this time&mdash;a time much briefer than that I have taken in recounting
+my sensations&mdash;the glorious summer's sun, the sun of morning, was
+bathing the sea; the ship, with beauty, and a soft, fresh breeze, was
+fanning every pallid brow with a caressing, silken wing, that seemed to
+mock its wretchedness.</p>
+
+<p>I thought not once of Christian Garth. I had ceased to strain my eyes
+for a distant sail, to seek to compromise with my fate or make
+conditions with my Creator. Dunmore was forgotten. I was composed to
+die&mdash;not resigned. These things are different; a bitter patience
+possessed me that I felt would sustain me to the end, but I was not
+satisfied that my doom was just or opportune.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Farewell, sweet, young, vigorous life!&quot; I moaned aloud. &quot;Farewell,
+Miriam! It will not be thou, but a phantom, that shall arise from dead
+ashes! Farewell, dear hand, that hast served me long and well!&quot; and I
+kissed my own right hand. I had not known until that moment how truly I
+loved myself. &quot;Sister, lover, farewell! Mother, father, receive me!
+Gentle Constance, reach forth thy guiding hand and lead me to my
+parents! Wentworth, remember me! Saviour, my soul is thine!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I bowed my head. I had no more to say. Unwilling I was to die&mdash;afraid I
+was not; for, as I sat there, my whole life swept before me, as it is
+said to do before the eyes of the drowning, and rapidly as one may sweep
+the gamut on a piano with one introverted finger, and I saw myself as
+though I had been another. I had done nothing to make me afraid to meet
+my God; so, with closed eyes, I lingered in the shadow, conscious of
+nothing save exceeding calm, when the grasp of my gentle friend of the
+moment aroused me to a sense of what was occurring, and I saw, with
+horror indescribable, the fierce flames leaping from the deck, heard the
+hoarse shouts, beheld the lurid surging of an agonized and despairing
+multitude! But above all rang the clear, trumpet-tones of Captain
+Ambrose, soon to sink in death:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;To the boats&mdash;to the boats! but save the women first&mdash;the children&mdash;as
+ye are Christian men! So help ye, mighty God!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I heard later how signally this noble charge was disregarded; how
+utterly self triumphed over generosity and duty; and how, in enforcing
+the example all should have followed. Captain Ambrose lost his valiant,
+valuable life. But this was thought nothing of then, and I sat patiently
+down to perish!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="III_CHAPTER_IV"></a><h2>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>It was sunset when I first felt able to sit up beneath the awning of
+sails which provident hands had stretched above the central platform
+reserved for the occupancy of the women and children, spread thick with
+mattresses on the raft, and look about me understandingly.</p>
+
+<p>We were riding smoothly over the long, low, level billows of that summer
+sea, sustained beyond their reach on what seemed a rude barn-floor,
+composed as this was of the masts, booms, and yards, roughly lashed
+together by tarred ropes, no longer needed on the destined ship, and
+which had been assigned by the captain for that purpose to Christian
+Garth.</p>
+
+<p>A mast was erected in the front of this hastily-constructed raft, on
+three sides of which were breastworks, with strong, loose ropes
+attached, so that those who clung to this refuge might support
+themselves with comparative safety, or rather have a chance for life,
+when our &quot;floating grave&quot; should hang suspended perpendicularly on the
+steep side of a mountain-billow, or drift beneath it.</p>
+
+<p>Just below, and surrounding the small, elevated platform on which I
+found myself when I revived, stretched on a slender mattress by the side
+of my feeble widow and her moaning child, were rows of barrels, firmly
+fastened by cleats, so as insure, to some degree, not only the
+preservation of our food and water, but to form a sort of bulwark of
+protection for those who occupied the central portion of the raft.</p>
+
+<p>The young girl, of whom I have spoken as having attached herself to me
+during the last moments of my stay on shipboard, and an old negro woman,
+whose crooning hymns made a strange accompaniment to the dashing waters,
+and whose stolid tranquillity seemed to reproach my anguish, were our
+only companions on the sort of dais assigned to his female passengers by
+Christian Garth.</p>
+
+<p>The man himself, to whom we owed our deliverance, stood near his
+primitive mast, trimming his sail carefully, and looking out with his
+far-reaching, sagacious ken over the waste of waters, into which the
+blood-red, full-orbed sun seemed dipping, suddenly, as for his
+night-bath.</p>
+
+<p>A few of the common passengers of the Kosciusko, and a knot of the
+seamen, comprising not more than twenty souls, composed the groups,
+scattered about the roughly yet securely lashed raft, silent and
+observant all, as men who face their doom are apt to be.</p>
+
+<p>I looked in vain for one familiar face, and for a moment regretted that
+I had been withheld, as by some spell, for whose weird influence I could
+never sufficiently account, from having cast my destiny with theirs, who
+were so much nearer to me in station and congeniality of spirit than
+those around me. With Miss Lamarque's hand locked in mine, I should have
+vied with her, I felt, in cheerful courage; and the knightly calmness of
+Dunmore might have sustained my drooping, fainting soul. These were my
+peers, and, <i>with</i> them, I should have been better content to be tried.</p>
+
+<p>But the white squall, which had in no way affected us (so small and
+partial was the sphere of its influence), had sufficed to separate ours
+irretrievably from our companion-raft, and the squadron of boats that
+had promised not to forsake us. And now the eye of agony was strained in
+vain over the weltering waste, for a vestige of those refugees from the
+Kosciusko&mdash;buried, perhaps, a thousand fathoms deep, by their sudden
+visitors, beneath the waves of that deadly Atlantic sea.</p>
+
+<p>Tears rained over my face as I thought of this probability, and,
+hopeless as I was of rescue, the almost certain fate of my
+companion-voyagers fell over me like a pall. &quot;Better, perhaps&mdash;far
+better had it been&quot;&mdash;I thought so then&mdash;&quot;had we all perished together in
+that terrific sheet of flame that rose up like a dividing barrier
+between us at the last. Fit emblem of the final day of doom. Our trials
+were but begun. What more remained? God in heaven only knew!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And rapidly, and in panoramic succession, all the fearful adventures of
+raft and boat that I had ever read of, or heard related, passed across
+my mind, ending with that latest, and perhaps the most fearful of
+all&mdash;the wreck of the Medusa!</p>
+
+<p>The night came down serene and beautiful. As the sun disappeared in
+ocean, up rose the full-orbed moon&mdash;crimson and magnified by surrounding
+vapors&mdash;that to the practised eye portended future tempest, calm as the
+ocean and the heavens then seemed.</p>
+
+<p>The constellations, singularly distinct and splendid, had the power to
+fix and fascinate my vision&mdash;never felt before&mdash;as they shone above me,
+clear and crystalline as enthroned in space&mdash;judges, and spectators,
+cold and pitiless as it seemed to me, in the strangeness and forlornness
+of my condition&mdash;Arcturus, and the Ursas, great and little, and Lyra,
+and the Corona Borealis, Berenice, and Hydra, and Cassiopea's chair;
+these and many more. I marked them all with a calm scrutiny that belongs
+to terror in some phases. The stars seemed mocking eyes that
+night&mdash;smiling and safe in heaven&mdash;the moon, a cold and cruel enemy with
+her vapory train, so grandly sailing across the cloudless heaven&mdash;so
+careless of our fate&mdash;the wreck of a ruined world as many deem
+her&mdash;veiling in light her inward desolation.</p>
+
+<p>A faint and vapory comet lurked on the horizon&mdash;like a ghastly
+messenger&mdash;scarcely discernible to the human eyes, yet vaguely ominous
+and suggestive&mdash;a spirit-ship it might be&mdash;watching in silence to bear
+away the souls of those lost at sea!</p>
+
+<p>There was deep stillness&mdash;unbroken, save by the lapping and plashing
+waters. Even the crooning hymns of the old negro woman had died away;
+and the moans of the suffering child, and the sobs of the weary mother,
+and the eager exclamations of Ada Greene (for such I learned was the
+name of my young companion), were, for a season, lost alike in sleep.</p>
+
+<p>Food had been distributed&mdash;prayer had been offered&mdash;all seemed favorable
+so far to our preservation. We were on the track of voyage&mdash;the pathway
+of ships&mdash;and the sea was tranquil as a summer lake; up to this point,
+the arm of God had been extended over us almost visibly. Would He
+forsake us now? I questioned thus, and yet I could not, dare not, hope
+as others hoped!</p>
+
+<p>The morning came; I woke, aroused by Salva's song, from troubled sleep;
+and, as I rose to a sitting posture, a troop of sea-birds that had been
+swooping overhead, fled with a fiend-like screaming.</p>
+
+<p>The mother and child were already consuming their scant allowance of
+food. Ada Greene was standing self-poised, swaying like a slender reed
+with the motion of the raft, so as never to lose her balance, like a
+young acrobat, with her folded arms, her floating hair, and fair Aurora
+face, uplifted to the day.</p>
+
+<p>Over the raft were scattered groups of men taking their morning meal;
+but, as before, the stalwart form of Christian Garth was at the helm, or
+rather, mast and rudder merged in one, which he controlled with calm,
+sagacious power.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is there a ship in the distance, that you gaze so earnestly?&quot; I asked
+of the young girl as I put back my hair that had clustered thickly over
+my face in my uneasy slumber, and followed eagerly the direction of her
+eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh! no; only a school of dolphins; but it is so pretty! Some came quite
+near just now; the men were harpooning them; but if we had them we could
+not cook them, you know, on this miserable contrivance.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;One we should be very grateful for, Ada, since it is all that lies
+between us and destruction!&quot; I answered, sorrowfully, for the levity of
+her spirit grieved and shocked me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I don't know about that; I think we might as well have gone down at
+once as stay here, and be roasted and starved. How hot it is to-day!
+What would I not give for a good glass of ice-water! Don't look so
+shocked; we shall be saved, of course. I am not the least afraid about
+that, for Mr. Garth says we <i>must</i> see a ship before evening. Don't you
+mark the flag flying at the mast-head? He brought it on board on
+purpose, so that they might not mistake our country (the packets, I
+mean), and give us the go-by as that Spanish vessel did! But they do say
+that was a pirate; and that, instead of sitting on a plank, we should
+have been walking a plank by this time, had they rescued us. I'm rather
+glad they didn't, though, after all&mdash;things couldn't be much worse than
+they are, could they, now?&mdash;There, I came very near falling, I declare!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The moans of the sick woman at my side became almost constant toward
+noon; and she was obliged to surrender her infant wholly to my charge,
+for the haemorrhage of the day before had returned, and she was fast
+drifting into unconsciousness. &quot;Water, water!&quot; was the only intelligible
+cry that left her lips, and that we had to give was warm and brackish,
+from the occasional lapping of the sea against the barrels, into which
+it oozed insensibly.</p>
+
+<p>The sun shone down hot and brazen, from the lurid heavens, covered with
+filmy clouds, so equally overspreading it that a thin, gray veil seemed
+to interpose between us and its scorching rays, scarcely tempering them
+by its diaphanous medium.</p>
+
+<p>Beneath it lay the sea, like a copper shield, smooth and glowing,
+seething like a boiling caldron, with its level foam, for the long,
+low-rolling billows lifted themselves but lazily from Ocean's breast,
+and assumed no distinctness of form or motion. Not the faintest breeze
+came to relieve the stifling closeness of the atmosphere, or lift the
+collapsed sail, or furled flag, that clung around our mast. The air
+shimmered visibly around us, as though undergoing some transformation
+from the heat, some culinary process, through which it was to be
+rendered unfit for human lips to breathe. Birds flew low and heavily
+around the raft, as though their wings met such resistance as fish find
+in water, alighting occasionally to pick up languidly morsels of
+rejected food.</p>
+
+<p>Still the old negro's crooning hymns went on, recommenced with morning
+light. To my sad heart, the refrain bore a mournful significance:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>&quot;In the land of the New Jerusalem<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">There shall be no more sea.&quot;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>She sat, a wrinkled hag, with a leering, repulsive face, with her feet
+planted firmly on her mattress, her knees elevated, her long, ape-like
+arms closely embracing these&mdash;her fingers, strung with brass and silver
+rings, intertwined with snake-like flexibility.</p>
+
+<p>On her head was the inevitable bright-colored handkerchief, the badge of
+her race, or rather of her condition in those days, and she wore the
+decent, blue-cotton frock, which marked her for a plantation-negro.
+Large hoops were in her flat, enormous ears, that seemed to suspend her
+shoulders as they touched them, drawn up and narrowed as these were,
+even beyond their natural hideousness, by her attitude, one which she
+maintained as stolidly as a dervish.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You must help us,&quot; I said, at last, when the crisis came, and affairs
+waxed desperate. &quot;You must take the child, at least, and care for him.
+See, it requires two persons to sustain his dying mother&mdash;one to wet her
+lips, one&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Deed, honey,&quot; she interrupted, coolly, &quot;you must 'scuse me dis oncst;
+I has jus' as much to do as I kin posomply 'complish, in keepin' of
+myself dry, comfable, and singin' ob my hyme-toones. We has all to take
+our chances dis time, an' do for our own selves, black and white; an' I
+don't see none ob my own white folks on dis raf', wich I is mighty proud
+of. Dar, now! I does b'leve dat is a ship sail way off dar. Does you see
+it, honey?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And she pointed to a large white gull, skimming the main at some
+distance. Disgusted with her selfishness, I vouchsafed her no further
+notice at the time, and her crooning went on during the whole period of
+the bitter death-struggle of that poor sufferer, whose name I never
+knew, but whose little, deformed waif, the orphan of the raft, remained
+my heritage.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You will take care of him,&quot; she had said to me, in her last conscious
+moments, &quot;my baby-boy, my little&mdash;&quot; the name died on her lips, and she
+never spoke again.</p>
+
+<p>When she was dead, Christian Garth caused her to be wrapped in
+sail-cloth, weighted with chains, and, with a brief prayer, consigned to
+the deep. His superstitious sailor's fears rebelled against the idea of
+keeping a corpse on board one moment longer than necessary, so the rites
+of sepulture were speedily accomplished.</p>
+
+<p>When I remonstrated, feebly enough it is true, for exhaustion was
+supervening on long-sustained effort, at his haste, which, even under
+the circumstances, seemed to me indecent, he coolly spoke of it as a
+measure essential to the good of all.</p>
+
+<p>Talismanic as were these words on such occasion, mine were the lips that
+murmured the brief prayer, a portion of the solemn Episcopal
+grave-service that I chanced to remember, above the poor, pale corpse,
+even while my weary arms inclosed the struggling child, who,
+understanding nothing of the truth, would fain have plunged after his
+mother into depths unknown.</p>
+
+<p>A low, long roll of thunder smote on the ear, like a message to the
+ocean, from the heavens above, as we saw the waters close greedily over
+the form of our dead passenger. The men who had launched the body from
+the raft looked up and listened fearfully, and Christian Garth hastened
+to trim his sail.</p>
+
+<p>It was sunset now, and the clouds gathered so rapidly about the sun,
+that he sank empalled in purple to his watery bed, leaving no trace
+behind to mark his faded splendor.</p>
+
+<p>A sudden breeze sprang up, infinitely refreshing at first to soul and
+sense, and again the thunder lumbered and crashed about us. The billows
+heaved and leaped like steeds just freed from harness, tossing their
+white manes; the raft shuddered and reeled with a deadly, sickly motion,
+like a creature in strong throes, plunging with frantic suddenness into
+the troughs of the waves at one moment, as if impelled by fear, then
+rallying to their summits, only to cast itself wildly down again.</p>
+
+<p>All was confusion, dire and terrible. Then burst the storm upon
+us&mdash;rain, wind!</p>
+
+<p>I was conscious of clutching, with one hand, a rope which strained and
+swayed desperately, while with the other I grasped the affrighted baby
+to my breast.</p>
+
+<p>Ada Greene and the old negro woman clung together, hanging to the same
+cord of safety, flung to them, to all of us, by the hand of Christian
+Garth.</p>
+
+<p>The barrels strained and groaned, and broke from their fastenings; the
+awning was wrenched from its mooring, and swept away; the bitter brine
+broke over us and choked our cries; the anguish of death was upon us
+without its submission. We struggled instinctively to breathe, to live;
+we grappled desperately with circumstances; we fought against our doom.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly the sea dropped to rest&mdash;the storm was spent; a low, sighing,
+soughing gale swept around our nucleus of despair, and the surging of
+the sea was like a bitter funeral-wail. The air grew cold and chill; one
+vast, pall-like cloud enveloped the whole face of the unpitying
+heavens, that seemed literally &quot;to press down upon our very faces like a
+roof of black marble.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>No moon, no stars, were visible; we had no light of any kind, nor could
+we ascertain the damage done until the cold, gray morning broke in gloom
+and rain upon us. Then it was made plain to us that our food had all
+been swept overboard&mdash;together with six seamen and five of the
+passengers. There remained on the raft only three shuddering women and a
+little child&mdash;and a handful of weary and discouraged men, sustained and
+led to a sense of duty by the dauntless master-spirit of one alone&mdash;the
+presence of Christian Garth, indomitable through all hardships. So it
+had fared with us for six-and-thirty hours of our experience on &quot;our
+floating grave.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>We had been washed from our little platform, which ordinarily lifted us
+above the lapping of the sea during the prevalence of the storm&mdash;and we
+regained it now, glad to repose even on the sea-soaked mattresses bereft
+of awning. By the mercy of God some glutinous sea-zoophytes had been
+tangled among them, and by the help of the brine-soaked biscuit in my
+pocket (crammed there, it may be remembered, as a precious hoard for a
+time of dire necessity, on the morning of the fire, by the small,
+cunning fingers of the sickly child), we breakfasted, or rather broke
+our fast&mdash;we four, the child, the negress, Ada Greene, and I&mdash;and life
+was aroused again in every breast by means of a briny morsel.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A cup of coffee would not be amiss just now,&quot; said the girl, laughing,
+&quot;but the Lord knows we can wait.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>There was a strange, bright light in the eyes of the young girl as she
+spoke these words, and she was arraying her hair coquettishly with some
+bunches of sea-weed, which had been cast up by the storm, and from which
+the eager, famishing lips of the little boy had been permitted to suck
+the gluten before discarding the skeleton stems.</p>
+
+<p>That hair was in itself a grace and glory&mdash;rippling from crown to waist
+in sheeny, golden splendor, fine as silk, and glossy as the yellow floss
+threads of pale, ripe Indian-corn&mdash;beautiful, even in its dishevelled
+and drenched condition, as an artist's dream. Devoid as it was of
+regular beauty, the face beneath, with its clear blue eyes, red lips,
+and pure complexion, the pink and white that reminds one of a sweet-pea
+or ocean-shell, had struck me as very lovely from the first; nothing to
+support this groundwork of excellence had I discovered, however, either
+in the form of the head, which was ignoble, or the expression of the
+face, which was both timid and defiant, or the tones of the voice, which
+were shrill and harsh by turns&mdash;yet, as my fellow-voyager and sufferer,
+I was interested in this young creature, not forgetting, either, her
+attention during my pending swoon, of which mention has been made.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am going to the party, whatever the preacher may say, and whether
+Captain Ambrose wills it or no. I am under his care and protection, you
+see, to go to New York to my aunt, Madame Du Vert, the famous milliner,
+and I am to learn her trade. Her name is Greene, so they call her Du
+Vert, to make out that she is French&mdash;<i>vert</i> is <i>green</i>, in French, you
+see; or so they tell me. Now, Captain Ambrose is a church-member, too,
+and he does not want dancing on his ship, and so he made the calkers
+pitch the deck&mdash;that was to break up the ball, you know; but don't tell
+any one this for the 'land's sake,'&quot; drawing near to me and whispering
+strangely, with her forefinger raised&mdash;&quot;or all those proud Southern
+people would pitch into me&mdash;pitch, you understand?&quot; and she laughed
+merrily&mdash;&quot;their white satin slippers and all!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You must not talk so, Ada;&quot; and I took her hand, which was burning.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Why not? Who are you, to prevent me? I am as good as you any day&mdash;or
+Miss Lamarque either, or any of those haughty ones&mdash;though my father was
+a negro-trader. Well, whose business was that but God's? If He don't
+care, who need care?&mdash;An't I right, old mammy?&quot; appealing to the ancient
+negress, who had suspended her croon to listen.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, indeed&mdash;that you is, honey; right to upholden your own dad&mdash;nebber
+min' what he did to serbe the debble. But you looks mighty strange,
+chile, outen your eyes. Wat dat you sees ober dar&mdash;is it a ship,
+gal?&mdash;or must we&mdash;&quot; and her voice sank to a mutter&mdash;&quot;must we fall back
+on dis picaninny, to keep from starvation?&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I understood her dreadful suggestion even before the words fully left
+her cannibal lips, exposing her yellow fangs; from the glance of her
+cruel eye in the direction of the child, and the working of her long,
+crooked talons, rather than fingers, writhed like knotted serpents; I
+understood them with an instinct that made me clutch him closely to my
+breast, and narrowly watch his enemy from that hour until the time when
+my brain failed and my eyes closed in unconsciousness, and with the
+determination to plunge with him into the sea rather than devote him to
+such a fate or yield to such an alternative as this wretch in human form
+had more than hinted&mdash;even should the animal instinct, underlying every
+nature, presume to dictate to reason at the last!</p>
+
+<p>We could but die&mdash;that was the very worst that Fate had in store for
+us&mdash;<i>but</i> die in the body! How infinitely worse that the soul should
+perish through the selfish sensuousness of cannibalism, which would
+degrade life itself below dissolution, even if preserved by such means!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am ready now to go to Captain Ambrose for assistance,&quot; said Ada
+Greene, poising herself before me, and having surrendered or forgotten
+her first idea, evidently, in the new mania of the moment. &quot;Of course,
+he does not intend to leave us here to perish, and he is in the next
+cabin&mdash;but a step; see how easily I can get to him, and I shall be back
+before you can say 'Presto!'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>As nimbly as a sea-gull runs upon the sand, the young creature flew
+across the now level raft toward the sea, but a strong hand clutched her
+as she was about to step overboard, and compelled her back to her place
+on the platform, where, bound with cords, she lay raving, until sleep or
+unconsciousness mercifully supervened to spare me the spectacle of her
+agony, which no human power could alleviate.</p>
+
+<p>Hours passed before this &quot;consummation devoutly to be wished&quot; took
+effect, and, at the end of that time, my reeling brain, my fainting
+energies, warned me that I, too, was probably approaching some dreadful
+crisis. With a view to the refreshment its waters could possibly afford
+my head, I crept quietly from the platform on which the old negro woman
+held enforced guard over the insensible form of Ada Greene, and, still
+clasping the poor helpless one, so mysteriously thrust upon my tender
+mercies, to my bosom, I gained the edge of the raft, unnoticed by
+Christian Garth, who might otherwise have apprehended me in turn, and
+borne me back to my allotted precincts, and hung above the ocean, so as
+to suffer its cooling spray to fall unceasingly across my burning
+forehead.</p>
+
+<p>From some instinctive prompting I had lashed the poor, frail baby to my
+girdle with the scarf of knotted silk I wore about my neck, and, wan
+and exhausted, he lay upon my shoulder tranquilly as any Indian papoose
+might do on its mother's breast. A branch of sea-weed floated past as I
+looked down&mdash;some gracious mermaid's gift, perhaps, extended by her
+invisible fingers to greet our famishing lips&mdash;and I caught it eagerly,
+dividing the welcome nutriment with the perishing child, now patient
+from weakness and instinctive consciousness, perhaps, of the entire
+uselessness of cries and tears.</p>
+
+<p>Whether the weed was a sort of ocean-hasheesh, or wholesome aliment, I
+never knew, but certain it is that, from the moment its juices passed my
+lips, a strange and delightful quietude stole over my weary senses, fast
+lapsing, as these had seemed, into, unconsciousness when I left my place
+to seek the ocean's brink.</p>
+
+<p>The rays of the declining sun seemed for a moment centred on one spot,
+immediately before my impending face, supported as this was on one hand,
+and my sight followed their lance-like rays to the very floor of ocean!</p>
+
+<p>As the waters of the Red Sea divided for the passage of Moses and the
+Israelites, so seemed these to part for my mental eyes, sundered as they
+were by a golden sword of infinite splendor.</p>
+
+<p>That power which neither pain nor peril can subdue had possession of me
+now, and, above all, the bitter circumstances that surrounded me, and,
+in the face of danger and of death, imagination asserted her supremacy.
+My dream was not of passing ship or harbor gained, or rich repast, or
+festival, or clustered grapes and sparkling wines, like other sufferers
+from shipwreck, fevered with famine, frenzied with despair; but hasheesh
+or opium never bestowed so fair, so strange a vision as that which, in
+my extremity, was mercifully accorded to me.</p>
+
+<p>My eyes pursued the sea-shaft to its base, as a telescope conducts the
+mortal gaze to revel in the stars. Merman and mermaid, nereid and
+triton, were there, rejoicing in the sunbeams thus poured upon them
+through this subtle conduit of ocean, as do the motes of summer in her
+rays; but soon these disappeared, a motley crowd, confused and joyous,
+leaving the vision free to pierce the depths, glowing with golden light,
+in search of still greater marvels.</p>
+
+<p>Then I saw outspread before me the streets, the fanes, the towers, the
+dwellings, of a vast, deserted city, one of those, I could not doubt,
+that had existed before the flood, and which had lain submerged for
+thousands of centuries; the fretwork of the coral-insect was over all
+(that worker against time, so slow, so certain), in one monotonous web
+of solid snow.</p>
+
+<p>Statues of colossal size, and arches of Titanic strength and power,
+adorned the portals, the pass-ways, the temples of this metropolis of
+ocean, guarded as were these last by the effigies of griffin and dragon,
+and winged elephant and lion, and stately mastodon and monstrous
+ichthyosaurus, all white as gleaming spar.</p>
+
+<p>Gods and demi-gods of gigantic proportions and majestic aspect were
+carved on the external walls of the windowless abodes and fanes; and,
+from the yawning portal of one of these, a temple vast as Dendera's
+self, came forth, fold after fold, even as I seemed to gaze, the
+monstrous sea-serpent of which mariners dream, more huge, more loathly,
+than fancy or experience ever yet portrayed him. I still behold in
+memory the stately, fearful head, with its eyes of emerald fire and
+sweeping, sea-green mane, as it reared its neck for a moment as if to
+scale the ladder the sunbeams had thrown down when first emerging from
+its temple-cavern; and, later, the mottled, monstrous body, as coil
+after coil was gradually unwound, until it seemed at last to lie in all
+its loathsome length for roods along the silent, shell-paved
+streets&mdash;the scaly monarch, of that scene of human desolation!</p>
+
+<p>I recall the feeling of security that upheld me to look and to observe
+every motion of the reptile of my dream.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He cannot come to me here,&quot; I thought. &quot;The ark is sacred, and God's
+hand is over it; besides, I hear the singing of the priests, and the
+dove is about to be cast forth! Will the raven never come back? Oh, the
+sweet olive-branch! It falls so lightly! We are nearing the mountain
+now, and we shall soon cast anchor!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Then, among choral chants of joy and thanksgiving, I seemed to sleep.
+How long this slumber lasted, or whether it came at all, I never knew.
+It is a loving and tender thing in our Creator to decree to us this
+curtain of unconsciousness when nerve and strength would otherwise give
+way beneath the intensity of suffering&mdash;a holy and gentle thing for
+which we are not half thankful enough in our estimate of blessings.</p>
+
+<p>My sleep, or swoon, shielded me from long hours of agony, mental and
+physical, that must have become unendurable ere the close. As it was, I
+knew no more after the sea-shaft closed with its wondrous and mysterious
+revelations (which I yet recall with marveling and admiration, as we are
+wont to do a pageant of the past), until aroused from lethargy by the
+hand and voice of Christian Garth.</p>
+
+<p>It was night. I saw the glimmer of the moonlight on the seas, a
+tranquil, balmy night; but some dark object was interposed between me
+and the stars which, I knew, were shining above, and the raft lay
+motionless upon the waters. I was aware, when my senses returned
+temporarily, that the bow of a mighty vessel was projected above our
+frail place of refuge, and that we were saved. The dove had come at
+last!</p>
+
+<p>When or how we were lifted to the deck of the ship I knew not, for,
+having partially revived, I soon drifted away again into profound
+lethargy and entire unconsciousness, which for a time seemed death.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="III_CHAPTER_V"></a><h2>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>A woman sat sewing near my berth in the state-room in which I found
+myself; a fan, lying on a small table at her side, betokened in what
+manner she had divided her attentions&mdash;between her needle and her
+helpless charge. I thought; indeed, that I had felt its soft plumes
+glide gently across my face in the very moment of my awakening in the
+first amazement of which I but dimly comprehended the circumstances that
+surrounded me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What brought this stranger to my pillow! Who and what was she? Where
+was I!&quot; These were my mental queries at the first. Then, as the truth
+gradually dawned over my sluggish and bewildered brain, I lay quietly
+revolving matters, and noticed my self-constituted nurse, and my
+surroundings, with the close yet careless observation of a child.</p>
+
+<p>The woman, on whom my gaze was earliest fixed (while her own seemed
+riveted on the work upon her knee), was of middle age or beyond it, of
+medium size, of square and sturdy make, and homely to the very verge of
+ugliness. She was dressed plainly if not commonly in black, but there
+was a general air of decency about her that seemed to place her beyond
+the sphere of servitude. She wore spectacles set in tortoise-shell
+frames, and she wore her iron-gray hair straight back behind small,
+funnel-shaped ears, and gathered into the tightest knot behind. Her
+head was flat and narrow at the summit, though broad at and above the
+base of the brain. Her forehead, wide yet low, was ignoble in
+expression. The mouth, shaped like a horseshoe, was curved down at the
+corners, and was full of sullen resolution. The nose, pinched, yet not
+pointed, showed scarcely any nostril, and might as well have been made
+of wood, for any meaning it betrayed. Her eyebrows were short, wide,
+rugged, and irregular, though very black; the cast-down eyes, of course,
+so far inscrutable.</p>
+
+<p>She was shaping a flimsy, black-silk dress, and doing it deftly, though
+it was a marvel to me how hands so stiff and cramped as hers appeared to
+be could handle a needle at all.</p>
+
+<p>On one of these gnarled and unlovely fingers she wore a ring which, in
+the idleness of the mood that possessed me, I examined listlessly. It
+was an old-fashioned and slender circle of gold, so pale that it looked
+silvery, such as in times long past had commonly been used either for
+troth-plight or marriage-vows, surmounted by two small united hearts of
+the same dull metal by way of ornament. Mrs. Austin, I remembered,
+possessed one, the aversion of my childhood, that seemed its
+counterpart.</p>
+
+<p>My weary eyes wandered from her at last, to take in the accessories of
+my chamber, tiny as this was, and I saw that against the wall were
+hanging a gentleman's greatcoat and hand-satchel. Cigars and books were
+piled on the same table which held the spool and scissors of my
+companion, and a pair of cloth slippers, embroidered with colored
+chenilles and quilted lining, of masculine size and shape, reposed upon
+the floor. A cane and umbrella were secured neatly in a small corner
+rack. There were no traces, I saw, of feminine occupancy beyond the
+transient implements of industry alluded to.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, in their languid, listless roving, my eyes encountered those
+of my attendant fixed full upon me, while a smile distorted the homely,
+sallow face, disclosing a set of yellow teeth, sound, short, and strong,
+like regular grains of corn.</p>
+
+<p>In those eyes, in that mouth and saffron teeth, lay the whole power and
+character of this repulsive and disagreeable physiognomy.</p>
+
+<p>Those feline orbs of mingled gray and green, with their small, pointed
+pupils, were keen, vigilant, and observing beyond all eyes it had ever
+before or since been my lot to encounter. After meeting their
+penetrating glance I was not surprised to hear their possessor accost me
+in clear, metallic tones, that seemed only the result of her gift of
+insight, and consistent with it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are awake and yourself again, young lady, I am glad to see! You
+have slept very quietly for the last few hours, and your fever is
+wellnigh broken. Will you have some food now? You need it; you must be
+weak.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, very weak; but not hungry at all. I do not want to eat. Just let
+me lie quietly awhile. It is such enjoyment.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She complied silently and judiciously with my request.</p>
+
+<p>After a satisfactory pause, during which I had gradually collected my
+ideas, I inquired, suddenly:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How long is it since we were lifted from the raft, and where are the
+other survivors?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;All safe, I believe, and onboard, well cared for, like yourself. It has
+been nearly two days since your raft was overhauled. This was what the
+captain called it,&quot; and she smiled.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The baby&mdash;where is he? I hope he lived.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, he is at last out of danger, and we have obtained a nurse for him.
+He would only trouble you now; but it is very natural you should be
+anxious about him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, he was my principal care on the raft, and I do not wish to lose
+sight of him. When I am better, you must let him share my room until we
+reach our friends.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, certainly!&quot; and again she smiled her evil smile. &quot;No one, so far as
+I know of, has any right or wish to separate you; but, for the present,
+you are better alone.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, I am strangely weak&mdash;confused, even,&quot; and I passed my hand over my
+blistered face and dishevelled hair with something of the feeling of the
+little woman in the story who doubted her own identity. Alas! there was
+not even a familiar dog to bark and determine the vexed question, &quot;Is
+this I?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Helpless as an infant, flaccid as the sea-weed when taken from its
+native element, feeble in mind from recent suffering, broken in body, I
+was cast on the mercies of strangers, ignorant, until they saw me, of my
+existence, yet not indifferent to it, as their care testified.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You will take some food now,&quot; said the woman, kindly, &quot;Your weakness is
+not unfavorable, since it proves the fierce fever broken; but you must
+hasten to gather strength for what lies before you. We shall be in port
+to-morrow.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I put away the spoon with an impatient gesture. &quot;I cannot; it nauseates
+me but to see it, to think of it. Strength will come of itself.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, no; that is impossible. Besides, the doctor has ordered panada, and
+I am responsible to him for your safety. Come, now, be reasonable. This
+is very nice, seasoned with madeira and nutmeg.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Making a strong effort to overcome my repugnance, I received one
+spoonful of the proffered aliment, then sank back on my pillow, soothed
+and comforted, not more by the unexpectedly good effects of the
+compound, than the associations it conjured up, of my sick childhood, of
+Mrs. Austin, and of Dr. Pemberton.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah! you smile; that is a good sign,&quot; said the woman; &quot;favorable every
+way. We shall have no more delirium now, I hope; no more 'bears and
+serpents' about the berth; no more calls for 'Bertie' and 'Captain
+Wentworth,' and you will soon be able to tell us all about yourself and
+your people&mdash;all we want to know.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I must have lapsed again into reverie rather than slumber, from which I
+was partly aroused by whispering voices at the door, one of which seemed
+familiar to me. Yet this fact or fancy made little impression on me at
+the moment, feeble and wretched as was my will, undiscriminating as were
+my faculties.</p>
+
+<p>And when the door opened, and a lady entered, I did not seek to inquire
+about her interlocutor. Respectfully rising from her seat beside me, my
+companion left it vacant for her, to whom she introduced me as her
+mistress, and stood, work in hand, sewing beneath the skylight, while
+the new-comer remained in the state-room.</p>
+
+<p>A handsome woman, tall and fashionably attired, apparently between
+thirty and forty years of age, square face, dark-eyed, rosy-cheeked, and
+with curling hair, approached me with uplifted hands and eyebrows as I
+lay gazing calmly upon her; for my food and slumber together had
+strengthened and revived me wonderfully in the last few hours, and my
+senses were again collected.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Awake, and herself again, as I live, even if we cannot say yet
+truthfully 'clothed and in her right mind.'&mdash;Eh, Clayton?&quot; with a
+sneering simper; &quot;and what eyes, what teeth, to be sure! Then the
+dreadful redness is going away, though the skin will scale, of course;
+but no matter for that; all the fairer in the end. And what a special
+mercy that her hair is saved!&mdash;You have to thank <i>me</i> for that, young
+lady. I would not let the ship's doctor touch a strand of it&mdash;not a
+strand. 'One does not grow a yard and a half of hair in a month, or a
+year, doctor,' I observed, 'and a woman might as well be dead at once,
+or mad, or a man, as have cropped hair during all the days of her
+youth.' I had a fellow-feeling, you see! I have magnificent hair myself,
+child, as Clayton well knows, for it is her chief trouble on earth, and
+I would almost as lief die as lose it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, indeed, Lady Anastasia's hair is one of her chief attractions,&quot;
+observed the sympathizing Clayton, behind her chair.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So Sir Harry Raymond thought, my dear &quot;&mdash;addressing me&mdash;&quot;when I married
+him, ten years ago; and so somebody else thinks just now, for I am tired
+of my widowhood, and intend taking on the conjugal yoke again as soon as
+I reach&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;New York,&quot; interpolated Mrs. Clayton, hastily and emphatically;
+clearing her throat slightly, by way of apology, perhaps, for her
+officiousness.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And you shall stand bridesmaid, my dear. Yes, I am determined on it; so
+never make great eyes at me. There is a little bit of romance about me
+that will strike out in spite of all my worldliness; and it will be so
+pretty to have an 'ocean-waif for an attendant&mdash;it will read so well in
+the papers! I suppose, when you reach your friends, there will be no
+difficulty about a dress, and all that sort of thing, meet for the
+occasion&mdash;a very splendid one, I assure you&mdash;conducted without regard
+to expense; for my <i>fianc&eacute;</i> is very rich, I hear, and my own jointure
+was a liberal one.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You do me a great honor,&quot; I murmured, conventionally rebelling inwardly
+at the suggestion.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, not at all!&quot; was the gracious rejoinder. &quot;I see at a glance, in
+spite of your misfortunes, that you are one of us, which is not what I
+say to everybody. True blood will show under all circumstances, though
+there is such an improvement. Did any one ever see the like before? Why,
+my dear, you were blistered and black when we picked you up, and
+afterward sienna-colored; now you are almost a beauty!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am better&mdash;much better, and have a great deal to be thankful for, I
+feel,&quot; I contented myself with murmuring.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Of course you have. It was just a chance with you between our ship and
+death, you know. By-the-by, what name shall we give our
+'treasure-trove?'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miriam for the present, if you please. This is no time nor place for
+ceremony.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, Miriam it shall be,&quot; she repeated with laughing eyes (hers were
+of that sort which close and grow Chinese under the pressure of
+merriment and high cheekbones combined). &quot;Miriam, I like the name&mdash;there
+is something grand about it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But how shall we know where to find your friends when we get to port?&quot;
+asked my first attendant. &quot;We <i>must</i> know more than your Christian name
+for such a purpose. You must place confidence in us, you must indeed!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Be patient with me,&quot; I entreated. &quot;I am much too feeble yet to give you
+the details that may be necessary. When we reach New York, you shall
+know every thing: or is it, indeed, to that place this ship is bound?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I thought you knew all about your destination by this time,&quot; replied
+Lady Anastasia Raymond. &quot;Yes, yes, New York of course!&quot; and again she
+laughed. &quot;Didn't you hear Clayton say so?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Just then a sharp tap at the door was answered by Lady Anastasia, who
+went quickly from beneath the curtain hung across it (in consideration,
+no doubt, of the privacy my illness enjoined), but not before I had
+caught once, and this time clearly, the tones of a voice that thrilled
+to my life, the same that had haunted my delirious fancy, I now
+remembered, through the last four-and-twenty hours.</p>
+
+<p>I rose to my elbow impulsively, only to fall back again utterly
+exhausted.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Who was that speaking?&quot; I asked, feebly; &quot;can it be possible&mdash;&quot; and I
+wrung my hands.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It was the ship's doctor,&quot; interrupted the woman I had heard called
+Clayton by her mistress. &quot;He had not time to do more than inquire about
+you, I suppose, there are so many ill in the steerage; but he has been
+very kind and will probably return.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I hope so,&quot; I rejoined; &quot;I should like to realize that voice as <i>his</i>.
+It has haunted me very disagreeably in my dreams, and the tones are
+those of an old, old acquaintance, one I should be sorry to see here.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I do not believe you have an acquaintance on the ship,&quot; she said,
+simply. &quot;Under the circumstances any such person would certainly have
+discovered himself; your situation would have moved a heart of stone.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But it is sometimes wise for the wicked to lie <i>perdu</i>,&quot; I murmured,
+and conjecture was busy in my brain. &quot;I should be glad, too, to see the
+captain of this vessel at his earliest convenience,&quot; I added, after a
+pause. &quot;Will you be so good as to apprise him in person of my earnest
+wish? It would be a real charity.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, certainly; but I am afraid he cannot come to-night. It is nearly
+evening now, and he never leaves the deck at this hour, nor until very
+late.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;To-morrow, then, I must insist on this interview, since I reflect about
+it, for several reasons.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;To-morrow he shall come,&quot; she said, sententiously; &quot;and now try and
+sleep again. It is very necessary you should gather strength, for we
+shall be in port shortly, when all will be confusion.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I went to sleep, I remember, murmuring to myself: &quot;The hands were the
+hands of Jacob, but the voice was the voice of Esau;&quot; and my bewildered
+faculties found rest until the morning's dawn.</p>
+
+<p>After a hasty toilet made by the careful hands of Mrs. Clayton, a
+matutinal visit made by Mrs. or Lady Raymond, who always rose early as
+she informed me, and a cup of tea, very soothing to my prostrated
+nerves, the potentate of the Latona was duly announced.</p>
+
+<p>Our ship's master was a tall, gaunt, sandy-haired man, with steady gray
+eyes, hard features, and enormous hands and feet, the first freckled and
+awkward, the last so long as very nearly to span the space between his
+seat (a small Spanish-leather trunk) and the berth I reposed in. He
+entered without his hat; and the swoop of the head he made to avoid the
+entanglement of the curtain was supposed to do double duty, and serve as
+a bow to the inmate of his state-room as well, for his I supposed it to
+be at the time, and he did not contradict me.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I hope you find yourself comfortable, marm, on board of my ship.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And in your state-room, captain?&quot; I interrupted promptly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Wall, you see it all belongs to me, kinder,&quot; he said, after seating
+himself, as he rubbed his huge, projecting knees, plainly indicated
+through his nankeen trousers, with his capacious, horny hands. &quot;I'm not
+very particular, though, where I sleep on shipboard, but at home there's
+few more so.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I thought a captain was more at home on shipboard than anywhere else,&quot;
+I pursued mechanically; &quot;such is the theory at least.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, not at all, not at all; when he has a snug nest on land, with a
+wife and children waiting to receive him. You might as well talk of a
+man in the new settlements bein' more at home in his wagon than in his
+neat, hewn-log cabin.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A very good simile, captain, and one that kills the ancient theory
+outright. Let me thank you, however, before we proceed further, for all
+the kindness and attention I have received in this floating castle of
+yours, both from you and others. I hope and believe that my companions
+in misfortune have fared as well.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Wall, they have not wanted for nothing as far as I knew&mdash;the poor baby
+in particular;&quot; and, as he spoke, he roughed his hair with one hand and
+smiled into my face a huge, honest, gummy smile, inexpressibly
+reassuring.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The man is hideous and repulsive,&quot; I thought; &quot;but infinitely
+preferable, somehow, to the specimen of English aristocracy and her maid
+who have constituted themselves so far my guardian angels&quot;&mdash;a twinge of
+ingratitude here, which I resented instantly by settling my patriotic
+prejudices to be at the root of the thing, and rebuking my mistrust
+sternly though silently. &quot;Yet that voice&mdash;how could I be mistaken?&quot; and
+again I addressed myself to the task before me, having gotten through
+all preliminaries.</p>
+
+<p>While I sat hesitating as to what I should say, so as to both guard
+against and conceal my suspicions from the captain's scrutiny, if,
+indeed, he might be supposed to possess such a quality, I observed that
+he drew from his pocket a long slip of newspaper, in which he appeared
+to bury himself for a time, when not glancing furtively at me, as if
+waiting impatiently for the coming revelation.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have sent for you, Captain Van Dorne,&quot; I said, at last, in very low
+and even tones, not calculated to reach outside ears, however vigilant,
+and yet not suppressed by any means to whispers&mdash;&quot;I have sent for you,&quot;
+and my heart beat quickly as I spoke, &quot;not merely to thank you for your
+hospitable kindness, but because I wish, for reasons that I cannot now
+explain, to place myself under your especial care until I reach my
+friends.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Certainly, certainly; but you <i>air</i> among your friends already if you
+could only think so,&quot; he answered, evasively, still caressing his potato
+knees with large and outspread hands.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do not for one moment deem me unmindful of much kindness, or ungrateful
+to those who have bestowed it,&quot; I hastened to explain. &quot;Yet I cannot
+deny that a fear possesses me that among your passengers may be found
+one whom I esteem, not without sufficient cause, my greatest enemy.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Poor thing! poor thing! what put such a strange fancy into your head?
