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authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 04:42:09 -0700
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+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type"
+ content="text/html; charset=us-ascii" />
+
+ <title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Lippincott's Magazine of
+ Popular Literature and Science, Vol. XV, No. 85, January,
+ 1875.</title>
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature
+and Science Vol. XV., No. 85. January, 1875., by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science Vol. XV., No. 85. January, 1875.
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: September 11, 2004 [EBook #13440]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LIPPINCOTT'S MAGAZINE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Sandra Brown and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+ <div class="trans-note">
+ Transcriber's Note: The Table of Contents and the list of
+ illustrations were added by the transcriber.
+ </div>
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+ <h1>LIPPINCOTT'S MAGAZINE</h1>
+
+ <h3>OF</h3>
+
+ <h2><i>POPULAR LITERATURE AND SCIENCE.</i></h2>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <h4>January, 1875.<br />
+ Vol. XV. No. 85.</h4>
+ <hr class="short" />
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:10%;">
+ <a href="images/title_page.png"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/title_page.png"
+ alt="decoration" /></a>
+ </div>
+
+ <h4>PHILADELPHIA:<br />
+ J. B. LIPPINCOTT AND CO.</h4><br />
+
+ <hr />
+ <br />
+ <br />
+
+
+ <h3>TABLE OF CONTENTS</h3>
+
+ <div class="toc">
+ <p><a href="#illustrations">ILLUSTRATIONS</a></p>
+
+ <p>THE NEW HYPERION.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">FROM PARIS TO MARLY BY WAY OF THE RHINE.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">XIX.--TYING UP THE CLEWS.
+ <a href="#page9">9</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4">CONCLUSION. <a href="#page28">28</a></p>
+
+ <p>FOLLOWING THE TIBER.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">TWO PAPERS.--1. <a href="#page30">30</a></p>
+
+ <p>THE PARADOX by CHARLOTTE F. BATES.
+ <a href="#page39">39</a></p>
+
+ <p>A NIGHT AT COCKHOOLET CASTLE.
+ <a href="#page40">40</a></p>
+
+ <p>THE LEADEN ARROW by EDWARD C. BRUCE.
+ <a href="#page56">56</a></p>
+
+ <p>TWO MIRRORS by F.A. HILLARD.
+ <a href="#page66">66</a></p>
+
+ <p>MALCOLM.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">CHAPTER LXIV. THE LAIRD AND HIS MOTHER.
+ <a href="#page67">67</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4">CHAPTER LXV. THE LAIRD'S VISION.
+ <a href="#page68">68</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4">CHAPTER LXVI. THE CRY FROM THE CHAMBER.
+ <a href="#page71">71</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4">CHAPTER LXVII. FEET OF WOOL.
+ <a href="#page75">75</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4">CHAPTER LXVIII. HANDS OF IRON.
+ <a href="#page78">78</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4">CHAPTER LXIX. THE MARQUIS AND THE
+ SCHOOLMASTER. <a href="#page81">81</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4">CHAPTER LXX. END OR BEGINNING?
+ <a href="#page85">85</a></p>
+
+ <p>THE STAGE IN ITALY by R. DAVEY.
+ <a href="#page90">90</a></p>
+
+ <p>THREE FEATHERS by WILLIAM BLACK.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">CHAPTER XX. TINTAGEL'S WALLS.
+ <a href="#page97">97</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4">CHAPTER XXI. CONFESSION.
+ <a href="#page105">105</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4">CHAPTER XXII. ON WINGS OF HOPE.
+ <a href="#page109">109</a></p>
+
+ <p>ON THE VIA SAN BASILIO by EARL MARBLE.
+ <a href="#page112">112</a></p>
+
+ <p>A CHRISTMAS HYMN by T. BUCHANAN READ.
+ <a href="#page116">116</a></p>
+
+ <p>THE PARSEES by FANNIE ROPER FEUDGE.
+ <a href="#page117">117</a></p>
+
+ <p>OUR MONTHLY GOSSIP.</p>
+
+ <p class="i4">A SWEDISH PROVINCIAL THEATRE.
+ <a href="#page123">123</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4">VENETIAN CAFF&Egrave;S by T.A.T.
+ <a href="#page126">126</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4">A NEW MEXICAN CHRISTMAS EVE by J.T.
+ <a href="#page129">129</a></p>
+
+ <p class="i4">ENGLISH BIBLE TRANSLATIONS by J.G.W.