+An enemy in my ship! Why, there is not a man on board who would not cut
+off his right hand rather than harm one hair of your poor, witless,
+defenseless head! There was not a dry eye on the deck when you and the
+rest wuz lifted from the raft!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I understand this prevalence of sympathy for misfortune perfectly, and
+honor it; yet I have heard a voice since my immurement in this cabin
+which must belong&quot;&mdash;and I whispered the dreaded name&mdash;&quot;to Mr. Basil
+Bainrothe!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>As I spoke I eyed him steadily, and I fancied that his cheek flushed and
+his eye wavered&mdash;that clear and honest eye which had given him a high
+place in my consideration from the moment I met its' gaze.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You must have been delirious-like when you conceited you heerd that
+strange voice,&quot; he said, presently.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'll send you my passenger-list if you choose, and you can read it over
+keerfully. I don't think you'll find <i>that</i> name, though, in its
+kolyums,&quot; shaking his head sagaciously.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Captain Van Dome, do you mean to say there is no such passenger in your
+ship's list as Basil Bainrothe?&quot; I asked, desperately.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That's what I mean to say.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Give me your honor on this point. It is a vital one to me. Your honor!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He hesitated and looked around. Just at this moment of apparent
+uncertainty, a slight tap was heard on the ground-glass eye above us
+that threw a sullen and unwilling light upon the scene of our interview.
+It seemed to nerve him strangely.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;On my word of honor, as an American seaman, I assure you that the name
+of Basil Bainrothe is not on the ship's list at this present speaking;&quot;
+and, as he spoke, he held up his right hand, adding, as he dropped it,
+doggedly, &quot;Ef the man's on board I don't know it!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is enough&mdash;I believe you, Captain Van Dorne. And now I want to ask
+you, as a parting grace, to convey me yourself to the Astor House, and
+place my watch&quot; (detaching it from my neck as I spoke) &quot;in the hands of
+the proprietors as a proof of my honest intentions. For yourself, I
+shall seek another opportunity.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not at all&mdash;not at all!&quot; he interrupted. &quot;Keep your watch, young lady.
+No such pledge will be required by them proprietors; and, as to myself,
+if it had not been for this paper,&quot; drawing from his pocket, and
+flattening on his knees as he spoke, the slip I had before observed,
+then glancing at me sharply, &quot;I could never have believed that such a
+pretty-spoken, pretty-behaved young creetur could have been <i>non com</i>.
+But pshaw! what am I talking about? This paper is as old as last year's
+krout! You don't keer nothing about seeing of it, do you, now?&quot; and he
+crumpled it in his hand.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not unless it concerns me in some way, Captain Van Dorne,&quot; I said,
+coldly. His manner had suddenly become offensive to me, and I longed to
+see him depart, having 'transacted my affairs, as far, at least, as I
+deemed it prudent to insist on such transaction.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It may be,&quot; I added, &quot;that, on reaching the port of New York, a friend
+or friends who expected me on the Kosciusko may be in waiting to receive
+me; that is, if the fate of that vessel be not already known. In that
+case, I shall not be obliged to avail myself of your services, and will
+acquaint you; but, otherwise, promise that you will conduct me from the
+ship yourself, either to the hotel or to your wife, as you prefer.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Wall, I promise you,&quot; he said, doggedly, as he prepared literally to
+undouble his long frame before executing another dive beneath my
+door-guarding drapery, and with this brief assurance I was fain to rest
+content.</p>
+
+<p>At all events, I was reassured on one subject&mdash;those honest eyes, that
+frank if ugly mouth had no acquaintance with lies, or the father of
+them, I saw at once; and the voice of the ship's doctor had for the
+nonce deceived my practised ear, overstrung by suspicion&mdash;enfeebled by
+suffering.</p>
+
+<p>So I rested calmly until the afternoon, with Mrs. Clayton sewing
+silently by my side, when with a little tap Lady Anastasia (or Mrs.
+Raymond, as she declared she preferred to be called by &quot;Americans&quot;)
+entered, bearing a basket in her hand, and wearing on her head a
+Dunstable bonnet simply trimmed, which she came, she said, to place,
+along with other articles of dress, at my disposal.</p>
+
+<p>It had not occurred to me before that, in order to go on shore
+respectably clad, some attire very different from a bed-gown would be
+essential, and I could but feel grateful for such proofs of unselfish
+consideration on the part of strangers, pitying both my indigence and
+imbecility, and so expressed myself.</p>
+
+<p>In accordance with their generous intentions, I submitted myself to be
+arrayed by Mrs. Clayton and her mistress: first, in the flimsy
+black-silk gown now completed, on which I had seen my attendant working
+when I first unclosed my eyes after long unconsciousness, and the
+measure which she had taken, while I lay in this condition, as coolly in
+all probability as an undertaker measures a corpse for its shroud;
+secondly, in a cardinal of the same material, a wrapping cut in the
+shape in vogue at that period; thirdly, in certain loosely-fitting boots
+and gloves with which I was fain to cover up my naked feet and blistered
+hands <i>in forma pauperis</i> and, lastly, in the collarette and cuffs
+provided by the economic and considerate Lady Anastasia, composed of
+cotton lace! The Dunstable bonnet was hung upon a peg in readiness, and
+I was kindly counseled to lie still, &quot;accoutred as I was,&quot; and exhausted
+by means of such accoutrement as I felt, until evening should find us
+riding in our harbor.</p>
+
+<p>Then there was a little, low consulting at the door with the renowned
+&quot;ship's doctor,&quot; who positively refused to approach me because he had
+just come from a case of ship-fever in the steerage, which he feared to
+communicate to one in my precarious state, but who sent in his
+imperative orders that I should have soup and sherry-cobbler forthwith,
+and try and build up my strength for the time of debarkation&mdash;speaking
+in a low, growling voice divested of its former clearness, but still
+strangely resembling that of Basil Bainrothe!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The poor man is so fagged out,&quot; said Mrs. Clayton, as she brought in my
+broth and wine, &quot;that his very voice is changed. He is a good soul, and
+has shown you great interest. Some day you must send him a present, that
+is, if you are able; but just now all you have to think of is getting
+safe ashore. Lady Anastasia will go to her friends, probably, or to
+those of the gentleman she is engaged to; but I do not mean to forsake
+you until I see you better, and in good hands.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I know not how it was that my heart sank so strangely at this
+announcement. The woman was kind&mdash;tender, even&mdash;and had probably saved
+my life, and yet her presence to me was a punishment worse than pain, a
+positive evil greater than any other.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I shall go to the Astor House,&quot; I faltered. &quot;The captain has promised
+me his escort thither.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, yes, I know, he has told me all about it; but your friends may not
+be in waiting, and it is simply our duty to see you in their hands. And
+now drink your sangaree. See, I have broken a biscuit in the glass, and
+it is well seasoned with lemon and nutmeg. There, now, that is right; a
+few spoonfuls of soup, and you will feel strengthened for your
+undertaking. I will sit quietly in the corner until you have your rest.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, I prefer to see Christian Garth before I try to sleep&mdash;the man who
+steered our raft&mdash;and the young girl he saved, and the baby&mdash;let them
+all come to me, and we will go on shore together.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I spoke these words with a sort of desperation, as though they contained
+my last hope of justice or protection from a fate which, however
+obscurely, seemed to threaten me, as we feel the thunder-storm brooding
+in the tranquil atmosphere of summer.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Christian Garth!&quot; she repeated, looking at me over her tortoise-shell
+spectacles, and, quietly drawing out a snuffbox of the same material,
+she proceeded to fill her narrow nostrils therewith. &quot;Why, that
+shaggy-looking old sailor, and the girl, and the old negro woman and
+child, went on shore at daylight this morning. He hailed a Jersey craft,
+and they all left together. It is perfectly understood, though, that the
+child is to be returned to you if you desire its company, but, if I were
+situated as you are, and sure of its safety, I would never want to see
+it again. It would be better off dead than living anyhow, under the
+circumstances, poor, deformed creature&mdash;better for both of you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The words came to me distinctly, yet as if from an immense distance, and
+I seemed to see the small chamber lengthening as if it had been a
+telescope unfolding, and the sallow woman with her hateful smile and
+tightly-knotted, brindled hair seated in diminished size and
+distinctness at its farthest extremity.</p>
+
+<p>So had I felt on that fearful night when Evelyn had made her revelation
+and received mine, and I did not doubt, even in my sinking state, that I
+was under the influence of a powerful anodyne.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Call the ship's doctor&mdash;I am dying!&quot; were the last words I remember to
+have articulated; then all was dark, and hours went by, of deep,
+unconscious sleep.</p>
+
+<p>It was night when I felt myself drawn to my feet, and roused to life by
+the repeated applications of cold water to my face. &quot;The anodyne was
+over-powerful,&quot; I heard Mrs. Raymond say. &quot;It is a shame to tamper with
+such strong medicines.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, she has strength for any thing!&quot; was Clayton's rejoinder. &quot;I never
+saw such a constitution&mdash;and he knew what he was doing.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No doubt of that.&mdash;But, dear Miss Miriam, do speak to me. I am so
+frightened at your lethargic condition.&mdash;I declare I am sorry I ever
+consented to have any thing to do with this matter! See how she stands.
+I cannot think it was right, Clayton, I cannot, indeed; I dislike the
+whole drama.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do be quiet! She is coming to herself fast, and what will she think of
+such expressions? You never had any self-control in your life, and you
+are playing for great stakes now.&quot; These last words in a hoarse whisper.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nonsense! mother.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Again! How often must I warn you?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, Clayton, then, now and forever.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Here! rouse up, little one! We are fast anchored in port, and the
+captain is waiting for us, for we go part of the way together, and our
+escorts have all failed us&mdash;yours and mine. Nice fellows, are they not?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I sat up and looked about me bewildered; yet I had heard distinctly
+every word spoken in the last few minutes, and remembered them for
+future observance, without having had the power to move or articulate a
+remonstrance.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now, drink this strong coffee, and all will be well again,&quot; said
+Clayton, putting a cup of the smoking beverage to my lips, which I
+swallowed eagerly, instinctively. The effect was instantaneous, and I
+was able to speak and stand, as well as hear and comprehend, while my
+bonnet was being tied on, and my throat muffled in a veil, by the
+dexterous fingers of Lady Anastasia.</p>
+
+<p>When this process was completed, she stooped down and kissed me, and I
+felt a hot tear fall upon my cheek as she rose again. In the next moment
+I was clinging to the captain's arm, with a spasmodic feeling of relief
+for which I could ill account. We passed across the plank which
+connected the ship with the shore in utter darkness, guided by a
+twinkling light far ahead, borne by a seaman, reached the dusky quay,
+with its few flaring lamps, made dim by drizzling rain and summer mist,
+and before many minutes we paused before one of a long line of coaches.</p>
+
+<p>The captain handed me in, then, standing before the open door, seemed to
+await the coming of some other person before taking his own place&mdash;the
+dreaded Clayton, I knew; but I could not remonstrate against what seemed
+an ordinary courtesy, and perhaps a step suggested by his innate notions
+of propriety.</p>
+
+<p>At any other time I might have agreed with him; but, feeble as I was,
+and still bewildered, my whole object seemed to be to escape from the
+sphere and power of those women, who had been most kind to me, yet whom
+I instinctively dreaded and abhorred.</p>
+
+<p>They came together, the mother and daughter, in their travesty of
+mistress and maid&mdash;enough of itself to excite suspicion of foul
+play&mdash;and climbed up the rickety steps of the hackney-coach, rejoicing
+over their victim. It mattered not; the captain would make the fourth
+passenger, and in his shadow I felt there were strength and security.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What are you waiting for, Captain Van Dorne?&quot; I had just feebly asked,
+as the door snapped-to, and the driver mounted his box. A hand was
+thrust through the window for all reply, and a card dropped upon my lap,
+which I hastened to secure in the depths of my pocket. By the merest
+chance, I found it there on the morrow, and later I comprehended its
+import, so mysterious to me at the moment of perusal.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;My poor young lady, you must forgive me for disappointing you, and
+hidin' the truth, for your own sake. May God bless and restore you, and
+bring you to a proper sense of his mercies, is the prayer of your
+servant to command, JOSEPH VAN DORNE.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>My frame of mind was a very different one when I read this scrawl, from
+that which bewildered and oppressed me on that never-to-be-forgotten
+night of suffering and distress, both mental and physical. Formed of
+those elements which readily react, courage and calmness had returned to
+me before I read the oracle of our worthy shipmaster; for, in spite of
+his disastrous dealing with me on that occasion, misguided as he was by
+others, I have reason to so consider him.</p>
+
+<p>But now the influence of the drug that had been given me so recently,
+doubtless through want of judgment, by the ship's doctor, was felt in
+every nerve; and, as the carriage rolled up the stony quay, I clung
+convulsively to Mrs. Raymond, and buried my face and aching forehead in
+her shoulder, with a strange revulsion of feeling.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You dread the darkness,&quot; she said, kindly, putting her arm around me as
+she spoke; &quot;but it is only for a time; we shall soon come out into the
+open lamp-light of&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Broadway, New York,&quot; interrupted Clayton, sententiously; &quot;a very poor
+sight to see, to one who has lived abroad. Have you ever crossed the
+waters, Miss Miriam? But I see you are quite faint and overcome. Here,
+smell this ether, that the ship's doctor put up expressly for your use,
+and recommended highly as a new restorative much in fashion in Paris.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Had the ship's doctor no name, then, that they never mentioned it, and
+that he spoke in a demon's voice? His doses I had proved, and was
+resolved to take no more of them, and I pushed away the phial, whose
+cold glass nose was thrust obtrusively against my own&mdash;pushed it away
+with all my strength, fast ebbing away as this was, even as I made the
+effort.</p>
+
+<p>The cruel potion had possession of me, and entered into every fibre of
+my brain through the avenues prepared for it by the treacherous anodyne;
+so that, enervated and intoxicated, I yielded passively, after a brief
+struggle, to the power of the then newly-invented sedative, called
+chloroform.</p>
+
+<p>When the carriage stopped, or whither it transported me, or who lifted
+my insensible form to the chamber prepared for me, I know not&mdash;never
+knew. There was a faint reviving, I remember; a process of disrobing
+gone through by the aid of foreign assistance (whose, I recognized
+not), then I slumbered profoundly and securely through the entire night,
+to recover no clearness of perception until a late hour on the following
+morning.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="III_CHAPTER_VI"></a><h2>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>I awoke, as I had done of old, after one of my lethargic seizures, from
+a deep, unrefreshing slumber, with a lingering sense about me of
+drowsiness and even fatigue.</p>
+
+<p>I found myself lying on a broad, canopied bedstead, the massive posts of
+which were of wrought rosewood, bare of draperies, as became the season,
+save at the head-board, behind which a heavy curtain was dropped of
+rose-colored damask satin.</p>
+
+<p>Of the same rich material were composed the tester and the
+lightly-quilted coverlet, thrown across the foot of the bed, over a fine
+white Marseilles counterpane.</p>
+
+<p>The chimney immediately opposite to me, as I lay, was of black marble,
+and, instead of graceful Greek <i>caryatides</i>, bandaged mummies, or
+Egyptian figures, supported the heavy shelf that surmounted the polished
+grate. In the centre of this massive mantel-slab was placed a huge
+bronze clock, and candelabra of the same material graced its corners.</p>
+
+<p>In either recess of this chimney rosewood doors were situated, one of
+which stood invitingly ajar, disclosing the bath-room, into which it
+opened, with its accessories of white marble.</p>
+
+<p>The other, firmly closed, seemed to be the outlet of the chamber&mdash;its
+only one&mdash;with the exception of the four large Venetian windows, two on
+either side of me as I lay, the sashes of which, warm as the season was,
+were drawn closely down.</p>
+
+<p>The furniture of this spacious chamber to which, as if by the touch of a
+magician's wand, I found myself transported, was throughout solid and of
+elegant forms, consisting as it did of <i>armoire</i>, toilet-table,
+bookcase, <i>&eacute;tag&egrave;re</i>, writing and flower stands, tables and chairs, of
+the richest rosewood.</p>
+
+<p>At the foot of my bed was placed a console, supporting a huge Bible and
+Prayer-book, bound alike in purple velvet, emblazoned with central suns
+of gold&mdash;an arch-hypocrisy that was not lost on its object.
+Freshly-gathered flowers were heaped in the vases of the floral stands,
+filling the close, cool room with an overpowering fragrance. The carpet
+of crimson and white seemed to the eye what it afterward proved to the
+foot&mdash;thick, soft, and elastic; and harmonized well with the rich,
+antique, and consistent furniture.</p>
+
+<p>The sort of microscopic scrutiny that children manifest seemed mine&mdash;in
+my unreasoning, half-convalescent state; and for a time I observed all
+that I have described with a listless pleasure, difficult to analyze, a
+sort of dreamy acceptance of my condition, the very memory of which
+exasperated me, later, almost to self-contempt.</p>
+
+<p>A crimson cord hung at one side of my bed, continued from a bell-wire at
+some distance, the tassel of which I touched lightly, and, at the very
+first signal, Mrs. Clayton appeared through the hitherto only unopened
+door, to know and do my bidding.</p>
+
+<p>The clock on the mantel-shelf struck nine as she stood beside me, and
+made respectful inquiries concerning my wants and condition;
+understanding which, she disappeared, to return a few minutes later,
+followed by an ancient negress, bearing a silver waiter.</p>
+
+<p>I recognized in this sable assistant (or thought I recognized at a
+glance) my companion in shipwreck; but, upon making known my
+convictions, was met with a prompt denial by the sable dame herself,
+who, shaking her head, gave me to understand, in a few broken words,
+that she &quot;no understood English&mdash;only Spanish tongue!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Her dress&mdash;handsome and Frenchified&mdash;her creole coiffure, and the long
+gray locks that escaped from her crimson kerchief bound over her ears,
+as well as her more refined deportment, did indeed seem to discredit my
+first idea, which came at last (notwithstanding these discrepancies) to
+be fixed, and proved one link in the long chain of duplicity I untangled
+later.</p>
+
+<p>At the time, however, I gave it little thought, but partook with what
+appetite I might of the choice and delicate repast provided for me, in
+this truly princely hotel, whose fame I discovered had not been
+over-trumpeted. On my previous visits to New York, the Astor House had
+been unfinished, and had made in its completion a new era certainly in
+the &quot;tavern-life&quot; of that inhospitable city of publicans. When the
+delicious coffee and snowy bread, the eggs of milky freshness, the
+golden butter, the savory rice-birds, the appetizing fish, had each and
+all been merely tasted and dismissed, and the exquisite China, in which
+the breakfast was served, duly marveled at as an unprecedented
+extravagance on the part even of John Jacob Astor, Mrs. Clayton came to
+me with kindly offers of assistance in the performance of my toilet,
+still a matter of difficulty in my feeble hands.</p>
+
+<p>My long hair, yet tangled and clogged with sea-water, was to be at last
+unbound and thoroughly combed, cleansed, and oiled, so that the black
+and glossy braids, that had been my chief personal pride, might again be
+wound about my head in the old classic fashion.</p>
+
+<p>Then came the bath, with its reviving, rehabilitating process, and
+lastly I assumed with the docility of a baby or a pauper the clean and
+fragrant linen and simple wrapper that had been mysteriously provided
+for me by the Lady Anastasia again, I could not doubt.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;All this must end to-day,&quot; I said, &quot;when really clothed and in my right
+mind.&quot; I requested writing-materials and more light to work by, and
+composed myself to write to Dr. Pemberton (once again, I knew, in
+Philadelphia), and request his assistance and protection in getting home
+safely, and, if need be, in tracing Captain Wentworth.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I suppose Captain Van Dorne has been too busy to call,&quot; I observed,
+carelessly, as I prepared to commence my letter, &quot;and Mrs. Raymond too
+happy, probably, in getting safe to shore and her lover, to think of
+me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;They have both inquired for you,&quot; said Mrs. Clayton, as she arranged
+pen, ink, and paper, before me, with her usual precision, while a grim,
+sardonic smile lingered about her features; &quot;several have called, but
+none have been admitted.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Who have called, Mrs. Clayton? Give me the cards immediately. I must,
+must know,&quot; I rejoined, eagerly, pausing with extended hand to receive
+them.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, there were no cards, and such as want to see you can come again.
+There, now! write away, and never trouble your mind about strange
+people. Have you sufficient light?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And, as she spoke, she touched a cord which set at right angles with
+the lower one the upper inside shutter of another window as she had
+adjusted the first.</p>
+
+<p>I wrote, two hasty notes, one on further consideration to Captain
+Wentworth himself, who might, after all, be at that very time in that
+same hotel&mdash;&quot;<i>Quien sabe</i>?&quot; as Favraud used to say with his significant
+shrug, which no Frenchman ever excelled or Spaniard equalled (albeit
+they shrug severally).</p>
+
+<p>My spirits rose with every word I wrote, and, when I got up from my
+chair after sealing and directing my letters, a new and subtle energy
+seemed to have infused itself through my frame. &quot;There, I have finished,
+Mrs. Clayton,&quot; I said, putting aside the implements I had been using.
+&quot;Now go, if you please, and bring to me the proprietor of this hotel. I
+will give him my letters myself, since I have other business to transact
+with him,&quot; and I laid my watch and chain on the table before me, ready
+for his hand, not having lost sight of my early resolution. &quot;But,
+stay&mdash;before you go, be good enough to open the lower shutters and throw
+up the windows. Cool as the weather is in this climate, I stifle for
+air, and this close atmosphere, laden with fragrance, grows oppressive.
+Who sent these flowers, by-the-by, Mrs. Clayton? or do they belong to
+the magnificence of this idealized hotel?&quot; She made no reply to any
+thing I had been saying.</p>
+
+<p>By this time, however, she had lowered the upper sashes of the windows
+about a foot, and the fresh air of morning was pouring in, curling the
+paper on the centre table and dispersing the noisome fragrance of the
+flowers, in which I detected the morbid supremacy of the tuberose and
+jasmine.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I want to see the streets, the people,&quot; I said, approaching one of the
+windows; &quot;this artistic light is not at all the thing I need. I have no
+picture to paint, not even my own face;&quot; and, finding her unmoved, I
+undertook to do the requisite work myself.</p>
+
+<p>The sashes were shut away below by inside shutters, which resisted all
+my efforts to stir them. After a moment's inspection, I perceived that
+they were secured by iron screws of great strength and size; not, in
+short, meant to be moved or opened at all. Again I essayed to shake them
+convulsively one after the other&mdash;as you may sometimes see a tiger, made
+desperate by confinement, grapple with the inexorable bars of his cage,
+though certain of failure and defeat.</p>
+
+<p>Overpowered by a sudden dismay that took entire possession of me, I sank
+into one of the deep <i>fauteuils</i> that extended its arms very opportunely
+to receive me, and sat mutely for a moment, while anguish unutterable,
+and conjecture too wild to be hazarded in speech, were surging through
+my brain.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am too weak, I suppose, to open these shutters,&quot; I said at last,
+feebly. &quot;Be good enough to do it for me, Mrs. Clayton, or cause it to be
+done immediately.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Was it not strange that up to this very moment no suspicion had clouded
+my horizon since I woke in that sumptuous room?</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I cannot transcend my orders by doing any thing of the kind,&quot; she said
+quietly, yet resolutely, as she pursued her avocation, that of dusting
+with a bunch of colored plumes the delicate ornaments of the <i>&eacute;tag&egrave;re</i>
+carefully one by one.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your authority! Who has dared to delegate to you what has no existence
+as far as I am concerned?&quot; I asked indignantly. &quot;I will go instantly.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You cannot leave this chamber until you receive outside permission,&quot;
+she interrupted, firmly planting herself at once between me and the door
+through which I had seen her enter. &quot;You must not think to pass through
+my chamber, Miss Miriam. It is locked without, and there is no other
+outlet.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Woman!&quot; I said, grasping her feebly yet fiercely, by the arm. &quot;Look at
+me! Raise those feline eyes to mine, if you dare, and answer me
+truthfully: What means this mockery? Why have you been forced on me at
+all? Where is Captain Van Dorne? What becomes of his promises? What
+house is this in which I find myself a prisoner? Speak!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You can do nothing to make me angry,&quot; she rejoined, calmly. &quot;I know
+your condition, and pity and respect it, but I shall certainly fulfill
+my part of this undertaking. Captain Van Dorne recognized you as Miss
+Monfort by the description in the newspaper, as did my mistress, and for
+your own welfare we determined to secure you and keep you safe until the
+return of Mr. Bainrothe and your sisters from Europe. They will be here
+shortly, and all you have to do is to be patient and behave as well as
+you can until the time comes for your trial;&quot; and she cast on me a
+menacing look from her green and quivering pupils, indescribably feline.</p>
+
+<p>My trial! Great Heaven! did they mean to turn the tables, then, and
+destroy me by anticipating my evidence? I staggered to a chair and again
+sat down silent confounded. &quot;Where am I, then?&quot; I feebly asked at
+length.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;In the establishment of Dr. Englehart,&quot; she made answer, &quot;a private
+madhouse.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;God of heaven! has it come to this?&quot; I covered my eyes with my hands
+and sobbed aloud, while tears of pride and passion rained hotly over my
+cheeks. This outburst was of short duration. &quot;I will give them no
+advantage,&quot; I considered. &quot;My violence might be perverted. There are
+creatures too cold and crafty to conceive of such a thing as natural
+emotion, and passion with them means insanity. Thank God, the very power
+to feel bears with it the power of self-government, and is proof of
+reason. I will be calm, and if my life endures put them thus to
+shame.&quot;&mdash;&quot;You say that I am in the asylum of Dr. Englehart?&quot; I asked
+after a pause, during which she had not ceased to dust the furniture and
+arrange the bed in its pristine order, speckless, with lace-trimmings,
+pillow-cases smooth as glass, and sheets of lawn, and counterpane of
+snow. &quot;If so, call my physician hither; I, his patient, have surely a
+right to his prompt services.&quot;&mdash;&quot;It is just possible,&quot; I thought, &quot;that
+interest or compassion may, one or both, still enlist him in my cause&mdash;I
+can but try.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A slight embarrassment was evidenced in her countenance as I made this
+request. It vanished speedily.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He is absent just at this time,&quot; she answered, quickly. &quot;When he
+returns I will make known your wish to him, if, indeed, he does not call
+of his own accord.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Be done with this shallow farce,&quot; I exclaimed, harshly. &quot;It shames
+humanity. Acknowledge yourself at once the faithful agent of a tyrant
+and felon, or a pair of them, and I shall respect you more. Confess that
+it was the voice of Basil Bainrothe I heard at my cabin-door, and that
+Captain Van Dorne was imposed upon by that specious scoundrel, even to
+the point of being conscientiously compelled to falsehood.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I deny nothing&mdash;I acknowledge nothing,&quot; she said, deliberately. &quot;You
+and your friends can settle this between yourselves when they arrive.
+Until then, you need not seek to tamper with me&mdash;it will be useless; and
+I hope you are too much of a lady to be insulting to a person who has
+no choice but to do her duty.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She could not more effectually have silenced me, nor more utterly have
+crushed my hopes. Yet again I approached her with entreaties.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I hope you will not refuse to mail my notes, even under these trying
+circumstances,&quot;! said, extending them to her.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You can ask Dr. Englehart to do so when he comes,&quot; she answered,
+gently; &quot;for myself, I am utterly powerless to serve you beyond the
+walls of this chamber.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And how long is this close immurement to continue?&quot; I asked again,
+after another dreary pause. &quot;Am I not permitted to breathe the external
+air&mdash;to exercise? Is my health to be unconsidered?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I know nothing more than I have told you,&quot; she replied. &quot;I am directed
+to furnish you with every means of comfort&mdash;with books, flowers,
+clothing, musical instrument, even, if you desire it; but, for the
+present, you will not leave these walls, and you will see no society.
+The doctor has decided that this is best.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And whence did he derive his authority?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, it was all arranged between him and Mr. Bainrothe, your guardeen&quot;
+(for thus she pronounced this word, ever hateful to me), &quot;long ago;
+before he went to France, I suppose. Captain Van Dorne had nothing to do
+but hand you over.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Captain Van Dorne! To think those honest eyes could so deceive me!&quot; and
+I shook my head wofully.</p>
+
+<p>When I looked up again from reverie, Mrs. Clayton had settled herself to
+work with a basket of stockings on her knees, which she appeared to be
+assorting assiduously.</p>
+
+<p>There she sat, spectacles on nose, thimble on twisted finger, ivory-egg
+in hand, in active preparation for that work, woman's <i>par excellence</i>,
+that alone rivals Penelope's. Surely that assortment of yellow,
+ill-mated, half-worn, and holey hose, was a treasure to her, that no
+gold could have replaced, in our dreary solitude (none the less dreary
+for being so luxurious). I envied her almost the power she seemed to
+have to merge her mind in things like these; and saw, for the first time
+in my life, what advantages might lie in being commonplace.</p>
+
+<p>It was now nearly the end of July. My birthday occurred in the middle of
+September. I thought I knew that, as soon as possible after my majority,
+Mr. Bainrothe's conditions would be laid before me.</p>
+
+<p>I could not, dared not, believe that my captivity would be lengthened
+beyond that time. I resolved that I would condone the past, and go forth
+penniless, if this were exacted in exchange for liberty at the end of a
+month and a half from this time.</p>
+
+<p>Six weeks to wait! Were they not, in the fullness of their power, to
+crush and baffle me? Six weary years! For, during all this time, I felt
+that the unexplained mystery that weighed upon my life would gather in
+force and inflexibility. Death would have seemed to have set its seal
+upon it, in the estimation of Captain Wentworth, as of all others. He
+would never know that the sea, which swallowed up the Kosciusko, had
+spared the woman he loved, nor receive the explanation that she alone
+could give him, of the mystery he deplored.</p>
+
+<p>Before I emerged from my prison, he might be gone to the antipodes, for
+aught I knew, and a barrier of eternal silence and absence be interposed
+between us. So worked my fate! These reflections continued to haunt and
+oppress me, by night and day, and life itself seemed a bitter burden in
+that interval of rebellious agony, and in that terrible seclusion, where
+luxury itself became an additional engine of torture.</p>
+
+<p>Days passed, alternately of leaden apathy and bitter gloom, varied by
+irrepressible paroxysms of despair. Whenever I found myself alone, even
+for a few moments, I paced my room and wept aloud, or prayed
+passionately. There were times when I felt that my Creator heard and
+pitied me; others when I persuaded myself his ear was closed inexorably
+against me.</p>
+
+<p>I suffered fearfully&mdash;this could not last. The accusation brought
+against me by my enemies seemed almost ready to be realized, when my
+body magnanimously assumed the penalty the soul was perhaps about to
+pay, and drifted off to fever.</p>
+
+<p>Then, for the first time, came the man I had until then believed a myth,
+and sat beside me in the shadow, and administered to me small, mystic
+pellets, that he assured me, in low, husky whispers, and foreign accent,
+would infallibly cure my malady&mdash;my physical one, at least; as for the
+mind, its forces, he regretted to add, were beyond such influence!</p>
+
+<p>For a moment, the wild suspicion intruded on my fevered brain that this
+leech was no other than Basil Bainrothe himself, disguised for his own
+dark purposes; but the tall, square, high-shouldered form that rose
+before me to depart (taller, by half a head, than the man I suspected of
+this fresh deception), and the angular movements and large extremities
+of Dr. Englehart, dispelled this delusion forever. After all, might he
+not be honest, even if a tool of Bainrothe's?</p>
+
+<p>I took the sugared miniature pills&mdash;the novel medicine he had left for
+me&mdash;faithfully, through ministry of Mrs. Clayton's, and was benefited
+by them; and, when he came again, as before, in the twilight, I was able
+to be installed in the great cushioned chair he had sent up for me, and
+to bear the light of a shaded lamp in one corner of the large apartment.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Englehart approached me deferentially, and, without divesting
+himself of the light-kid gloves which fitted his large hands so closely,
+he clasped my wrist with his finger and thumb, and seemed to count my
+pulses.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ver much bettair,&quot; was his first remark, made in that disagreeable,
+harsh, and husky voice of his, while he bent so near me that the aroma
+of the tobacco he had been smoking caused me to cough and turn aside.</p>
+
+<p>Still, I could not see his face, for the immense bushy whiskers he wore,
+nor his eyes, for the glasses that covered them, nor his teeth, even,
+for the long, fierce mustache that swept his lips; and when, after a
+brief visit, he rose and was gone again, there remained only in my mind
+the image of a huge and hairy horror&mdash;a sort of bear of the Blue
+Mountains, from the return of which or whom I fervently hoped to be
+delivered.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Send him word I am better, Mrs. Clayton,&quot; I entreated; &quot;I cannot see
+him again, he is so repulsive; and, if you have a woman's heart in your
+breast, never leave me alone with him, or with Mr. Bainrothe, when he
+calls, for one moment&mdash;they inspire me equally with terror,
+indescribable,&quot; and I covered my face to hide its burning blushes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Look up, Miss Monfort, and listen to me,&quot; said Mrs. Clayton, at last,
+regarding me keenly, with her warped forefinger uplifted in her usual
+admonitory fashion, but with an expression on her face of interest and
+sympathy such as I had never witnessed there before. &quot;A new light has
+broken just now upon my understanding; I can't tell how or whence it
+came, but here it is,&quot; pressing her hand to her brow; &quot;I believe you
+have been misrepresented to me&mdash;but that is neither here nor there. I
+shall watch you closely and faithfully until we part&mdash;all the more that
+I do not believe you any more crazy than I am; I half suspected this
+before, but I know it now.&quot; She paused, then continued: &quot;I should have
+to tell you my life's secret if I were to explain to you why Mr.
+Bainrothe's interests are so dear to me, so vital even, and I will not
+conceal from you that I knew your guardeen's good name depends on your
+confinement here until you come of age. After that it will only be
+necessary for you to sign a few papers, and all will be straight
+again&mdash;no harm or insult is designed. To these I would never have lent
+myself in any way&mdash;ill as you think of me. And as long as we continue
+together I will guard your good name as I would do that of my own dear
+daughter&mdash;that is, if I had one. You shall receive no visitor alone.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She spoke with a feeling and dignity of which I had scarcely believed
+her capable, shrewd and sensible as I knew her to be, and far above the
+woman she called her mistress, in a certain <i>retenu</i> of manner and
+delicacy of deportment, usually inseparable from good-breeding.</p>
+
+<p>I could not then guess how acceptable, to her and the person she was
+chiefly interested in, were these signs of my aversion for Basil
+Bainrothe, and what sure means they were of access to the only tender
+spot in the obdurate heart of Rachel Clayton.</p>
+
+<p>Certain it is that, from these expressions, I derived the first
+consolation that had come to me in my immurement, and from that hour the
+solemn farce of keeper and lunatic ceased to be played between us two.</p>
+
+<p>From such freedom of communication on my jailer's part, I began to hope
+for additional information, which never came. It was in vain that I
+conjured her to tell me where my prison was situated, whether at the
+edge of the city, or far away in the country, or to suffer me to have a
+glimpse from a window of my vicinity. To all such entreaties she was
+pitiless, and I was left to that vague and vain conjecture which so
+wears the intellect.</p>
+
+<p>In the absence of all possibility of escape, it became a morbid and
+haunting wish with me to know my exact locality. That it could be no
+great distance from the city of New York, if not within its limits, I
+felt assured, from the expedition with which my transit from the ship
+had been effected.</p>
+
+<p>During the first three weeks of my confinement the deep silence that
+prevailed about me had led me to adopt the opinion that I was the
+occupant of a <i>maison de sant&eacute;</i>. I had once driven past one on Staten
+Island, where a friend of my father's&mdash;about whose condition he came to
+inquire personally&mdash;had been immured for years. I did not alight with
+him when he left the carriage to make these inquiries, but I perfectly
+remembered the old gray stone building, with its ancient elms, and the
+impression of gloom and awe it had left on my mind. But this idea was
+presently dispelled.</p>
+
+<p>I was awakened one morning, in the fourth week of my sojourn in
+captivity, by the sound of chimes long familiar to my ear, the duplicate
+of which I had not supposed to be in existence. At first I feared it was
+some mirage of the ear, so to speak, instead of eye, that reflected back
+that fairy melody, which had rung its accompaniment to my whole
+childhood and youth; but, when, after the lapse of seven days, it was
+repeated, I became convinced that its reality was unquestionable, and
+that neither impatience nor indignation had so impaired my senses as to
+reproduce those sounds through the medium of a fevered imagination.</p>
+
+<p>Were these delicious bells, a recent addition to the cupola of our grim
+asylum, bestowed by some benevolent hand that sought to mark and lend
+enchantment to the holy Sabbath-day&mdash;even for the sake of the
+irresponsible ones within its walls&mdash;or was I indeed&mdash;? But of this
+there could be no question&mdash;I dared not hazard such conjecture lest it
+drive me mad in reality&mdash;I must not!</p>
+
+<p>I groped in thick darkness, and time itself was only measured now by
+those sweet chimes, so like our own, and yet so far away. My very clock
+one morning was found to have stopped, and was not again repaired or set
+in motion. Papers I never saw, had never seen since I came to dwell in
+shadow, save that single one so ostentatiously spread before me,
+announcing the loss of the Kosciusko and her passengers&mdash;a refinement of
+cruelty, on the part of those who sent it, worthy of a Japanese.</p>
+
+<p>Rafts had been launched and lost, the survivors stated (the men who had
+seized the long-boat, to the exclusion of the women and children); the
+sea had swallowed all the remainder. A later statement might refute the
+first, but even then none could know the truth with regard to my
+identity, for would not Basil Bainrothe control the publication as he
+pleased, and make me dead if he listed&mdash;dead even after the rescue?</p>
+
+<p>Yet Hope would sometimes whisper in her daring moods: &quot;All this shall
+pass away, and be as it had not been. Be of good heart, Miriam, and do
+not let them kill you; live for Mabel&mdash;live for Wentworth!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Then, with bowed head, and silent, streaming tears, my soul would climb
+in prayer to the footstool of the Most High, and the grace, which had
+never come to me before, fell over me like a mantle in this sad
+extremity.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="III_CHAPTER_VIa"></a><h2>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>Unfaltering in her respectful demeanor toward me was Mrs. Clayton from
+the time of the little scene I have recently described. What new and
+sudden light had broken in upon her I never knew, but I supposed at the
+time that the flash of conviction had gone home to her mind with regard
+to the baseness of Bainrothe and the iniquity of his proceedings,
+founded on the fear I had expressed of his solitary presence, and the
+insight she had gained into my character.</p>
+
+<p>Watching none the less strictly, she gradually relaxed that personal
+surveillance that is ever so intolerable to the proud and
+delicate-minded, and those suggestions that, however well intended, had
+been so irritating to me from such a source. She no longer urged me to
+read, or sew, or eat, or take exercise; but, retiring into her own work
+(whence she could observe me at her pleasure, for her door was always
+set wide open, and her face turned in my direction), she employed or
+feigned to employ herself in her inexhaustible stocking-basket or
+scollop-work, either one the last resource of idiocy, as it seemed to
+me.</p>
+
+<p>Left thus to myself in some degree, I unclosed the leaves of the
+bookcase, and surveyed its grim array of &quot;classics&quot;&mdash;all new and
+unmarked by any name, or sign of having been read&mdash;and from them I
+selected a few worthies, through whose pages I delved drearily and
+industriously, and most unprofitably it must be confessed. The only
+living sensations I received from the contents of that bookcase were, I
+am ashamed to acknowledge, from a few odd volumes of memoirs, and
+collections of travels that I had happened to find stowed away behind
+the others. The rest seemed sermons from the stars.</p>
+
+<p>Captain Cook's voyages and Le Vaillant's descriptions did stir me very
+slightly with their strong reality, and make me for a few hours forget
+myself and my captivity; but all the rest prated at me like parrots,
+from stately, pragmatical Johnson down to sentimental, maudlin Sterne.</p>
+
+<p>I found them intolerable in the mood in which I was, nothing so
+exhausting as the abstract! and closed the book desperately to resume my
+diary, neglected since the awful events of Beauseincourt, but always to
+me a resource in time of trouble and of solitude. Of pens, ink, paper,
+there was no lack, and I wrote one day, Penelope-wise, what I destroyed
+the next. Yet this very &quot;jotting down&quot; impressed upon my brain the few
+incidents of my prison-house recorded here, that might otherwise have
+faded from my memory in the twilight of monotony.</p>
+
+<p>I had no need to sew. Fair linen and a sufficiency of other plain
+wearing-apparel, including summer gowns, I found laid carefully in my
+drawers, and the Creole negress brought in my clothes well ironed and
+carefully mended, to be laid away by the orderly hands of Mrs. Clayton.</p>
+
+<p>Once, during the temporary illness of this dragon (whose bed or lair was
+placed absolutely across the door of egress from her closet, so as to
+block the way or make it difficult of access), the Creole, in an
+unavoidable contingency like this, came with a pile of clothing in her
+arms to lay the pieces herself in the bureau, by direction of my jailer,
+and thus revealed herself.</p>
+
+<p>By the merest accident I had found in the lining of my purse two pieces
+of gold (the rest of my money had been spirited away with the belt that
+contained it, or the leather had been destroyed by the action of the
+saltwater), and one of these I hastened to bestow on the attendant,
+signifying silence by a gesture as I did so.</p>
+
+<p>I knew this wretch to be wholly selfish and mercenary, from my
+experience of her on the raft&mdash;for that she was the same negress I had
+long ceased to doubt&mdash;and I determined, while I had an opportunity of
+doing so, to enter a wedge of confidence between us in the only possible
+way.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sabra,&quot; I whispered, &quot;what became of the young girl, Ada Lee, and the
+deformed child? It surely can do no harm to tell me this, and I know you
+understand me perfectly.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, honey, sartinly not; 'sides, I is tired out of speakin' Spanish,&quot;
+in low, mumbling accents. &quot;Well, den, dat young gal gone to 'tend on
+Mrs. Raymond, and, as fur de chile, dey pays me to take kear of dat in
+dis very house ware you is disposed of. Dat boy gits me a heap of
+trouble and onrest of nights, dough, I tells you, honey; but I is well
+paid, and dey all has der reasons for letting him stay here, I
+spec'&quot;&mdash;shaking her head sagaciously&mdash;&quot;dough dey may be disappinted yit,
+when de time comes to testify and swar! De biggest price will carry de
+day den, chile; I tells you all,&quot; eying the gold held closely in her
+palm.</p>
+
+<p>I caught eagerly at the idea of the child's presence, though the rest
+was Greek to my comprehension until long afterward, when, in untangling
+a chain of iniquity difficult to match, it formed one important but
+additional link.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Poor little Ernie! I would give so much to see him,&quot; I said. &quot;Ask Dr.
+Englehart to let him come to see me, Sabra, and some day I will reward
+you&quot;&mdash;all this in the faintest whisper. &quot;But Mrs. Raymond&mdash;where is she?
+Does she never come here? I desire earnestly to speak with her. Can't
+you let her know this? Try, Sabra, for humanity's sake.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>At this juncture the head of Mrs. Clayton was thrust forth from its
+shell, turtle-wise, and appeared peering at the door-cheek.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have been there long enough to make these clothes instead of
+putting them away, old woman,&quot; was the sharp rebuke that startled the
+pretended Dinah to a condition of bustling agitation, and induced her to
+shut up one of her own shrivelled hands in closing the drawer, with a
+force that made her cry aloud, and, when released, wring it with agony,
+that drew some words in the vernacular. &quot;What makes you suppose Miss
+Monfort wants to hear your chattering, old magpie that you are?&quot;
+continued Mrs. Clayton, throwing off her mask. &quot;Now walk very straight,
+or the police shall have you next time you steal from a companion.
+Remember who rescued you on the Latona, and on what conditions, and take
+care how you conduct yourself in the future. Do you understand me?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>After this tirade, which sorely exhausted her, Mrs. Clayton relapsed
+into silence; and now it was my time to speak and even scold. I said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now that the Spanish farce is thrown aside, it is hard indeed that I
+cannot even be allowed to exchange a few words with a laundress in my
+solitary condition&mdash;hard that I should be pressed to the wall in this
+fiendish fashion. This woman was telling me of the presence of a little
+child in the house, and I have desired permission to see it by way of
+diversion and occupation. I have asked her to apply to Dr. Englehart.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The child shall come to you, Miss Monfort, whenever you wish,&quot; said
+Mrs. Clayton, with ill-disguised eagerness. &quot;This woman is not the
+proper person to apply to, however, and it is natural you should feel
+concerned about it, now that you are able to think and feel again. You
+know, of course, it is the boy of the wreck.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, very natural. Its mother died in my arms, if I am not mistaken in
+the identity of the child; and fortunately&mdash;&quot; I paused here, arrested by
+some strange instinct of prudence, and decided not to show further
+interest in his fate.</p>
+
+<p>He might be inquired for, and traced even, I reflected, and thus my own
+existence be brought to light. Selfishly, as well as charitably, would I
+cherish him. Little children had ever been a passion with me, but this
+poor, repulsive thing was the &quot;<i>dernier ressort</i> of desolation.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>That very evening I heard the husky and guttural voice of Dr. Englehart
+in the adjoining chamber, or rather in the closet of Mrs. Clayton, a
+mere anteroom originally, as it seemed, to the large apartment I
+occupied.</p>
+
+<p>It was very natural that in her ill condition my dragon should seek
+medical aid, and I paid no further attention to the propinquity of this
+unpleasant visitor than I could help&mdash;sitting quietly by my shaded lamp,
+absorbed in the Psalter, in which I found nightly refuge.</p>
+
+<p>He came in at last, after tapping very lightly on the door-panel,
+unsolicited and unexpected, to my presence&mdash;the same inscrutable,
+hirsute horror I had seen before, with his trudging, scraping walk, his
+square and stalwart frame, his gloved extremities, his light,
+blue-glasses, hat and cane in hand, a being as I felt to chill one's
+very marrow.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is it true vat I hear,&quot; he asked, pausing at some distance, &quot;dat you
+vant to have dat leetle hompback chilt for a companion, Miss Monfort?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is true, Dr. Englehart.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And vat can your motif be? Heh? I must study dat for a leetle before I
+can decide de question, or even trost him as a human being in your
+hands.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Lunatics are rarely governed by motives at all,&quot; I replied, &quot;only
+impulses. I want human companionship, however, that is all. I sicken in
+this solitude&mdash;I am dying of mental inanition.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is true, you look delicate indeed, I am pained to see.&quot; The accent
+was forgotten here for a moment, and an expression of real sympathy was
+perceivable in his low, husky voice. &quot;Command me in any way dat accords
+wid my duty,&quot; he continued, &quot;yes! de boy shall come! To interest, to
+amuse you, is perhaps&mdash;to cure!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you; I shall await his advent anxiously; be careful not to
+disappoint me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, not for vorlds!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are very kind; I believe, though, that is all we have to say to one
+another, Dr. Englehart.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are bettair, then?&quot; he said, advancing steadily toward me in spite
+of this dismissal. &quot;You need no more leetle pill? Are you quite sure of
+dat?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not now, at least, Dr. Englehart.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Permit me, then, to feel your pulse vonce more. I shall determine den
+more perfectly dis vexing subject of your sanity.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you; I decline your opinion on a matter so little open to
+difference. Be good enough to retire. Dr. Englehart. Let me at least
+breathe freely in the solitude to which I am consigned.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I mean no offence, yonge lady,&quot; he said, meekly, falling back to the
+centre-table on which was burning my shaded astral lamp&mdash;for I had left
+it as he approached, instinctively to seek the protection of an
+interposing chair, on the back of which I stood leaning as I spoke.</p>
+
+<p>He, too, remained standing, with one hand pressed firmly backward on the
+top of the table, in front of which he poised himself, gesticulating
+earnestly yet respectfully.</p>
+
+<p>His position was an error of mistaken confidence in his own make-up,
+such as we see occur every day among those even long habituated to
+disguise.</p>
+
+<p>As he stood I distinctly saw a line of light traced between his cheek
+and one of his bushy side-whiskers.</p>
+
+<p>That line of light let in a flood of evidence. The man was an impostor,
+a tool, as criminal as his employer&mdash;not the footprint on the sand was
+more suggestive to Robinson Crusoe than that luminous streak to me, nor
+the cause of wilder conjecture.</p>
+
+<p>Yet I betrayed nothing of my amazement I am convinced, for, after
+standing silently for a time and almost in a suppliant attitude before
+me, Dr. Englehart departed, and for many days I saw him not again.</p>
+
+<p>An object that looked not unlike a small, solemn owl, stood in the
+middle of the floor, regarding me silently when I awoke very early on
+the following morning.</p>
+
+<p>At a glance I recognized poor little Ernie, and singularly enough, he
+knew and remembered me at once.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ernie good boy now,&quot; he said as he came toward me with his tiny claw
+extended. &quot;Lady got cake in pocket, give Ernie some?&quot; Not only did he
+recall me, it was plain, but the incident that saved his life, and the
+rebukes he had received on the raft for his refusal to partake of briny
+biscuit, which no persuasion, it may be remembered, had availed to make
+him taste&mdash;even when devoured by the pangs of hunger. I tried in vain,
+however, to recall him to some remembrance of his poor mother. On that
+point he was invulnerable; the abstract had no charm for him or meaning.
+He dealt only in realities and presences.</p>
+
+<p>A new element was infused into my solitude from this time. In this child
+I lived, breathed, and had my being, until later events startled my
+individuality once more into its old currents of existence. Not that I
+merged myself entirely in Ernie, sickly, wayward, fitful, ugly little
+mite that he was undeniably. Nay, rather did I draw him forcibly into my
+own sphere of being and find nutrition in this novel element.</p>
+
+<p>So grudgingly had Nature fulfilled her obligations in the case of this
+poor stunted infant, that, at two and a half years of age, he had not
+the usual complement of teeth due a child of eighteen months, and was
+suffering sorely from the pointing up of tardy stomach-teeth through
+ulcerated gums.</p>
+
+<p>To attend to and heal his bodily ailments occupied me entirely at first,
+and finally, finding him ill cared for, I made him a little pallet on my
+sofa and kept him with me by night and day. Surely such devotion as he
+manifested in return for my scant kindness to him few mothers have
+received from their offspring. To sit silently at my feet while I talked
+to him, or do my bidding, seemed his chief pleasures, as they might not,
+could not have been, had he been strong, and active, and more soundly
+constituted. As it was, no more loyal creature existed, nor did the
+Creator ever enshrine deeper affections or quicker perceptions in any
+childish frame. Weird, and wise, and witty as Aesop was this child, like
+him deformed; and to draw out his quaint remarks, read him fresh from
+his Maker's hand&mdash;this warped, and tiny, imperfect volume of
+humanity&mdash;was to me an ever-new puzzle and delight. Severity he had been
+used to of late, I saw plainly. He shrank with winking eyes from an
+uplifted hand, even if the gesture were one of mere amazement, or
+affection, and sat patiently, like a little well-trained dog, when he
+saw food placed before me, until invited to partake thereof. His manner
+was wistful and deprecating even to pathos, and I longed for one burst
+of passion, one evidence of self-will, to prove to myself that I, like
+others he had been recently thrown with, was not the meanest of all
+created creatures&mdash;a baby's despot!</p>
+
+<p>Oh, better than this the cap and bells, and infant tyranny forever, and
+the wildest freaks of baby folly. He suffered silently, as I have seen
+no other child do, uncomplainingly even, and at such times would sink
+into moods of the blackest gloom, like those of an old, gouty subject.
+Hypochondria, baby as he was, seemed already to have fixed his fangs
+upon him. He had days of profound melancholy, when nothing provoked a
+smile, and others of bitter, silent fretting, inconceivably distressing;
+again there were periods of the wildest joy, only restrained by that
+reticence which had become habitual, from positive boisterousness.</p>
+
+<p>All this I could have compelled into subservience, of course, by
+substituting fear for affection. It is not a difficult matter for the
+strong and cunning to cow and crush the spirit of a little child; no
+great achievement, after all, nor proof of power, though many boast of
+it as such. Strength and hardness of heart are all one requires for
+this external victory; but human souls are not to be so governed (God be
+praised for this!), and love and respect are not to be compelled.</p>
+
+<p>It is the error of all errors to suppose that, because a child has a
+sickly frame or imperfect animal organization, it is just or profitable
+to give it over to its own devices, and consign it to indolence and
+ignorance. Alas! the vacancy that begets fretfulness, and crude,
+capricious desires, the confusion of images that arises from partial
+understanding, are far more wearing to the nerves of an intelligent
+infant than the small labor the brain undertakes, if any, indeed, be
+needed, in mastering ideas properly presented, and suitable to the
+condition of the sufferer. One might as well forbid the hand to grasp,
+the eye to see, nay, more, it will not do to confound the child of
+genius with the fool, or to suppose that the one needs not a mental
+aliment of which the other is incapable. Feed well the hungry mind, lest
+it perish of inanition. It is a sponge in infancy that imbibes ideas
+without an effort; it is a safety-valve through which fancy and poetry
+conduct away foul vapors; it is an alembic, retaining only the pure and
+valuable of all that is poured into it, to be stored for future use. It
+is a lightning-rod that conducts away from the body all superfluous
+electricity. It does not harm a sensible child to put it to study early,
+but it destroys a dull one. Let your poor soil lie fallow, but harvest
+your rich mould, and you shall be repaid, without harm to its fertility.</p>
+
+<p>Ideas were balm to Ernie, even as regarded his physical suffering. His
+enthusiasm rose above it and carried him to other spheres.</p>
+
+<p>Some illustrated volumes of &quot;Wilson's Ornithology,&quot; which I found in
+the bookcase, proved to be oil on troubled waters in Ernie's case; and
+before long he knew, without an effort, the name of every bird in the
+two folios of prints, and would come of his own accord to repeat and
+point them out to me.</p>
+
+<p>I found, to my amazement, that, when a cage of canaries was brought in
+and hung in the bath-room at my request for his amusement, he
+discriminated and gravely averred that no birds like those were to be
+found in his big book, though yellow hammers and orioles were there in
+their native colors, that might have deceived a less observant eye into
+a delusion as to their identity with our pretty importation.</p>
+
+<p>Verses, remarkable for rhyme and rhythm both, when repeated to him a few
+times with scanning emphasis, took root in that fertile brain which
+piled his compact forehead so powerfully above his piercing, deep-set
+eyes, and fell from his infant lips in silvery melody as effortless and
+spontaneous as the trickling of water or the singing of birds in the
+trees.</p>
+
+<p>Day by day I saw the little, wistful face relaxing from the hard-knot
+expression, so to speak, of sour and serious suffering, and assuming
+something akin to baby joyousness, and the small, warped figure, so low
+that it walked under my dropped and level hand, acquiring security of
+step and erectness of bearing. I knew little of the treatment required
+for spinal disease, but common-sense taught me that, in order to effect
+a cure, the vertebral column must be relieved as much as possible from
+pressure, and allowed to rest. So I persuaded him to lie down a great
+part of the time, and contrived for him a little sustaining brace to
+relieve him when he walked.</p>
+
+<p>I fed him carefully; I bathed him tenderly, and rubbed his weary,
+aching limbs to rest, so that before many weeks the change was
+surprising, and the success of my treatment evident to all who saw
+him&mdash;the comprehensive &quot;all&quot; being myself and two attendants.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Englehart had been suggested in the beginning by Mrs. Clayton, as
+his medical attendant, but rejected by me with a shudder, that seemed
+conclusive; yet one evening, unsummoned by me, and as far as I knew by
+any other, he walked calmly into my apartment, ostensibly to see the
+little invalid&mdash;his charge as well as mine.</p>
+
+<p>For a moment the extravagant idea possessed me that, in spite of
+appearances, I had done this man injustice, and that he came in reality
+for humane purposes alone; wore his disguise for these.</p>
+
+<p>This delusion was soon dissipated, as with audacity (no doubt
+characteristic, though not before evidenced to me), he seated himself
+complacently and uninvited, and, disposing of his hat and stick, settled
+himself down for a <i>t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te</i>, an affair which, if medical, usually
+partakes of the confidential.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your little <i>prot&eacute;g&eacute;</i>, Miss Monfort,&quot; he said, huskily, &quot;seems to be a
+serious sufferer,&quot; and for a moment dropping his accent while he rubbed
+his gloved hands together as with an ill-repressed self-gratification;
+&quot;come, tell me now what you are doing for his benefit,&quot; again
+artistically assuming a foreign accentuation.</p>
+
+<p>In a few words I described my course of treatment and its success.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;All very well,&quot; he responded, hoarsely, &quot;as far as it goes; but I am
+convinced that much severer treatment will be necessaire&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I think not,&quot; I replied, curtly; &quot;and certainly nothing of the kind
+will be permitted by me while I have charge of this poor infant.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A few leetle pills, then, for both mother and child;&quot; he suggested,
+humbly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are mistaken if you imagine any relationship to exist between Ernie
+and myself,&quot; I answered, calmly, never dreaming at the moment of covert
+or intended insult. &quot;I might as well inform you at once, that I am Miss,
+not Mrs. Monfort; you should be guarded how you make mistakes of that
+nature.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And my eye flashed fire, I felt, for I now heard him chuckling low in
+the shadow, in which he so carefully concealed himself.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I shall remembair vat you say,&quot; he observed, &quot;and try to do bettair
+next visit; but all dis time I delay in de execution of my mission here.
+See, I have brought you von lettair; now vat will you do to reward me?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Holding it high above my head, in a manner meant, no doubt, to be
+playful, and to suggest a game of snatch, perhaps, such as his peers
+might have afforded him, he displayed his treasure to my longing eyes,
+but I sat with folded arms.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If the letter brings me good news, I shall thank you warmly, Dr.
+Englehart; if not, I shall try to believe you unconscious of its
+contents.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Tanks from your lips would, indeed, seem priceless,&quot; he remarked,
+courteously, as with many bows and shrugs he laid it on the table before
+me, bringing his shaggy head by such means much closer to my hand than I
+cared to know it should be, under any circumstances.</p>
+
+<p>With a gesture of inexpressible disgust, regretted the next moment, as I
+reflected that, to bring me this letter, he might be overstepping common
+rules, I raised the envelope to the light and recognized, to my intense
+disappointment, the well-known characters of Bainrothe's&mdash;small, rigid,
+neat, constrained.</p>
+
+<p>My heart, which a moment before had beat audibly to my own ear, sank
+like a stone in my breast, and I sat for a time holding the letter
+mutely, uncertain how to proceed. Should I return it unread, and thus
+hurl the gauntlet in the traitor's face, or be governed by expedience
+(word ever so despised by me of old), and trace the venom of the viper,
+by his trail, back to his native den?</p>
+
+<p>After a brief conflict of feeling, I determined on the wiser
+course&mdash;that of self-humiliation as a measure of profound policy.</p>
+
+<p>I broke the seal, the well-known &quot;dove-and-vulture&quot; effigy which he
+called in heraldry &quot;The quarry&quot; and claimed as his rightful crest. Very
+significantly, indeed, did it strike me now, though I had jested on the
+subject so merrily of old with Evelyn and George Gaston.</p>
+
+<p>The letter was of very recent date, and ran as follows&mdash;I have the
+original still, and this is an exact copy:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;On September 1st, or as soon thereafter as feasible, I shall call to
+see you, Miriam, in your retirement, which I am glad to hear has so far
+been beneficial. Should I find you in a condition to <i>make</i> conditions,
+I shall lay before you a very advantageous offer of marriage I had
+received for you before your shipwreck. Should you accept this offer,
+and attach your signature to a few papers that I shall bring with me
+(papers important to the respectability of your whole family as well as
+my own), I shall at once resign to you your father's house and the
+guardianship of Mabel. The chimera that alarmed you to frenzy can have
+no further existence, either in fact or fancy. I am about to contract an
+advantageous marriage with a foreign lady of rank, wealth, and beauty,
+to whom I hope soon to introduce you.. I need not mention her name, if
+you are wise. Be patient and cheerful; cultivate your talents, and take
+care of your good looks&mdash;no woman can afford to dispense with these,
+however gifted; and you will soon find yourself as free as that
+'chartered libertine' the air, for which last two words I am afraid you
+will be malicious enough to substitute the name you will not find
+appended, of your true friend and guardian, B.B.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Had Wentworth spoken, then? Did he know of my immurement? Was it his
+beloved presence, his dear hand, that were to be made the prize of my
+silence and submission? Was the bitter pill of humiliation I was now
+swallowing to be gilded thus? No, no&mdash;a thousand times, no! He was not
+the man with whom to make such conditions&mdash;the man I loved&mdash;nay
+worshiped almost. He was of the old heroic mould, that would have
+preferred any certainty to suspense, and death itself to an instant's
+degradation.</p>
+
+<p>He deemed me dead, and the obstacle that had risen between us needed no
+explanation now. The waves had swallowed all necessities like this. But,
+had he known me the inmate of a mad-house, no bolts or bars would have
+withheld him from my presence. His own eyes could alone have convinced
+him of such ruin as was alleged against me by these friends.</p>
+
+<p>From this survey of my utter helplessness I turned suddenly to confront
+the deep, dark, salient eyes of the disciple of Hahnemann, real or
+pretended, fixed upon me with a glance that even his blue spectacles
+could not deprive of its subtle intensity.</p>
+
+<p>Where had I seen before orbs of the same snake-like peculiarity of
+expression, or caught the outline of the profile which suddenly riveted
+my gaze as the light partially revealed it, then subsided into shadow
+again? I pondered this question for a moment while Dr. Englehart,
+silent, expectant perhaps, stood with his hand tightly grasping the back
+of a chair, on the seat of which he reposed one knee, in a position such
+as defiant school-boys often assume before a pedagogue.</p>
+
+<p>As I have said, his head and body were again in shadow, as was, indeed,
+most of the chamber, for the rays which struggled through the thick
+ground glass of my astral lamp were as mild as moonbeams, and as
+unsatisfactory. But the light fell strong and red beneath the shade, and
+the full glare of the astral lamp seemed centred on that pudgy hand, in
+its inevitable glove, that had fixed so firm a gripe on the back of the
+mahogany chair as to strain open one of the fingers of the tight, tawny
+kid-glove worn by Dr. Englehart. This had parted slightly just above the
+knuckle of the front-finger, and revealed the cotton stuffing within.
+Nay, more, the ruby ring with its peculiar device was thus exposed,
+which graced the slender finger of the charlatan! I do not apply this
+term as concerned the profession he affected at all, but merely (as
+shall be seen later) as one appropriate to himself individually.</p>
+
+<p>There must be beings of all kinds to constitute a world, philosophers
+tell us, and he, no doubt, so long in ignorance of it, had stumbled
+suddenly on his proper vocation at last. The <i>r&ocirc;le</i> he was playing (so
+far successfully) had doubtless been the occasion of an exquisite
+delight to him, unknown to simpler mortals, who masquerade not without
+dread misgivings of detection. I for one, when affecting any costume not
+essentially belonging to me, or covering my face even with a paper-mask
+for holiday diversion, have had a feeling of unusual transparency and
+obviousness, so to speak, which precluded on my part every thing like a
+successful maintenance of the part I was attempting to play. It was as
+if some mocking voice was saying: &quot;This is Miriam Monfort, the true
+Miriam; the person you have known before as such was only making
+believe&mdash;but the Simon-pure is before you, a volume of folly that all
+who run may read! Behold her&mdash;she was never half so evident before!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>But to digress thus in the very moment of detection, of recognition,
+seems irrelevant. The flash of conviction was as instantaneous in its
+action in my mind as that of the lightning when it strikes its object. I
+stood confounded, yet enlightened, all ablaze!&mdash;but the subject of this
+discovery did not seem in the least to apprehend it, or to believe it
+possible, in his mad, mole-like effrontery of self-sufficiency, that by
+his own track he could be betrayed.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Vat ansair shall I bear to Mr. Bainrothe from his vard?&quot; asked the
+Mercury of my Jove, clasping his costumed hands together, then dropping
+them meekly before him. &quot;I vait de reply of Miss Monfort vid patience.
+Dere is pen, and ink, and papair, I perceive, on dat table. Be good
+enough to write at once your reply to de vise conditions of your
+excellent guardian.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You know them, then?&quot; I said, quickly, glancing at him with a derisive
+scorn that did not escape his observation.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have dat honnair,&quot; was the hypocritical reply, accompanied by a
+profound bow.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Disgrace, rather,&quot; I substituted. &quot;But you have your own stand-point of
+view, of course. The shield that to you is white, to me is black as
+Erebus. You remember the knights of fable?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Always the same&mdash;always indomitable!&quot; I heard him murmur, so low that
+it was marvelous how the words reached my ear, tense as was every sense
+with disdainful excitement. Yet he simply said aloud, after his
+impulsive stage-whisper: &quot;Excuse me! I understand not your allusions. I
+pretend not to de classics; my leetle pills&mdash;&quot; and he hesitated, or
+affected to do so.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Enough&mdash;I waive all apologies; they only prolong an interview
+singularly distasteful to me for many reasons. You are behind the
+curtain, I cannot doubt, and understand not only the contents of that
+absurd letter, but its unprincipled references. To Basil Bainrothe I
+will never address one line; but you may say to him that I scorn him and
+his conditions. Yet, helpless as I am, and in his hands, tell him to
+bring his emancipation papers, and I will sign them, though they cost me
+all I possess of property. My sister I will not surrender any longer to
+his care, nor my right in her, which, with or without his consent, is
+perfect when I reach my majority. As to the suitor to whom he alluded,
+he had better be allowed to speak for himself when this transaction is
+over. I shall then decide very calmly on his merits, tarnished, as these
+might seem, from such recommendation.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He is one who has loved you long, lady,&quot; said the man, sadly, speaking
+ever in that made and husky voice (wonderful actor that he was by
+nature!), which he sustained so well that, had I not unmistakably
+identified him, it might have imposed on my ear as real. &quot;Hear what has
+been written on this subject: When others have forsaken you and left you
+to your fate, he has continued faithful to your memory. The revelation
+of your immurement was made simultaneously to two men who called
+themselves your lovers, and its sad necessity explained by your
+ever-watchful guardian. One of these lovers repudiated your claims upon
+him, and turned coldly from the idea of uniting his fate to that of one
+who had even for an hour been a suspected lunatic; the other declared
+himself willing to take her as she was to his arms, even though her own
+were loaded with the chains of a mad-house! Penniless and abandoned by
+all the world, and with a clouded name, he woos her as his wife&mdash;the
+woman he adores!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And, as he read, or seemed to read, these words, with scarce an accent
+to mar their impetuous flow, Dr. Englehart drew in his breath with the
+hissing sound of passion, and folded his arms tightly across his padded
+breast, as if they enfolded the bride he was suing for in another's
+name.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And who, let me ask, is this Paladin of chivalry?&quot; I inquired,
+derisively. &quot;Give me his name, that I may consider the subject well and
+thoroughly before we meet at last.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Excuse me if I refuse to give the name of eider of dese gentlemen at
+dis onhappy season,&quot; he rejoined. &quot;Wen de brain is all right
+again&quot;&mdash;tapping his own forehead&mdash;&quot;your guardian will conduct the
+faithful knight to kneel at de feet of her he loves so well.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And the other&mdash;where is he?&quot; fell involuntarily from my lips&mdash;my
+heaving heart&mdash;an inquiry that I regretted as soon as it was uttered;
+for, affecting sorrowful mystery, the man inclined himself toward me and
+whispered in my ear confidentially:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Plighted to another, and gone where no eyes of yours shall rest on him
+again.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pander&mdash;liar&mdash;spy!&quot; burst from my passionate lips as in all the fury of
+desperation I turned from the creature who had so wantonly wounded my
+self-respect, and waved to him to begone. Another name quivered on my
+lips, but I checked it on their threshold after that first burst of
+indignation instantly subdued.</p>
+
+<p>I was not brave enough nor strong enough to hazard a shaft like that
+which might have been returned to me so deathfully. I would let the
+barrier stand which he had erected between us, and which to demolish
+would be to lay myself open, perhaps, to insult of the darkest
+description.</p>
+
+<p>Let the ostrich with his head in the sand still imagine himself unseen;
+the masquerader still conceive himself secure beneath his paper
+travesty; the serpent still coil apparently unrecognized beside the
+bare, gray stone that reveals him to the eye&mdash;I was too cowardly, too
+feeble, to cope with strategy and double-dyed duplicity like this!</p>
+
+<p>So the man went his way with his silly secret undiscovered, as he
+deemed, and that it might remain so to the end, as far as he could know,
+I devoutly prayed. For I knew of old the unscrupulous lengths to which,
+when nerved by hate or disappointment or passions of any kind, he could
+go, without a particle of mercy for his victims or remorse for his
+ill-doing.</p>
+
+<p>When Dr. Englehart was gone&mdash;for so I still choose to call him for some
+reasons, although I give my reader credit for still more astuteness than
+I possessed myself, and believe that he has long ago recognized, through
+this cloud of mystery and travesty thrown about him, an old
+acquaintance&mdash;the child Ernie rose from the bed on which he had lain
+tremulous and observant, with his small hands clinched, his eyes on
+fire. &quot;Ernie kill bad man!&quot; he exclaimed, ferociously, &quot;for trouble
+missy. Give Ernie letter&mdash;he carry it away and hide it; bad letter&mdash;make
+poor Mirry cry.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, Ernie, I will keep it,&quot; I said, as I laid it carefully aside. &quot;It
+shall stand as a sign and testimony of treachery to the end. Go to
+sleep, little child; but first say your prayers, so that the good angels
+may sit by you all night. Don't you hear Mrs. Clayton groaning? Poor
+Clayton! I must go and comfort her and soothe her pains, as Dinah cannot
+do. And, now that the bad doctor is gone home, and we are all locked up
+again securely, we shall rest peacefully, I trust; and so, good-night!&quot;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="III_CHAPTER_VII"></a><h2>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>From being the most silent of children, a perfect creep-mouse in every
+way, Ernie had become fearfully loquacious under my care, and was now as
+talkative as he had ever been observant.</p>
+
+<p>The action that most children develop through exercise of limb had been
+reserved for his untiring tongue. He had literally learned to talk from
+hearing me read aloud, which I did daily, much to Mrs. Clayton's delight
+and edification, for the benefit of my own lungs, which suffered from
+such confirmed silence, as I had at first indulged in. His exquisite
+ear&mdash;his prodigious memory&mdash;aided him in the acquirement of words, and
+even long and difficult sentences, of which he delivered himself
+oracularly when engaged with his blocks and dominoes.</p>
+
+<p>He told himself wonderful stories in which the &quot;buful faiwry&quot; and
+&quot;hollible&quot; giant of the story-books figured largely. I am almost ashamed
+to acknowledge that I would hold my breath and strain my ear at times to
+listen to these murmured stories, self-addressed, as I have never done
+to receive the finest ebullitions of eloquence or the veriest marvels of
+the <i>raconteur</i>. There was something so sweet, so wondrous to me in this
+little, ever-babbling baby-brain fountain, content with its own music,
+having no thought of auditors or effect, no care for appreciation,
+totally self-addressed and self-absorbed, that I was never weary of
+giving it my ear and interest. Had the child known of or perceived this,
+the effect would have been destroyed, and a fatal self-consciousness
+have been instituted instead of this lotus-eating infantile
+<i>abandon</i>&mdash;the very existence of which mood indicated genius. What poor
+Ernie's father might have been I could only surmise from his own
+qualities, which, after all, may have flowed from a far-off source; but
+that his mother had been gentle, simple, and inefficient, I knew full
+well, from my slight acquaintance with her, and observation of her
+non-resisting organization. Ernie, on the contrary, grappled with
+obstacles uncomplainingly, and was only outspoken in his moments of
+gratification. His was the temperament that is the noblest and the most
+magnanimous in its very moulding. Whining children are selfish, as a
+rule, and petty-minded, and most often incapable of enjoyment&mdash;which
+last is a gift of itself that goes not always with possession.</p>
+
+<p>Among other accomplishments self-acquired, Ernie had the power of
+mimicry to a singular degree. Mrs. Clayton had a slight hitch in her
+gait of late from rheumatic suffering, which he simulated solemnly,
+notwithstanding every effort on my part to restrain him.</p>
+
+<p>Without a smile or any effort of mirth, he would limp behind as she
+walked across the floor, unconscious of his close attendance, and when
+she would turn suddenly and detect him, and shake her clinched fist at
+him, half in jest, he would retaliate by a similar gesture, and scowl,
+and stamp of the foot, that so nearly resembled her own proceedings as
+to cause me much internal merriment. But of course for his own
+advantage, as well as from regard for her feelings, it was necessary for
+me on such occasions to assume a gravity of deportment bordering on
+displeasure.</p>
+
+<p>It may be supposed, then, that when, on the morning after Dr.
+Englehart's visit, before my chamber had been swept and garnished, and
+while Mrs. Clayton was busy in her own, Ernie brought me a letter and
+laid it on the table before me, as Dr. Englehart had done the night
+before in his presence, I was infinitely amused.</p>
+
+<p>What, then, was my surprise in stooping over it to find this letter
+addressed to myself in the unfamiliar yet never-to-be-forgotten
+character of Wardour Wentworth!</p>
+
+<p>After the first moment of bewilderment I opened the already-fastened
+letter&mdash;closed, as was the fashion of the day, without envelope, and
+sealed originally with wax, of which a few fragments still remained
+alone.</p>
+
+<p>The date, the subject, the earnest contents, convinced me that I now
+held the clew of that mystery which had baffled me so long, and that the
+missing letter said to have been lost at Le Noir's Landing was at last
+in my possession. It needed not this additional proof of treachery to
+convince me that my suspicions had been correct, and that, next to the
+arch-fiend. Bainrothe, I owed the greatest misery of my life to him who,
+in his ill-adjusted disguise, had dropped this letter from his pocket on
+the preceding evening&mdash;my evil genius, Dr. Englehart&mdash;<i>alias</i> Luke
+Gregory.</p>
+
+<p>It was a gracious thing in God to permit me to owe the great happiness
+of this discovery to the little crippled child he had cast upon my care
+so mysteriously, and I failed not to render to him with other grateful
+acknowledgments &quot;most humble and hearty thanks&quot; for this crowning grace.
+Henceforth Hope should lend her torch to light my dearth&mdash;her wings to
+bear me up&mdash;her anchor wherewith to moor my hark of life wherever cast,
+and to the poor waif I cherished I owed this immeasurable good. Had Mrs.
+Clayton anticipated him with her infallible besom&mdash;that housewifely
+detective, that drags more secrets to light than ever did paid
+policeman&mdash;I should never have grasped this talisman of love and hope,
+never have waked up as I did wake up from that hour to the endurance
+which immortalizes endeavor, and renders patience almost pleasurable.</p>
+
+<p>On the back of this well-worn letter was a pencil-scrawl, which,
+although I read it last, I present first to my reader, that he may trace
+link by link the chain of villainy that bound together my two
+oppressors.</p>
+
+<p>It was in the small, clear calligraphy of Basil Bainrothe, before
+described; characterized, I believe, as a back-hand&mdash;and thus it ran:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are right&mdash;it was a master-stroke! Keep them in ignorance of each
+other, and all will yet go well. I sail to-morrow, and have only time to
+inclose this with a pencilled line. Try and head them at New York. My
+first idea was the best&mdash;my reason I will explain later.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yours truly, B.B.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;N.B.&mdash;The man could not have played into our hands better than by
+taking up such an impression. There is no one there to undeceive him.&quot;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="THE_LETTER"></a><h2>THE LETTER.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>&quot;My Miriam: Your note, through the hands of Mr. Gregory, has been
+received&mdash;read, noted, pondered over with pain and amazement. The avowal
+of your name so uselessly withheld from me, lets in a whole flood of
+light, blinding and dazzling, too, on a subject that fills me with
+infinite solicitude.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There have been strange reserves between us that never ought to have
+existed, on my part as well as yours. I should have told you that I once
+had a half-sister, called Constance Glen&mdash;older than myself by many
+years&mdash;who married during my long absence from our native land a
+gentleman much older than herself, an Englishman by the name of Monfort,
+and, after giving birth to a daughter, died suddenly. These particulars
+I gathered from strangers, but there were many wanting which you can
+best supply. I know that this gentleman had a daughter, or daughters, by
+an earlier marriage&mdash;and I can find no clew to the date of my sister's
+marriage&mdash;which might in itself determine the possible age of her own
+daughter. That this child survived I have painful cause to remember. I
+had sustained shipwreck, and was in abeyance for clothes and money both,
+when it occurred to me to call on my brother-in-law, present to him my
+credentials, and remain a few days at his house as his guest, in the
+enjoyment of my sister's society, until my needs could be supplied from
+certain resources at a distance. The reception I met with from his elder
+daughter, and the information she haughtily gave me, determined my
+course. I sought no more the inhospitable roof of Mr. Monfort, to find
+shelter beneath which I had forfeited all claim by the death of my
+sister, then first suddenly revealed to me. Her child, I was told, had
+been recently injured by burning and could not be seen, even by so near
+a relative, and the manner of the young lady, whom I now identify as
+Evelyn Monfort, was such as to lead me at the time to believe this a
+mere excuse or evasion, which I did not seek to oppose.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is just possible that there may be a third sister, yet I think I
+have heard you say you had but one, and this reminiscence is anguish to
+my mind. Even more, the careless and unwarrantable allusions of Mr.
+Gregory to certain scars, evidently from burns that he had the insolence
+to observe on your neck and arms, and remark upon as mere foils to their
+beauty, in my first acquaintance with you and before I had a right to
+silence him, recurred to me as a partial confirmation of my fears.
+Without explaining to him my motives, I questioned him on this subject
+again soon after he handed me your note, a proceeding that I should have
+shrunk from as gross and unworthy of a gentleman under any other
+circumstances. I did not stop to think what impression my inquiries
+would leave upon his mind, ever prone to levity and suspicion; but he
+must have seen that I was deeply moved, and that no impertinent
+curiosity could sway me to such a course with regard to the woman I
+loved and had openly declared my plighted wife. You will understand all
+this and make allowance for me. Write to me immediately, and relieve, if
+possible, my intense solicitude. At all events, let me know the truth,
+and look it in the face as soon as may be. Any reality is better than
+suspense. Yet I must 'hope against hope,' or surrender wholly. I have
+not time to write another line. My business is imperative, or I should
+certainly retrace my steps.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yours eternally, Wentworth.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The man who wrote this letter was capable of condensing in a few calm
+words a world of passion, whether he spoke or wrote them; but he had
+governed his pen carefully in his agonizing uncertainty. It was yet to
+be determined when he penned these lines whether he should be
+considered a lover addressing his mistress, or an uncle writing to his
+niece, and in this bitter perplexity he commanded his inclinations to
+the side of principle.</p>
+
+<p>I wept with tears of joy and thankfulness above this constrained
+epistle&mdash;I pressed it to my heart, my lips, a thousand times, in the
+quiet hours of night, in the moments of retirement my jailer granted me.
+The child Ernie alone saw and wondered at these manifestations of which
+I first saw the extravagance through his solemn imitations thereof,
+which yet made me catch him rapturously in my arms and kiss him a
+thousand times, until he put me aside, at last, with decorous dignity,
+as one transcending privilege.</p>
+
+<p>By some vicarious process, best understood by lovers, I lavished on
+little Ernie a thousand terms of endearment, meant only for another, and
+by the light of my own happiness he seemed transfigured. He was
+identified with the lifting away of a burden more bitter than captivity
+itself. They could but kill my body now&mdash;my soul was filled with a new
+life that nothing could extinguish; and believing in Wentworth, I felt
+that I could die happy, let death come when and how it would. I knew now
+that in the course of time, whether I lived or died, Wentworth would
+know that I was not his niece, and claim Mabel as his own, remembering
+my estimate of those who held her in charge. Then would the tide of love
+and passion, so long repressed, roll back in its old channel, and he
+would leave no stone unturned, no path unexplored, whereby to trace my
+fate.</p>
+
+<p>To this, as yet, he held no clew. The sea had seemed to swallow Miriam
+Harz, by which name I had been registered in the ship's books and known
+to the passengers; nor could it be surmised that the young &quot;mad girl,&quot;
+since spoken of, as I had been told, in the papers, as having been
+restored to her friends by the accident of meeting the Latona, and
+Miriam Monfort, were one and the same person. But if the time should
+come when all should be explained, either by my own lips or the
+revelations of others, good cause might Basil Bainrothe and his
+confederate have to tremble!</p>
+
+<p>Like all cold, patient, deeply-feeling men, there were untold reserves
+of power and passion in the nature of Wardour Wentworth which might, for
+aught I knew to the contrary, tend naturally to and culminate in
+revenge. The wish to retaliate was, I knew, a fundamental fault in my
+own character, one I had often occasion to struggle with even in
+childhood, when Evelyn, my despot, was also my dependant, and generosity
+had been called to the aid of forbearance. Vengeance was a fierce thirst
+in my Judaic heart which only Christian streams could ever allay or
+quench, and I judged the man I loved by self&mdash;not always a fitting
+standard of comparison.</p>
+
+<p>And Gregory! I could imagine well the fiendish delight with which he had
+seen me day by day writhing uncomplainingly beneath the unexplained and
+as I had deemed unsuspected alienation of Wentworth, the cause of which
+his act had wrapped in mystery! Afraid to tamper with the note I gave
+him for the cool, discerning eye of Wentworth, curiosity had at first
+led him to break the seal of that intrusted to his care in return, and
+dark malevolence to retain it rather than destroy, for the eye of his
+confederate. That he had dispatched it at once for Paris was very
+evident from the pencilling on the back of the letter; and that the
+snare was set for me already, in which the accident of the encountered
+raft proved an assistant, I could not doubt.</p>
+
+<p>I fell into the hands of Bainrothe on shipboard instead of into those
+of Gregory in New York; this was the only difference, for subterfuge
+could have done its work as well, if not as daringly, on land as on sea;
+and the league of iniquity was made before I sailed from Savannah.</p>
+
+<p>How perfectly I could comprehend, for the first time since this
+revelation, what Wentworth must have suffered beneath his burden of
+unrelieved doubt and conjecture! I could see how, day by day, as no
+answer came to change the current of his thoughts, conviction slowly
+settled down like a cloud upon his heart, his reason; and what stern
+confirmation of all he dreaded most, my silence must have seemed to him!</p>
+
+<p>All this I saw in my mental survey with pity, with concern, with wild
+desire to fly to him, and whisper truth and consolation in his arms; for
+I loved this man as it is given to passionate, earnest natures to love
+but once, be it early or late; loved him as Eve loved Adam, when the
+whole inhabited earth was given to those two alone.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You seem in very good spirits to-day, Miss Monfort,&quot; said Mrs. Clayton,
+with unusual asperity on one occasion, when, holding Ernie in my arms, I
+lavished endearments upon him; &quot;your king, indeed! your angel! I really
+believe you admire as well as love that hideous little elf.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Of course I do, Mrs. Clayton; all things I love are beautiful to me;&quot;
+and I remembered how Bertie's plain face had grown into touching
+loveliness in my sight from the affection I bore her.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And do you really love this child?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Most certainly, and very tenderly too; is he not my sweetest
+consolation in this dreary life?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What if they remove him?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah! what, indeed!&quot; and, relaxing my grasp, I clasped my hands together
+patiently; that thought had occurred to me before.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is a very strong affection to have sprung up from a short
+acquaintance on a raft,&quot; she remarked, sententiously.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I saved his infant life, you know; and the benefactor always loves the
+thing he benefits. It is on this principle alone God loves his erring
+creatures, Mrs. Clayton, rest assured.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If you had loved the child with true friendship, you would have pushed
+him into the sea, rather than have held him in your arms above it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you suppose he is less near to God than you or I&mdash;to Christ the
+all-merciful?&quot; I questioned, sternly. &quot;Much rather would I have that
+infant's yet unconscious hope of heaven than either yours or mine, Mrs.
+Clayton!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But his earthly hope&mdash;it was that I alluded to; what chance for him?