+ <a href="#page131">131</a></p>
+
+ <p>LITERATURE OF THE DAY. <a href="#page134">134</a></p>
+
+ <p><i>Books Received.</i> <a href="#page136">136</a></p>
+ </div>
+ <hr />
+ <a name="illustrations"
+ id="illustrations"></a>
+
+ <h4>ILLUSTRATIONS</h4>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig009">C&AElig;SAR'S
+ PENNY.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig010">THE THRONED
+ CORPSE.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig011">THE SKELETON IN
+ ARMOR.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig012">BRUSSELS.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig014-1">FATHER
+ JOLIET.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig014-2">THE
+ CATECHISM.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig015">FRAU
+ KRANICH.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig016">"TO MY
+ ARMS."</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig017">THE FUTURE OF
+ FFARINA.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig018">HOHENFELS'
+ FAILURE.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig019">READING THE
+ CONTRACT.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig020-1">INTERRUPTED
+ REPOSE.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig020-2">COALS vs.
+ COATS</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig021">THE JESTER AT THE
+ FEAST.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig022">ST. GUDOLE,
+ BRUSSELS.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig023">SQUARE OF THE
+ H&Ocirc;TEL DE VILLE, BRUSSELS.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig024">DIVERS
+ DIVERSIONS.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig025">THE MIMIC
+ HUNT.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig028-1">HOMEWARD
+ BOUND.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig028-2">CHARLES AND
+ JOSEPHINE.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig028-3">ARGUS AND
+ ULYSSES.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig029-1">"HAND IT OVER TO
+ ART."</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig030">NEAR THE SOURCE OF
+ THE TIBER.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig031">CAPRESE.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig032">LAKE
+ THRASIMENE.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig034">THE TIBER NEAR
+ PERUGIA.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig036">TODI.</a></p>
+
+ <p class="illustrations"><a href="#fig037">CHURCH AND CONVENT
+ OF SAINT FRANCIS, AT ASSISI.</a></p>
+ <hr />
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page9"
+ id="page9"></a>[pg 9]</span>
+
+ <h2>THE NEW HYPERION.</h2>
+
+ <h3>FROM PARIS TO MARLY BY WAY OF THE RHINE.</h3>
+
+ <h3>XIX.&mdash;TYING UP THE CLEWS.</h3>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:75%;">
+ <a href="images/009.png"
+ name="fig009"
+ id="fig009"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/009.png"
+ alt="C&AElig;SAR'S PENNY." /></a>C&AElig;SAR'S PENNY.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>In leaving Cologne for Aix-la-Chapelle you turn your back to
+ the river&mdash;a particular which suited my mood well enough.
+ The railway bore us away from the Rhine-shore at an abrupt
+ angle, and in my notion the noble Germanic goddess or image
+ seemed at this point to recede with grand theatric strides,
+ like a divinity of the stage backing away from her admirers
+ over the billowy whirlpool of her own skirts. As I dreamed we
+ penetrated the tunnel of K&ouml;nigsdorf, which is fifteen
+ hundred yards long, and which seemed to me sufficiently
+ protracted to contain the slumber of Barbarossa. The thought
+ gave me a useful hint, and I fell into a light sleep, while
+ Charles and Hohenfels pervaded the darkness merely by their
+ perfumes&mdash;the former with whiffs at a concealed bottle of
+ Farina, the latter with a pastille counterfeiting the incense
+ of the cathedral. In a couple of hours from the H&ocirc;tel de
+ Hollande we reached Aachen, as the fond natives call the burgh
+ so dear to Charlemagne. Deprived of that
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page10"
+ id="page10"></a>[pg 10]</span> magnificent mirror, the
+ Rhine, the pretty towns throughout this part of Germany seem
+ but like country belles. We should hardly have paused at Aix
+ but for the sake of affording a rest to Charles, who grew
+ worse whenever lunch-time competed with railway-time. As for
+ the dull little city, for us it was a wilderness, with the
+ blank cleanliness of the desert, except in so far as it was
+ informed and populated by the memory of Charlemagne.</p>
+
+ <div class="figleft"
+ style="width:60%;">
+ <a href="images/010.png"
+ name="fig010"
+ id="fig010"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/010.png"
+ alt="THE THRONED CORPSE." /></a>THE THRONED CORPSE.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Here he died, and entered his tomb in the church himself had
+ founded. Into this sepulchre the emperor Otho III. dared to
+ penetrate in the year 997, impelled by a motive of vile and
+ varlet-like curiosity. They say the dead monarch confronted his
+ living visitor in the great marble chair in which he had been
+ seated at his own command, haughty and inflexible as in life,
+ the ivory sceptre in his ivory fingers, his white skull crowned
+ with the diadem of gold. The peeping emperor looked upon him
+ with awe, half afraid of the mysterious and penetrating shadows
+ that reached forth out of his rayless eyes. Before he left,
+ however, he peered about, touched the sceptre and the throne,
+ fingered this and that, and having, as it were, trimmed the
+ nails and combed the beard of the great spectre, retired with a
+ valet's bow. Observing that Charlemagne had lost most of his
+ nose, he caused it to be replaced in gold very delicately
+ chiseled and enchased. The sacrilege was repeated by Frederick
+ Barbarossa in 1165, who went farther and forced Charlemagne to
+ get up from his chair before him. The corpse, in rising, fell
+ in pieces, which have been dispersed through Europe as relics.