+Poor, weakly, deformed; he had better be at rest than knocked from
+pillar to post, as he must be in this hard, cold world of chance and
+change.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And that shall never be while I live, Ernie,&quot; I said, taking him again
+in my lap, at his silent solicitation. &quot;Why, Mrs. Clayton, with such a
+noble soul, such intelligence as this child possesses, he may fill a
+pulpit, and save erring souls, or write such beautiful poems and
+romances as shall thrill the heart, or draw from an instrument sounds as
+divine as De Beriot's, or paint a picture, and immortalize his name;
+there is nothing too good, too great for Ernie to do, should God grant
+him life to achieve; and, as surely as I am spared to be enfranchised,
+shall I make this gifted child my charge.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are perfectly infatuated, Miss Monfort; I declare, I shall begin
+to believe&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, you shall not begin to believe any such, thing,&quot; I interrupted her,
+smiling; &quot;you are surely too sensible and just a woman to begin to
+believe fallacies thus late in the day.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Have it your own way,&quot; she said, sharply; &quot;you always get the better of
+me at last.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not always,&quot; I pursued, &quot;or I should not be here, you know. It rests
+with you to keep or let me go&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;To ruin my child's husband! There, now! you have my life-secret,&quot; she
+said, with a desperate gesture; &quot;use it as you will.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I understood more than ever the hopelessness of my case from the moment
+of that impulsive revelation, to which I made no answer.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What is more,&quot; she said, huskily, &quot;I, too, am watched; I never knew
+this until two days ago: a negro man, an attendant of the house, an old
+servant of your guardian's, I believe, guards the doors below, and
+refuses to let me pass to and fro. Dinah, even, is employed to dog my
+steps. This is not exactly what I bargained for; yet, in spite of all,
+on her account I shall be faithful to the end.&quot; And for a time she
+busied herself in that careful dusting of the ornaments of the chamber,
+which seemed mechanical, so habitual was it to her sense of order and
+tidiness.</p>
+
+<p>Her hand was on the gold-emblazoned Bible, I remember, and her
+party-colored bunch of plumes lifted above it, as if for immediate
+action, when her arm fell heavily to her side, and she heaved a bitter
+sigh, so deep, it sounded like a long-suppressed sob, rather, to my ear.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If I could only think you did not hate me, Miss Miriam,&quot; she said, &quot;I
+believe I could be better satisfied to lead the life I do.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Hate you! Why should I hate you, Mrs. Clayton? You are only a tool in
+the hands of my persecutor, I know, from your own confession, and I
+understand your motive better in the last few moments than I did before
+(inadequate as it seems to my sense of justice), for aiding this
+oppressor. You have been very kind to me in some respects; an inferior
+person could have tortured in a thousand ways, where you have shown
+yourself considerate, delicate even, and for all this I thank you more
+than I can express. I should be very ungrateful, indeed, were I to hate
+you. The word is strong.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yet you prefer even that hump-backed child to me or my society,&quot; she
+said, peevishly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The comparison cannot be instituted with any propriety,&quot; I responded,
+gravely, turning away and dismissing the boy to his blocks and books, as
+I did so, which made for him, I knew, a fairy kingdom of delight,
+through the aid of his splendid imagination.</p>
+
+<p>A commonplace infant will tire of the choicest toys; they are to such
+minds but effigies and delusion, which last, the delight of imaginative
+infancy, to the cut and dried, dull, childish understanding is
+impossible.</p>
+
+<p>I once overheard one little girl at a theatre&mdash;a splendid spectacle,
+calculated to dazzle and delight imaginative childhood&mdash;say to another:
+&quot;It is nothing but make-believe! That house and garden are only painted.
+See how they shake! And the women are dressed in paste jewelry, like
+that our cook-maid wears to parties, and no jeweler would give a cent
+for them; and the fairies are poor girls, dressed up for the occasion;
+and the whole play is made up as they go. You see, I know all about it,
+father says.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I heard no more, but had a glimpse of a little, eager face suddenly
+dashed in its expression, and of small fingers pressed to unwilling ears
+to shut out unwelcome truths.</p>
+
+<p>The discriminating child seemed a little monster in my eyes, who ought
+to have been sent out of the way at once of all companions capable of
+<i>abandon</i> and enjoyment; and, as to the &quot;father&quot; she quoted from, I
+could imagine him as the embodiment of asinine wisdom, so to speak&mdash;the
+quintessence of the practical, which so often, I observe, inclines its
+devotees to idiocy!</p>
+
+<p>I knew very well that Wattie was not of the stamp to doubt the truth and
+splendor of &quot;Aladdin and the Wonderful Lamp,&quot; or &quot;Cinderella,&quot; as
+surveyed from the stage-box, in his confiding infancy, any more than to
+believing in baubles when the time came to justly discriminate. Woe for
+the incredulous child, too matter-of-fact to be enlisted in the
+creations of fancy, and who tastes in infancy the chief bitterness of
+age&mdash;the incapability of surrendering life to the ideal!</p>
+
+<p>How fresh imagination keeps the heart&mdash;how young! What a glorious gift
+it is when rightly used and governed! Hear Charlotte Bront&eacute;'s testimony,
+as recorded by her biographer: &quot;They are all gone,&quot; she says, &quot;the
+sisters I so loved, and I have only my imagination left to comfort me.
+But for this solace I should despair or perish.&quot; The words are not
+exact&mdash;the book is not beside me, but such is their substance. He who
+lists can seek them for himself in the pages of that wondrous spell
+woven by Mrs. Gaskell&mdash;that tragic and strange biography which once in a
+season of deep despondency did more to reconcile me to my own condition,
+through my pity and admiration for another, than all the condolences
+that came so freely from lip and pen. Every fabric that love had
+erected crumbled about her or turned to Dead-Sea ashes on her lip. See
+what a world of passion those French letters and themes of hers betray!</p>
+
+<p>The brand of suffering and suffocating sorrow is on every one of them,
+plain to the eye of the initiated alone, they who have gazed on the
+wonders of the inner temple&mdash;the holy of holies&mdash;and gone forth
+reverently to dream of the revelation evermore in silence.</p>
+
+<p>But, above every ruin of hope, or pride, or affection, like an imperial
+banner flung from &quot;the outer wall,&quot; her imagination waved and triumphed.
+&quot;The clouds of glory&quot; she trailed after her were dyed in spheres
+unapproachable by death, or shame, or disappointment, and the gift
+described in the Arabian story as conferred by the genii's salve when he
+touched therewith the eyes of the traveler and caused him to see all the
+wonders of the earth, its gems, its gold, its gleaming chrysolites, its
+inward fires, unobscured by the interposition of dust and clay, which
+veiled them from all the rest of humanity, may stand as a type of her
+ideality.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="III_CHAPTER_VIII"></a><h2>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>The six weeks which had been allotted to me as the term of my captivity
+were accomplished, and still Mr. Basil Bainrothe came not&mdash;wrote not. I
+had seen the month of August glide away, its progress marked only by the
+changing fruits and flowers of the season, and the more fervent light
+that pierced through the Venetian blinds when turned heavenward, for it
+was through these alone that the light of day was permitted to visit my
+chamber.</p>
+
+<p>Where, then, was the place of my captivity situated? In the environs of
+a great city, possibly, for the wind often blew, laden with fragrance as
+from choice rather than extensive gardens, through my casement, and the
+shadow of a tall tree impending over the skylight of the bath-room was,
+when windy, cast so distinctly on its panes as to convince me of the
+neighborhood of an English elm, the foliage of which tree I knew like an
+alphabet.</p>
+
+<p>And then, those fairy, Sabbath chimes! Were such musical bells
+duplicated in adjacent cities? or was I, indeed, near our old, beloved
+church, in which memory so distinctly revealed our ancient, velvet-lined
+pew, my father's bowed head, and the venerable pastor rising white-robed
+and saintly in his pulpit to bid all the earth keep silent before the
+Lord! Conjecture was rife! Thus August passed away.</p>
+
+<p>My birthday had gone by, and the equinox was upon us, with its rapid
+changes of sun and storm, when one of these tempests, accompanied by
+hail of unusual size, shattered to fragments the skylight of the
+bath-room. This hail-storm was succeeded by a deluge of rain, which
+flooded not only the adjacent closet, but the chamber I occupied, among
+other evils completely submerging the superb Wilton carpet, concerning
+the safety of which Mrs. Clayton felt immense responsibility.</p>
+
+<p>A glazier came as soon as the weather permitted, who was carefully
+escorted through my chamber by Mrs. Clayton to ascertain the repairs to
+be made&mdash;a fresh-looking, white-aproned Irish lad, I remember (for a
+human being was a novelty to me then), who found it necessary, in order
+to repaint the wood-work, to bear the sash away with him, leaving behind
+his tray of chisels and putty, and the light step-ladder he had brought
+with him on his shoulder, and on whose return I vainly waited as a
+chance for communication with the outer world.</p>
+
+<p>While Dinah was busy with mops and brooms drying the carpet, and Mrs.
+Clayton thoroughly occupied with her active superintendence of the
+needful operations, little mischievous, meddlesome Ernie had made his
+way, contrary to all rules, beneath and behind my bed, and torn off a
+goodly portion of the gray and gilded paper which had so far effectually
+aided to conceal a closed door situated behind the bed-head, from which
+the frame had been removed. Then, for the first time since our
+acquaintance, did I slap sharply those little, busy fingers which I
+could have kissed for thankfulness, and, watching my opportunity, I
+replaced the paper, unseen by Mrs. Clayton, with the remains of a
+gum-arabic draught which had been prescribed for his cough. I knew that,
+after experiencing such condign punishment, he would return no more to
+the scene of his destruction, and that he might forget both injury and
+discovery, I devoted myself to his amusement during that active, long,
+rainy day with unhoped-for success.</p>
+
+<p>The glazier had announced to Mrs. Clayton that his return might be
+deferred for four-and-twenty hours, and, as the succeeding day was clear
+and warm, I proceeded, in spite of broken sashes, to take my daily bath
+as usual at twelve o'clock.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Clayton, with her prison-key in her pocket, and her snuffbox at
+hand, yielded herself to the delight of ginger-nuts and her
+stocking-basket, and rested calmly after her fatigues of the preceding
+day; and Ernie, attracted by the crunching noise&mdash;the sound of dropping
+nuts, perhaps, which betrayed the presence of his favorite article of
+food&mdash;hastened to keep her company&mdash;a thing he never did
+disinterestedly, it must be confessed.</p>
+
+<p>An opportunity now presented itself for observation which I knew might
+not again occur during my whole captivity; and surely no sailor ever
+ascended to the mast-head of the Pinta with a heart more heaved with
+emotion than was mine, as I placed my foot on the last rung of the
+ladder, and towered from my waist upward above the skylight. I had drawn
+the bolt within, as I invariably did while bathing, and with a feeling
+of proud security I stood and surveyed the scene beneath and around me.
+The angle of vision did not, it is true, embrace objects immediately
+below me, owing to the projecting cornices of the flat roof (a mere
+excrescence from the original structure, as this was), but beyond this
+the eye swept for some distance uninterruptedly.</p>
+
+<p>Bathed in the golden light of that autumn noonday sun, I saw and
+recognized a long-familiar scene, and for a moment I reeled on the
+slender step as I did so, and all grew dark around me. But, with one of
+those energetic impulses that come to us all in time of emergency, I
+recovered my balance in time to save myself from falling; and eagerly
+and wistfully, as looks the dying wretch on the dear faces he is soon to
+see no more, I gazed upon the paradise from which fiends had driven me.</p>
+
+<p>There, indeed, just as I had left it, lay the deep-green grassy lawn,
+with its richly-burdened flower-pots, its laburnums, and white and
+purple lilacs, and drooping guelder-rose bushes, and its great English
+walnut-tree towering, like a Titan, in the centre. There was the
+hawthorn-hedge my father's hand had planted, and the fountain-like
+weeping-willow my mother had set, in memory of her dead, whose graves
+were far away; and there towered the lofty elm-trees, with their long,
+low, sweeping branches, meeting in friendly greeting, to two of which a
+swing had once been attached as a bond of union&mdash;a swing in which it had
+once been my childish pleasure to sway and read, while Mabel sat beside
+me with her head upon my shoulder, held securely in her place by my
+strong, loving, encircling arm.</p>
+
+<p>Nor were these all to assure me that, after a year of melancholy and
+eventful absence, I looked again upon the precincts of home. A little
+farther on rose the gray wall and tower of the library and belfry, half
+concealed by its heavy coating of ivy, glossy and dark, and shutting
+away all other view of the mansion. Beyond these last was the pavilion
+my father had built for the playhouse of his children, through the open
+lattice-door of which I saw a girl seated at her work, with graceful,
+bending neck, and half-averted face. A moment later, Claude Bainrothe
+lounged across the sward, cigar in hand. At his approach, the face
+within was turned, and I recognized, at a glance, that of my young
+aurora-like companion of the raft, Ada Greene. Then gazing cautiously
+around, as if to elude observation (never dreaming of the eye dropped
+like a bird's upon him), he lifted the rosy face in his hand and kissed
+it thrice right loverly!</p>
+
+<p>I saw no more&mdash;I would not witness more&mdash;for had I not learned already
+all that I asked or ought to know? Well might the dear old chimes ring
+out their Sabbath welcome to one who had obeyed their summons from her
+childhood up to womanhood! Well might the summer air bear on its wings
+greeting of familiar odors, lost and found!</p>
+
+<p>This was no idle dream, no mirage of a vagrant brain like that
+sea-picture, or that wild vision at Beauseincourt, but sober, and sad,
+and strange reality. I understood my position from that moment,
+geographically as well as physically. I was a prisoner in the house of
+Basil Bainrothe (while he, perchance, reigned lordly in my own); that
+house whose hidden arcana I had never explored, and which, beyond its
+parlor and exterior, was to me as the dwelling of a stranger.</p>
+
+<p>Derisively deferential, he had resigned to me this secluded chamber in
+the ell&mdash;his own particular sanctum, I remember to have heard&mdash;and
+betaken himself, in all probability, to the more spacious mansion of his
+former neighbor.</p>
+
+<p>Far wiser, even if sadder, than I went up its rounds, did I descend that
+ladder!</p>
+
+<p>Half an hour after I had entered it, and with new hope, I emerged from
+the bath-room as fresh as a naiad, having first abstracted from the
+tool-box of the glazier two tiny chisels of different sizes, and a
+small lump of putty, which I secreted, on my first opportunity, in my
+favorite hiding-place&mdash;a hollow in the post of my bedstead&mdash;an
+accidental discovery of mine, made during Mrs. Clayton's first illness,
+since which I had always insisted on making up my own bed, much to her
+relief.</p>
+
+<p>My conscience so disturbed me on the score of this theft, that I
+hastened to secrete my only remaining piece of gold in the glazier's
+box; ill-judged, as this appeared to me on reflection. The boy was an
+apprentice, evidently, and might else, I thought, at the time, have been
+the loser. I feared to add a line, and dared not seek a passing word
+with him, so carefully was I watched.</p>
+
+<p>I next examined, with the eye of scientific scrutiny, two massive rulers
+that lay on my table, one made of maple-wood, and the other of ebony,
+and, having selected the first as most available for my purpose,
+prepared to commence the most arduous undertaking of my life&mdash;the
+careful shaping of a wooden key!</p>
+
+<p>I had read somewhere that, during the French Revolution, a young
+peasant-girl, by means of such an instrument, had set at large her
+lover, or her brother, in <i>La Vend&eacute;e;</i> having taken with soft wax the
+outline of the wards of the lock, in a moment of opportunity.</p>
+
+<p>That day my work began&mdash;three times a failure, but at last successful.
+With the aid of putty, gradually allowed to harden, I obtained the mould
+I desired, in the dead of night, and afterward, whenever privacy, even
+for a few minutes, was mine, I drew from my bosom my sacred piece of
+sculpture, and worked upon it with knife and chisel alternately, as
+devotee never worked on sculptured crucifix. Never shall I forget the
+rapture, the ecstasy of that moment, in which, ensconced between my
+bed-head and the wall, I slowly turned the key, first thoroughly soaked
+in oil, in the morticed wards, and knew, by the slight giving of the
+door, that it was unlocked.</p>
+
+<p>Not Ali Baba, when he entered the robbers' cave, and saw the heaps of
+gold&mdash;all his by the force of one magic word; not Aladdin, when the
+genius of the lamp rose to his bidding, bearing salvers of jewels, which
+were to purchase for him the hand of the sultan's daughter; not Sindbad,
+when he saw the light which led him to the aperture of egress from the
+sepulchre in which he had been pent up with his wife's body to die&mdash;knew
+keener or more triumphant sensations than filled my bosom as I laid that
+completed key next my heart, after turning it cautiously backward and
+forward in my prison-lock!</p>
+
+<p>I dared not, at that time, draw back the bolt above, that confined it
+loosely yet securely, or turn the silver knob sufficiently to set it
+even ever so little ajar; but I did both later, when oil had time to do
+its subtle work, and I could effect my experiment in silence. Yet I
+hazarded nothing of the sort when the quick ear of Mrs. Clayton held
+watch in the adjoining room. I was obliged to take advantage of those
+moments of rare absence, when, double-locking the doors of her chamber,
+both inner and outer, she would descend, for a few minutes, to the
+realms below, returning so suddenly and silently as almost to surprise
+me, on one or two occasions, at my work.</p>
+
+<p>About the time of the completion of my experiment, I became aware of
+sounds in the room beneath my chamber, and sometimes on the great
+stairway (of which I now knew the largest platform was situated very
+near the head of my bed), that gave token of occupancy.</p>
+
+<p>The rattling of china and silver might be discerned in the ancient
+dining-room, at morn and night. The occupant probably dined elsewhere,
+but the regularity of these meals was unmistakable.</p>
+
+<p>I recognized, faintly, the step of Bainrothe on the stairway,
+distinguishing it readily from any other, as it passed and repassed my
+hidden door.</p>
+
+<p>October had now set in, with a chilliness unusual to that bland season,
+and I asked for and obtained permission to have a fire kindled in the
+wide and gloomy grate of my chamber, hitherto unused by me.</p>
+
+<p>About this household flame, Ernie, Mrs. Clayton, and I gathered
+harmoniously; she with her unfailing work-basket, I with book or pencil,
+the baby with his blocks and dominoes and painted pictures&mdash;the only
+happy and truly industrious spirit of the group. My true work was
+done&mdash;else might it never have been completed.</p>
+
+<p>The presence of fire was indispensable to Mrs. Clayton, and, from the
+time of its first lighting, she left me but seldom alone. Her rheumatic
+limbs needed the solace that I had no heart to grudge her, distasteful
+as she was to me, and becoming more so day by day&mdash;false as I now knew
+her to be&mdash;false at heart.</p>
+
+<p>How hatred grows, when we once admit the germ&mdash;not, like love,
+parasitically&mdash;but strong, stanch, stern, alone throwing down fresh
+roots, even hour by hour, like the banyan, monarch of the Eastern
+forest. I am afraid I have a turn for this passion naturally, but for
+love as well, ten times more intense&mdash;so that one pretty well
+counterbalances the other.</p>
+
+<p>To carry out the vine-simile, I might as well add at once that, in the
+end, the parasitical plant has triumphed, and stifled the sterner
+growth. In other words, Christianity has conquered Judaism.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I suppose I may soon expect a visit from Mr. Bainrothe,&quot; I said one
+day to Mrs. Clayton. &quot;I think my birthday approaches; can you tell me
+the day of the month? I know that of the week from remembering the
+Sabbath chimes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I thought she started slightly at this announcement, but she replied,
+unflinchingly:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The 5th, yes, I am quite sure it is the 5th of the month.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you never see a newspaper, Mrs. Clayton, and, if so, can you not
+indulge me with a glimpse of one? I think it would do me good&mdash;remind me
+that I was alive, I have seen none since the account of Miss Lamarque's
+safety, for which God be praised.&quot;<a name="FNanchor_6_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_6_6"><sup>[6]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, Miss Monfort, it is simply impossible. I should be transgressing
+the rules of the establishment.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Dr. Englehart's, I suppose, as if indeed there were such a person,&quot; I
+said, impetuously&mdash;unguardedly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you pretend to doubt it?&quot; she asked, slowly, setting her greedy eyes
+upon my face, and dropping her darning-work and shell upon her knee.
+&quot;Why, what possesses you to-day, Miss Miriam?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I shall answer no questions, Mrs. Clayton&mdash;this right, at least, I
+reserve&mdash;but, the fact is, I doubt every thing lately, except this
+child and God. I do not believe my Creator will forsake me utterly&mdash;I
+shall not, till the end.&quot; And tears rolled down my face, the first I had
+shed for days. I had been petrified, of late, by the resolution I was
+making, and the effort of mind it had cost me. I had felt, until now,
+that I was hardening into stone.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You desire to see Mr. Bainrothe, I suppose,&quot; she remarked, after a long
+silence, during which she had again betaken herself to her occupation,
+without lifting her eyes as she asked the question.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I desire to look my fate in the face at once, and understand his
+conditions,&quot; I replied, sullenly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But what if he is not here&mdash;what if Dr. Englehart&mdash;&quot; lifting her eyes
+to mine.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I cannot be mistaken,&quot; I interrupted, with impetuosity. &quot;I have heard
+his step; he eats in the room below; I am convinced, for I know of old
+that bronchial cough of his&mdash;the effect of gormandism&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Then suddenly, Ernie, looking up, made a revelation, irrelevant, yet to
+my ear terrible and astounding, but fortunately incomprehensible to my
+companion. What did that little vigilant creature ever fail to remark?</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mirry make tea,&quot; he said, or seemed to say, and my face paled and
+flushed alternately, until my brain swam.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Make tea?&quot; said the voice of Mrs. Clayton, apparently at a great
+distance. &quot;No, I will make the tea, Ernie, as long as we stay together.
+Mirry does not know how to draw tea like an Englishwoman.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Oh, fortunate misunderstanding! how great was the reaction it
+occasioned! From an almost fainting condition I rallied to vivacity,
+and, for long, weary hours, sat pointing out pictures to the boy, to win
+him to oblivion, and persuade him to silence. Singularly enough, but
+not unusual with him, he never resumed the topic. I had taken pains to
+hide my work from his observing eyes; and how he knew it, unless he lay
+silently and watched me from his little bed, when I worked at early dawn
+in mine, I never could conjecture. A few days later Mrs. Clayton
+announced to me that Mr. Bainrothe would call very shortly.</p>
+
+<p>It was early morning, I remember, when she laid before me the card of
+&quot;Basil Bainrothe,&quot; with its elaborate German characters, on which was
+written, in pencil, the addendum, &quot;Will call at ten o'clock;&quot; and,
+punctual as the hand to the hour, he knocked at the dressing-room door
+at the appointed time, and was admitted.</p>
+
+<p>He entered with that light, jaunty step peculiar to him, and which I
+have consequently ever associated in others with impudence and guile.
+Hat and cane in the left hand, he entered; two fingers of the right
+raised to his lips, by way of salutation (he clinched his glove in the
+remainder), to be offered to me later, and ignored completely, then
+waved carelessly, as if condoning the offense.</p>
+
+<p>He was quite a picture as he came in&mdash;a fashion-plate, and as such I
+coolly regarded him&mdash;fresh, fair, and smiling, looking younger, if
+possible, than when we parted a year before, and handsome, as that
+much-abused word goes, in his debonair, off-hand style of appearance.</p>
+
+<p>He was dressed with even more than his usual care and trimness (wore
+patent-leather boots, my aversion from that hour, for these were the
+first I had ever seen), and lavender-colored pantaloons, very tightly
+strapped down over them; a glossy black coat and vest, and linen of
+unimpeachable quality and whiteness; while a chain of fine Venetian
+gold held his watch, or eye-glass, or both, in suspension from his neck.
+Yet no beggar in rags ever appeared to me half so loathly as did this
+speckless dandy!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You have come,&quot; I said, grimly, as he settled his shirt-collar to speak
+to me, after formally depositing his hat and cane, and a roll of paper
+he drew from his pocket, on the centre-table, and wiping his face
+carefully with his cambric, musk-scented handkerchief, unspeakably
+odious and unclean to my olfactories&mdash;&quot;you have come at last; yet the
+greatest wonder to me is, how you dare appear at all before me,&quot; and I
+looked upon him right lionly, I believe.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You were always inclined to assume the offensive with me, Miriam. Yet I
+confess you have a little shadow of reason this time, or seem to have,
+and I am here to-day for purposes of explanation or compromise&quot; (bowing
+gracefully), and he rubbed his palms together very gently and
+complacently, looking around as he did so for a chair, which perceiving,
+and drawing to the table so as to face me where I sat on the sofa, he
+deposited himself upon, assuming at once his usual graceful pose.</p>
+
+<p>It was <i>fauteuil</i>, and he threw one arm over that of the chair,
+suffering his well-preserved white hand&mdash;always suggestive of poultices
+to me&mdash;with its signet ring, to droop in front of it&mdash;a hand which he
+moved up and down habitually, as he conversed, in a singularly soothing
+and mechanical fashion&mdash;his &quot;pendulum&quot; we used to call it in old times,
+Evelyn and I, when it was one of our chief resources for amusement to
+laugh at &quot;Cagliostro,&quot; our <i>sobriquet</i> for this <i>ci-devant jeune homme</i>,
+it may be remembered.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Let me premise, Miriam,&quot; he began, &quot;by congratulating you on your
+improved appearance&quot;&mdash;another benign bow. &quot;You were so burned and
+blackened by exposure, and so&mdash;in short, so very wild-looking when I
+last saw you, that I began to fear for the result; but perfect rest and
+retirement, and good nursing, have effected wonders. I have never seen
+you so fair, so refined-looking, and yet so calm, as you are now
+(calmness, my child, is aristocratic&mdash;cultivate it!); even if a little
+thin and delicate from confinement, yet perfectly healthy, I cannot
+doubt, from what I see. Do assure me of your health, my dear girl. You
+are as dumb to-day as Grey's celebrated prophetess.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;All personal remarks as coming from you are offensive to me, Mr.
+Bainrothe,&quot; I rejoined; &quot;proceed to your business at once, whatever that
+may be&mdash;a truce to preamble and compliments.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You shall be obeyed,&quot; he remarked, bowing low and derisively. &quot;Yet,
+believe me, nothing but my care for your fair fame and my own have led
+me to confine you in such narrow limits for a season which, I trust, is
+almost over. As to my persecutions, which, I am told, you allege as a
+reason for leaving your house and friends so precipitately, these are
+out of the question henceforth forever, I assure you&quot;&mdash;with a wave of
+the velvet hand&mdash;&quot;since I am privately married to a lady of rank and
+fortune, who will soon be openly proclaimed 'my wife,' and who will be
+found, on close acquaintance, worthy of your friendship.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>While giving utterance to this tirade, Mr. Bainrothe was slowly
+unwinding a string from around the roll of papers he had laid on the
+table, and which he now proceeded to spread somewhat ostentatiously
+before me, still mute and impassive to all his advances as I continued
+to be.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There are several,&quot; he said. &quot;Your signature to each, will be
+required, which, now that you are in your right mind again, and of age,
+will be binding, as you know. My witnesses shall be called in when the
+time comes. Dr. Englehart and Mrs. Clayton will suffice as proofs of
+these solemnities&mdash;these and others likely to occur.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Solemnities! Levities, mockeries rather!&quot; I could not help rejoining.</p>
+
+<p>He felt the sarcasm. His florid cheek paled with anger, his
+yellow-speckled eyes glowed with lurid fire, he compressed his lips
+bitterly as he said:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Marriage is usually considered a solemnity, Miss Monfort; and, let me
+assure you, it is only as a married woman I can conscientiously release
+you from confinement. You have shown yourself too erratic to be
+intrusted in future with your own liberties.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Possibly,&quot; I rejoined. &quot;Yet I mean to have the selection, let me assure
+you, in return, of the controller of my liberties&mdash;nay, have already
+selected him, for aught you know!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>My cool audacity seemed for a moment to paralyze even his own. He paused
+and surveyed me, as if in doubt of his own senses.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;<i>Impayable!</i>&quot; I heard him murmur, softly, and, turning to the
+book-shelves, he left me for a time to master the contents of the three
+documents over which I was bending.</p>
+
+<p>I read them in order as they were numbered, and became more and more
+indignant as their meaning opened upon my brain, and culminated at last
+in a sharp, sudden exclamation of utter disdain.</p>
+
+<p>I started from my chair and approached him, paper in hand. I think for
+a few moments the idea of personal danger possessed him, and the vision
+of a concealed dirk or pistol swam before his eyes, which he shielded
+with his hand, while he placed a chair between us; and, truth to say,
+there was murder in my heart, and in my eyes as well, I suppose, even if
+the mistrust went no further.</p>
+
+<p>I could have obliterated him from the face of the earth at that moment
+as remorselessly as if he had been a viper in my path striking to sting
+me. Yet I advanced toward him with no demonstration or intentions of
+this kind, having the habits of lady-like breeding and usual innocence
+of weapons, and ignorance of the use thereof as well, to restrain me.</p>
+
+<p>I forget. Close to my heart lay one of the sharp, shining chisels I had
+taken from the glazier in the bath-room.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What is it you object to, Miriam?&quot; he asked, in faltering tones, as his
+hand fell and his glimmering eyes encountered mine.</p>
+
+<p>From that day I have believed the legend which tells that, when the
+Roman, helpless in his dungeon, thundered forth, &quot;Slave! darest thou
+kill Caius Marius?&quot; the armed minion of murder turned and fled, dropping
+the knife he held, in his panic, at the feet of the man he came to slay.
+Almost such effect was for a time observable in Basil Bainrothe.</p>
+
+<p>It made me smile bitterly. &quot;All, every thing,&quot; I answered. &quot;The whole
+requisition, from first to last, is base, dastardly&mdash;crime-confessing,
+too&mdash;if seen with discriminating eyes. Why, if innocent of fraud toward
+me and mine, should you ask a formal acknowledgment on my part as to
+your just administration of my affairs, and a recantation of all I have
+said to the contrary, both with regard to yourself and Evelyn Erle?
+Such are the contents of this first paper, the only one that I could,
+under any possible circumstances, be induced to sign as a compromise
+with your villainy; for, not to gain my own life or liberty, will I ever
+put hand to the others, infamous as they are on the very surface.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miriam, this violence surprises me, is wholly unlooked for, and
+unnecessary,&quot; he remarked, mildly. &quot;From what Mrs. Clayton has told me,
+I had supposed that my disinterested care and assiduity with regard to
+your condition were about to meet their reward in your rational
+submission to the necessities of your case and mine. Resume your seat, I
+entreat you, and let us calmly discuss a matter that seems to agitate
+you so unduly. Perhaps I may be able to place it before you in a better
+light ere we have concluded our interview. You will sit down again,
+Miriam, will you not?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, surely, if you are alarmed; but, really, I should suppose, with
+Mrs. Clayton and Dr. Englehart no doubt in call, you need not be so
+tremulous. There, you are quite safe, I assure you, in your old place,
+with the table between us;&quot; and I pointed derisively to the <i>fauteuil</i> he
+had occupied so gracefully a few moments before, and into which he now
+slowly subsided.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Contemptuous girl,&quot; he broke forth at last, &quot;you may yet live to regret
+this behavior; so far, nothing has been denied you; no expense has been
+spared for your comfort; in a tribunal of justice you could say this, no
+more: 'My guardian, thinking me mad from his experiences of my conduct
+and health, and regaining accidental possession of me at a time when,
+under a feigned name, I was thought to be drowned, deemed it best,
+before revealing my existence to the world, to try and restore me to
+sanity by private measures, rather than bring upon my malady the eyes
+of a mocking world. In doing this, he used all delicacy, all devotion,
+surrounding me with comforts, and many luxuries, and even humoring my
+insane whim to have the companionship of a year-old child found with me
+on the raft under circumstances suspicious&mdash;if no more&mdash;'&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Wretch!&quot; I gasped, &quot;dare only asperse me in thought, and&quot;&mdash;the menace
+hung suspended on my tongue. What power had I to execute it, even if
+uttered?</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As to my name, I feigned none. It was my mother's, is my own, and from
+her I inherited, or, from the race of which she sprang, the power to
+remember and avenge my wrongs; to hate, and curse&mdash;and blast, perhaps,
+as well&mdash;such as you and yours, granted to his chosen children through
+the power of Almighty God!&quot; And again I rose and confronted him; then
+fiercely pointed down upon his ignoble head, now bowed involuntarily,
+either from policy or nervous terror, I never knew, a finger quivering
+and keen with scorn and rage, an index of the mind that directed it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I wonder you are not afraid to behave to me in this manner,&quot; he said,
+at length, lifting his head with a spasmodic jerk, and raising to mine
+his mottled, angry eyes, now cold and hard as pebbles, &quot;seeing that you
+are, so to speak, in the hollow of my hand;&quot; and, suiting the action to
+the word, he extended his long, spongy, right hand, and closed it
+crushingly, as though it contained a worm, while he smiled and
+sneered&mdash;oh, such a sneer! it seemed to fill the room.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;True, true&mdash;I am very helpless,&quot; I said, sitting down with a sudden
+revulsion of feeling, and, clasping my hands above my eyes, I wept
+aloud, adding, a moment later, as I indignantly wiped my tears: &quot;Yes, if
+the worst betide, there will only be one more martyr; and, what is
+martyrdom, that any need shrink from it? The world is full of it!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nothing, if you are used to it,&quot; he said, carelessly, &quot;as the old woman
+remarked of the eels she was skinning alive; I suppose you know all
+about it by this time. But come, you are rational again, now, and I
+don't wish to be hard on you, Miriam; I don't, upon my soul!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Your soul!&quot; I murmured&mdash;-&quot;your soul!&quot; I reiterated louder; and I smiled
+at the idea that suggested itself&mdash;&quot;have reptiles souls?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The memory of your father alone, my old, confiding friend, one of the
+most perfect of men, as I always thought him, would incline me kindly to
+his daughter, even if no other tie existed between us,&quot; he said calmly,
+unmindful of my sarcasm. &quot;But other ties do exist, mistaken girl! The
+world looks upon us as one family&mdash;since the marriage of Claude and
+Evelyn, that uncongenial union which, but for your caprice, would never
+have taken place, and which is at the root of all our misfortunes, all
+our fatal necessities.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Necessities!&quot; I muttered, between my clinched teeth, drumming with my
+fingers impatiently on the table before me, and smiling scornfully a
+moment later.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You seem in a mood for iteration, to-day, Miss Monfort.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I make my running commentaries in that way, Mr. Bainrothe. But a truce
+to recrimination and reminiscence both. Let us adhere strictly to the
+letter and verse of our affairs. These papers form the subject of your
+visit, I believe. Know, at once, that the first I will sign, on certain
+conditions, bitter and humiliating as I feel it to be obliged to do
+this; but, that I will ever consent to yield the guardianship of my
+sister wholly to Evelyn Erie and her husband, or divest myself of my
+house and furniture, or my wild lands in Georgia, to you, here first
+named to me, in consideration of expenses already incurred and to be
+incurred for Mabel's education, and my own safe-keeping, during a long
+attack of lunacy; or that I will, to crown the whole iniquitous
+requisition, consent to give my hand in marriage to that scoundrel&mdash;Luke
+Gregory!&mdash;are visions as vain as those of the child who tried to grasp a
+comet or the moon&mdash;or, to descend in comparison, to catch a bird by
+putting salt on its tail! There, you have my ultimatum; now go and make
+the best of it!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I am prepared for your objections&mdash;prepared, too, to overcome them,&quot; he
+said, coolly. &quot;Take time to consider all this. I do not expect an answer
+to-day, did not when I came, nor will I accept one signature without the
+whole. There is no compromise possible. As to your marriage&mdash;it must be
+accomplished before you leave this room. I, as a magistrate, can tie the
+knot&mdash;fast enough to bind all the other agreements to certain
+fulfillments, for Gregory is a friend of mine, and a man of honor, and
+will see them carried out to the letter. He loves you, too, and proves
+it, for he takes you penniless. Afterward a priest may complete the
+ceremony if you have any scruples. Then, of course, it rests between you
+and Gregory, whether you remain together or separate as wide as the
+poles&mdash;I shall wash my hands of the whole affair thereafter, having
+secured my good name and yours.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I stood with bowed head and moving lips before him&mdash;mutely, indignantly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I shall, however, make all this,&quot; he continued, &quot;appear as well as
+possible to your friends and mine, especially, believe me, Miriam! I
+shall state, for your sake, that, after being rescued from the raft, you
+were partially insane, but still sufficiently mistress of yourself to
+coincide with me and your sisters in the wish to let your death as Miss
+Harz pass current with the world, until you should redeem your errors&quot;
+(what errors?), &quot;and be restored to health and perfect reason. You will
+see that your acknowledgment of the last paper includes these
+extenuating facts, when you have leisure to re-read it (for I saw how
+hastily you glanced over that one in particular); you must do me the
+favor to peruse it much more carefully,&quot; drawing on his gloves coolly,
+&quot;before you make your final decision. You are very comfortable here, my
+dear girl,&quot; glancing around benignly, &quot;but you have no conception of the
+frame of mind, bare walls, utter solitude, a fireless hearth and a
+frugal table, would bring about in a very few days or weeks, or even in
+one as resolute and defiant as yourself. I should be loath to try such
+an experiment <i>or deprive you of your child</i>&mdash;but <i>necessitous non habet
+legem,</i> the school-book says. I think you, too, studied a little Latin,
+Miriam?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Monster!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not a very relevant or polite remark, I must confess. By-the-by,
+Miriam, as you stand before me with your well-poised figure&mdash;your
+blazing eyes&mdash;your quivering nostrils&mdash;your curling, compressed
+lip&mdash;your heaving chest (always a splendid feature in your <i>physique</i>),
+your folded arms, and the color coming and going in your pale-olive
+cheek, in the old flame-like way I used to admire so much in your
+girlhood&mdash;you are a splendid creature, by Jove! I could find it in my
+heart to love you still&mdash;there, it is out at last&mdash;if it were not for
+Mrs. Raymond&mdash;&quot; glancing, as he spoke, in the direction of Mrs. Clayton,
+with a knowing smile, &quot;It was your magnificent disdain that kindled the
+torch before. Beware how you revive that fanaticism of mine!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I turned for one moment with an involuntary feeling of appeal to Mrs.
+Clayton, but her cold, green eyes were quivering in accordance with the
+smile that stretched her thin lips to a line of mocking mirth. One
+glimpse of sympathy would have carried me to her arms for
+refuge&mdash;distasteful as she was to me in every way save one. She, like
+myself, was a woman. But such perversion of all natural feeling
+estranged me from her irreconcilably and forever.</p>
+
+<p>I was alone; shame, humiliation, despair, possessed me; indignation, for
+the insult I was forced to bear in her presence, filled my soul&mdash;I stood
+with my head cast down, tears raining on my bosom, my arms dropped
+nervelessly beside me, my hands clinched, my whole frame trembling with
+excitement.</p>
+
+<p>Slowly and one by one came those convulsive sobs&mdash;that rend and wrench
+the physical frame as earthquakes do the earth. Then rose the sudden
+resolve&mdash;born of volcanic impulse, irresistible to mind as is the
+lava-flood to matter, sweeping before it all obstructions of reason,
+habit, expediency.</p>
+
+<p>If it cost me my life I would avenge myself on this tiger, thirsting for
+my blood; I would anticipate him in his work of destruction, and the
+strength of Samson seemed to permeate my frame.</p>
+
+<p>It was strange that at that moment of cold, impetuous energy I forgot
+the steel I carried in my bosom, and thought only of the power I bore in
+my own hands. I determined to strangle him with my strong, elastic
+fingers, of which I knew full well the powerful grasp.</p>
+
+<p>The consequences were as cobwebs in my estimate&mdash;compared to the ecstasy
+of such revenge&mdash;for all this flashed through my brain with the swift
+vividness of lightning, and in less than thirty seconds after his last
+remark this matter was matured. The woman prevailed over the lady.</p>
+
+<p>I raised my eyes slowly and dashed away my tears, preparatory to the
+onset. He was looking at me wonder-struck, and, perhaps, with something
+like compunction in his face as I met his gaze. He must have read an
+expression that appalled him in those dilated eyes of mine that
+confronted his, for, as I sprang toward him, he bounded backward and
+escaped through the door of Mrs. Clayton's chamber, which he shut after
+him with undignified alertness. I stood smiling, and strangely cold,
+leaning against the mantel-shelf, while my heart beat as though it would
+have leaped from my throat, and I could feel the pallor of my face as
+chill as marble.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Clayton approached me, but I put her away with waving hands. &quot;Go,
+wretch!&quot; I said, &quot;woman no more, you have unsexed yourself. Leave me in
+peace&mdash;your touch is poisonous.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She shrank away silently, and I stood for a while like one frozen; then
+cast myself down on a chair and gave way to bitter weeping. The
+flood-gates were open, and the &quot;waters&quot; had indeed &quot;come in over my
+soul.&quot; I had restrained my passionate inclinations until now, not only
+from a sense of personal dignity, but from a determination not to play
+into the hands of my enemies and captors, and all the more from such
+long self-control was the revulsion potent and overwhelming.</p>
+
+<p>The consciousness that Ernie was at my knee at last aroused me from the
+indulgence of my grief, and I looked down to meet his compassionate and
+inquiring eyes fixed upon me with a masterful expression I have never
+seen in any other childish face. It thrilled me to the heart.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What Mirry cry for&mdash;is God mad with Mirry?&quot; he asked at length.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It seems so, Ernie&mdash;yet oh, no, no! I cannot, will not believe in such
+injustice on the part of the Most High!&quot; I pursued in sad soliloquy,
+with folded hands, and shaking head; and musing eyes fixed on the fire
+before me: &quot;My God will not forsake me!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Did the bad man hurt Mirry?&quot; he asked, leaning with both arms on my lap
+and putting up his hand to touch my face.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, very cruelly, Ernie.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Big giant will come and kill him, and fayways put him in the river, and
+the old wolf wat eat Red Riding Hood eat him, and then the devil will
+roast him for his dinner.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I could but smile, albeit through my tears, at the climax of these
+threats which seemed to delight and stir the inmost soul of Ernie. His
+eyes flashed, his cheek crimsoned, his wide red mouth curled with
+disdainful ire, disclosing the small, pointed pearls within; he seemed
+transfigured.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And Ernie! what will Ernie do for Mirry?&quot; I asked, as I watched the
+workings of his expressive face. &quot;Will Ernie let the wicked man kill
+Mirry?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He looked at his small hands and arms, then extended them wistfully.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ernie will tell good Jesus,&quot; he said, &quot;and he will make Ernie grow
+big&mdash;ever so big&mdash;to tie the man and put him in a bag like Clayton's
+cat.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The burlesque was irresistible, and none the less so that the child was
+so direfully in earnest. To his infant imagination no worse disaster
+than had befallen Clayton's cat could be devised. This animal, adored by
+him, had been bagged and exiled, perhaps drowned for aught I know, for
+stealing cheese from the cupboard sacred to Clayton, by that vengeful
+potentate, to the despair of Ernie. The idolized kittens, too, which had
+followed her, had disappeared with their mother, and days of infant
+melancholy ensued, during which the canaries before referred to were
+brought as substitutes. The faithful heart still clung to its feline
+passion, it was evident, though for weeks the memory of that hapless cat
+had been ignored and its name unmentioned.</p>
+
+<p>I believe, after my momentary wrath was over, I should have been content
+with the punishment suggested by the child, as sufficient even for Basil
+Bainrothe.</p>
+
+<p>FOOTNOTES:</p>
+
+<a name="Footnote_6_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_6_6">[6]</a><div class="note"><p> The raft on which Miss Lamarque and her family had found
+refuge had been swept by the tempest of nearly every soul that clung to
+it, after a terrible night of storm and rain, during which that
+courageous lady&mdash;that Sybarite of society&mdash;sustained the fainting souls
+of her companions by singing the grand anthems of her Church, in a voice
+loud, clear, and sweet as that of a dying swan. One child was saved of
+the nine little ones, and the brother and sister remained almost alone
+on the raft. Let it be here mentioned that, at no period of her
+subsequent life, a long and apparently prosperous one, could Miss
+Lamarque bear to hear the circumstances of the wreck alluded to. Mr.
+Dunmore and his companions found a watery grave.</p></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="III_CHAPTER_IX"></a><h2>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>A nervous headache, that confined me to my bed for several days,
+succeeded the degrading and exciting scene through which I had passed,
+and, as Mrs. Clayton had at the same time one of her prostrating
+neuralgic attacks, the services of Dinah were in active requisition.
+During my own peculiar phase of suffering, the small racket of Ernie,
+unnoticed in hours of health, grated painfully on my ear, and I caught
+eagerly at the proposition of the negress to take him down-stairs for a
+walk and hours of play in the sunshine, privileges he did not very often
+obtain in these latter days.</p>
+
+<p>I was much the better for having lain silently for a time, when he
+returned with his hands filled with flowers, his lips smelling of
+peppermint-drops, and his eyes, always his finest feature, dancing with
+delight.</p>
+
+<p>He had seen Ady, he told me, with eagerness, and she had kissed him, and
+tied a string of beads about his neck&mdash;red ones&mdash;which he displayed; and
+&quot;Ady had a comb in her head, and her toof was broke&quot;&mdash;touching one of
+his own front teeth lightly, so that I knew he was not pointing out any
+deficiency in the afore-mentioned comb. From this description, vague as
+it was, I identified Ada Greene as the person intended to be described;
+for I too had observed the imperfection he made a point of&mdash;a broken
+tooth, impairing the beauty of otherwise faultless ones.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And who gave you the flowers, Ernie?&quot; I asked, receiving them from his
+generous hands as I spoke, and raising the white roses to my nostrils to
+inhale their delicate breath. &quot;Did Ady give you these?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No&mdash;Angy!&quot; he answered, solemnly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Tell me about Angy, Ernie&mdash;had she wings?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No wings! Poor Angy could not fly. She was walking in the garden with
+Adam and Eve, with their clothes on,&quot; he said, earnestly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Mr. and Mrs. Claude Bainrothe, no doubt,&quot; I thought, smiling at the
+strange mixture of the real and the ideal&mdash;the plates of the old Bible
+evidently supplied the latter, from which many of his impressions were
+derived&mdash;and the practical pair in question the former, quietly
+perambulating together.</p>
+
+<p>But &quot;Angy!&quot; Could I doubt for one moment to whom he applied that
+celestial title? The face of one of the angels in the transfiguration
+did, indeed, resemble Mabel's. I had often remarked and pondered over
+it.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Tell me about Angy, Ernie,&quot; I entreated. &quot;O Heaven! to think her hands
+have touched these flowers&mdash;her sweet face bent above him! Darling,
+darling! to be divided and yet so near! It breaks my heart!&quot; and tears
+flowed freely while he tried to describe the vision that had so
+impressed him, in his earnest way.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Poor Angy got no wings,&quot; he began again; &quot;bu hair, and bu eyes, and bu
+dress&quot;&mdash;every thing he admired was blue&mdash;&quot;and she kissed Ernie and gave
+him peppermint-drops. Then Adam and Eve laughed just so&quot;&mdash;grinning
+wonderfully&mdash;&quot;and said, 'Go home, bad, ugly child, with a back on!' Then
+Angy pulled flowers and gave Ernie!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is only the little gal next door&mdash;I means de young lady ob de
+'stablishment, wat de poor, foolish, humped-shouldered baby talking
+about,&quot; Dinah explained. &quot;He calls her 'Angy,' I s'pose, 'cause she's so
+purty like; and you tells him 'bout dem hebbenly kine of people, so de
+say, mos' ebbery night. Does you think dar is such tings, sure enough,
+Mirry?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Certainly, Dinah&mdash;the Bible tells us so; but what is the name of the
+pretty little girl of whom you speak? Tell me, if you know&quot;&mdash;and I laid
+my hand upon her arm and whispered this inquiry, waiting impatiently for
+a confirmation of my almost certainty. For, that my darling <i>was</i>
+Ernie's Angy, I could not doubt, and the thought moved me to tremulous
+emotion.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Dar, now: you is going to hab one ob dem bad turns agin&mdash;I sees it in
+your eyes. You see,&quot; dropping her voice for a moment, &quot;I darsn't dar to
+speak out plain and 'bove-board heah, as if I was at home in Georgy!
+Ebbery ting is wat dey calls a mist'ry' hereabouts; an' I has bin
+notified not to tell ob no secret doins ob deirn to any airthly creeter,
+onless I wants to be smacked into jail an' guv up to my wrong owners. My
+own folks went down on de 'Scewsko;' an' I means to wait till I see how
+dat 'state's gwine to be settled up afore I pursents myself as 'mong de
+live ones. We is all published as dead, you sees, honey, an' it would be
+no lie to preach, our funeral, or eben put up our foot-board.
+He&mdash;he&mdash;he! I wonder wat my ole man'll say ef he ebber sees me comin'
+back agin wid a bag full ob money? I guess it'll skeer de ole creeter
+out ob a year's growfe; but dis is de trufe! Ef Miss Polly Allen gits de
+'state (she was my mistis's born full-sister, an' a mity fine ole maid,
+I tells you, chile!), wy, den Sabra'll be found to be no ghose; fur it's
+easier to lib wid good wite folks Souf dan Norf. We hab our own housen
+dar, an' pigs, an' poultry, an' taturs, an' a heap besides, an' time to
+come an' go, an' doctors wen we's sick, an' our own preachin', an' de
+banjo an' bones to dance by, an' de best ob funeral 'casions an'
+weddin's bofe, an' no cole wedder, an' nuffin to do but set by de light
+wood-fiah an' smoke a pipe wen we gits past work; an' we chooses our own
+time to lay by&mdash;some sooner, some later, 'cordin' as de jints holes out.
+But here it is work&mdash;work&mdash;work&mdash;all de time; good pay, but no
+holiday, no yams, no possum-meat, an' mity mean colored siety!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But what has all this to do with the name of the little girl next door?
+Whisper that, and tell me the rest afterward.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But, if Master Jack Dillard gits de 'state,&quot; she proceeded, as though
+she had not heard my eager question, &quot;wy, den Sabra Smif am as dead as a
+door-nail from dis time to de day ob judgment, an' de ole man'll have to
+git anoder 'fectionate companion. I'se mity sorry for de poor ole soul,
+but I a'n't gwine to put myself in Jack Dillard's claws, not ef I knows
+myself. He's one ob dem young wite sort wat lubs de card-table, an'
+don't scriminate atween ole an' young folks. You see, he's my masta's
+nevy&mdash;for de ole folks had no chillun but Miss May Jane, an' she's bin
+dead dis fifteen yeer, and bofe her chilluns dun follered her to de
+grabe, so dere is only Miss Polly Ann lef, and&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Here Mrs. Clayton groaned audibly, and, calling Dinah to her aid, broke
+up the <i>t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te</i> if such might justly have been called our
+interview. It was not very long, however, before Dinah returned to my
+bedside, by Mrs. Clayton's directions, to offer to comb out my hair,
+which was tangled beyond my skill to thread in my prostrate condition.
+Yet, to make an effort so far as to rise and have this done, I knew
+would be of benefit to me.</p>
+
+<p>We were sitting by the toilet, while the process of untangling my
+massive length of locks was going on, and the upper drawer thereof was
+half open, thus affording me a glimpse of its contents. Among these was
+my silent watch with its chain of gold, its pencil and seal attached. I
+wore it usually (though useless now in its silent condition&mdash;the
+mainspring was broken) from habit and for safe keeping, but had laid it
+there when I staggered to my bed, ill and weak after my terrible
+interview with Mr. Bainrothe.</p>
+
+<p>It caught the eye of Dinah and stirred her master-passion, avarice, and
+she began to question me, I soon saw, with a view of getting it in her
+own possession. The selfishness of the old negress had struck me on the
+raft as something rare even in one of her shallow race, and my
+conviction of her cowardice and coldness prevented me from taking
+advantage of her cupidity, as I might have done otherwise.</p>
+
+<p>She was fully capable, I felt convinced, of accepting my watch as a
+bribe, and failing afterward to come up to her bargain. Yet, dear as it
+was to me from association of ideas, I should not have weighed it an
+instant against the merest probability of escape. I knew if I could gain
+an hour upon my pursuers, I should be safe in the house of Dr.
+Pemberton, or even in that of Dr. Craig, another friend of my father's.
+I was comparatively at home anywhere in the city of my nativity,
+acquainted as I was with its streets and people, and I fully determined,
+when I found Sabra's avarice excited, to offer her as a reward this
+golden treasure, should she first place me in circumstances to gain my
+freedom.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Dey calls you pore, honey,&quot; she said softly, &quot;but wen I sees dat
+bright gole watch and chain I knows better. Now I reckon dey would bring
+enough bright silver dollars at a juglar's shop to buy my ole man twice
+over agin! He is but porely, and our chilluns is all dead and gone,
+anyway, all but one, way down in New Orleans, an' ef I could git his
+free papers he might come here and jine his wife in freedom, even if
+Massa Jack Dillard did heir masta's estate. How much would dat watch and
+chain be worth, honey?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Two or three hundred dollars, I suppose, I don't know exactly; but
+certainly enough to buy your old man at Southerners' value set upon aged
+negroes; but whether it be or not&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>An apparition, of which I fortunately caught the reflection in the glass
+before me, cut short the promise that hovered on my lips. It was that of
+Mrs. Clayton, in her bed-gown and swathed in flannel, peering, peeping,
+listening at the door of her chamber, as unlovely a vision, certainly,
+as ever broke up an <i>entretien</i> or dissolved a delusion.</p>
+
+<p>I maintained my self-possession, though my agitation was extreme (the
+crisis had seemed so favorable!), while she limped forward and accosted
+me civilly, with a demand as peremptory as a highwayman's for my watch
+and chain, of which I took no notice.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I should be doing you great injustice in your condition,&quot; she added,
+coolly, &quot;to let you sell your watch, even to benefit Dinah and her old
+man, benevolent as is your motive; so I must take possession of it, or
+send for Dr. Englehart to do so, whichever you prefer.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The watch is there,&quot; I said, rising haughtily, with my still unadjusted
+hair falling about me. &quot;It was my father's and is precious to me far
+beyond its intrinsic value; and I shall hold you accountable for it some
+day. Take it at once, though, rather than recall the person before me
+with whose presence you menace me. Keep it yourself, however; I would
+rather deal with you than the others, false as you have shown yourself
+to every promise.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I wish you would be reasonable,&quot; she said, &quot;and do what your friends
+ask of you. This confinement is wearing us both out; it will be the
+death of me, and you will be to blame.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The sooner the better,&quot; I rejoined, heartlessly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, Miss Monfort, you have no better friend than I am, perhaps, but you
+are ungrateful.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I hope not; but some things of late have shaken, I confess, what little
+faith I had in you; this confiscation of my property is one of them.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You know why this is done; I need not explain, but I shall trust you
+fearlessly in Dinah's society in future. I believe you have no other
+treasure to bribe her with,&quot; and, smiling in her sardonic way, she
+turned and limped to her bedroom, which it had cost her so great an
+effort to leave. Her groans and moans during the remainder of the
+evening were piteous, and Dinah could do nothing to comfort her. A
+sudden determination possessed me. My own system recuperated rapidly,
+and after a nervous headache I was always conscious of renewed vital
+power and of keener sensations. I would try the experiment once
+more&mdash;hazarded under circumstances so different that it made me
+tremulous but to think of the vast abyss between my <i>now</i> and then&mdash;and
+essay, to magnetize Mrs. Clayton.</p>
+
+<p>She could not sleep naturally, and she feared evidently to avail herself
+of opiates, lest in her heavy slumber, perhaps, I should escape. In her
+normal condition this seemed impossible, for she slept habitually as
+lightly as a cat, or bird upon its perch, yet lying, and with her key
+beneath her head (never dreaming of other outlet) she felt at ease. I
+had already learned that since her illness there were additional
+precautions taken to insure my safety, and, as she had alleged, her own
+fidelity.</p>
+
+<p>The Dragon was watched in turn by a Cerberus&mdash;no other than the
+long-trusted colored coachman of Basil Bainrothe, of whom mention has
+been made far back in these pages.</p>
+
+<p>Thus secure and secured, Mrs. Clayton might have surrendered herself to
+slumber with all serenity, one would suppose, had it not absolutely
+refused to visit her eyelids, and the suggestion of an opiate, on my
+part, was received for some reason in dumb derision.</p>
+
+<p>I went to her at last, and said: &quot;Mrs. Clayton, I hear you groaning
+grievously, and I fancy I could relieve you. The laying on of hands is a
+sort of gift of mine; let me try by such means to ease your pain.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you, Miss Monfort,&quot; very dryly, &quot;you are very kind, indeed, but I
+don't think you can relieve me. I have excruciating neuralgia in my
+eyebones and temples, and my hands are cramped again. Dinah has been
+rubbing, without bettering them, for the last half hour.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Let me try,&quot; and, without farther parley, I sat down to my
+self-appointed, loathed, and detested task, first quietly dismissing
+Dinah to the next room, where Ernie was eating his supper, and I knew
+would soon be wanting to be put to bed. We changed places for a time,
+and it was not long before Mrs. Clayton pronounced the pain in her eyes
+&quot;almost gone.&quot; The experiment was a desperate one, and I bore to it all
+the powers of my organization&mdash;mental and physical&mdash;and had the
+satisfaction in less than an hour to see her sleeping profoundly. She
+had been failing fast under her painful vigils, and I knew that a few
+hours of refreshing sleep would be worth to her more than all the drugs
+in the Pharmacopoeia. Now came the test which was to make this slumber
+worth nothing or every thing to me. If she could be awakened from it
+without my coincidence, it would prove, perhaps, only a snare to my
+feet, but if her waking depended on my will, then might I indeed hope to
+baffle my Dragon, and, as far as she was concerned, make sure of my
+escape. I willed then earnestly that she should sleep until twelve
+o'clock; and at ten, when Dinah became impatient to retire, I gave her
+permission, in order to gain egress to try and arouse Mrs. Clayton.</p>
+
+<p>In consequence of this immurement of our servant, I had remained
+supperless&mdash;beyond the crusts of bread left by Ernie and some cold tea
+in Mrs. Clayton's teapot, of which I partook with an appetite born of
+exhaustion. Those who have undertaken this &quot;laying on of hands,&quot; for the
+purpose of soothing pain, will comprehend what the succeeding sensation
+of nerveless prostration is&mdash;those only&mdash;and give me their sympathy.</p>
+
+<p>From her errand to arouse our sleeper in quest of the key, of course
+Dinah returned disconsolate. Greatly to my satisfaction, she stated that
+it was &quot;out ob de question to try to git her eyes open. Why honey,&quot; she
+pursued, &quot;ef I didn't know what a steady-goin' Christian creetur she
+was, I mout suppose she had bin 'bibin' of whisky or peach-brandy&mdash;dat's
+de sleepiest stuff goin', chile; but I does believe she has the fallin'
+fits, caze, even wen I pulled open one corner of her eyes, dey was
+rolled clean back in her head. Mebbe she's dyin', chile, an' ef she
+is&mdash;but no!&quot; she muttered, &quot;dat ole creetur down-stairs nebber leaves
+dem back-doors open one minute, you had better believe, even ef he
+happens to turn his back a spell, an' it would be no use tryin' to git
+out ob de 'stablishment dat way, but I knows whar she keeps her key, an'
+I kin go to bed myself if you say so, an' you kin lock de do' inside,
+an' lay de key back undernefe her pillow: you see dar's a bolt outside,
+too, honey, an' I means to draw dat after me, as ole Caleb always does
+ob nights wen he goes to bed.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Chuckling low at the manifest disappointment in my face, she
+disappeared, to return almost instantly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I thought she must be possumin',&quot; she said, &quot;but I know she is as fas'
+asleep now as de bar' in de hollow ob a tree in cole wedder, for she
+made no 'sistance like wen I grabbed de key from undernefe her head, an'
+here it is, chile, an' ef you wants to try your 'speriment you kin, but
+I spec you'd better wait a spell,&quot; and she looked cunningly at me;
+&quot;dere's traps everywhar in dese woods!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It occurred to me as well that Mrs. Clayton might be feigning slumber,
+having penetrated my design of lulling and soothing her fitful spirit to
+rest; and feeling, as I did, an utter want of confidence in Sabra, not
+only as free agent but as watched attendant, I determined as far as in
+me lay to disarm suspicion by duplicity. So I lifted up my voice in
+testimony of deceit, and declared my weariness of bondage to be such
+that I had determined to embrace Mr. Bainrothe's conditions, and that in
+a few days I should be free again without assistance.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So take the key, Dinah,&quot; I said, after observing it closely, and
+perceiving that it was several sizes larger than that I had made, as
+clumsy as that was, and, therefore, could be of no use to me. &quot;Let
+yourself out, and bolt the door behind you, and Mrs. Clayton shall see
+that I will take no mean advantage of her slumbers.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>This arrangement having been carried with speedy effect, I returned to
+my own chamber after a close scrutiny of Mrs. Clayton's condition, and
+employed myself at once in running my penknife around the door concealed
+by my bed-head, and thus loosening the paper, pasted on cotton cloth,
+that covered it, from that of the wall, with which it was connected so
+intimately as to make the whole surface within the chamber seem to form
+one partition.</p>
+
+<p>Long before this I had cut that which surrounded the lock, so that it
+lay like a flap, over it, fastened down lightly, however, with
+gum-arabic (part of Ernie's draught for a catarrh), so as to baffle
+slight inspection. My heart beat wildly as, after having effected this
+preliminary step, I cautiously unlocked the door, which, for aught I
+knew, might be, like that of Mrs. Clayton's closet, bolted without, so
+as to frustrate all my efforts. It opened outwardly, and could have been
+readily so secured.</p>
+
+<p>In the great providence of God, it was not bolted. I sank on my knees,
+weak and prayerful, I remember, as the door swung slightly back,
+revealing the platform beyond, and the short stair that led from it up
+to the second story. The hinges creaked a little, and these I hastened
+to oil; then closing and relocking the door softly, I crept (without
+pushing my bedstead back again the few inches I had wheeled it forward)
+to look once more upon the sleeping face of Mrs. Clayton.</p>
+
+<p>It was still calm and unconscious. Ernie, too, slumbered peacefully.
+Every thing seemed propitious to my purpose. I threw on hastily the
+famous, flimsy black silk and mantle that had been prepared for me on
+shipboard, tied a dark veil over my head, and, with no other
+precaution, went forth, as I hoped, to freedom.</p>
+
+<p>My heart seemed to suspend its action as, cautiously unlocking and
+opening the door, I stepped forth on the platform. It will be remembered
+that I knew the topography of the lower part of the house of old
+thoroughly.</p>
+
+<p>I had been entertained there with my father more than once, when, as
+heiress of my mother's great estate, I had commanded the reverence of my
+hosts, and the situation of parlors, study, and dining-room, was
+perfectly familiar to me.</p>
+
+<p>It was what in those days was called a single house, though a
+spacious-enough mansion; that is, all the rooms, with one exception,
+were placed either on the same side of the wide hall of entrance, or
+behind it in the ell. The study alone formed a small lateral projection
+on the other hand. The door of this apartment opened at the foot of
+that-stair, on the upper platform of which I now stood trembling,
+weighing my fate by a hair. I had left the door ajar through which I had
+crept quietly, so that, in case of failure, I might have a chance of
+retreat before discovery should be made. It was well, perhaps, that I
+did so on this occasion, for otherwise I should scarcely have had nerve
+enough to avoid the sure and speedy detection which must have followed
+the slightest delay or noise made in returning.</p>
+
+<p>I lingered to reconnoitre some minutes on the platform before I ventured
+to commence the wary descent of the broad, carpeted stairway. I had
+convinced myself that the second story was empty, though a lighted lamp
+swung in the upper entry, as well as in that below, throwing a flood of
+radiance on the scene with which I would fain have dispensed.</p>
+
+<p>I heard the sound of voices from the closed parlors, and saw reposing
+on the rack before me several hats and canes, indicative of visitors.
+From the study, however, there fortunately came no murmur, and I found
+that it was dark. The front-door stood invitingly open; I could see the
+opposite lamp-post without, and I had made up my mind to dart on and
+downward, and reach at a bound the pavement, when the door of the first
+parlor was suddenly thrown back, and left so, by a servant coming out
+with a tray of wines and fruits which he had been evidently handing, and
+I had just time to shrink into shadow, favored in my wish for
+concealment by the black dress and veil I wore, when a once familiar
+form appeared in the door-way of the front hall, which I recognized at a
+glance as that of Gregory. Closing the door firmly after him, he
+prepared to divest himself of hat and cape in the hall, without a look
+in my direction. After the completion of which process he entered the
+parlor by the nearest door, setting that also wide open as he did so,
+with some exclamation about the heat of the apartment, which seemed to
+meet with acquiescence from the powers within.</p>
+
+<p>I caught a panoramic view of that interior before I fled swiftly,
+noiselessly, hopelessly, back to my cage again, having lost my only
+chance of escape by that fatal delay of five minutes on the platform. I
+should have been out and away on the wings of the wind ere Gregory
+entered the inclosure before the house, had I not hesitated. Yet, after
+all, perhaps, I miscalculated. What if I had met him face to face&mdash;been
+seized and dragged back again to captivity! Perchance it was better as
+it was. Time would develop and determine this; but, in the interval, how
+woful was my disappointment!</p>
+
+<p>I had time to get to bed again, and in some degree recover my
+composure; indeed, I had been in bed an hour when the clock in the
+dining-room beneath me, which, since the evident occupancy of that
+long-deserted hall, had been wound and put in running order, struck
+twelve, with its deep-mouthed, melodramatic tones, and at the very
+moment I heard sounds indicative of the resurrection of the mesmeric
+sleeper.</p>
+
+<p>She was evidently startled in some way on finding herself awake again,
+or perhaps from having fallen so soundly asleep in hands like mine, for
+she called aloud first for &quot;Dinah,&quot; then, repeatedly, on &quot;Miriam,&quot; both
+without effect. In a few moments after these appeals had died away she
+came in person, as I knew she would, to reconnoitre.</p>
+
+<p>The bedstead had been pushed carefully and noiselessly back again on its
+grooved castors against the door, from the lock of which the wooden key
+had been removed, rewashed in oil, and hidden away in that hollow
+aperture in the bedstead, which formed a perfect box, by the skillful
+readjustment of one loosened compartment of the veneering of the massive
+post.</p>
+
+<p>She shook me slightly, and I rose in my bed with a start and shudder,
+admirably simulated, I fancied, and which completely deceived her
+evidently. &quot;I am sorry to have startled you so,&quot; she said, hurriedly,
+&quot;but where is Dinah, Miss Monfort, and how did she get out?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I really cannot inform you where she is,&quot; I answered, petulantly. &quot;I
+scarcely think it was worth while to disturb me for the sake of asking
+me a question you must have known my inability to answer.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But how did she get out, Miss Harz?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;By means of the key under your head, which you will find in the lock,
+no doubt, where it was left. She promised me, insolently enough, to
+bolt the door outside to prevent egress, and I, to prevent ingress,
+locked it within.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So she assured you we were both prisoners by night, did she? Well, I am
+glad you have proof at last of what I told you.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have no proof; but, as I have made up my mind to come to terms of
+some kind very soon, I thought it useless to investigate. Do you feel
+better for my laying on of hands? You seem refreshed.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, greatly better; a good sleep was what I needed, and I fell into a
+doze while you were beside the bed, I believe. I have heard of magnetism
+before as a means of relief for pain; now I am convinced of its
+efficacy.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Magnetism! You don't think it amounts to that, do you? You flatter me;&quot;
+and I laughed.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I do, indeed, and I am sure I am much obliged to you, Miss Monfort;
+though, for that matter, you can never say, even when you come to your
+own again&mdash;which you will now do shortly&mdash;that I have not been
+considerate and attentive to you while in confinement.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You need not be afraid of any complaint as far as you are concerned. I
+think I comprehend you and your motives by this time. Let there be peace
+between us from this hour.&quot; And I extended my hand to her, which, very
+unexpectedly to me, she seized and kissed&mdash;a proceeding deprecated
+loathingly. &quot;I assure you,&quot; I added, laughingly, &quot;I would rather even
+marry Englehart than continue here.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then you will marry Mr. Gregory?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I do not know&mdash;either that or die, I suppose&mdash;whichever God pleases. I
+am weary of being a prisoner&mdash;weary of you, of every thing about me. All
+that I cared for is lost to me, and I might as well surrender, I
+suppose; not at discretion, however!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She turned from me silently, and sought her couch again; but I felt
+instinctively that she slept no more; and so we lay, silently watching
+one another, until morning. I dared not renew my efforts to escape, at
+all events, in the night-time, when I knew the house was locked, and
+watched without, as well as within&mdash;for this was the old habit of the
+square.</p>
+
+<p>One&mdash;two&mdash;three&mdash;four o'clock came, and passed, and were reported by the
+deep-tongued clock in the room beneath me, before I slept, and then I
+dreamed a vision so vivid, that I wakened from it excited&mdash;exhausted&mdash;as
+though its frightful figments had been stern realities.</p>
+
+<p>I thought that the noble dog Ossian came to me again and laid the
+double-footed key upon my lap, as he had done at Beauseincourt&mdash;staining
+my white dress with blood, not mud, this time, and that Colonel La Vigne
+struck it furiously to the floor, and handed me instead the wooden one I
+had carved, with the words of the proverb:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The opportunity lost is like the arrow sped: it comes no more. Your
+wooden key will fail you next time, as it has failed you this, and you
+will be baffled&mdash;baffled&mdash;as you tried to baffle me! Miriam, unseen I
+pursue you!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Then he laughed horribly, and faded in the gray dawn, to which I awoke,
+covered with cold dew, and trembling in every limb. Had he been there,
+indeed, in spiritual presence? Was it his hand that had left that band
+about my brow&mdash;that surging in my brain&mdash;that weight upon my heart? O
+God! had I indeed become the sport of fiends? At last I wept, and in my
+tears found sullen comfort. The image so often caviled at as false in
+<i>Hamlet</i> came to me then as the readiest interpretation of what I
+suffered, and thus proved its own fidelity and truth. &quot;A sea of sorrow&quot;
+did indeed seem to roll above me, against which I felt the vanity of
+&quot;taking arms.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>My destruction was decreed, and I had nothing to do but suffer and
+submit!</p>
+
+<p>All the persecution I had sustained since my father's death, at the
+hands of Evelyn and Basil Bainrothe&mdash;all my wrongs, beginning at the
+heart-betrayal of Claude, and ending with the immurement I was suffering
+now at the hands of his father&mdash;all my strange life at Beauseincourt,
+with its episode of horror, its one reality of perfect happiness too
+fair to last, its singular revelations, its warm and deep attachments,
+my fearful and nightmare-like experience on the burning ship, the level
+raft, with the green wares curling above it, the rescue, the snare into
+which I had inevitably fallen, the Inquisition-walls closing around
+me&mdash;all were there in one vivid and overwhelming mental summary!</p>
+
+<p>I think if ever madness came near me in my life, it came that night, so
+crushing, so terrific was this weight which, Sysiphus-like, memory was
+rolling to the summit of the present moment, to fall back again by the
+power of its own weight to the valley below&mdash;the valley of despair&mdash;-
+and destroy all that it encountered or found beneath it. Yet, by the
+time the sun was up, my eyes were sealed again in slumber.</p>
+
+<p>Before I close this chapter, it will be as well to describe the tableau
+I had caught sight of through the open parlor-door when I tempted my
+fate and failed.</p>
+
+<p>Standing close in the shadow, so that, even if directed toward me
+unconsciously, the glance of those within, I knew, could not penetrate
+the mystery of my presence, I scanned with a sad derision, the scene
+before me. With a glance I received the impression that it required
+moments to convey in narrative.</p>
+
+<p>On the hearth-rug, with his back to the fire, his legs apart, his
+coat-skirts parted behind him, stood Basil Bainrothe, monarch of all he
+surveyed, with extended hand, evidently demonstrating some axiom to the
+two visitors ensconced on the sofa near him, who, with the exception of
+their booted feet, and the straps of their pantaloons, were beyond my
+angle of vision. On the opposite side of the chimney from these
+inscrutable guests sat two ladies, elaborately dressed and rouged, in
+whom I recognized at a glance Evelyn Erle and Mrs. Raymond. Just before
+I vanished, Claude Bainrothe, courteous in manner and elegant in
+exterior, approached them from the other parlor, in time to witness the
+<i>entr&eacute;e</i> of Gregory, to which I have referred, and to salute him
+cordially. That these were all confederates I could not doubt, and
+prepared to aid each other. How could I know that one pair of those
+evident feet belonged to the invisible body of a man who was one of the
+few whom I could have called to my defense from the ends of the earth,
+had choice of champions been afforded me? It was not until long
+afterward that I ascertained beyond a doubt that Major Favraud had
+formed one of that company on the occasion of my fatal failure. Had I
+dreamed of his presence, I should fearlessly have entered the parlor,
+and thrown myself on his brotherly protection, secure of his best
+efforts to rescue me, even though his own heart's blood had been the
+sacrifice.</p>
+
+<p>Alas! should I ever find another dart like that, never to be recalled,
+to launch in the right direction, and fix quivering in the eye of the
+target?&mdash;God alone could know.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="III_CHAPTER_X"></a><h2>CHAPTER X.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>After the one hopeful excitement of my prison-life, my spirit drooped
+deplorably for a season, and all occupation became distasteful to me. My
+diary even was abandoned, the writing of which had so well assisted to
+fill my time, and, although destroyed daily, to impress upon my memory a
+faithful and sequent record of the monotonous hours, else remembered
+merely as a homogeneous whole. Had it not been for poor Ernie and his
+requirements, I should have sunk under this fresh phase of suffering, I
+am convinced. My health, too, was giving way. My strength, my energy
+were failing. I kept my bed, as I had never been willing to do before if
+able to arise from it, until noon sometimes, for want of nervous
+impulse, and my food was tasteless and innutritious, even when I forced
+myself to eat a portion of what was placed regularly before me. It
+seemed to me that, long ere this, Wardour Wentworth must have
+ascertained my fate, and the thought that he might be passive when my
+very soul was at stake, thrilled me with agony unspeakable.</p>
+
+<p>This mood endured so long that even Mrs. Clayton grew alarmed. She
+insisted on Dr. Englehart again, and, when I shook my head drearily for
+all reply, begged that I would permit her to state my case to Mrs.
+Raymond, who might in turn see some able physician about me and procure
+remedies.</p>
+
+<p>To this, at last, I consented.</p>
+
+<p>The consequence was what I had hoped it might be: Mrs. Raymond came in
+person, and I had at last the opportunity I had long desired of seeing
+her alone. If thoughtless, if unrefined according to my views of good
+breeding, she was still young, and vivacious, and perhaps kind-hearted;
+besides this, sufficiently well pleased with herself to be generous to
+one who could no longer be her rival.</p>
+
+<p>Her approach was heralded by a note from Mr. Bainrothe, full of his
+characteristic, guileful sophistry and cool impertinence. It ran as
+follows (I still possess this billet with others of his inditing&mdash;along
+with a snake's rattle):</p>
+
+<p>&quot;MIRIAM: I am glad to hear through Mrs. Clayton that reaction has
+occurred, and that you manifest repentance for your recent violence
+toward one who always means you well. A little jesting on the part of
+your guardian, my dear girl, should meet with a very different
+reception, and handsome women must submit to compliments with a good
+grace, or run the risk of being called prudes or viragos. Not that I
+mean to apply either term to you by any means. Your father's daughter
+could not be other than a lady, even if she tried, but I must confess
+your manners have deteriorated somewhat since you went into voluntary
+banishment among those outlandish people. I have heard no very good
+account of this old La Vigne who died in debt, it seems, and left his
+children beggars. I have some curiosity to know whether he paid your
+salary. 'Straws show,' you know, etc.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is now October; by the end of this month I hope you will have made
+up that stubborn mind of yours (truly indomitable, as I often say to
+Evelyn) to leave seclusion, and enter your family once more in the only
+way you can do so respectably after what has occurred&mdash;as a married
+woman.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You remember the French song which I was always fond of humming, 'O&ugrave;
+est on si bien qu'au sein de sa famille?' How appropriate it seems to
+your condition!</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You will be surprised to hear that your step-mother's brother has
+appeared on the tapis, and that he has had the audacity to propose to
+adopt Mabel, whom he claims as his niece.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He seems a gentlemanly person enough, but may be an impostor for aught
+I know. The young lady he was engaged to, Gregory tells me, perished in
+the Kosciusko, which proves a relief, after all, as it is rumored he has
+a wife in Europe. But such gossip can hardly interest you very vividly.
+The man has gone to California, and will probably return no more.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Did you, or did you not, meet this person at Colonel La Vigne's?
+Favraud hinted something of the kind when he was here; but I can get no
+satisfaction from Gregory.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;They all believe you were drowned in Georgia, and I thought it best for
+the present not to undeceive Favraud, who laments your fate.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The surprise will be all the more pleasant; and, of course, every thing
+will be explained to the satisfaction of friends when you appear
+publicly as the wife of Luke Gregory&mdash;'long secretly married!' You see,
+it will be necessary to go back a little to save appearances, on account
+of Ernie!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The miscreant! I understood him now&mdash;oh, my God, for strength to tear
+his cowardly heart from his truculent body! But no; let there be no
+further unavailing anger. In God's good time all should recoil on his
+own head. For the present, I must bear, and make myself insensible, if
+possible; and yet, I would not willingly have had the living greenness
+of my spirit turned to stone, as we are told branches are in some
+strange, foreign rivers&mdash;crystal-cold!</p>
+
+<p>Another extract, the closing one, and then forever away with Basil
+Bainrothe and his flimsy letters:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Again, I must congratulate you on the subdued and humbled temper you
+manifest. Claude, and Evelyn, and I, had just been discussing a plan for
+removing you to another asylum, where stricter discipline and less
+luxurious externals are employed to conquer the otherwise unmanageable
+inmates. Dr. Englehart, you know, holds up the theory of indulgence to
+his patients, and I am rejoiced to find his measures have at last
+prevailed over your frenzy. Mabel, like your other friends, believes you
+dead, and is at home with Evelyn and Claude, and is growing in beauty
+and intelligence every day.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She was quite shocked at her uncle's wild behavior, and positively
+refused to go with him, is fond of Mr. Gregory, and remembers you with
+affection.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Owing to my knowledge of your condition for the last year, my dear
+child, I don't blame you for any thing that is past, not even for those
+delusions with regard to my own acts and intentions which formed your
+mania, nor for the misfortune and sense of shame which, no doubt, caused
+your hasty flight, and whose evidences you brought with you from the
+raft, in the shape of a nearly year-old child.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I remain, faithfully yours,</p>
+
+<p>&quot;B.B.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The shameful accusations which brought the blood to my brow ought to
+have been easier to bear than all the rest, because so easily confuted,
+and because I knew not really believed; but they were not. The very idea
+of shame humiliated me more than positive ill-treatment could have done;
+and, spotless though I knew myself to be (as others knew me too&mdash;all I
+loved and cared for), still my purity was shocked by such injustice.</p>
+
+<p>I felt like one who had gone out to walk in fresh attire, and been
+mud-pelted by rude urchins, so that the outward robes, at least, were
+soiled, and a sense of degradation and uncleanness became the
+consequence in spite of reason. But, after all, the dress could be
+easily changed when opportunity should occur, and all be made clean
+again, and the mud-pelting forgotten or overlooked, and the urchins
+punished or dismissed in scorn.</p>
+
+<p>Surely, God would not much longer permit this fiend to subjugate me. Had
+I not suffered sufficiently? Alas I who but our Creator can judge of our
+deserts, or measure our power to bear?</p>
+
+<p>In my adversity and lonely trouble I had drawn near to Him and his
+blessed Son&mdash;our Mediator, and example, and only strength. Dear as was
+still the memory of that earthly love, the only real passion I had ever
+known, could ever know, it came no longer to my spirit as a substitute
+for religion. I had learned to separate my worship of God from my fealty
+to man, yet was this last not weakened, but strengthened, by such
+discrimination.</p>
+
+<p>If only for the gift of grace it brought to me, let me bless my sad
+captivity!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="III_CHAPTER_XI"></a><h2>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>The dreary days rolled on; the health of Mrs. Clayton declined so
+rapidly that a small stove was found necessary to the comfort of her
+contracted bedroom, which freed me from the unpleasant necessity of her
+actual presence. The stocking-basket was set aside, the gingerbread nuts
+were neglected, and the noise of constant crunching, as of bones, came
+no more from my dragon's den; nor yet the smell of Stilton cheese and
+porter, wherewith she had so frequently regaled herself and nauseated me
+between-meals, and in the night-season. I used to call her a chronic
+eater&mdash;a symptom, I believe, of the worst sort of dyspepsia, as well as
+too often its occasion.</p>
+
+<p>I prefer, myself, the Indian notion of eating, seldom, and enough at a
+time. After all, is there any despot equal to the stomach and its
+requisitions? What an injustice it seems to all the rest of the organs,
+the royal brain especially, that this selfish, sensual sybarite should
+exact tribute, and even enforce concession, whenever denied its
+customary demands!</p>
+
+<p>There are human beings, the poor of the earth, as we know, who pass
+their whole lives, merge their immortal souls in ministering to its
+absolute necessities, who go cold, ill-clad, and ignorant, to keep off
+the pangs of hunger; who sacrifice pride and affection at its miserable
+altar. There are others, fewer in number, it is true, but scarcely less
+to be pitied, who exceed this enforced servility in the most abject
+fashion of voluntary adulation; who flatter, persuade, and bring rich
+tribute to this smiling Moloch, only waiting his own time to turn upon
+and destroy his idolaters. For the pampered stomach, like all other
+spoiled potentates, is treacherous and ungrateful beyond belief.</p>
+
+<p>Yet the philosophers tell us man's necessity for food lies at the root
+of civilization, and that the desire for a sufficiency and variety of
+aliment alone keeps up our energies! I cannot think so; I believe it is
+the stone about our necks that drags us down, and is intended to do so,
+and which keeps us truly from being &quot;but a little lower than the
+angels.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Revenons &agrave; nos moutons!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The good-hearted vulgarian, who, whatever she was, and however
+detestable the part she was playing, was at least possessed of womanly
+sympathy, came frequently to see me during those weary days. Her
+engagement to Mr. Bainrothe was never by her acknowledged, or by me
+alluded to, and she seemed to have taken up the impression in some way
+that I was the victim of an unfortunate attachment to that subtle
+person, which had degenerated into a morbid and causeless hatred on my
+part, leading to mania.</p>
+
+<p>Had she stated this conviction plainly, I might have been tempted to
+undeceive her; as it was, I suffered the error to continue, knowing that
+no condition of belief would influence her half so kindly toward me.
+Women as a class have a sincere friendship for those who have undergone
+slighting treatment at the hands of their lovers and husbands; and we
+all know what a common trick of trade it is with men who have been
+unsuccessful in their attempts to gain a woman's affections, or worse,
+in their evil designs on her honor, to give out such mendacious
+impressions!</p>
+
+<p>Yet, to the end of time, the vanity and credulity of women will lead
+them to lend credence to such statements, rather than look matters
+firmly in the face, with the eyes of common-sense and experience. I, for
+one, am a very skeptic on this subject of manly dislike growing out of
+female susceptibility, and usually take the conservative view of the
+question.</p>
+
+<p>During one of these condescending visits of the &quot;Lady Anastasia,&quot; whose
+position toward Bainrothe I perfectly comprehended, through the
+inadvertence, it may be remembered, of Mrs. Clayton, I ventured to ask
+her whether she had met with her betrothed, as she had expected to do on
+landing at New York, and when her marriage was to take place.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Whenever you come out of this retirement, dear; not before. You see I
+have set my heart on 'aving you for my bridesmaid, with your friends'
+permission.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Then Mr. Bainrothe has concluded to annul the condition of my marriage
+before leaving the asylum.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, I had forgotten about that! Well, we will have the ceremony
+performed together, if you prefer; down in Dr. Englehart's
+drawing-rooms.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You reside here, then?&quot; I questioned; &quot;you are at home in this house,
+whosesoever it may be?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, no, you quite misunderstand me. I am staying with friends, and Mr.
+Bainrothe is over at home with his son and daughter-in-law&quot;&mdash;with a jerk
+of her head in the right direction&mdash;&quot;in the other city, I mean; I am
+such a stranger I. forget names sometimes. This, you know, is solely
+Dr. Englehart's establishment.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I suppose that gentleman is absent, as I have not seen him lately,&quot; I
+continued.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He has been absent, but has just returned. He speaks of calling, I
+believe, very soon, to see you on the part of Mr. Gregory. How happy you
+are to inspire such a passion in the heart of that splendid man!&quot;&mdash;and
+she rolled her eyes, and drew up her square, flat shoulders
+expressively. &quot;Do tell me where you knew him, and all about it; I am
+sure he is much more suitable to you, in age and intellect,
+than&mdash;than&mdash;even Mr. Bainrothe.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There is no question of him now,&quot; I responded, gravely, purposely
+misunderstanding her; &quot;he has been married some time to my step-sister,
+Evelyn Erie, and, I suppose, with many of my other friends, believes me
+dead!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, no, I assure you,&quot; she rejoined, with some confusion, &quot;it is a
+mistake altogether. Both Mr. and Mrs. Claude Bainrothe are perfectly
+aware of your seclusion, and he, especially, recommended and contrived
+it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;There <i>was</i> contrivance, then; you admit that!&quot; I said, impressively.</p>
+
+<p>At this juncture a feeble voice from the adjoining room was heard
+calling aloud, and I listened to it, uplifted as it was, evidently, in
+tones of remonstrance and reproof, for some moments afterward&mdash;the Lady
+Anastasia having hastened, with dutiful alacrity, to the bedside of her
+<i>soi-disant</i> servant.</p>
+
+<p>I became aware, after this visit, that Mrs. Raymond had become my jailer
+as well as her mother's. She came regularly at supper-time thereafter to
+superintend Dinah's arrangements, to give Mrs. Clayton her
+night-draught, which did not assuage her direful vigilance one
+particle, but rather seemed to infuse new powers of wakefulness in those
+ever-watchful eyes, until sunrise, when, protected by the knowledge that
+others besides herself were on the watch, she permitted sleep to take
+possession of her senses.</p>
+
+<p>I earnestly believe that no one ever so effectually controlled the
+predisposition to slumber as did this woman.</p>
+
+<p>After locking us up regularly for the night, the &quot;Lady Anastasia&quot;
+withdrew, followed by Dinah; and I would hear, later, sounds of
+festivity, in which her well-known laugh was blended, in the dining-room
+below, where, with Bainrothe and his friends, she held wassail,
+frequently, until after midnight. The groans of Mrs. Clayton would then
+commence, and, with little intermission, last until morning's light.</p>
+
+<p>Yet it was something to be rid of Mrs. Raymond's surveillance during
+those very hours I had selected for my second effort to escape. This
+must be hazarded, I knew, between eight and ten o'clock of the evening,
+during which time I had reason to suppose the house-door remained
+unlocked. The risk of encountering some one in the hall below&mdash;for there
+was constant passing and repassing of footsteps during those
+hours&mdash;constituted my chief danger; but, at all hazards, the experiment
+must then, if at all, be made.</p>
+
+<p>October was fast drifting away, and I knew that at its close my course
+would be decided for me, should I not anticipate such despotism by
+setting it at naught, in the only possible way&mdash;that of flying from the
+scene of my oppression.</p>
+
+<p>How to do this, and when, became the one problem of my existence; and it
+was well for me that Mrs. Clayton was too great a sufferer to notice
+beyond my external safety, or she might have seen clear indications of
+some strange change at work, stamped upon my features.</p>
+
+<p>My unsettled intentions were suddenly brought to a crisis by the
+contents of a letter handed to me, as usual, in the shadows of the
+evening, by the long-absent Dr. Englehart, who came in person, in
+accordance with Mrs. Raymond's announcement (arriving, as it chanced,
+while Mrs. Clayton slumbered), to deliver it.</p>
+
+<p>Gregory wrote a large, clear hand, not difficult to decipher, even by
+the dim light of a moonlight lamp; and, while Dr. Englehart stood
+regarding me in the shadow, anxiously enough, I perceived, to keep me
+entirely on my guard, I perused, with mingled derision and terror, this
+truly characteristic epistle. My running commentaries, as I
+read&mdash;entirely <i>sotto voce</i>, of course, for one does not care to rouse
+the wrath of a tiger on the crouch, by flinging pebbles in the
+jungle&mdash;may give some idea of the impression it made upon me, and the
+emotions it excited.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;BELOVED MIRIAM&quot; (insolent cur!)&mdash;&quot;for by this tender title I am
+permitted to address you at last&quot; (by whom?)&mdash;&quot;I cannot flatter myself
+that, in concurring with the wishes of your friends, you return my
+fervent passion&quot; (you are mistaken there; I do return it with the seal
+unbroken); &quot;but will you not suffer me to hope that the deep,
+disinterested devotion of months may undo the past, and dissolve those
+bitter prejudices which I feel well aware were instilled into your heart
+by one of the coldest and most time-serving of men&quot; (of course, hope is
+free to all; it is no longer kept in a box, as in the days of Pandora)?
+&quot;When I assure you that Wentworth, with a perfect knowledge of your
+present situation, has repudiated the past, you will more perfectly
+understand my reference&quot; (I will believe this when he tells me so, not
+before; your assertion simply reassures me). &quot;It is not, however, to
+place my own devotion in contrast with his perfidy, that I now address
+you&quot; (Nature drew the contrast, fortunately for him, without your
+assistance), &quot;but to beseech you, for your own sake, to let nothing turn
+you from your recently-formed resolution&quot; (I don't intend to let any
+thing turn me, if I can help it, this time!). &quot;It remains with you to
+live a free and happy life, adored and indulged by one who would give
+his heart's blood to serve you&quot; (a poor gift, I take it), &quot;or pass your
+whole existence in the cell of a lunatic, cut off from every being who
+could care for or protect you.&quot; (Great Heavens! what can the wretch
+mean?) &quot;Should you refuse to become my wife, and affix your signature to
+the papers in your possession, I have reason to know that Bainrothe
+designs to make, or rather continue, you dead, and imprison you in a
+lonely house on the sea-coast, which he owns, where others of his
+victims have before now lived and died unknown!&quot; (Very melodramatic,
+truly; but I don't believe Cagliostro would dare to do it.) &quot;To convince
+you of the truth of my allegations. Dr. Engelehart is instructed to
+place in your hands a note recently intercepted by me from that
+arch-conspirator to his son, which please return to him, my truest
+friend&quot; (direst enemy, you mean), &quot;along with this letter, as I send you
+both documents at my own peril, and dare not leave them in your hands&quot;
+(how magnanimous!); and here I dropped the letter on the table, and
+extended my hand mutely to Dr. Englehart for the note, which was ready
+for me, in the hollow of his pudgy palm.</p>
+
+<p>It did, indeed, most clearly confirm the statement, true or false, of
+the ubiquitous Gregory. Returning it to the physician <i>pro tem</i>., I then
+continued the perusal of this singular love-letter to the end, in which
+the lawyer and knave predominated in spite of Eros! Yet there was food
+for consideration here, and extremest terror.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How long before this ultimatum is proposed to me, which Mr. Gregory
+seemed to anticipate, and with which you, no doubt, are acquainted?&quot; I
+asked, coldly, after consideration.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ten days will close up de whole transaction, as I understand,&quot; was the
+no less cool reply, made in those husky, inimitable tones, peculiar to
+the man of petty pills.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ten days! It would seem a short time wherein to get up a reasonable
+trousseau, even!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;True&mdash;true! but nosing of dat kind is necessaire under dese
+circumstances&mdash;only your mos' gracious and graceful consent!&quot; He spoke
+eagerly, with bowed head and clasped hands, standing mutely before me
+when he had concluded.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;If Mr. Gregory loved me truly, he would not limit me thus,&quot; I hazarded.
+&quot;He would give me time to learn to return his affection, as I must try
+to do, and to forget the past! He would not strike hands with my
+persecutors, but insist on my liberation&mdash;or obtain it, as he could
+readily do, without their co&ouml;peration, through you, Dr. Englehart, who
+seem to be his friend and ally, and who have already run such risks for
+his sake in bringing me these two dangerous letters,&quot; and as I spoke I
+pushed them across the table, to be gathered up and concealed with
+well-affected eagerness.</p>
+
+<p>How perfectly he played his part, and how cunningly Bainrothe had
+contrived to convey to me his menace&mdash;real, or assumed for effect, I
+could not tell which, for my judgment spoke one language, my cowardice
+another! Yet, I confess, that the panic was complete, though I concealed
+it from the enemy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Women usually, at least romantic and incredulous women like me, demand
+some proof of a lover's devotion,&quot; I resumed, as coolly as I could,
+&quot;before yielding him their faith and fealty; but Mr. Gregory has given
+me no evidence so far of the sincerity of his passion; I confess I find
+it difficult, under the circumstances, to believe in its existence.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>He drew near to me, bent eagerly above me, then again concealed himself,
+as it was wise for him to do, in shadow; and I could hear his hissing
+breath, as it passed between his closed teeth&mdash;like that of a roused
+serpent. The impulse of the man came near betraying him, but he rallied
+and refrained from an exposure, as he would have supposed it, that must
+have been fatal to his success as a lover, even if it confirmed his
+power of possession.</p>
+
+<p>His tones, low and deep, were unmistakably those of suppressed passion
+when he spoke again, and he had almost dropped his accent, so
+wonderfully assumed.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;When shall he come to you, and speak for himself? Let me take to him
+some word of encouragement from your lips&mdash;for de love of whom&mdash;he
+languishes&mdash;he dies! All other passions of his life have proved like
+cobwebs, compared to this&mdash;avarice, ambition, revenge, all yield before
+it! He is your slave! Do not trample on a fervent heart, thus laid at
+your feet! Have mercy on this unfortunate!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Strange language from a captor to a captive&mdash;mocking language, that I
+find unendurable! Let Mr. Gregory remain where he is until the extreme
+limit of the interval granted me by Basil Bainrothe&mdash;as breathing-space
+before execution; and before hope expires in thick darkness&mdash;then let
+him come and take what he will find of the victim of so much perfidy!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You do not&mdash;you cannot&mdash;meditate personal violence, self-murder?&quot; He
+spoke in a voice of agony, that could scarcely be restrained from
+breaking into its natural tones.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No&mdash;no&mdash;do not flatter yourselves that I could be driven by you&mdash;by
+<i>any</i> one to such God-offending,&quot; I hastened to say, for I felt the
+importance of keeping this barrier of disguise, of ice, between Gregory
+and myself as a means of safety for a season, and determined that he
+should not transcend it, if I could prevent an <i>expos&eacute;</i>, such as his
+excited feelings made imminent. &quot;My hopes are dead&mdash;say this to Mr.
+Gregory&mdash;and I have reason to believe I should fare as well in his hands
+as in any other's, knowing him&mdash;as I know him to be&mdash;&quot; and I hesitated
+here for a moment&mdash;&quot;gentle, compassionate, faithful, where his feelings
+are fairly enlisted.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He thanks you, through my lips, most lovely lady, for dis great proof
+of consideration; dis' message, which I shall truthfully deliver, will
+fill his heart with joy, long a stranger to his breast, for he has
+feared your hatred.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now go, Dr. Englehart, and let no one come to me without previous
+warning, for I need all my strength to bear me up in this emergency. Nor
+would I meet Mr. Gregory without due preparation&mdash;even of apparel,&quot; and
+I glanced at my dress of spotted lawn, faded and unseasonable as it
+seemed in the autumn weather. &quot;I know his fastidiousness on this
+subject, and from this time it ought to, it must be my study to try to
+please him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Why was not the fate of Ananias or Sapphira mine after that false
+utterance? Why did I triumph in the strength of guile that desperation
+gave me, rather than sink abashed and penitent beneath it? And this was
+the woman who had once lectured on duplicity and expediency, and deemed
+herself above them!</p>
+
+<p>Bitter and nauseous as was this bowl to me, I drank it without a
+grimace; so much depended on the measure of deceit&mdash;hope, love, honor,
+life itself perhaps&mdash;for my terrors whispered that even such warnings as
+those Gregory had given were not to be disregarded where there was
+question of success or failure to Basil Bainrothe! But one alternative
+presented itself&mdash;escape! Delay, I scarce could hope for, and, even if
+granted, how could it avail me in the end? Those words&mdash;&quot;He will make
+you dead!&quot; rang in my ears, and seemed written on the wall. They
+confronted me everywhere. It was so easy to do this&mdash;so easy to repeat
+what the papers had already told the world&mdash;so easy to confine me in a
+maniac's cell under an assumed name, and by the aid of my own gold, and
+say, &quot;She perished at sea!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>It would be to the interest of all who knew it, to preserve the secret,
+except the poor ship's captain, and he had been a dupe, and would
+scarcely recognize his folly, or, if he did, be the first to boast of
+and publish it. Besides that, should the matter be inquired into, how
+easy for Bainrothe to allege that my own family had sanctioned his
+course to save my reputation! For innuendo was over on this disgraceful
+subject. He had declared openly his base design.</p>
+
+<p>Years might elapse before the final exposition, years of utter ruin to
+my prospects and my hopes. Wentworth might be married by that time, or
+indifferent, or dead; Ernie too old to make the matter of a year or two
+of consequence in the carrying out of the nefarious scheme to sustain
+which it would be so easy to summon and suborn witnesses.</p>
+
+<p>All these possibilities represented themselves to me with frightful
+distinctness; my mind became imbued with them to the exclusion of all
+else&mdash;of reason even. I was literally panic-stricken, and nothing but
+flight could satisfy my instinct, my impulse of self-preservation. I
+must go, even if blown like a leaf before the gales of heaven; must fly,
+if even to certainty of destruction. I had felt this necessity once
+before, be it remembered, but never so stringently, so morbidly as now.
+I was yielding under the agony, the anxiety incident to my condition; my
+nervous system, too severely taxed, was breaking down, and it would
+succumb entirely, unless relief came to me (of this I felt convinced),
+before another weary month should roll away. Had I been imprisoned for a
+certain term of years as an expiation for crimes, I think I could have
+borne it better; but the injustice, the uncertainty of these proceedings
+were more than I could sustain.</p>
+
+<p>I fell asleep, I remember, on the night of my interview with
+Gregory&mdash;<i>alias</i> Englehart&mdash;to dream confusedly of Baron Trenck and his
+iron collar, and the Princess Amelia and her unmitigated grief, and it
+seemed to me that I was given to drink from a cup the poor prisoner had
+carved (as memoirs tell us he carved and sold many such), filled with a
+sort of bitter wine, by the man in the iron mask&mdash;so vividly did Fancy,
+mixing her ingredients, typify the anguish of my waking moments, and
+reproduce its anxieties, in dreams of night that could not be
+controlled.</p>
+
+<p>When I awoke in the morning it was to lie quietly, and listen to the
+doleful voice of Sabra, for such had been Dinah's Congo name, uplifted
+in what she called a &quot;speritual&quot; as she cleaned the brass mountings of
+the grate and kindled its tardy fires. With very slight alteration and
+adjustment, this picturesque and dramatic Obi hymn is given in this
+place, just as I jotted it down in my diary, thus imprinting it on my
+memory from her own dolphin-like lips and bellows-like lungs. Her
+forefathers, she informed me with considerable pride, had been
+snake-worshipers, and she certainly inherited their tendency to treat
+the worst enemy of mankind with respectful adoration.</p>
+
+<p>It served to divert my mind from its one fixed idea for a little time to
+arrange this singular hymn, which, together with those she had given
+voice to on the raft, proved her poetic powers. For Sabra assured me
+that this gift of sacred song had come to her one day when she was
+washing her master's linen, and that she had felt it run cold streaks
+down her back and through her brain, and that from that time she was
+uplifted to sing &quot;sperituals&quot; by spells and seasons. This, her longest
+and most successful inspiration, I now lay before the reader:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">SABRA'S SPERITUAL.<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">We's on de road to Zion,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">We's on de paf' to Zion,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">But dar's a roarin' lion,<br /></span>
+<span class="i8">For Satan stops de way.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Oh! lef' us pass, ole Masta,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Oh! lef' us pass, strong Masta,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Oh! lef' us pass, rich Masta&mdash;<br /></span>
+<span class="i8">It am near de break ob day!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">We's on de road to Zion,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">We's on de paf' to Zion,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">But wid his red-hot iron<br /></span>
+<span class="i8">He bars de hebbenly gate!<br /></span>
+<span>Oh! lef' us pass, ole Masta,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Oh! lef' us pass, kin' Masta,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Oh! lef' us pass, sweet Masta,<br /></span>
+<span class="i8">For we is mighty late!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">Does you hear de rain a-fallin'?<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Does you hear de prophets callin'?<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Does you hear de cherubs squallin'<br /></span>
+<span class="i8">Wat's settin' on de gate?<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Oh! lef us pass, ole Masta,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Oh! step dis side, kin' Masta,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Unbar de do', dear Masta,<br /></span>
+<span class="i8">We <i>dar'</i> no longer wait!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">Does you hear de win' a blowin'?<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Does you hear de chickens crowin'?<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Does you see de niggars hoein'?<br /></span>
+<span class="i8">It am de break ob day!<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Oh! lef us by, good Masta,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Oh! stan' aside, ole Masta,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Oh! light your lamp, sweet Sabiour,<br /></span>
+<span class="i8">For we done los' our way!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">We'll gib you all our money,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">We'll fotch you yams and honey,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">We'll fill your pipe wid 'baccer,<br /></span>
+<span class="i8">An' twiss your tail wid hay!<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">We'll shod your hoofs wid copper,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">We'll knob your horns wid silber,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">We'll cook you rice and gopher,<br /></span>
+<span class="i8">Ef you will clar de way!<br /></span>
+</div><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">He's gwine away, my bredderin,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">He's stepped aside, my sisterin,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">He's clared de track, my chillun,<br /></span>
+<span class="i8">Now make de trumpets bray!<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">We tanks you kindly, Masta,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">We gibs you tanks, ole Masta,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">You is a buckra Masta,<br /></span>
+<span class="i8">Whateber white folks say!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="III_CHAPTER_XII"></a><h2>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>During these last days of my captivity, Mrs. Clayton was truly a piteous
+sight to see&mdash;swathed in flannel and helpless as an infant, yet still
+perversely vigilant as she had been in her hours of health, and
+determined on the subject of opiates as before. I sometimes think she
+feared to place herself wholly in my hands, as she must have been under
+the influence of a powerful anodyne, and that, in spite of her
+professions of confidence, and even affection, she feared me as her foe.
+God knows that, had it been to save my own life, I would not have harmed
+one hair of her viperish head, as flat on top as if the stone of the
+Indian had been bound upon its crown from babyhood, yet full of brains
+to bursting around the base of the skull.</p>
+
+<p>It was necessary for Dinah to be in constant attendance on my Argus, and
+even to feed her, so helpless were her hands, with the mucilages which
+now formed her principal diet, by the order of some celebrated physician
+who wrote his prescriptions without seeing his patient, after the form
+of the ancients, sending them daily through the hands of Mrs. Raymond.
+Still those vigilant green eyes never faltered in their task, and lying
+where&mdash;with the door opened between our chambers (as she tyrannically
+required it to be most of the time) she could command a view of almost
+every act of my life&mdash;I found her scrutiny more unendurable than when
+she had at least feigned to be absorbed with her stocking-basket.
+Ernie's noise, too, disturbed her, and I was obliged to keep him
+constantly amused, for fear that her wrath might culminate in eternal
+banishment.</p>
+
+<p>The days slid on&mdash;November had passed through that exquisite phase of
+existence (which almost redeems it from the reproach cast upon it
+through all time, of being <i>par excellence</i> the gloomy month of the
+year), the sweet and balmy influences of which had reached us, even
+through the walls of our prison-house, in the shape of smoky sunshine,
+and balmy, odorous, and lingering blossoms, and was now asserting its
+traditional character with much angry bluster of sleet, and storm, and
+cutting wind. It was Herod lamenting his Mariamne slain by his own hand,
+and making others suffer the consequences of his regretted cruelty, his
+remorseful anguish. It was the fierce Viking making wild wail over his
+dead Oriana.</p>
+
+<p>No more to come until another year had done its work of resurrection and
+decay, the lovely Indian Summer slumbered under her mound of withered
+flowers and heaps of gorgeous leaves, unheeding all, or unconscious of
+the grief of her stern bridegroom.</p>
+
+<p>Cold and bitter and bleak howled the November blast, and ruthlessly
+drove the sleet against the shivering panes, exposed without, though
+shielded within by Venetian folding shutters, on that gray morning, when
+a passing whisper from most unlovely and altogether unfaithful lips
+nerved me paradoxically to sudden resolution.</p>
+
+<p>False as I knew old Dinah to be&mdash;almost on principle&mdash;still, I could not
+disregard the possible truth of her passing warning, given in broken
+whisper first as she poured out my tea and afterward prepared my bath.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Honey, don't you touch no tea nor coffee dis evening after Dinah goes
+out ob here an' de bolt am fetched home; jus' make 'tence to drene it
+down, like, but don't swaller one mortal drop, for dey is gwine to give
+you a dose of laudamy&quot;&mdash;nodding sagaciously and peering into the teapot
+as she interpolated aloud; &quot;sure enough, it is full ob grounds, honey!
+(I heerd 'um say dat wid my own two blessed yers), for de purpose of
+movin' you soun' asleep up to dat bell-tower (belfry, b'leves dey call
+it sometimes)&mdash;he! he! he! next door, in dat big house, war de res' on
+'em libs, de little angel gal too. You see, honey, der was an ossifer to
+sarve a process writ about somebody here dis mornin', but dar was
+something wrong about it, so dey all said, an' he is comin' to sarch de
+house for you, I spec', to-morrow; for de hue an' cry is out somehow&mdash;or
+mebbe it's me&mdash;he! he! he! (very faintly) an' dey is gwine to move you,
+so dey says, to keep all dark, after you gets soun' asleep. But de
+ossifer is 'bleeged to wait till mornin' (court-time, as I heerd 'em
+say) comes roun' agin to git de <i>haby-corpy</i> fixed up right, an' dat's
+how he spounded hisself. Wat does dat mean, honey?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I can scarcely make you understand now, Dinah&quot; (aside). &quot;Don't ask
+me&mdash;just go on, low, very low; how did you hear all this?&quot; (Aloud) &quot;More
+cream, Dinah.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Wid my ear to de key-hole, in de study, war dey axed de ossifer. My
+'spicions was roused by de words he 'dressed to me wen I opened de front
+do', for you see, dat ole nigger watch-dog ob dern, dat has nebber a
+good word for nobody, was gone to market, an' Madame Raymond she hel' de
+watch, an' she sont me from de kitchen to mine de front-do' bell.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Old dame,' says the ossifer (for so dey calls him), as pleasant as a
+mornin' in May; 'has you a young gal locked up here as you knows ob? Now
+tell what you choose, and don't be afraid of dese folks. Dis is a free
+country for bofe black and white.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Den I answered him straightforward like de trufe: 'Dar's nobody in de
+house heah but wat you kin see for axin' for 'em, as far as I knows on.
+Wat young gal do you 'lude to, masta?&mdash;Bridget Maloney, I spose, dat
+Irish heifer wat does de chambers ebery mornin' and goes home ob
+ebenin's. Ef you means her, she's off to church to-day, an' sleeps at
+her mammy's house.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;'Does you feel willin' to swar to de trufe of your insertion, ole
+dame?' he disclaims. 'I shall resist on dat'&mdash;fierce as a buck-rabbit,
+holdin' up his right hand, an' blinkin' his little 'cute eyes.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sartin an' sure I does when de right time is come,' I sez. 'Jes' take
+me to de court-hous' ef you doubt Dinah's word compunctionable. I neber
+hab bin in dat place yit since I was sold in Georgy on de block befo' de
+high, wooden steps; but I knows it is more solemn to lie dar dan in
+Methody meetin'-house.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Den Mr. Bainrofe he cum out, hearin' de talk, in dat long-tailed,
+satin-flowered gownd ob his'n, wid a silk rope tied roun' his waist, an'
+gole tossels hangin' in front, jes' like a Catholic Roman or a king, an'
+he sez, 'Walk in here, my fren, an' don't tamper wid my servants&mdash;dat
+ain't gentlem'ly;' den he puts his han' on de ossifer's shoulder, an'
+dey walked in together, an' I listened at de do', in duty boun', an' I
+heerd him say, 'Plant a guard if you choose&mdash;do wateber you like&mdash;but,
+till dat writ am rectified, you can't sarch through my house, for a
+man's house is his castle here, as in de Great Britain, till de law
+reaches out a long arm an' a strong arm.' Dat was wat Mr. Bainrofe
+spounded to de ossifer, an' he 'peared 'fused-like an' flusterfied, for
+I peeped fru de key-hole at 'em wen dey wus talkin'. 'An,' sez he, 'dis
+heah paper does want de secon' seal, sure enough, since I 'xamine it,
+wat you, is so 'tickiler 'bout; but dat can easily be reconstructified,
+an' I'll be sartin sure to be here airly to-morrow morning. In de mean
+while, my man, McDermot, shall keep de house in his eye, an' mus' hab de
+liberty of lodgment.'</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Den Mr. Bainrofe he say, 'Oh, sartinly&mdash;your man, McDermot, am welcome
+to his bite an' sup, an' all he kin fine out'&mdash;an' he laughed, an' dey
+parted, mighty pleasant-like, and den he called Mrs. Raymun' and Mass'
+Gregory, an' I listened again. Dat's our colored way for reformation,
+child. An' I heerd 'em&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Dinah! Dinah! what are you muttering about&mdash;don't you hear Mrs. Raymond
+knocking? Miss Monfort must be tired out of your nonsense. What keeps
+you there so long?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I'se spounding another speritual to Miss Mirainy, an', wen I gits
+'gaged in dat way, I disregards airthly knockin'. I'se listenin' to de
+angels hammerin' overhead, an' Mrs. Raymun' will hab to wait a
+spell&mdash;he! he! he!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, go at once, Dinah, and open the door for Mrs. Raymond. I can write
+your song down just as well another time,&quot; I remonstrated, taking up and
+laying down my note-book as I spoke, so as to display my ostensible
+occupation to the peering eyes of Mrs. Clayton (now sitting bolt upright
+in her bed, looking like a Chinese bonze), for the purpose of sweeping
+in my position definitively.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That will do, Dinah. Now go and get Miss Monfort's bath ready,&quot; I
+heard my dragoness say, after a short whispered communication from her
+early visitor. It was the idea, probably, to remove me, as well as
+Dinah, while the plot was being unfolded, and my bath-room, with its
+closed door, promised security from quick ears and eyes to the brace of
+conspirators now plotting their final blow.</p>
+
+<p>Once in that belfry, and truly might the sense of Dante's famous
+inscription become my motto for life: &quot;Here hope is left behind.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I covered my eyes as I recalled that dreary, dreadful prison-house of
+clock and bell, into which I had clambered once by means of a movable
+step-ladder, rarely left there by the attendant, in order to rescue my
+famished cat, shut up there by accident. I recollected the maddened look
+of the creature, as it flew by me like a flash, frightened out of its
+wits, Mrs. Austin had said, by the clicking of the machinery of the huge
+clock, and the chiming of the responsive bell. Both were silent now, and
+there was room enough for a prisoner's cot in that lonely and dismantled
+turret as there once had been for a telescope and its rest, used for
+astronomical purposes at long intervals by my father and a few of his
+scientific friends, but finally dismantled and put aside forever.</p>
+
+<p>I could imagine myself a denizen, at the will of Bainrothe, of that
+weird, gray belfry, shut up with that silent clock, in company with a
+bed, a chair, and table, denied, perchance, even the comfort of a stove,
+for fear the flue might utter smoke, and, with it, that kind of
+revelation, said proverbially to accompany such manifestations; denied
+books, even writing-materials, the sight of a human face, and furnished
+with food merely sufficing in quantity and quality to keep soul and body
+together!</p>
+
+<p>Could I resist this state of things? Could I sustain it and retain my
+reason? No, I felt that the picture my fancy drew, if realized, would
+make me abject and submissive, change me to a cowardly, cringing slave.
+I was not made of the right stuff for martyrdom, only for battle, for
+resistance, and would put forth my last powers in the effort to save
+myself from the unendurable trials before me, even if destruction were
+the consequence. A pistol-ball in my brain would be preferable to what I
+saw awaiting me, should Bainrothe succeed in his stratagem, as I doubted
+not he would do, if determined on it. I should know freedom in its true
+sense never again, if that night were suffered to pass without its
+redemption, if that belfry once were entered.</p>
+
+<p>As carelessly as I could I followed Dinah to the bath-room, ostensibly
+to direct the temperature of the water, but really to draw out from her
+all that was possible while the mood of communication possessed her, on
+the subject so vital to me and my welfare. Life and death almost were
+involved in her revelations, and I hastened to wind in the clew while it
+lingered in my hand; for I knew that she was an eccentric as well as a
+selfish creature, and might suddenly see fit to withdraw or snap its
+thread.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now, tell me about McDermot, Dinah, what sort of a look has he? Is he
+large or small, light or dark, and does he smoke a pipe'?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He is a great big man, honey, wid red har an' sort ob chaney-blue eyes;
+mos while, sometimes he rolls em up in his head, an' he smells mighty
+strong of whisky. I tells you all; his bref mos knocked me down, but I
+didn't see no pipe?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A discouraging account, truly; yet I persevered. It seemed my only hope
+to enlist this man on my side, either through his sympathies or sense of
+duty. I had no power to command his services on the side of his avarice.
+The ring on my finger, the pledge of Wentworth's troth, a massive
+circlet of chased gold, was all that remained to me in the shape of
+valuables. I did not possess a stiver in that prison, nor own even the
+clothes on my back.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Could you not take him a message from me, Dinah? It is his duty, you
+know, to assist me; it is on my account, doubtless, he is placed here;
+and hereafter I can reward him liberally, and you too. Just now, you
+know, I am penniless.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The woman stopped and looked at me, her small black irises mere points,
+set in extensive, muddy-looking whites, not unfrequently suffused and
+bloodshot.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I dun told the ossifer dar wus no one here you knows, answerin' to your
+perscription.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But that was only a measure of safety for yourself; you surely do not
+mean to take sides with my persecutors?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I has nuffin at all to do wid it, at all,&quot; hunching her back; &quot;I has
+gib you far warnin' 'bout de laudamy an' der retentions, an' you mus'
+fight it out yourself, chile! I is afraid to go one step furder; but de
+debble sort o' tempted me dis mornin' to make a clean breast of der
+doins. Ef you mentions it, do; I is retermined to reny ebbery word of
+your ramification, and in dis here country a nigger's word, dey tells
+me, goes jus' as fur as a pore white gal's, if not furder; 'sides dat, I
+is gwine to swar favorable for my 'ployers, in course, at de
+court-house&mdash;unless&quot;&mdash;hesitating and leering in my face&mdash;&quot;you sees,
+honey, dey have not paid me yit&mdash;and mebbe dey won't, ef I displeases
+'em, an' your gole watch is gone; an' den, Dinah would be lef' on de
+shelf.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But I have other property, Dinah, other jewels, even. That watch was
+very little compared to what I possess outside of these prison-walls,
+and these possessions&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Whar is dey, honey? 'a bird in dis han' am worf two dozen in a bush,'
+as my ole masta used to say, wen de traders cum up to buy his corn an'
+cotton, an' I always sawed de dollars come down mighty quick after dat
+sayin' of his'n; for I used to watch round the dinin'-room pretty
+constant an' close in dem days, totin' in poplar-chips an' corn-cobs for
+kin'lin' an' litin' masta's long clay pipes&mdash;none ob de common sort, I
+tells you&mdash;an' brushin' up de harf an' keepin' off' de flies, and so
+forf. You see I was a little shaver in dem days, an' masta liked my
+Congo straction, an' petted me a heap, an' I never seed the cotton-field
+till my ole masta died; den dey put me out ob de house, because Mass
+Jack Dillard's father&mdash;dat was my ole mistis's own step-brother's secon'
+son&mdash;he 'cused me ob stealin' his gole pencil-case wrongfully&mdash;like I
+had any use fur his writin' 'tensils!&quot; (indignantly).</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Dinah,&quot; I adjured, cutting short the stream of her narrative, &quot;for
+God's sake, see Mr. McDermot, and tell him of my situation! He shall
+have a thousand dollars to-morrow, and you also shall have money enough
+to buy your whole family, and bring them hither, if you will but assist
+me to escape <i>this</i> night. Don't stand and look at me, woman, but act at
+once, if you have a human heart. You must help me now, or never.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You mus' tink I's one ob de born fools, Miss Mirimy, to bl'eve all dat
+stuff! Doesn't I know you loss all your trunks on de 'Scusco, an' wasn't
+you a pore gal, teachin' white folks's chilluns fur a livin' before? I
+has hearn all dat discounted since I come into dis 'stablishment. We
+all knows as how teachers is de meanest kine of white trash gwine;
+still, I specs you might'ly. You has been ob de quality; any nigger can
+see dat wid half an eye open; an' you has got more sense in de end ob yo
+little finger, ef you is crazy, dan all de res tied up in a bunch ob
+fedders! Wat I does for you, chile, I does for lub ob yo purliteness&quot;
+(hesitating here). &quot;You hasn't anoder ob dem gole-pieces anywhar, like
+dat you gib me befo', has you? I'se bery bad off fur 'baccer, I is,
+indeed, chile, an' de pay is mighty slow in dis house.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have not a five-penny bit, Dinah, not one copper cent, if it were to
+save my life or yours.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is dat ring of yours good guinea gole, honey?&quot; asked the mercenary
+creature, leering at it. &quot;It looks mighty bright and pretty, it does
+dat! But mebbe its nuffin but pinchbeck, after all.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It looks what it is, Dinah&quot;&mdash;and, after a moment's consideration, I
+drew it from my finger. &quot;If I give you this, will you promise to deliver
+my message to McDermot faithfully?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sartain sure, honey, but tell me again wat it is; I forgits de small
+patticklers.&quot;</p>
+<br />
+
+<p>&quot;Get me my pencil and a scrap of paper, and let me write it down for him
+to read; or no, this might involve observation, detection. I must rely
+upon your memory, Dinah, which I have reason to know is good. Now,
+listen and understand me. I promise to Mr. McDermot one thousand
+dollars, to be paid down to-morrow morning, if he will help me to escape
+to-night. And I promise you liberty for all of your family, and security
+for yourself, if you will assist me, or even be silent, and let me go
+without a word, without informing. Do you understand this, Dinah? If so,
+repeat it to me low, yet distinctly.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>She obeyed me, evincing wonderful shrewdness in her way of putting the
+affair, as she said she meant to do, in approaching McDermot.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And do you believe me, Dinah, now that I have promised so solemnly to
+pay these rewards?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Dats neider here nor dar, Miss Mirim, so dat McDermot bleves you, dat's
+enough; wat dis chile bleves am her own business. Dem Irish am mighty
+stupid kine ob creeturs; dey swallows down mos' any thing you chooses to
+tell 'em.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>A voice without, uplifted at this juncture, as if it had long been
+expending itself in ineffectual appeals, now summoned Dinah, harshly and
+emphatically.</p>
+
+<p>The Lady Anastasia had departed, after a brief interview, and Mrs.
+Clayton, unable to leave her bed, felt naturally anxious to ascertain
+the cause of Dinah's prolonged ministry on her fellow-prisoner.</p>
+
+<p>I heard only the words, &quot;De pattikalerest lady I ebber come acrost about
+de feel of water, an' I is done tired out, I is&mdash;&quot; The rest was lost, as
+Dinah vanished from the apartment of the invalid. In the next moment, I
+heard the key turned, and the outlet bolt drawn, and the growl of the
+surly sable watch-dog without, who, in Mrs. Raymond's absence,
+officiated as our jailer and Cerberus.</p>
+
+<p>It was early evening when Dinah returned, for she brought to us but two
+meals at this season, the necessary food for Ernie being always ready in
+a closet. She came ushered in, as usual, by Mrs. Raymond, who bore with
+her on this occasion what she called savory broth, concocted, by her own
+fair hands, for the benefit of her suffering parent. While Clayton was
+employed in supping this mutton abomination, with a loud noise peculiar
+to the vulgar, and Mrs. Raymond whispering inaudible words above the
+bowl, I was ostensibly employed in tearing a croquet to pieces with my
+fork, while I interrogated Dinah, in a low, even voice, between each
+shred, unintelligible, I knew, in the next room, through its monotony,
+on the success of her mission, and caught her muttered rather than
+murmured replies eagerly in return.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Did you speak with him, Dinah?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Dere was no use, honey; Bainrothe done bought him up. I peaked fru de
+key-hole, and seen de gole paid down wid my own two precious eyes. Dar's
+no mistake about dat,&quot; shaking her head dolefully. &quot;All you has to do
+now, honey, is to keep wide awake, an' duly sober, as ole mast a used to
+say, 'frain 'ligiously from de tea or coffee, one or de udder, dat she
+will offer you 'bout eight o'clock dis ebenin', or mebbe dey will send
+it up by me, I can't say yit. Howsomever, you needn't to drink dat stuff
+arter wat you knows; an' ef dey goes to take you forcefully off to de
+belfry in de night-time, you kin skreech ebbery step ob de way. Dat's de
+bes plan, chile, wat I kin project for your resistance; but I'se afeard
+dar is no hopin' you, any way we can fix it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you, Dinah, you have done your best, no doubt; don't sell my
+ring, though; I shall want it back some day.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;La, chile, I done 'sposed ob it aready, an' dey give me a poun of
+backer an' a gole-piece fur it. It was good gole an' no mistake. I tells
+you all,&quot; adding aloud, &quot;an' now, Miss Mirim, I has tole you ebbery
+syllable. I disremembered ob dat speritual ar. I is sorry you doesn't
+like dese crockets, fur de madame made un wid her own clean red hands.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Say white hands, you old limb of Satan, or I shall be after you with a
+mop,&quot; cried the laughing voice of Mrs. Raymond from the side of the sick
+woman's bed, betraying at once how she had divided her attention. Then,
+advancing into my chamber, she added, as coolly as though she had been
+suggesting a visit to the theatre:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Excuse me, Miss Monfort, for intruding, but I am about to ask you
+whether it would be agreeable to you to be married to-night at ten
+o'clock? This seems very sudden, but circumstances have forced the
+arrangement on us all, and I assure you, from the bottom of my heart, it
+is for both of us the preferable alternative of evils, as poor Sir Harry
+Raymond would have said. Alas, my dear! shall I ever again have such a
+helpmate as he was: so kind, so generous, so considerate&quot;&mdash;and she
+clasped and wrung her large, rosy hands. &quot;A second marriage is often a
+great sacrifice, and, in any case, a hazard, as I feel, as the time
+draws near, very sensibly. But you seem confounded, and yet you must
+have been somewhat prepared for this condition of things after your last
+interview with Dr. Englehart?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The amazement of Dinah at this change in the programme, if possible,
+exceeded my own. She did not understand, as I did, that it was a measure
+prompted not only by humanity but self-interest, and that even the hard
+heart of Basil Bainrothe preferred a compromise to such violence and
+injustice as those he had otherwise meditated. Besides, what better or
+more sensible mode than this could there be, according to his views, of
+quashing the whole <i>esclandre</i>&mdash;quieting official inquiry as well as
+public indignation? As the wife of Gregory, I should be, of course, a
+<i>for&ccedil;at</i> for life, walking abroad with the concealed brand and manacle,
+afraid and ashamed to complain and acknowledge my condition, and
+willing to condone every thing.</p>
+
+<p>I saw, at a glance, that my true policy was to feign a reluctant consent
+to this proposition, and to determine later what recourse to take, as if
+indeed any remained to me in that den of serpents. I would consider, as
+soon as Mrs. Raymond was gone, what measures to pursue in order to elude
+the vigilance of McDermot, the detective; and then, if all proved vain,
+I could but perish! For I would have walked cheerfully over the burning
+ploughshares of old, lived again through the hideous nightmare of the
+burning ship and raft, nay, clasped hands with the spectre of La Vigne
+himself, had it offered to lead me to purgatory, rather than have
+married the knave, the liar, the half-breed Gregory!</p>
+
+<p>My resolution was soon made.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You will send me a suitable dress, I suppose,&quot; I said, calmly, &quot;you
+know I am a pauper here.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, fortunately I have two almost alike. Which shall it be, a chally
+or barege?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It matters little, the color is all I care for. Let it be white; I have
+a superstition about being married in colors.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So should I have, were this the first time, but, being a widow, I shall
+wear a lavender-satin, trimmed with blond, made up for a very different
+occasion.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, that will be quite suitable. Well, the long agony is over at last,
+and I am glad of it,&quot; and I drew a deep, free breath.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You will have to sign the papers before you come down-stairs. Mr.
+Bainrothe told me to say this to you, and to ask you to have them ready;
+they will be witnessed below with the marriage, and at nine,
+<i>precisely</i>, expect me to appear with your gown, and make your toilet.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Will not Bridget Maloney do as well?&quot; I asked, desperately. She, at
+least, I thought, may be compassionate.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is strange you should know of her at all, or she of you. It is that
+girl, then, who has given us all this trouble,&quot; going to the bed, &quot;when
+I did not suppose she knew of her existence. Explain this, Clayton, if
+you can.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I suppose Ernie, who is fond of her, has mentioned her name to Miss
+Monfort; she thinks his mother is sick up-stairs, but knows no more, I
+am certain; besides, it's Dr. Englehart's establishment&mdash;such things are
+to be expected, and surprise no one of the attendants. Bridget is kept
+busy among them all.&quot; The farce was to be kept up, it seemed, to the
+end.</p>
+
+<p>Old Dinah was evidently quaking in her shoes, and began to see her
+error, as she glanced reproachfully at me, but no further revelation
+seemed to be expected. It was, indeed, to divert, partly, immediate
+suspicion from one I still hoped to make my tool, that I mentioned the
+Irish girl at all, or craved her presence, but I soon found how futile
+in one instance was this trust. No sooner had Mrs. Raymond turned to
+depart, than Dinah followed her, protesting against being locked up the
+whole evening with the invalid, and begging leave to go out for an hour
+or two on business of her own, which she declared important.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But Miss Monfort may need you in making her preparations,&quot; remonstrated
+Mrs. Raymond, &quot;and Clayton and Ernie will want your attention; besides,
+fires will go down if not constantly mended, this cold evening.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Dar's plenty of coal in de box, an' de tongs, wid claws, wat Ernie is
+so fond of handling ready and waitin' for dem wat's strong enough to use
+dem if dey choose, an' tea in de caddy, an' de kittle on de trivet, jes
+filled up, de brass toastin'-fork on de peg in de closet, 'sides bread
+an' butter, an' jam, an' new milk on de shelf, an' I is 'bliged to go
+anyway, case my ticklerest friend am dyin' ob de numony&mdash;I is jes got
+word; but at nine o'clock&quot; (and she looked maliciously at me) &quot;percisely
+Dinah'll be in dis pickin' patch&mdash;he! he! he! can't possumbly cum no
+airlier.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>In a flash I saw the advantage her prolonged absence would give me,
+unless, indeed, she had become my confederate, so I beheld her depart
+with a feeling of relief which reacted in the next moment to positive
+helplessness and terror as the bolt was drawn, behind her. What could I
+do? What was there to be done? For a time I sat mute and crushed by
+consideration; then casting myself on my bed I slept for half an hour,
+the kind of slumber that confusion generates, and yet I woke refreshed,
+calmed, comforted, and with a clearly-formed resolution and plan of
+action. I rose and approached Mrs. Clayton, whose groans, perhaps,
+aroused me, and, as I stood beside her bed, the clock in the dining
+room-below struck six. I had still three hours for hope&mdash;for endeavor,
+before the circle of flame should close hopelessly around me forever!
+Three hours&mdash;were they not enough? Could I not compel them to
+concentration?</p>
+
+<p>A cup of strong tea was hastily drawn and swallowed&mdash;another made for,
+and administered by my hand to, Mrs. Clayton, with toast <i>ad libitum</i>&mdash;a
+tedious process&mdash;and afterward Ernie's supper prepared and eaten&mdash;all in
+less than half an hour. By seven he was in bed and asleep, and I had
+taken my seat by Mrs. Clayton, for the purpose, apparently, of merciful
+ministry to her condition&mdash;a piece of self-abnegation, as it seemed, and
+as she felt it, scarcely to be expected on my blissful marriage-night.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I feel very sorry for you; you suffer so, Mrs. Clayton,&quot; I had said, as
+I drew a chair beside her bed.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And I for you, Miss Monfort; our fate seems equally hard, but we must
+bear it;&quot; and she groaned heavily and closed her eyes, evidently in
+great pain.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have come to that conclusion, also, after a bitter struggle; physical
+pain is not so easily borne, however; the body has little philosophy.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I thought all this was over,&quot; she rejoined, abstractedly, &quot;when my
+hands were drawn as you see them by neuralgia ten years since. But I did
+not suffer as much then, I believe, as I do now; besides, I was younger,
+happier, better able to bear pain.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, that is true; the old should be at rest,&quot; at least my sense of
+justice whispered this; then, after a pause: &quot;Does my rubbing ease your
+shoulder, Mrs. Clayton?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Somewhat&mdash;it is my head to-night, however, that troubles me chiefly. Be
+good enough to press my temples. Ah, that is great relief! You are very
+kind, Miss Monfort; yet, in reviewing the past, I hope you will not find
+that I have been wanting to you in my turn. I trust we shall part in
+peace and meet hereafter as friends. But you do not answer me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Pardon me, I was thinking. This is a crisis, you know&mdash;this night
+decides my fate for good or ill, all rests with merciful God!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, all&mdash;of ourselves we are helpless, of course. It is a comfort to
+me, I confess, as I lie here, to feel that I have never willingly
+injured a fellow-being; to think that I&mdash;but, bless my soul, Miss
+Monfort, you must not hold me down in that way! you would not, I trust.
+But even if you did&mdash;no key this time, the door is fast without!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, not for worlds! be still, the pain will pass. I have the gift, you
+know, of soothing physical suffering. There, rest, you must not stir;
+give yourself up to me, if you can&mdash;slumber will come.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It must not come&mdash;see, we are all alone!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Her glazing eye&mdash;her slower breathing began already to attest the
+influence of the electric fluid, so potent in my veins, so wanting in
+her own, both from temperament and disease, yet she resisted bravely and
+long, and, even when her limbs were powerless, her spirit rebelled
+against me in murmured words of defiant opposition; but this, too,
+yielded finally to silence and to stupor; and she slept the deep, calm,
+unmistakable slumber caused by magnetism.</p>
+
+<p>Then, again, I went through the experiment of the preceding night, and
+strove to awaken her.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Get up,&quot; I said, and yet without willing that she should do so. &quot;Mrs.
+Raymond is here to show you her marriage-dress, and Mr. Bainrothe
+calls.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Tell them to let me sleep; don't&mdash;don't&mdash;disturb me. I am so happy&mdash;so
+peaceful. It is sweet, too, to think that she will be married at last.
+Poor thing! it was no fault of hers, though&mdash;no fault. A young actress
+is exposed to so many temptations, and it was better so&mdash;Harry Raymond's
+mistress.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>That secret would never have escaped her devoted lips had she been able
+to retain it.</p>
+
+<p>As carefully as the eyes of the dead are closed, I drew down her gaping
+lids, and turned away. As I did so, the clock struck eight. Fatima never
+listened more anxiously to the toll of parting time than I did that
+night; but, alas for me! no sister Anne kept watch on the tower; no
+brother hastened to arrest the sword. I was deserted by all save God and
+desperation. One hour comprised my fate! Very quietly I closed the door
+between Mrs. Clayton's room and my own. The bolt was on the other side,
+so I could not secure my privacy, even for a moment, should she chance
+to wake, or should Mrs. Raymond or Dinah return unexpectedly. As rapidly
+as I could, I altered my dress&mdash;this time above my clothes&mdash;threw on the
+black silk frock and mantilla prepared for me on shipboard, tied a dark
+veil over my head, an old woolen scarf about my throat, provided for
+Ernie's sore-throat and croup, and stood equipped for my enterprise.</p>
+
+<p>Neither bonnet, nor gloves, nor boots, did I possess&mdash;Mrs. Raymond's
+loan having long since been condoned on behalf of some one else, and my
+clothing, in my captivity, had been contrived to suit my circumstances.</p>
+
+<p>Wheeling the bedstead very gently on its noiseless castors a few inches
+from the wall, I insinuated myself between them, and, sheltered by the
+head-board, loosened again the slightly-adhering covering of paper that
+concealed the door, and fitted into the key-hole the well-oiled wooden
+key, which once before had proved its efficiency. It did not fail me
+now, in my hour of extremity, for a moment later I had turned and
+removed it from its socket, stepped forth upon the landing, and relocked
+without the door of my prison; but, perhaps, with too much of nervous
+haste, too little caution, for, to my inexpressible confusion, the
+handle of the instrument of my emancipation remained in my hand, broken
+off at the lock, and useless forever more.</p>
+
+<p>In delaying probable pursuit from within, I had cut off all possibility
+of my own retreat in case of failure. My bridges were literally burned
+behind me, and I had no alternative left between flight and detection.
+And yet there was something in the situation that, inconsistently
+enough, made me smile, albeit with a trembling heart.</p>
+
+<p>I shook my head drearily, as a couplet from Collins's &quot;Camel-Driver,&quot;
+with its strange appropriateness, irresistibly crossed my brain.</p>
+
+<p>Why is it that, in times like these, such conceits beset us, such
+comparisons arise? Does the quality called presence of mind find root in
+the same source that impels us to apt quotation?&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>&quot;What if the lion in his rage I meet?<br /></span>
+<span>Oft in the dust I see his printed feet.&quot;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>I gained fresh heart from that trivial diversion of thought, and stood
+quietly contemplating alternately the hall below and that above (both of
+which were visible from my place on the intermediate platform; all was
+still in both of these wide corridors), to make sure of the safety of my
+enterprise; and now, once more my foot was on the brink of those
+mysterious stairs which led, I felt, to doom or to liberty. I commenced,
+very cautiously, to descend them. The study-door at their foot was
+closed, and all seemed silent within. The murmur of voices, and the
+remote rattling of china proceeding from the ell behind the hall,
+encouraged me to believe that on this bitter night the family was
+concentrated, for greater comfort, in the supper-room.</p>
+
+<p>With my hand on the baluster, pausing at every step, I crept quietly
+down the stairway; then, as if my feet were suddenly winged with terror,
+I darted by the study-door, flew lightly over the carpeted hall, and
+found myself, in another moment, secure within the small enclosed
+vestibule into which the door of entrance gave. My worst misgivings had
+never compassed the terrific truth. At this early hour of the evening,
+not only was the front door locked, but the key had been withdrawn. This
+was despair.</p>
+
+<p>My knees gave way beneath me, and I sank like a flaccid heap in the
+corner, against one of the leaves of the small folding-door that divided
+the arched vestibule from the long entry, and which was secured to the
+floor by a bolt, while the other one was thrown back. Crouched in the
+shadow, powerless to move or think, I heard, with inexpressible terror,
+the door of the study open, and the voice and step of Bainrothe in the
+hall, approaching me.</p>
+
+<p>Had he heard me? Would he come? Was I betrayed?</p>
+
+<p>I felt my hair rise on my head as these questions rang like a tocsin
+through my brain, and I think, at that moment, I had a foretaste of the
+chief agony of death.</p>
+
+<p>They were answered by Bainrothe himself, as he paused midway between the
+study-door and my place of refuge; and again I breathed&mdash;I lived.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I was mistaken, 'Stasia, it is not he! the wind, probably; and that
+marble looks so cold&mdash;so uninviting&mdash;shall not explore it. He has a key,
+you know, and can come when he likes; for my part, I shall go in to
+supper while the oysters are hot. Do as you like, though.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Had we not better wait? You know he is sure to come to-night, bad as
+the weather is, on account of that affair. It was late when Wentworth
+notified him.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>This was the rejoinder made from within the study, in which I
+recognized the voice of Mrs. Raymond, clear and shrill.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, have it as you please. If you prefer courtesy to comfort, you
+shall be gratified; but what's the use of ceremony with Gregory? He will
+be here in twenty minutes, Mr. Bainrothe; but don't wait. I shall have
+time to sup with him before I go up-stairs, you know. I believe I will
+stay where I am until he comes, and finish taking in the poor thing's
+wedding-gown. Well, any thing is better than removal to the belfry&quot;&mdash;and
+I thought I heard a sigh.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A matter of mere temporary necessity, you know, only she might have
+frozen in the interval,&quot; said Bainrothe, jauntily, as he walked up the
+hall to the door of the dining-room, which I heard him open and let fall
+against its sill again. It closed with a spring, and in the next moment
+the study-door was also softly shut, and all was still.</p>
+
+<p>My resolution was promptly taken. The folding leaves of the inner
+door&mdash;that which divided the marble-paved vestibule from the carpeted
+entry&mdash;against one of which I had been, leaning, I well knew worked to
+and fro on pulleys which obeyed the drawing of a cord and tassel hanging
+at one side, and thus they could readily be closed with a touch by any
+one standing in the vestibule as they opened out into the hall on which
+side was the latch and bolt. I recalled this quaint arrangement with a
+quickness born of emergency, as one that might serve me now, and
+speadily possessed myself of the tassel at the extremity of the
+controlling cord. Thus armed, and praying inwardly for strength and
+courage, and wherewith to carry out my scheme successfully, I took my
+stand in one of the two niches (just large enough for the purpose) in
+the door-frame, preferring, of course, that next to the lock, prepared
+to darken the vestibule at the first approach of the expected guest (I
+was afraid to do it before, lest attention might be called to it from
+within the house), and make my escape by rushing past him ere he could
+recover himself as he entered in the gloom.</p>
+
+<p>The hazard was extreme, the result uncertain, the effort almost
+foolhardy, it may be thought; but the storm and darkness were in my
+favor, and I was fleet of foot, as were not all of my pursuers, as far
+as I could foresee who these might be.</p>
+
+<p>Momently I grew cooler, more determined, more calm, more desperate, more
+regardless of consequences; and now the culmination of endeavor
+approached in the shape of the sound of stamping feet upon the icy
+platform of the steps which they had softly ascended, and the uncertain
+fitting of a dead-latch key in its dark socket, the feeling for the knob
+with half-frozen fingers, and finally the sudden and violent throwing
+forward and open of the door into the darkened vestibule, for I had
+drawn the cord at the first symptoms of Gregory's advent, which yet took
+me by surprise. I had closed the inner doors, it is true, but paralyzed
+with sudden terror I had taken no advantage of the darkness thus evoked,
+and, as the tall form of the expected and expectant bridegroom staggered
+in, literally blown forward by the tempest, with introverted umbrella,
+and wet and streaming garments (dimly discerned in the gloom) that
+brushed against me as he passed, I continued to stand transfixed to
+stone in the niche I still occupied.</p>
+
+<p>The dream in which La Vigne had prophesied my failure flashed over me
+like lightning, and my knees trembled beneath me, yet I still clung
+spasmodically to the cord I held, and with such desperate force that,
+when Gregory pushed against the door, he believed it latched within, and
+so desisted from further effort.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Dark as Erebus,&quot; he muttered, &quot;and on such a night! Confound such
+hospitality! I suppose I must go back and ring;&quot; and in pursuance of
+this idea he again suddenly opened the front-door, which, swinging
+violently back as he turned his face within, once more afforded me the
+golden opportunity so lately lost. Quick as thought I dropped the cord I
+held, and in the sudden gust the leaves of the inner door, thus
+released, flew open and impelled my foe irresistibly forward. With his
+flapping coat and hat he drifted into the lighted hall before the
+driving blast, and, roused to instantaneous action, I slid from the
+niche I filled to the icy platform without, and swift and silent as a
+spectre sped down the sleety steps to the outward darkness. I was free!</p>
+
+<p>A moment after, I heard the door slammed heavily after me, while I
+crouched by the gate-post for concealment.</p>
+
+<p>Rising up, I mutely blessed the friendly portal that made me an outcast
+in the storm-swept streets from which the very dogs shrank terrified.</p>
+
+<p>One moment, one only, I paused as I passed by my father's gate-way,
+crowned with stone lions that glimmered in the gloom. The force of
+association and of contrast shook me with emotion&mdash;I could not enter
+there. My own roof afforded me no shelter from the biting blast; but
+squares away, with a comparative stranger, I must seek (if I ever gained
+it on that dreadful night) a refuge from the storms and sure protection
+from my foes.</p>
+
+<p>I moved rapidly along toward the tall street-lamp that diffused a dim
+and murky light from its frost-crusted lantern at the corner of the
+square, and before I reached it I encountered the first danger of my
+undertaking.</p>
+
+<p>Protected, fortunately, by the shadow of the high stone-wall near which
+I walked rapidly, I met Dinah, so nearly face to face that the whiff of
+the pipe she was smoking was warm upon my cheek. Wrapped in her old
+cloth shawl and quilted hood, she muttered as she went, and staggered
+too, I thought, though here the northeast wind, that swept her along
+before it, might have been at fault, while, blowing in my face, it
+retarded my progress.</p>
+
+<p>I passed her unchallenged, but, glancing back just as I turned the
+corner, I became aware that she was retracing her steps. I fled rapidly
+on until I reached the shelter of a friendly nook between two houses
+(well remembered of old), when, turning again to gaze, I saw her
+standing immovable as a statue beneath the lamp-post, evidently looking
+in the direction I had taken. There seemed no way of escape now save in
+persistent flight. My place of concealment might be too readily detected
+by a cautious observer, a savage on the war-trail. Should Dinah herself
+pursue me, I knew my speed would distance her; but, that prompt pursuit
+of some kind was imminent, I knew from that moment.</p>
+
+<p>My aim was to reach the house of Dr. Pemberton, no intermediate one
+presenting itself as that of an acquaintance of whom I could ask
+shelter, and belief in the truth of my assertions. Of this house I
+remembered the position with tolerable accuracy. It formed one, I knew,
+of a long block of buildings extending from one street to another, and
+was near the centre.</p>
+
+<p>I had been there only on rare occasions, when his niece abode with him,
+for he dwelt ordinarily in widowed solitude, although, our intimacy was
+that of relatives rather than of patient and physician.</p>
+
+<p>For this desired goal I strained every nerve, every muscle, every
+faculty, on that never-to-be-forgotten night of bitter, freezing cold,
+and driving sleet and blast, which seemed to proclaim itself, in every
+howling gust, &quot;The wind Euroclydon!&quot;</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="III_CHAPTER_XIII"></a><h2>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>At first, excitement and terror winged my feet; but even these refused,
+after I had gone a few squares, to do their friendly office.</p>
+
+<p>Bareheaded, but for a filmy veil, soon thoroughly drenched through;
+barehanded and almost barefooted, for my thin silk slippers and
+stockings formed not, after my first few steps, the slightest impediment
+to wet or cold, I felt that I must perish by the wayside. The sleety
+storm drove sharply in my face, rendered doubly sensitive to its rigor
+by long absence from outward air. My insufficient clothing clung closely
+about me, freezing in every fold, and I glided rather than walked along
+the icy pavement, scarcely lifting my stiffened feet, or having power to
+do so.</p>
+
+<p>One stern hope&mdash;it almost seemed a forlorn one&mdash;now possessed me to the
+exclusion of all else; one prayer trembled on my quivering lips&mdash;that I
+might reach my destination, if only to tell my story and drop dead a
+moment after.</p>
+
+<p>Yet I think, in spite of this resolve&mdash;this prayer&mdash;that, had a friendly
+door been opened on the way, an area even emitting light and warmth, I
+should have instinctively turned aside and, at any risk, pleaded for
+shelter, both from storm and foeman.</p>
+
+<p>In those days that seem far back in the march of luxury, because of
+the vast impetus of human momentum, stores were closed early, and the
+primitive family tea-table still existed which marked the assemblage of
+the household around the evening comet and hearth.</p>
+
+<p>I remember the closed, inhospitable look of the houses past which I
+sped&mdash;the solid wooden shutters, then universal, which, closed from the
+wayfarer every evidence of internal life, and the cold sheen of the
+icy-white marble steps, made visible by dim lamp-light.</p>
+
+<p>I gained a street-corner not very far, as it seemed to me, from my place
+of destination. Yet, until I glanced across the way, I was uncertain,
+and, but for the friendly refuge this opportunity presented, I think I
+must have faltered and perhaps fallen and frozen to death on the
+road-side.</p>
+
+<p>To my bewildered and disordered brain, Aladdin's palace seemed suddenly
+to rise before me in that wilderness of sealed houses and uninhabited
+streets; for, as I have said before, the very dogs had crept away that
+night into secure corners, and not even a pariah chimney-sweep, with his
+dingy blanket drawn close around him, nodded and dozed by a watch-box or
+slept on a door-step.</p>
+
+<p>I crept across the space that divided me from this cynosure of warmth
+and luxury, as a poor, draggled moth might do, to bask in the
+revivifying light of an astral lamp, attracted beyond my power to
+resist, to pause before the resplendent window, rich in green and purple
+and amber rotund vases, whose transparent contents were set forth and
+revealed by fiery jets of gas, toward which I feebly stretched my
+half-frozen fingers.</p>
+
+<p>There was a splendid vision, also, of goldfish, in glass globes, jars of
+leaden rock-work, baskets of waxen fruits and flowers, crystal bottles
+containing rose and amber essences; but, above all, there was
+light&mdash;there was heat.</p>
+
+<p>With one greedy, insatiate gaze my eyes swept in the details of this
+mimic Eden, and, in another moment, my hand turned the knob of the
+ground-glass door near the window, and I found myself in paradise!</p>
+
+<p>Rest, shelter, heat&mdash;these must I have or perish, and, but for the
+timely refuge of this thrice-blessed apothecary's shop, I might have
+left this retrospect unwritten!</p>
+
+<p>I staggered to a chair, and seated myself, unbidden, by the almost
+red-hot stove, and cowered above it for a time, oblivious of all else.</p>
+
+<p>Then I looked timidly around me.</p>
+
+<p>The master of this Eden was standing, at the moment when he first caught
+my eyes, holding up a bottle, scrutinizingly, between his face and the
+light, one of many of the same sort that a lad, in a long, white apron,
+was engaged in washing.</p>
+
+<p>The odor of the various drugs and essences over which he presided formed
+an aromatic atmosphere singularly suggestive of incense, as did his
+costume, that of a high-priest of the temple; but, very soon discarding
+a gray-linen cape or talma, worn for the protection of his speckless
+coat, and tossing a bundle of corks rather disdainfully to his
+assistant, the head of the establishment came politely forward, standing
+on the other side of the stove, with clasped hands, expectantly.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You will tell me your errand here when you are quite ready,&quot; he said,
+kindly. &quot;Do rest and warm yourself first. The stove has a narcotic
+tendency when one has just come out of cold like this! The thermometer
+has fallen twenty degrees since noonday; but that is only half the
+trouble. Hem! This sleet and wind are beyond any former experience of
+mine at this season.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I heard the words of the speaker as if bound in a dreadful dream, but
+they were clearly understood, and now I made an effort at utterance, but
+failed, until after repeated endeavors, to enunciate one word. Yet I
+noted distinctly, and even with a nice discrimination of scrutiny, the
+red-haired and bright-eyed man, portly and somewhat pompous-looking,
+with his plump hands folded over his vest, who stood before me, looking
+pityingly down on my suffering face.</p>
+
+<p>After a time I gathered up my forces sufficiently to inquire, being
+quite thawed and comforted by the reviving heat of the apartment, how
+far it might be to the house of Dr. Pemberton, who resided in the block
+of houses known as Kendrick's Row, on Maple Street.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It is nearly a square and a half, miss, by street measurement just now,
+as, on account of changes, this is impassable,&quot; was the prompt reply.
+&quot;Scarcely half a square by the alley that runs from my back-door, after
+a short turn, straight through to Maple Street; and, if it is only
+question of a message, I can send Caleb, so that you may await the
+coming of the doctor in comfort, in this emporium. He always uses his
+gig for night-visits, and will, no doubt, be happy to carry you home in
+his wolfskin.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thanks&mdash;there is no question of a medical visit. I have very important
+business with him. I must see him in his own house. I will go without
+further delay. But, perhaps&quot;&mdash;lingering a moment&mdash;&quot;you would be so good
+as to suffer Mr. Caleb to show me the short way you spoke of? I shall
+not mind going through the alley at all.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I rose prepared to depart, and glanced beseechingly at Caleb, who laid
+down his bottle uncorked, and folded his arms with an approving knightly
+bow, unperceived by his employer.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We have just had a similar inquiry as to Dr. Pemberton's locality; I
+mean,&quot; said the master of the emporium, without replying to my request,
+&quot;on the part of a very distinguished-looking personage&mdash;I might say,
+well got up in the fur and overcoat line&mdash;and, had you come in a few
+moments earlier, you might have had his escort; or perhaps you are on
+his track now&mdash;probably one of his party?&quot; hesitatingly. &quot;No! Well, it
+is a strange coincidence, to say the least&mdash;very strange&mdash;as the doctor
+is so well known hereabouts. As to going out in the storm again, I have
+my misgivings, miss, for you, when I look at the flimsiness of your
+attire and its drenched condition. I can't see, indeed, how a
+delicate-looking lady like yourself ever held her own against this
+terrific wind. Eolus seems to have lost his bags! But, perhaps you had
+an escort to the corner?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No&mdash;no&mdash;no&mdash;I came quite alone! Oh, for pity's sake, put me on my way
+and let me go! My business is most urgent!&quot; I hesitated&mdash;my heart sank.
+Had Bainrothe been before me to spirit the doctor away by some feigned
+message of need, of distress, to which no inclemency of weather could
+close that benevolent medical ear? And did he lie in wait for me on the
+way?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Perhaps I had, after all, better go alone,&quot; I continued; &quot;it might be
+too great an inconvenience&quot;&mdash;and I moved toward the ground-glass door.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not if you will accept my services, miss,&quot; said Caleb, timidly, pushing
+away the remaining corks as he spoke, and glancing furtively at his
+master.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How often must I remind you, Caleb Fink,&quot; said the owner of the
+emporium, &quot;that your sphere is circumscribed to your duties? Attend to
+those phials, and drain them well before you bottle the citrate of
+magnesia. The last was spoiled by your unpardonable carelessness. I have
+not forgotten this!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And again, with a deprecatory look at me, Caleb Fink subsided into a
+nonentity.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Truly has the great and wise Dr. Perkins remarked that 'the women of
+America are suicidal from the cradle to the grave!' I will give you one
+of his pamphlets, miss, to take away with you, and you will be convinced
+that slippers are serpents in disguise in winter weather! The wooden
+shoes of Germany rather! Ay, or even the <i>sabot</i> of France! You must not
+stir another step in those. Be seated, pray, and I will not detain you
+long, while I procure a substitute or protection for such shams, worth
+nothing in such Siberian weather.&mdash;Caleb, a word with you;&quot;. and he
+whispered to his apprentice, who glided away, to return in a trice with
+a pair of India-rubber overshoes, into which benign boats he proceeded
+to thrust my unresisting feet, as I stood leaning on the counter; after
+which a muffler was tied about my ears, and a heavy honey-comb shawl
+thrown over my shoulders by the same expeditious hands.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Could you be always as spry, Caleb! Your gloves now&mdash;I shall need my
+own&quot;&mdash;and a pair of stalwart knitted mits were forthwith drawn over my
+passive hands, in which my fingers nestled undivided and warm.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Now you look something like going for the doctor! My overcoat,
+Caleb&mdash;gloves&mdash;fur-cape&mdash;cane! All hanging near the bed. There, we are
+ready now for old Borealis himself, if he chooses to blow! But I
+forget&mdash;God bless me, you are as pale as the ghost of Pompey, at
+Philippi!&mdash;Caleb, the Perkins elixir&mdash;a glass!&mdash;Now, young lady, just
+take it down at a gulp. It is the only alcoholic preparation that
+Napoleon Bonaparte Burress ever suffered to pass his temperate lips.
+Father Matthew does not object to it at all, I am told, on emergencies.
+It may be had at this repository very low, either by the gross or
+dozen&quot;&mdash;speaking the last words mechanically, and he tendered me a small
+glass of some nauseous, bittersweet, and potent beverage, that coursed
+through my veins like liquid fire.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thank you; it is very comforting,&quot; I gasped, and, setting the glass
+down on the counter, I covered my face with my hands and burst into
+tears.</p>
+
+<p>The whole forlornness of my outcast and eleemosynary condition rushed
+over me simultaneously with the flood of warmth caused by the Perkins
+elixir, which nerved me the next moment for the encounter with the
+elements.</p>
+
+<p>I saw the kindly master of the emporium turn away, either to conceal his
+own emotion or his observation of mine, and Caleb stood trembling and
+crying like a girl before me.</p>
+
+<p>I had shrunk, it may be remembered, from the description Sabra gave me
+of McDermot, when I heard of his red hair and &quot;chaney-blue eyes;&quot; but to
+this red-haired, hazel-eyed man I yearned instinctively, for there are
+moral differences discernible in the temperament greater than any other,
+and, when a red-haired man is tender-hearted, he usually usurps the
+womanly prerogative, and gushes.</p>
+
+<p>But Caleb's sympathy touched me even more.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We will go now, if you please,&quot; I said, recovering myself by a strong
+effort, and Napoleon B. Burress mutely tendered me his stout,
+overcoated arm. &quot;The short way you mentioned&mdash;let us go that way, if not
+disagreeable to you,&quot; I pleaded.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, no; it will be an absolute saving of time to me; but, I warn you,
+the alley is narrow and dark!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Never mind; I prefer the short cut, be it what it may. Time is every
+thing to me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>We passed through the shop, threaded a narrow entry, opened a back-door,
+which gave upon a strip of paved yard, leading in turn to a back-gate,
+through which we emerged into a dark and dirty-looking alley.</p>
+
+<p>But first the work of unlocking a padlock, which confined a chain, had
+to be effected, and, while Mr. N.B. Burress was thus unfastening his
+back-gate preparatory to egress, I stood gazing back, Eurydice-like, in
+the place I had left, for the doors of the long entry stood open,
+revealing the shop beyond and its illuminated window.</p>
+
+<p>Standing thus, I saw, as through a vista and in a perfect ecstasy of
+terror, the ground-glass shop-door open, and two well-known forms in
+succession block its portals&mdash;those of Gregory and Bainrothe! Would
+Caleb send them on our track, or would the better part of valor come to
+his aid and save me from their clutches?</p>
+
+<p>A thought occurred to me. &quot;Mr. Burress,&quot; I said (I had retained his name
+with its remarkable prefix), &quot;will you not lock the gate outside? I can
+wait patiently until you secure your premises&mdash;and&mdash;and bring away the
+key.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I had meant to leave it here until my return, but you are right,&quot;
+speaking indulgently. &quot;I suppose burglars are abroad on nights like
+this,&quot; and he quietly relocked the alley-gate. &quot;You are very
+considerate,&quot; he said, dryly, after we had gone a few yards in profound
+silence, &quot;but had I not better return for a lantern?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, not for worlds! Faster&mdash;faster, Mr. Burress, and Heaven will reward
+you! Never mind the stones&mdash;the snow&mdash;the mud&mdash;so that we get there
+first! Yes, I see where the lane turns; I see very well in the
+dark&mdash;never fear&mdash;only do not delay&mdash;I am so glad you locked the
+alley-gate. They cannot come that way.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Of whom are you afraid, poor young lady? Nobody would harm you, I am
+sure; such a gentle, tender thing as you seem to be!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, yes! Fiends are on my track! Don't let them get possession of me
+again, Mr. Burress. I am pursued&mdash;yes&mdash;faster&mdash;faster!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;But what has startled you, poor thing, since we left the Repository?
+You seemed quite calm after the Perkins elixir&mdash;and those tears. Ah! I
+understand!&quot; and he coughed several times significantly. The doctor will
+set all right, I suppose, when I give you into his hands. I am glad I
+came with you myself&mdash;courage, we shall soon be there!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes&mdash;yes&mdash;he is my only hope! I will explain all when we are safe with
+him. It is not as you think! I have no strength now. Don't question me
+further, it exhausts me to talk. Just drag me along.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And silently and valiantly did he betake himself to his task. The
+noisome alley was threaded, and again we emerged into the sleety,
+lamp-lit street, a few doors from the corner of that block, in the
+centre of which Dr. Pemberton resided.</p>
+
+<p>As we approached the friendly threshold, the exact situation of which
+was familiar to my companion, he pointed it out triumphantly with his
+stick.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;We shall soon be there,&quot; he reiterated, &quot;no need for hurry now.&quot; But
+as he spoke I saw a carriage turn the corner we were facing, and again I
+urged on my lagging escort to his utmost speed. I ran up the sleety
+steps in advance of him, and rang the bell with convulsive energy. Its
+summons was answered promptly, but not a second too soon, for, as the
+door opened to admit me, the carriage paused before the door, and two
+men leaped from it, one of whom, the taller, thrusting Burress aside,
+rushed up the steps after me with outstretched arms.</p>
+
+<p>I had found refuge in the vestibule, and slammed the door in his
+face&mdash;closing, as it did, with a spring-lock&mdash;before he reached the
+platform. Then turning to his companion, he fled down to the street
+again, with the cry that reached my ear distinctly, of &quot;Baffled, by
+God!&quot; on his profane lips, and the twain drove off as rapidly as they
+had come.</p>
+
+<p>A moment later a feeble ring at the door, and a voice from without,
+assuring the inmates that it was only N.B. Burress, and conjuring them
+not to be alarmed, caused him to be admitted at once by the house-maid,
+and shown into the same small front study into which she had conducted
+me to await the doctor's appearance.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What name shall I give? The doctor is engaged,&quot; said the house-maid,
+lingering.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;None at all, merely let me know when he is ready to see me. I am tired
+and cold, and can wait patiently by this good fire.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;It may be some time, miss; would you like a cup of hot coffee, you and
+this gentleman? The doctor has just had his supper, and there is a pint
+or more left in the urn.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thanks&mdash;nothing could be more welcome,&quot; and the house-maid disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That is the way of this house&mdash;patients are always entertained, if in
+need of refreshment,&quot; said Mr. Burress, advancing to the chimney, while
+he rubbed his hands in a self-gratulatory manner, then expanded them
+before the bright glare that filled every pore with warmth.</p>
+
+<p>I was tremulous, and silent, and half exhausted, and he seemed to take
+this in at a friendly glance, for he made none of those inquiries that I
+knew were burning on his inquisitive lips; but after a few moments of
+further enjoyment before the grate, and having duly turned himself as on
+a spit, so as to absorb every ray of heat possible, he betook himself to
+an arm-chair and a book, near the drop-light on a corner table, the soft
+rustling of the turning leaves of which had a most soothing effect on my
+nerves.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I shall only stay a few minutes,&quot; he said, apologetically. &quot;I wish,
+however, to see you safe in Dr. Pemberton's hands before I leave you, as
+a sort of duty, you know, you being a charge of mine, and should you
+need further escort&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, thank you, kindly; you have surely had enough trouble on my account
+already.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Not a particle&mdash;only a pleasure, miss; but the push I got from your
+pursuer upset me on the pavement and made sparks fly out of my eyes,
+and, before I could gather myself up, they were back again in the
+carriage and off. You will have to give me the mans name, miss&mdash;you
+will, indeed, on my own account, when all your fatigue and fright are
+over. Such favors are generally returned by me with compound interest.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, be thankful you have not a compound fracture, Mr. Burress, and let
+the fellow go. He is beneath contempt. But I shall not be satisfied
+until Dr. Pemberton tells me himself that you are uninjured.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;A lump as big as a potato&mdash;that's all, miss; not worth minding, I
+assure you;&quot; and he raised his hand to his occipital region. &quot;An
+application, before retiring to bed, of 'Prang's Blood and Life
+Regenerator,' will make all right again. An astonishing remedy, miss,
+which no family should be without, and which may be obtained cheaply by
+the gross or dozen at my emporium. You have heard of Hercules Prang?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>These were the last words I heard distinctly from the lips of Napoleon
+B. Burress; nor were they answered, even by the brief &quot;Never&quot; which
+might have proclaimed my ignorance of the very existence of that
+demi-god of charlatanry, who, for the benefit of suffering mankind, had
+condescended to compel his genius into the shape of a &quot;revivifying
+balsam.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>I had, with the aid of the house-maid, divested myself of my wet
+overshoes and wrappings before the advent of my companion, and had
+already ensconced myself in a deep Spanish chair, that stood invitingly
+and with extended arms in one corner of the fireplace, when he advanced
+to place himself on the rug for a general roasting.</p>
+
+<p>It was precisely twenty minutes past ten, Mr. Burress told me later,
+when he detected, by stealing on tiptoe to my chair, and bending above
+me, that I was sound asleep, and the mantel clock was on the stroke of
+eleven when I awoke.</p>
+
+<p>In one corner of the room sat a stern statue of Silence, in the shape of
+N.B. Burress, watching my repose, and from the adjoining office came the
+murmur of voices that proved that the long interview between Dr.
+Pemberton and his patient was still in progress.</p>
+
+<p>At this moment, one of the walnut-leaves of the small folding-door,
+that formed a communication between the study and office of the good
+physician, swung itself gently on its noiseless hinges, into the
+position distinguished in description as &quot;slightly ajar,&quot; and thus
+remained fixed, after a fashion that spiritual mediums might have been
+able to account for, on supernatural principles.</p>
+
+<p>The low murmur of voices then readily resolved itself into shaped words
+and sentences, and, but for my deep languor, and the delightful sense of
+security that possessed me, I should have risen and closed the obliging
+door, to shut out unintentional communications.</p>
+
+<p>As it was, I lingered and listened, as one might do to the dash of
+waves, or the rustling of branches, until suddenly the tones and meaning
+of the principal interlocutor caused me to rise to my loftiest sitting
+posture, and clasp the arms of the chair I occupied, while the strained
+ear of attention drank in every syllable of the remainder of the
+narrative, evidently drawing near its close.</p>
+
+<p>The low monotony of a continued discourse pervaded the voice, the manner
+of the speaker, the thread of whose story was no longer interrupted, as
+before, by the comments or questions of his companion, intent upon the
+vital interest of the tale.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;So I turned back at Panama,&quot; said the <i>raconteur</i>, probably, of a
+series of adventures, &quot;and abandoned my project altogether. The man
+spoke with an air and tone of truth: the sketch was unmistakably hers.
+The whole thing was full of <i>vraisemblance</i>, so to speak, and bore me
+completely off my feet. The initials beneath the sketch of Christian
+Garth were identical with her own.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;He referred me to Captain Van Dome for confirmation of the saving of
+the few remaining passengers on the raft, and her presence in the ship
+Latona, together with that of the child and negress.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have seen Captain Van Dorne, and he admits the part he played, on the
+representation of Bainrothe; and, through the evidence of a newspaper
+advertisement, of the previous autumn, which had met his eye, to satisfy
+the puerile scruples of this really good but ignorant man&mdash;going no
+deeper than the surface in his code of morals&mdash;they were obliged to tear
+out the record of their names, and take refuge temporarily in the
+long-boat, before he would swear to Miriam, in her state-room, that
+Bainrothe was not on board.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As to the <i>habeas corpus</i> which would have gone into effect to-day, and
+which the wretch managed to defeat by requiring an error to be corrected
+in the writ, that no guiltless man would have observed, I fear sometimes
+it will prove ineffectual if we wait for the morrow. My plan was to go
+at midnight with a party of my friends to the house of this miscreant,
+and take the law in my own hands; but, in this I could not stir, for the
+reasons I have given you. Besides that, it was risking too much&mdash;her
+safety and reputation.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She cannot be secretly removed, of course, for we have a detective in
+the house able and strong, besides the old well-paid negress, both of
+whom&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Have played you false,&quot; I interrupted, rising impetuously, and throwing
+back the loose leaf of the door, &quot;and I am here to tell you this. O
+friends, have you forgotten me?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And, rushing forward, I threw an arm around each of those dear necks,
+weeping alternately on the shoulder of one and the other of the two men
+I loved best in the world, and who, for some moments, sat silent and
+amazed!</p>
+
+<p>Then Wentworth rose mutely, and clasped me to his breast, and silence
+prevailed between us. It comprehended all.</p>
+
+<p>I think, when we meet again in heaven, after that severance which is
+inevitable to those who wear a mortal shape, we may feel as we did then,
+but never before! The rapture&mdash;the relief&mdash;the spiritual
+ecstasy&mdash;surmounting, as on wings of fire, pain, fatigue, suspense,
+anguish of mind and body&mdash;were in themselves lessons of immortality
+beyond any that book or sage has issued from midnight vigil or earthly
+tabernacle.</p>
+
+<p>Not until a new order of things is established, and we have done with
+tribulation, tears, and death, shall we again know such sensations; nor
+is it indeed quite certain that human heart and brain could twice
+sustain them here below!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="III_CHAPTER_XIV"></a><h2>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>Reaction came at last! Life is full of bathos as well as pathos. An hour
+later, we four companions in the rejoicing over this redemption, if
+chiefly strangers before, were partaking cheerfully together of hot
+coffee and oysters. The services of Mrs. Jessup had been called in&mdash;the
+doctor's excellent old Quaker house-keeper&mdash;and, amid many &quot;thous&quot; and
+&quot;thees,&quot; she had served us a capital and expeditious supper.</p>
+
+<p>No one enjoyed the festive occasion more than Mr. Burress, who, on the
+point of stealing lightly away after witnessing from the front study the
+scene of recognition and meeting, had been arrested on the threshold by
+Dr. Pemberton himself.</p>
+
+<p>Either to allow a full explanation between two long-parted lovers, or to
+conceal his own emotion and get back his customary calm, our dear doctor
+had seen fit to step into the front-study for a few minutes, and he
+checked Mr. Burress, with his hand on the door knob, with some very
+natural questions as to the mode and time of our meeting, and ended by
+requiring his presence at the slight collation he ordered at once.</p>
+
+<p>The part the worthy apothecary had played' in my closing adventure; the
+certainty that to his zeal and promptness I owed my immunity from
+further captivity&mdash;for, had I walked around the square in the usual
+way, the men at watch from the carriage-windows must have espied and
+seized me&mdash;or, had we loitered in the alley, and arrived a moment later
+at the central house of Kendrick Row, there is no doubt that they would
+have been there to await my arrival, nor could Mr. Burress have saved me
+from their clutches&mdash;the whole thing seemed especially providential;
+but, as the efficient medium of such mercy, Napoleon B. Burress did,
+indeed, seem to all present crowned with a perfect nimbus of glory. Dr.
+Pemberton led him back to my presence with his arm encircling his
+shoulder; Captain Wentworth shook his hand mutely but long, with his
+eyes dimmed with tears, and words that found imperfect utterance, at
+last compelling him to strange silence.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I thank you, I bless you,&quot; he said, at last. &quot;I do not hope to be able
+to return such services, but, what I <i>can do</i>, command.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And I to think that she was crazy all the time; escaped from the great
+asylum a mile away. Sweetest creature, too, I ever saw in my life; and
+Caleb thought so, too.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The speaker brushed a briny drop or two from his eyes with the back of
+his hand as he spoke; then, smiling archly, asked:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Can you forgive me, miss, for belying you so, even in thought? You see,
+I have made a clean breast of it now; but such a pity!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Forgive you?&quot; And I advanced toward him, and put both my hands in one
+of his large white extremities, and, before I knew what I was doing, I
+had stooped over and kissed it, and was bathing it with my tears.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O miss! this is too much; it is, indeed!&quot; said Napoleon B., blushing
+to the roots of his hair, and withdrawing his hand with a
+slightly-mortified air; &quot;you nonplus me completely.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You see she was too much overcome, Mr. Burress, to speak otherwise than
+this,&quot; said Wentworth, drawing me to his bosom. &quot;You must honor this
+expression of feeling as I do.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;O sir! it is the greatest honor I ever received in my life; and she,
+poor thing, like Penelope, tangled up in a web so long, and free at
+last! Well, it is a great joy to me to think I helped a little to cut
+the ropes.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Helped! Why, I owe every thing to you. Listen,&quot; and then as briefly as
+I could I recounted the trials in store for me that very night&mdash;the
+compulsory marriage, or the removal to the belfry-tower&mdash;one or the
+other inevitable, and either of which must have made the proposed rescue
+of the following day, on the part of Captain Wentworth and his friends,
+in one sense or the other unavailing. As the wife of Gregory, or as the
+prisoner of the turret, I should in one case have been morally, and in
+the other physically, dead or lost forever!</p>
+
+<p>Mutely, and tearfully even, was my skill in setting forth the magnitude
+of the wrong, from which Mr. Burress had been instrumental in saving me,
+acknowledged by my audience, not excepting Jenny the house-maid, who,
+arrested on the threshold, stood wiping her eyes with her neat cotton
+apron in token of sympathy.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Caleb will be wondering what has become of me, and tired out of
+watching if I don't go home at once,&quot; said Mr. Burress, after his
+emotion had subsided, and accepting gracefully the civic crown with
+which he had been metaphorically rewarded. Mine was in store, but how
+could he dream of this?</p>
+
+<p>A statue of the Greek Slave, a copy made by a master-hand, soon adorned
+his window, and his bride wore pearls of price, the joint gift of Miriam
+and Wardour Wentworth, a twelvemonth later, when a mistress of the
+emporium was brought home, much to the solace of Caleb, who was
+remembered by us also, let me not forget to add.</p>
+
+<p>Truly kind and benevolent as he was, Napoleon Burress had a despotic
+manner, which relaxed beneath the genial smile of Marian March.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I must go, indeed, my dear sir&quot; (to Dr. Pemberton), &quot;but this night
+will be memorable in my annals. God bless you all! Farewell. Afraid of
+an encounter? Not I. Like Horatio Cockleshell of old, I learned to carry
+pistols constantly about me when I had to pass the bridge every night as
+a youngster. My parents lived in Hamilton village. I still keep up the
+custom, and therefore pay my fine yearly to the council.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;When at last we separated, the clock was on the stroke of one, and I
+went to a clean and quiet chamber above the little study, where a bright
+fire was burning, but whence the smell of lavender, which always
+accompanies the fresh sheets of Quakerhood, still prevailed with a
+summer-like fragrance. The attentive house-maid disrobed me, and bathed
+my chilled and frosted feet and swollen hands in water tempered with
+alcohol. Then arraying me in a mob-cap and snowy cotton gown, the
+property of good Mrs. Jessup, placed me in the soft nest prepared for
+sojourners beneath that homely but hospitable roof.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I hope thee is comfortable, Miriam Monfort,&quot; said Mrs. Jessup, after I
+was ensconced in bed. &quot;Why, thy face is the same, after all, that I
+remember when thou wert a very little girl, and used to walk out with
+Mrs. Austin. She is well, I hope?&quot; settling the bed-cover.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I cannot tell you, Mrs. Jessup. I must rather ask such questions of
+you. When did you see her last? and Mabel&mdash;do you know my little
+sister?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, yes, I know her perfectly well by sight. Let me see, it was Sabbath
+before last that, just as I was coming out of Friends' meeting-house, I
+saw Mabel Monfort, a pretty maiden, truly, walking with her step-sister,
+I think, and a tall and stately gentleman. But Mrs. Austin I have not
+seen since last rose-time, and then only in passing. She seemed well,
+but wore a troubled face.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, yes; she was troubled, no doubt, things were so altered; and, if
+her heart had not turned to stone, she must have thought of me sometimes
+regretfully. But all bids fair now, Mrs. Jessup, both for me and her,
+and for Mabel. For the rest, let them go&mdash;they are fiends!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Thee has a very flushed and hot cheek, Miriam, now that I see thee
+closely and touch thy face&quot;&mdash;doing so lightly with the back of her hand
+as she spoke. &quot;A bowl of sage-tea would, no doubt, be of service to
+thee; shall I&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Oh, no, Mrs. Jessup; I never could drink that wise stuff in the world.
+I have just had a good supper, and am excited, that is all. Jenny will
+tell you what she overheard concerning my escape of to-night, and that
+will account for all.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Good-night, then, Miriam; may the Lord have thee in his care this
+night&quot;&mdash;and she withdrew, followed by Jenny, eager, no doubt, to
+commence the recital of my adventure, or to hear what more Captain
+Wentworth and Dr. Pemberton had to say on the subject.</p>
+
+<p>It was nearly daylight when they parted, one to snatch a few hours of
+needful slumber before setting out on his professional tour, the other
+to go at once to the officers of justice, and, at the very earliest hour
+possible, obtain the authority to arrest the brace of arch-conspirators,
+still protected by the shadows of the dawn.</p>
+
+<p>For Justice has its time of sleeping and waking in large cities, and
+will not be denied its meals, its hours of rest, and even recreation. So
+it was seven o'clock in the cold November morning before the proper
+ceremonials could be accomplished which placed it in the power of
+Wentworth to arraign Basil Bainrothe and Luke Gregory.</p>
+
+<p>He occupied one seat in the hackney-coach, which was otherwise filled by
+the officers of the law; but, when he rang a sonorous peal on the portal
+bell of Bainrothe's residence, it was unanswered, and, though the house
+had been watched since daylight by an armed police force, who had no
+connection with McDermot, it was found, when an entrance had been
+effected, that the only inhabitants of the mansion were a sick woman, an
+old negress, and a child, apparently, from its puny size, about a
+twelvemonth old. The woman could not be aroused from the coma in which
+she seemed to have fallen, either as a crisis of her disease or a
+precursor of death (medical opinion was divided), until suddenly, about
+noon, she waked, perfectly clear in mind and comfortable in body, and
+called loudly for nourishment!</p>
+
+<p>I had slept profoundly until that hour, and my first thought in waking
+was of Mrs. Clayton and her probable condition; then came the
+concentrated effort necessary for her release; and she, too, awoke, as I
+have shown, to consciousness and physical ease.</p>
+
+<p>Her surprise, her indignation, at being thus deserted, surpassed even
+her disappointment at my escape, and her involuntary somnolency was a
+theme of self-reproach and marvel both. But all yielded in turn to
+terror when she found herself under arrest in her own chamber, in
+company with her fellow-conspirator Sabra.</p>
+
+<p>The child was brought to me, at my earnest request, and, during the few
+days of my sojourn under Dr. Pemberton's roof, managed to make friends
+of all around him. His deformity soon became a matter of interest and
+medical examination, and it was decided that it was not beyond the reach
+of surgical skill.</p>
+
+<p>The process would be very gradual, Dr. Pemberton thought, of
+straightening the spinal curvature; but, should the health of the child
+prove good after his tardy and difficult dentition, much might be hoped
+from the aid of Nature herself. This was joyous intelligence to me.</p>
+
+<p>The noble soul of Ernie should still wear a fitting frame, and the
+stature of his kind be accorded to him! The &quot;picaninny&quot; wicked old Sabra
+had gloated on as a dainty morsel, on the raft, might live to put Fate
+itself to shame; for had I not marveled that his mother even should care
+to preserve a thing so frail and wretched, when we sat hand-in-hand
+together on the burning ship? And, later, had I not pondered over the
+wisdom of his preservation? Who, then, shall penetrate the mysteries of
+divine intention?</p>
+
+<p>Claude Bainrothe had been arrested, but, after close and thorough
+examination, was dismissed as irresponsible for and ignorant of his
+father's acts and designs, a sentence afterward revoked, as far as
+public opinion was concerned.</p>
+
+<p>Evelyn, Mabel, and Mrs. Austin, were, of course, beyond suspicion&mdash;the
+last two deservedly so; and if, indeed, Evelyn had been guilty of
+co&ouml;peration, I knew it had been through the force of circumstances
+alone, too potent for her egotism and vanity. She never wished to
+destroy, only to govern me, and make my being and interests subordinate
+to her own. Mrs. Austin and Mabel received me with earnest joy, and
+Evelyn even manifested a decent sense of sisterly gratulation.</p>
+
+<p>I never saw Claude Bainrothe nor entered my father's house until after
+he had left it and forever&mdash;accompanied not by his wife, who lingered
+behind in distress and wretched dependence, most bitter to a spirit like
+hers, neither loving to give or receive favors&mdash;for, gathering up all of
+his own and his father's valuables, and drawing from the bank every
+dollar he could command, this worthy son of an unprincipled sire fled to
+join his parent, with his minion, Ada Greene. Evelyn had been for some
+time sensible of his infatuation, and striven vainly to combat it by
+every means in her power, forbearance having been her first alternative,
+vivid reproach her last. But experiments had failed. The first only
+fostered guilt beneath her own roof&mdash;the last urged it to its
+consummation.</p>
+
+<p>Still young and beautiful, she was deserted by the only man she had ever
+loved&mdash;the being for whom she had ruthlessly sacrificed the welfare of
+her sisters and every sentiment of honor; to whom she had given up her
+liberty to pander to his and his father's ignominy, and her home to
+their desecration.</p>
+
+<p>In her great grief she retired to the solitude of her own chamber, and
+refused to see any face save that of Mrs. Austin, who from this period
+became her sole attendant, even after time had somewhat ameliorated the
+first agony incident to her condition.</p>
+
+<p>For there came to her another phase of being which made this attendance
+no less a necessity than her present form of bitter and helpless grief.
+Hope revived, but in a form that promised no fruition, and which later
+will be made plainer to the reader. Just now I must continue my
+<i>r&eacute;sum&eacute;</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Old Martin was dead of paralysis, after praying vainly to be spared to
+see his master's child return and take possession of her own, for he had
+never believed in my suicide, an idea that Bainrothe had taken pains to
+propagate. Nor did he lend any faith to my demise; knowing what he did,
+he believed that I had gone to England to get assistance from my
+mother's relatives&mdash;and Mrs. Austin had shared his opinion; she had
+nursed him to the last, faithfully, and Evelyn had been tolerant of his
+presence. This, at least, was a consolation.</p>
+
+<p>Sabra and Mrs. Clayton were not prosecuted, and I did, perhaps, the most
+inexorable act of my life when I refused to see either of them again, or
+assist them to more than a mere subsistence until health could be
+restored to the one and her &quot;owners&quot; written to in order that the other
+might be reclaimed to bondage, in which condition alone she, and such as
+she, can be restrained from wrongdoing. &quot;For there are devils on the
+earth,&quot; says Swedenborg, &quot;as well as angels, and they both wear human
+guise&mdash;but by this may we know them, that no mortal ties bind them, no
+sphere confines them. They walk abroad, the one solely to evil for its
+own sake, the other to universal good for the Father. Such as these die
+not, but are translated, the one to hell, the other to heaven.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Do we not right, then, to confine and enslave devils while they abide
+with us, or, if we can, to destroy them utterly? And if we discern them,
+shall we not adore God's angels?</p>
+
+<p>These dwell not long among us, and their eyes are fixed always with a
+far, pure yearning for some sphere in which we have no part. We feel
+this in our daily intercourse with them, for angels like these dwell
+often in the lowliest form about us, and our common contact with them
+thrills and awes us, though we scarcely realize that it is from them we
+have these sensations, or what renders them so far, though near at hand!</p>
+
+<p>Little children, submissive slaves, sad women, unresisting men, patient
+physicians, great patriots, persistent preachers, martyr poets&mdash;all
+these forms and phases in turn do our associate angels enter into and
+inform.</p>
+
+<p>But ever the sign is there! They are not ours! Among us, but not of
+us&mdash;set apart, here for a season be it, longer or shorter, ready at any
+time to spread their wings! My sister was of these&mdash;I did not recognize
+this truth in the time of my great sorrow, when the parting plumes had
+not revealed themselves to my undiscerning eyes.</p>
+
+<p>A mighty touchstone has been applied to these earthly orbs since then,
+and the power to discriminate has been given to my soul. As Gregory and
+Sabra were devils, I verily believe, so was Mabel one of Swedenborg's
+angels. Who shall gainsay me? Who knows more than I on this subtle
+subject? Not the wisest theologian that lives and breathes this earthly
+air! Only those who never speak to enlighten us, and who have passed
+into infinite light and knowledge through the portals of the grave.</p>
+
+<p>When I knelt beside Wardour Wentworth in the old church of chimes a
+fortnight after my emancipation from the thraldom of demons, I acquired
+with this new allegiance of mine a more Christian and forbearing spirit
+than had ever before possessed me; but the pearl of great price came not
+yet. Into the deeps of sorrow was my soul first compelled to enter, a
+diver in the great ocean, whence alone all such precious pearls are
+borne.</p>
+
+<p>Notice had been given to Claude Bainrothe to evacuate my father's
+premises before my return from the brief wedding-trip which comprised
+business as well as recreation. Captain Wentworth took me with him to
+Richmond and to Washington, to both of which places his affairs led him.
+In the last I had the pleasure of grasping Old Hickory by his honest
+hand. He was my husband's patron and benefactor, and as such alone
+entitled to my regard; but there was more. As patriot, soldier,
+gentleman in the truest sense of the word, I have not seen his peer.</p>
+
+<p>It was a great delight to me, in spite of the shadow Evelyn's grief
+threw over our threshold, to stand once more as mistress in my father's
+house, even in the wreck of fortune, and control the education and
+destiny of my young sister. Little Ernie, too, had his place in the
+household as son by adoption, and grew daily stronger and more vigorous
+in our sight, the thoughtful, loving, and reticent child, heralding the
+man of power, affection, and principle, that he has become.</p>
+
+<p>The employment of my husband lay near the city of my nativity. He was
+occupied in making the great railroad through Jersey that was the
+pioneer of engineering progress, and a mighty link between two kindred
+States. He was in this way, though often absent, never for any length of
+time, and his return was always a fresh source of joy to his household.
+Mabel worshiped him; Ernie silently revered; Evelyn with all of her
+growing peculiarities acknowledged he had merit; and Mrs. Austin
+regarded him with mingled awe and affection, for to her he was
+singularly kind and affectionate.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;To grow old in servitude,&quot; he would say, &quot;what sadder fate can befall
+any being, or more entitle him or her to forbearance and respect? What
+life-long hardships does this condition not impose? And this is a field
+for universal charity, which costs not much, only a little patience and
+a few kind words and smiles.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Ours was a happy household; no cloud rested upon it, save for a few
+brief days of illness or discomfort, until the great blow fell. In her
+seventeenth year and on the eve of her marriage with Norman Stansbury
+(again our neighbor, at intervals, when he came to visit his relatives,
+a man of noble qualities and singularly devoted to my sister), Mabel
+died suddenly of some secret disease of the heart which had simulated
+radiant health and bloom.</p>
+
+<p>I had sometimes observed with anxiety a slight shortness of breath, a
+gasping after unusual exercise, and called the attention of physicians
+to this state of things in my sister, who regarded it merely as a
+nervous symptom, and this was all to indicate that the fell destroyer
+was silently at work. She had just laid a bunch of white roses on her
+toilet, and crossed the chamber for water to place them in, when she
+called my name in a strange, excited way, that brought me speedily to
+her side from the adjoining room. She was lying white and speechless on
+her bed, beside which the crystal goblet lay in fragments.</p>
+
+<p>The waters of her own existence had flowed forthwith those prepared for
+her flowers, and before assistance could be summoned she expired
+peacefully in my arms, without a struggle. She had inherited her
+mother's malady.</p>
+
+<p>The anguish, and disappointment of the lover, and my own despair, maybe
+better imagined than portrayed. My baby died a few weeks later&mdash;partly,
+I think, from the effect of my own condition on her frail organization,
+and the hope of years was blighted in this fragile blossom&mdash;the first
+that had blessed our union.</p>
+
+<p>The little Constance slumbered by Mabel's side, and a slip from that
+bunch of white roses, the last my sister had gathered, shadows the
+marbles that guard both of those now-distant, yet not neglected graves.
+Thus death at last entered our happy household!</p>
+
+<p>A great shadow fell over me, which I vainly strove to dispel with all
+the effort of my reason and my will. Physicians, remembering my mother's
+inscrutable melancholy&mdash;a part of that mysterious malady that consumed
+her life&mdash;whispered their warnings in my husband's ears, and he
+resolved, with that energy which belongs to men of his nature, to lay
+the axe at once to the root of this evil in the only way that presented
+itself to his mind&mdash;as possible of accomplishment.</p>
+
+<p>At first I resisted faintly the coincidence of his will, which he knew
+was sure to come sooner or later; and to the very last it was agony
+unspeakable to me, to think that my father's house should pass into the
+hands of strangers, and that the place that knew me should know me no
+more!</p>
+
+<p>Very resolutely and calmly did Wardour endure and stem my opposition.
+Swift and strong as the current of my will flowed naturally, he was ever
+its master, as the stone dam can stay and lull the fiercest rivers. He
+persisted, knowing well what was at stake, and to my surprise Dr:
+Pemberton and Mr. Gerald Stansbury cooperated with his decision. Nor did
+Mr. Lodore oppose it, though losing thereby one of his most liberal
+parishioners.</p>
+
+<p>A great struggle was going on in my heart just then&mdash;that I think
+would have perished in darkness, had I not found myself free and
+emancipated from all fetters of custom and observance by our change of
+residence.</p>
+
+<p>From the shallow streams of conventional Christianity, moving with tardy
+current, and full of shoals and sandbanks, I was drifting down, slowly
+but surely, with that great ocean of deep and unsounded religion, to
+which all profound natures, that have suffered, do, I believe&mdash;if left
+to themselves&mdash;inevitably tend.</p>
+
+<p>In this new land of promise&mdash;the golden California&mdash;lying like a bride
+by the side of her bridegroom&mdash;the great Pacific Ocean&mdash;and shut away
+by deserts and mountains, from all old conventional cliques and
+prejudices of our Eastern cities, my soul took wing. What poetry was in
+me found its outlet; what religious capacity God had endued me with,
+went forth from the clash of cymbals and the sound of the sackbut, that
+ever had reminded me, in all seasons of sorrow, or even of joyous
+excitement, that I was one of an ancient people, astray in foreign
+pastures&mdash;went forth (even as the compromise was made at first by Christ
+and his apostles with the magnificent but soulless worship of the Jews)
+to merge these sounds of ancient rite and form in the deep roll of the
+organ, that fills the churches where the Host is present.</p>
+
+<p>I needed this abiding miracle to stay my faith&mdash;to give it a new
+rapture, never experienced before&mdash;to sustain me in my sorrow. In the
+presence of the holy Eucharist&mdash;in the sweet belief that saints communed
+with me, and that the Mother of God, who, like me, had wept and
+suffered, interceded for me at the throne of Christ, I regained the
+vitality that seemed gone forever.</p>
+
+<p>There is no cup like this for the lips of the parched and weary
+wayfarer&mdash;none!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<a name="III_CHAPTER_XV"></a><h2>CHAPTER XV.</h2>
+<br />
+
+<p>Let me go back a little in this retrospect, into which I am compelling
+into a small space much that would take time in the telling, as a
+necessary retrenchment for too much affluence of description in the
+beginning.</p>
+
+<p>The mind of the narrator, like the stone descending the shaft, gathers
+accelerated velocity with its momentum toward the last, and so expends
+itself in a more brief and sententious manner than in the commencement.
+It should be also, but rarely is, more powerful, and more condensed as
+it nears its <i>finale</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Why these things do <i>not</i> go more uniformly together, as according to
+popular opinion they invariably must, is better understood by the artist
+than his readers.</p>
+
+<p>Details are requisite to fill up a mental picture, and impress it on the
+memory, and, though brevity is certainly the soul of wit, it cannot be
+said to be infallible in enforcing description to do its duty&mdash;that of
+painting a panoramic picture on the brain.</p>
+
+<p>Life is full of pre-Raphaelitism, and so is fiction, if indeed it
+resembles life&mdash;such as we know it, or such as it might be. The art of
+verisimilitude is found alone in detail.</p>
+
+<p>Let me go back, then, for a brief summary of some of the principal
+events and personages of Monfort Hall and Beauseincourt, the earlier
+portions of this retrospect. I will begin with the La Vignes.</p>
+
+<p>George Gaston, in one of the brief pauses of his stormy political
+career, wooed and married Margaret La Vigne, the year before her mother
+espoused in second nuptials her early lover (the brother of that saintly
+minister who came to her rescue in the first days of her widowhood), and
+in this marriage she has been happy and prosperous.</p>
+
+<p>They continue to reside under the same roof, and Bellevue awaits its
+master. It will be empty, I think, if I understand George Gaston's
+character, so long as Major Favraud is a wanderer on the face of the
+Continent of Europe, and held, for his especial benefit and return, in
+readiness.</p>
+
+<p>Vernon and his sweet wife Marion spent the first season of their happy
+married life under my lintel-tree, and are now our nearest neighbors in
+our new land of sojourn. A slender iron fence divides our grounds from
+theirs. A golden cord of affection binds our lives together. Our
+interests, too, are the same.</p>
+
+<p>Vernon is leagued with my husband in the great engineering projects
+which have enriched them both&mdash;the capital to enlist in which sphere
+of enterprise was furnished by the sale to a company of our
+&quot;gold-gashed&quot; lands in Georgia&mdash;revealed to my knowledge, as it may be
+remembered, by the inadvertence of Gregory.</p>
+
+<p>The career of Bertie La Vigne had been a varied one, as might have been
+foreseen perhaps from her early manifestations and proclivities.</p>
+
+<p>She came to me, while still we dwelt in the city of my birth, when she
+was approaching her seventeenth year, and remained a twelvemonth under
+my roof, engaged in the study of Shakespeare with that accomplished
+<i>artiste</i> Mr. Mortimer. She intended to pursue what gift she had of
+voice and histrionic talent as a means of livelihood, she told me from
+the first, and to get rid of the ineffable weariness and monotony of her
+life at Beauseincourt as well.</p>
+
+<p>The two motives seemed to me to be worthy of all praise. There are,
+indeed, abodes that kill the soul as well as the body, and this was one
+of them in my estimation, yet I remembered as a seeming inconsistency
+that, when, in her sixteenth year, it was proposed that Bertie should
+come to me for the purpose of attending schools for the accomplishments,
+she steadily refused to do so.</p>
+
+<p>Her sense of duty might have been at the root of this firm and
+persistent refusal to accept from my hand a gift richer far than &quot;jewels
+of the mine&quot;&mdash;the power of varied occupation&mdash;but something had secretly
+whispered to me that this was not all on which her apparent
+self-abnegation was based, and I think that I was right in my
+conjecture.</p>
+
+<p>Have you seen a plant, scathed by frost, that has made a strong and
+successful effort to live, and still in its struggling existence bears
+the mark of the early blight on leaf and blossom?</p>
+
+<p>Such was the impression made on my mind by Bertie La Vigne after three
+years of separation, and yet she had grown into majestic stature and
+into comparative beauty since we parted at Beauseincourt.</p>
+
+<p>Tall, slender, straight as a young palm-tree, with exquisite
+extremities, and a face of aristocratic if not Grecian proportions,
+there still was wanting in her step, her eye, her smile, that wonderful
+<i>abandon</i> that had formed her chief charm in her earlier years.</p>
+
+<p>She had been crystallized, so to speak, by some strange process of
+suffering, into a cold and dull propriety, never infringed on save at
+times when she found herself alone with me, and when the old
+frolic-spirit would for a little time possess her. It was not dead, but
+sleeping.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And what, my dear Bertie,&quot; I said, one day, when Mr. Mortimer had
+departed, and she came to throw herself down on the sofa in my chamber
+and <i>rest</i>, &quot;what has reconciled you to the old Parrot, as you used to
+call our sublime Shakespeare?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Sublime! I shall think you affected, Miriam, if you apply that word
+again to that old commonplace. If he were sublime, do you suppose all
+the world would read him or go to see his plays? Do reserve that epithet
+for Milton, Dante, Tasso, Schiller, and the like inaccessibilities. Yes,
+I do revere 'Wallenstein' more than any thing Shakespeare ever
+spouted&quot;&mdash;in answer to my gently-shaking head&mdash;&quot;I should break down over
+<i>Thekla</i>, I should, indeed.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Do you think his bed was soft under the war-horses?&quot;&mdash;and she waved her
+hand&mdash;&quot;O God! what a tragedy; what a love!&quot; and she covered her face
+with her quivering palm.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Bertie, you are still too excitable. I am sorry to see it.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Philosopher, cure thyself.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, I know that was always a fault of mine.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;That is why you married the man in the iron mask, you know. I could
+never have loved that person.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Describe the man you think you could have loved, Bertie La Vigne.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Could have loved? That time is past forever, child. 'Frozen, and dead
+forever,' as Shelley says. <i>He</i> was my affinity, I believe, only he died
+before I was born. What a pity! I would rather be his widow than the
+wife of any man living.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;<i>She</i> would like to hear that, no doubt, Bertie.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, she may hear it if she chooses when I go to England to read the
+old Parrot in the right way, under their very noses, Kembles and all.
+I'll let Mrs. Shelley know I'm there,&quot; and she laughed merrily.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;And what is your idea of the way to read Shakespeare, Bertie dear?&quot; I
+asked, playfully.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As one having authority, a head and shoulders above him and all his
+prating, just as you would talk to your every-day next neighbor, read
+him without any fear of his old deer-stealing ghost? Why, Miriam, he
+knew himself better than we knew him. He had no more idea of being a
+genius than you have! He was a sort of artesian well of a man, and could
+not help spouting platitudes, that was all. Besides, he had eyes to see
+and ears to hear, and a very Yankee spirit of investigation. It is the
+fashion to crack him up like the Bible, both encyclopaedias, that's all!
+Every man can see himself in these books, and every man likes a
+looking-glass, and that's the whole secret of their success.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Bertie, you are incorrigible.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, I am not; only genuine. I do think there is a good deal in both of
+the works in question, but their sublimity I dispute. They are homely,
+coarse, commonplace, as birth and death.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>There was something that almost froze my blood in the way she said those
+last words, lying back upon the sofa with far-off-looking eyes and hands
+clasped beneath her head.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Miriam,&quot; she said, after a while, &quot;life is a humbug. I have thought so
+for some time.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Poor child, poor child!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ay, poorer than the poorest, Miriam Harz,&quot; and, laying aside my work, I
+went to and knelt beside her, and kissed her brow.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I have no soul to open! I am as empty as a chrysalis-case, that the
+butterfly has gone out of to dwell amid sunshine and flowers. Yet I
+believe I had one once&quot;&mdash;in ineffably mournful accents&mdash;&quot;but two men
+killed it; and yet, neither intended the blow! O Miriam! I understand at
+last what Coleridge meant by his 'life in death.' There is such a
+thing&mdash;and that great necromancer found it out! I am the breathing
+impersonation of that loathly thing, I believe. Listen&quot;&mdash;and she sat up
+with one raised finger and gave the poet's words with rare expression:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span>&quot;'The nightmare&mdash;life in death was she,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">That chilled men's blood with cold.'<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>&quot;Doesn't that describe me as I am, Miriam?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You are, indeed, much changed, Bertie; perhaps it would be well could
+you confide in me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, it would not be well! I never could keep any thing wholly to
+myself, neither can I tell it wholly, even to such as you&mdash;reticent!
+merciful! But this believe, I have done nothing wrong, nothing to be
+ashamed of, to wear sackcloth and ashes for, and I am preparing to put
+my foot on it all. Ay, from the snake's head of first discovery to the
+snake's tail of the last disappointment, ranging over half a dozen
+years! A long serpent, truly!&quot; laughing. &quot;But I mean to be galvanized
+and get back my life. I am determined to be famous, rich, beautiful!&quot;
+and she nodded to me with the old sweet sparkle in her eye, the glad
+smile on her lip.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;You laugh at the last threat!&mdash;laugh on! 'He who laughs best, laughs
+last!' says the old proverb. There is such a thing as training one's
+features, isn't there, as well as one's setters? Miriam, I shall develop
+slowly; I am still in my very downiest adolescence as to looks. You will
+see me when I have filled out and ripened, and when I put on my grand
+Marie Antoinette <i>tenu</i>, some day! Hair drawn back, <i>&agrave; la Pompadour</i>,
+powdered with gold-dust; a touch of rouge, perhaps, on either cheek;
+ruffles of rich lace at shoulders and elbows; pink brocade and emeralds,
+picked out with diamonds! Mr. Mortimer's teachings in every graceful
+movement! It will be all humbug, for I have no real beauty, not much
+grace; but people will think me beautiful and graceful for all that,
+while I wear my costumes. They are several&mdash;this is only one&mdash;all highly
+becoming! I have a vision of a sea-green dress and moss-roses; of a
+violet-satin robe, trimmed and twisted everywhere with flowers of yellow
+jasmine; of pale-gold and tipped marabouts in my hair; also of an azure
+silk with blond and pearls and a tiara on my forehead&quot; (she laughed
+archly). &quot;You don't know my capabilities, my dear, for appearing to look
+well&mdash;they are wonderful!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The very prospect transfigures you, Bertie. I am glad you are so
+courageous.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Were you courageous when you clung to your ropes on the sea-tossed
+raft! No, Miriam! that was instinct&mdash;nothing more; and I, too, have very
+strong intuitions of self-preservation. Heaven grant that they may be
+successful! Let us pray.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>And, with moving lips and down-drawn lids, from beneath which the large
+tears stole one by one, like crystal globes, this suffering spirit
+communed with its God, silently.</p>
+
+<p>So best, I felt! Bertie was only a lip-deep scoffer. Her heart was open
+to conviction yet, and, when the time came, I believed that the seed
+sown in old days would germinate and bear good harvest. All was chaos
+now!</p>
+
+<p>Shall I keep on with Bertie, now that the theme has possession of me,
+and go back to the others when she is finally dismissed? I think this
+will be wisest, especially as my space is small, and mood concentrative
+rather than erratic.</p>
+
+<p>Let us pass over, then, five eventful years, during which the sorrows
+and changes I have spoken of had taken place, and Wentworth had fixed
+his home in the vicinity of San Francisco.</p>
+
+<p>I had heard of Bertie in the interval as a successful <i>d&eacute;butante</i> as a
+reader of Shakespeare, and had received her sparse and sparkling letters
+confirming report, truly &quot;angel visits, few and far between.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>At last one came announcing her intention of visiting California
+professionally, and sojourning beneath my roof while in San Francisco.
+It was to be a stay of several weeks.</p>
+
+<p>She was accompanied and sometimes assisted by Mr. and Mrs. Mortimer,
+professional readers both&mdash;the last distinguished more for grace and
+beauty, even though now on the wane of life, than she ever had been for
+talent, but eminently fitted, both by education and character, for a
+guide and companion.</p>
+
+<p>An English maid, as perfect as an automaton in her training and
+regularity, accompanied Bertie, to whom were confided all details of
+dress, all keys and jewels, with entire confidence and safety. An
+elaborate doll seemed the red-and-white and stupidly-staring Euphemia.
+Yet was she adroit, obedient, and expert, just to move in the groove of
+her requirements.</p>
+
+<p>I have spoken only of her accessories; but now for Bertie herself.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Is she not magnificent?&quot; was my exclamation when alone with my husband
+on the night of her arrival, after our guest, with her sparkling face
+and conversation, her superb toilet and bearing, her graceful,
+nymph-like walk, had retired to her chamber, attended by the mechanical
+&quot;Miss Euphemia.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>The Mortimers, with their children and servants, remained at the
+principal hotel.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;The very word for her,&quot; he replied; &quot;only that and nothing more.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Wardour!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Well, love!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;How little enthusiasm you possess about the beautiful! Now, if there
+were question of a new railroad-bridge, the vocabulary would have been
+exhausted.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;What would you have me say, dear? Is not that word a very comprehensive
+one? The lady above-stairs is indeed magnificent; but, Miriam, where is
+Bertie?&quot; and he laughed.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah! I understand; you find her artificial.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She is too fine an actress for that, Miriam; only transfigured.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, I see what you mean&quot; (sadly). &quot;Bertie <i>is</i> wholly changed. Whom
+does she resemble, Wardour? What queen, bethink you, whose likeness you
+have seen? Not Mary Queen of Scots&mdash;not Elizabeth&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, surely not; but she is, now that you draw my attention to it,
+strikingly like Marie Antoinette.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She said she would be, and she has succeeded!&quot; and I mused on the
+wonderful transition.</p>
+
+<p>Four years more, and we heard of Bertie in England, as the
+rarely-gifted and beautiful American reader, &quot;Lavinia La Vigne.&quot; Out of
+the <i>r&eacute;pertoire</i> of her family names she had fished up this
+alliteration, and &quot;Bertie&quot; was reserved for those behind the scenes.</p>
+
+<p>It was declared also in the public sheets, what great and distinguished
+men were in her train; how wits bowed to her wit, and authors to her
+criticisms! But, when she wrote to me, she said nothing of all this,
+only telling of her visit to Mrs. Shelley, who had received her kindly,
+and to the tomb of Shakespeare, whose painted effigy she especially
+derided. &quot;It looks indeed like a man who would cut his wife off with an
+old feather-bed and a teakettle,&quot; was one of her characteristic remarks,
+I remember; but there was a little postscript that told the whole story
+of her life, on a separate scrap of paper meant only for my eye I
+clearly saw, and committed instantly to the flames after perusal:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Ah, Miriam, this is all a magic lantern! The people are phantoms, the
+realities are shadows, and I a wretched humbug, duller than all! Two men
+have lived and breathed for me on the face of this earth&mdash;two only. One
+was my much-offending and deeply-suffering father. The other&mdash;O, Miriam,
+to think of him is crime; but in his life, and that alone, I live. I
+send you Praed's last beautiful little song&mdash;'Tell him I love him yet.'
+It will tell you every thing. An answer I have scribbled to it as if
+written by a man. Keep both, and when I am dead, should you survive me,
+dear, lay them if you can in my coffin, close, close to my heart!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>Three years more, and Bertie is in Rome, independent, at last, through
+her own exertions, and able to gratify her tastes. I receive thence
+statues, and pictures, and cameos, all exquisite of their kind, her
+princely gifts, her legacies. Then comes a long silence. She knew what
+faith was mine when she last abode, beneath my roof and made herself a
+little impertinently merry at my expense in consequence of this new
+order of things.</p>
+
+<p>Now comes a letter (a paper envelope accompanying it)&mdash;Bertie La Vigne
+has entered the Catholic Church, through baptism and confirmation, so
+briefly states the letter written in her own hand and of date some
+months back, retained; no doubt, through forgetfulness, until reminded.
+The paper, of recent issue, tells of the ceremony at St. Peter's, which
+admitted to the novitiate several noble ladies, native and foreign, and
+among the rest an <i>artist</i> of merit, Miss Lavinia La Vigne, of Georgia,
+United States of America.</p>
+
+<p>On the margin of the paper were a few penciled words in her own
+handwriting: &quot;I have found the reality.&quot; This was all.</p>
+
+<p>I shall never see her again unless I go to Rome, and then only through a
+grating, or in the presence of others like herself, for she has taken
+the black veil, and retired behind a shadow deep as that cast from the
+cypress-shaded tomb. Yet, under existing circumstances, and in
+consideration of her early experiences which no success nor later future
+could obliterate, or render less unendurable, I believe she has chosen
+the wiser part.</p>
+
+<p>Peace be with thee, Bertie, whether in earth or in heaven!<a name="FNanchor_7_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_7_7"><sup>[7]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>Our home overlooks the calm bay of San Francisco, standing, as it does,
+on an eminence, surrounded with stately forest-trees, and dark from a
+distance with evergreens which trail their majestic branches over roods
+of lawn.</p>
+
+<p>These trees have ever been a passion with me. I love their aromatic
+odors, reminding one of balm and frankincense, and the great Temple of
+Solomon itself, built of fine cedar-wood. I admire their stately
+symmetry, and the majesty of their unchanging presence, and stand well
+pleased and invigorated in their shadow.</p>
+
+<p>Our house is built of stone, and faced with white marble brought from
+beyond the seas. Its architectural details are composite, and yet of
+dream-like beauty and perfection.</p>
+
+<p>There are statues and blooming plants in the great lower corridors and
+porticos, and vast hall of entrance, oval and open to the roof, with its
+marble gallery surrounding it and suspended midway, secured by its
+exquisite and lace-like screen of iron balustrading. Pictures of the
+great modern masters adorn the walls.</p>
+
+<p>The skylight above floods the whole house with sunshine at the touching
+of a cord, which controls the venetians that in summer-time shade the
+halls below; and the parlors, and saloon, and library, and dining-room,
+and the quiet, spacious chambers above-stairs, are all admirably
+proportioned and finished, and furnished as well, for the comfort of
+those that abide in them&mdash;hosts and guests.</p>
+
+<p>In one of the most private and luxurious of these apartments abode, for
+some years, a pale and shadowy being, refusing all intercourse with
+society, and vowed to gloom and hypochondria. It was her strange and
+mournful mania to look upon all human creatures with suspicion, nay,
+with loathing.</p>
+
+<p>The fairest linen, the whitest raiment, the most exquisite repast,
+whether prepared by human hands, or furnished by divine Providence
+itself, in the shape of tempting fruits, if touched by another, became
+at once revolting and unpalatable. Thus, with servants to relieve her of
+all cares, and Mrs. Austin as her devoted attendant, she preferred, by
+the aid of her own small culinary contrivance, to prepare her fastidious
+meals, to spread her own snowy couch, so often a bed of thorns to her,
+to put on her own attire, regularly fumigated and purified by some
+process she affected, as it came from the laundry and touched only with
+gloved hands by herself, as were the books into which she occasionally
+glanced for solace.</p>
+
+<p>Most of her time was spent in gazing from her window, that overlooked
+the bay, and dreaming of the return of one who had long since
+heartlessly deserted her, leaving her dependent on those she had
+injured, and from whom she bitterly and even derisively received
+shelter, tender ministry, and all possible manifestations of compassion
+and interest.</p>
+
+<p>Her mind had been partially overthrown at the time of her husband's
+desertion and her dead baby's birth&mdash;events that occurred almost
+conjointly; and it was the wreck of Evelyn Erie we cherished until her
+slow consumption, long delayed by the balmy air of California,
+culminated mercifully to herself and all around her, and removed her
+from this sphere of suffering.</p>
+
+<p>Whither? Alas! the impotence of that question! Are there not beings who
+seem, indeed, to lack the great essential for salvation&mdash;a soul to be
+saved? How far are such responsible?</p>
+
+<p>Claude Bainrothe is married again, and not to Ada Greene, who, outcast
+and poor, came some years since as an adventuress to California, and
+signalized herself later, in the <i>demi-monde,</i> as a leader of great
+audacity, beauty, and reckless extravagance. The lady of his choice (or
+heart?) was a fat baroness, about twenty years his senior, who lets
+apartments, and maintains the externes of her rank in a saloon fifteen
+feet square, furnished with red velveteen, and accessible by means of an
+antechamber paved with tiles!</p>
+
+<p>He has grown stout, drinks beer, and smokes a meerschaum, but is still
+known on the principal promenade, and in the casino of the German town
+in which he resides, as &quot;the handsome American.&quot; He is said, however, to
+have spells of melancholy.</p>
+
+<p>The &quot;Chevalier Bainrothan,&quot; and the &quot;Lady Charlotte Fremont,&quot; his
+step-daughter, for as such she passes, for some quaint or wicked reason
+unrevealed to society, with their respectable and hideous house-keeper,
+Madame Clayton, dwell under the same roof, and enjoy the privilege of
+access to the <i>salon</i> of the baroness, and a weekly game of <i>&eacute;cart&eacute;</i> at
+her <i>soir&eacute;es</i>, usually profitable to the chevalier in a small way.</p>
+
+<p>All this did Major Favraud, in his own merry mood, communicate to us on
+the occasion of his memorable visit to San Francisco, when he remained
+our delighted guest during one long delicious summer season. Of Gregory,
+we never heard.</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I had hoped to hear of your marriage long before this,&quot; I said to him
+one day. &quot;Tell me why you have not wedded some fair lady before this
+time. Now tell me frankly as you can.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Simply because you did not wait for me.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Nonsense! the truth. I want no <i>badinage</i>&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Because, then&mdash;because I never could forget Celia&mdash;never love any one
+else.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;She was one of Swedenborg's angels. Major Favraud&mdash;no real wife of
+yours. She never was married&quot;&mdash;and I shook my head&mdash;&quot;only united to a
+being of the earth with whom she had no real affinity. Choose yours
+elsewhere.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I believe you are half right,&quot; he said, sadly. &quot;She never seemed to
+belong to me by right&mdash;only a bird I had caught and caged, that loved me
+well, yet was eager to escape.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Such, was the state of the case, I cannot doubt; a more out and out
+flesh-and-blood organization would suit you better. Your life is not
+half spent; the dreary time is to come. Go back to Bellevue, and get you
+a kind companion, and let children climb your knees, and surround your
+hearth. You would be so much happier.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Suggest one, then. Come, help me to a wife.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;No, no, I can make no matches; but you know Madame de St. Aube is a
+widow now. You were always congenial.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Yes, but&quot;&mdash;with a shrug of his shoulders, worthy of a Frenchman&mdash;&quot;<i>que
+voulez vous</i>? That woman has five children already, and a plantation
+mortgaged to Maginnis!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Maginnis again! The very name sends a chill through my bones! No, that
+will never do. Some maiden lady, then&mdash;some sage person of thirty-four
+or five.&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;I do not fancy such. I'll tell you what! I believe I will go back and
+court Bertie on some of her play-acting rounds, and mate a decent woman
+of that little vagabond. Because she was disappointed once, is that a
+reason? Great Heavens! this tongue of mine! Cut it out, Mrs. Wentworth,
+and cast it to the seals in the bay. I came very near&mdash;&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Betraying what I have long suspected. Major Favraud. Who <i>was</i> that
+man?&quot;</p>
+
+<p>&quot;Don't ask me, my dear woman; I must not say another word, in honor. It
+was a most unfortunate affair&mdash;a sheer misunderstanding. He loved her
+all the time; I knew this, but you know her manner! He did not
+understand her flippant way; her keen, unsparing, and bitter wit; her
+devoted, passionate, proud, and breaking heart; and so there was a
+coolness, and they parted; and what happened afterward nearly killed
+her! So she left her home.&quot;<a name="FNanchor_8_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_8_8"><sup>[8]</sup></a></p>
+
+<p>&quot;I must not ask you, I feel, for you say you cannot tell me more in
+honor, but I think I know. The man, of all the earth, I would have
+chosen for her. Oh, hard is woman's fate!&quot;</p>
+
+<p>To the very last I have reserved what lay nearest my heart of hearts.</p>
+
+<p>Three children have been born to us in California, and have made our
+home a paradise. The two elder are sons, named severally for my father
+and theirs, Reginald and Wardour.</p>
+
+<p>The last is a daughter, a second Mabel, beautiful as the first, and
+strangely resembling her, though of a stronger frame and more vital
+nature. She is the sunshine of the house, the idol of her father and
+brothers, who <i>all</i> are mine, as well as the fair child of seven
+summers herself.</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Austin presides, in imagination, over our nursery, but, in reality,
+is only its most honored occasional visitor, her chamber being distinct,
+and my own rule being absolute therein, with the aid of a docile
+adjunct.</p>
+
+<p>Ernest Wentworth, our adopted son&mdash;so-called for want of any other
+name&mdash;is the standard of perfection in mind and morals, for the
+imitation of the rest of the band of children.</p>
+
+<p>He has gained the usual stature of young men of his age, with a slight
+defect of curvature of the shoulders that does but confirm his scholarly
+appearance.</p>
+
+<p>His face, with its magnificent brow, piercing dark eyes, pale
+complexion, and clustering hair, is striking, if not handsome.</p>
+
+<p>He has graduated as a student of law, and, should his health permit,
+will, I cannot doubt, distinguish himself as a forensic orator.</p>
+
+<p>George Gaston and Madge have promised a visit to the Vernons; but I
+cannot help hoping, rather without than <i>for</i> any good reason, that they
+will not come! I love them both, yet I feel they are mismated, even if
+happy.</p>
+
+<p>My husband is noted among his peers for his liberal and noble-minded use
+of a princely income, and his great public spirit. He unites
+agricultural pursuits with his profession, and has placed, among other
+managers, my old ally, Christian Garth and his family, on the ranch he
+holds nearest to San Francisco.</p>
+
+<p>Thence, at due seasons, seated on a wain loaded with the fruits of their
+labor, the worthy pair come up to the city to trade, and never fail in
+their tribute to our house.</p>
+
+<p>The immigrant possessed of worth and industry, however poor; the
+adventurous man, who seeks by the aid of his profession alone to
+establish himself in California; the artist, the man of letters, all
+meet a helping hand from Wardour Wentworth, who in his charities
+observes but one principle of action, one hope of recompense, both to be
+found in the teachings of philanthropy:</p>
+
+<p>&quot;As I do unto you, go you and do unto others.&quot; This is his maxim.</p>
+
+<p>Our lives have been strangely happy and successful up to this hour, so
+that sometimes my emotional nature, too often in extremes, trembles
+beneath its burden of prosperity, and conjures up strange phantoms of
+dark possibilities, that send me, tearful and depressed, to my husband's
+arms, to find strength and courage in his rare and calm philosophy and
+equipoise.</p>
+
+<p>Never on his sweet serene brow have I seen a frown of discontent, or a
+cloud of sourceless sorrow, such as too often come&mdash;the last especially
+to mine&mdash;born of that melancholy which has its root far back in the
+bosoms of my ancestors.</p>
+
+<p>Such as his life is, he accepts it manfully; and in his shadow I find
+protection and grow strong.</p>
+
+<p>Reader, farewell!</p>
+<br />
+
+<p>THE END.</p>
+
+<p>FOOTNOTES:</p>
+
+<a name="Footnote_7_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_7_7">[7]</a><div class="note"><p> EDITOR'S NOTE.&mdash; ... Some years after the closing of Miriam
+Monfort's Retrospect, the civil war broke out in the United States, and
+Pope Pius IX. was pleased to grant permission to several American nuns,
+Southern ladies, whose vocation was religious, to visit their own
+States, and lend what succor, spiritual and physical, they could to the
+wounded and dying, on the battle-fields and in the Confederate camps.
+Among these came the Sister Ursula, from the convent of the Carthusians,
+known once as Lavinia, or Bertie La Vigne. She was particularly fearless
+and efficient, and was killed by a cannon-ball at Shiloh while kneeling
+beside a dying officer, ascertained to be her sister's husband, the
+gallant George Gaston of the Seventh-Georgia. By order of Colonel
+Favraud, they were buried in one grave. He best knew wherefore this was
+done....</p></div>
+
+<a name="Footnote_8_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_8_8">[8]</a><div class="note"><p> This was previous to Bertie's visit.</p></div>
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 12453 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
+