+ We saw such of them as remain here at the Chapelle. I was
+ allowed, for about the equivalent of an American dollar, to
+ measure the Occidental emperor's leg&mdash;they call it his
+ arm. And then, as a makeweight in the bargain, the venal
+ sacristan placed in my hands the head of Charlemagne.</p>
+
+ <p>I thought Hohenfels would have sunk to the ground with
+ disgust. He colored deeply and dragged me into the air. "I am
+ ashamed of every drop of German blood in my veins," he cried.
+ "What are we to think of the commerce of these wretches, for
+ whom the very wounds of C&aelig;sar are the lips of a
+ money-box?"</p>
+
+ <p>I had given back the skull, as Hamlet returns the skull of
+ Yorick to the grave-digger, and was dusting my fingers with a
+ handkerchief, as hundreds of Hamlets have dusted theirs. I
+ said, "'Thrift, thrift, Horatio.'"</p>
+
+ <p>"At Kreutzberg there are twenty monks on the counter! This
+ morning, at St. Ursula's, it was the eleven thousand virgins,
+ their skulls ranged like Dutch cheeses above our heads or in
+ rows around the walls, with a battery-full of them in the
+ neighboring apartment, like a cheesemonger's reserved magazine.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page11"
+ id="page11"></a>[pg 11]</span> Here, the very leader of
+ modern ideas, the creator of our form of civilization, is
+ shown for so many pennies to any grocer who wants to weigh
+ the head of a king! Profanation! Barbarians!
+ Philistines!"</p>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:60%;">
+ <a href="images/011.png"
+ name="fig011"
+ id="fig011"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/011.png"
+ alt="THE SKELETON IN ARMOR." /></a>THE SKELETON IN
+ ARMOR.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>I turned rather hastily, while my hands were yet clammy with
+ the skull, thinking that this accusation of Philistinism was
+ aimed at me. But Hohenfels thought of nothing less than of a
+ personality, being in his cloudiest mood of generalization. So
+ I only concealed the handkerchief, while I said, as easily as I
+ might, "You need not accuse your German blood, for I have lived
+ long enough in my American's Paradise to know that civilized
+ Paris is considerably worse in this particular respect, with
+ the addition of a certain goblin levity particularly French.
+ How often have I seen babies frightened by the skulls in the
+ dentists' windows, with their cynical chewing action! It is
+ said that a child sat next a dentist's apprentice once in an
+ omnibus, and was observed to turn rigid, fixed and white, but
+ unable to speak: he had sat on one of these skulls, and it had
+ bitten him. Silver-mounted skulls set as goblets, in imitation
+ of Byron, are to be seen at any of the china-shops rubbing
+ against the chaste cheeks of the old maid's teacup. Skeletons
+ are sold, bleached and with gilded hinges, to the medical
+ students, who buy the pale horrors as openly as meerschaum
+ pipes. Have I not often found young Grandstone supping among
+ his doctors' apprentices of the Ober restaurant after
+ theatre-hours, a skeleton in the corner filled with umbrellas
+ like a hall-rack, and crowned with the triple or quintuple
+ tiara of the girls' best bonnets? Ay, Mimi Pinson's cap has
+ known what it is to perch on the bony head of Death. The
+ juxtaposition is but an emblem. The sewing-girl, like Hood's
+ shirtmaker, scarcely fears the 'phantom of grisly bone.' Poor
+ Francine! where have you taken <i>your</i> artisanne's cap to,
+ I wonder? Are you left alone, all alone again, and thinking of
+ the pretty solitude you have left behind you at Carlsruhe? Who
+ uses those polished keys now?"</p>
+
+ <p>Hohenfels interrupted me, complaining that my monologue was
+ uninteresting and diffuse, and was interfering with the railway
+ time-table. But I finished it in the car: "And the railway!
+ What has a person of fixed and independent habits to do with
+ railways but to growl at them? Before I was tempted upon the
+ railway by that impertinent engineer at Noisy, I got up and sat
+ down when I liked, ate wholesome food at my own hours, and was
+ contented at home. Confusion to him who made me the victim of
+ his engineering calculations!
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page12"
+ id="page12"></a>[pg 12]</span> Confusion to Grandstone and
+ his nest of serpents at &Eacute;pernay! Did they not
+ introduce me to Fortnoye, who has doubly destroyed my peace?
+ Where are the conspirators, that I may pulverize them with
+ my maledictions?"</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:80%;">
+ <a href="images/012.png"
+ name="fig012"
+ id="fig012"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/012.png"
+ alt="BRUSSELS." /></a>BRUSSELS.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>This question&mdash;which Hohenfels called peevish as he
+ buried himself in his book&mdash;was not answered until we had
+ passed Verviers, Chaudfontaine and Li&egrave;ge. I was aroused
+ from a sulky slumber in the station at Brussels by Hohenfels,
+ who said, in his musical scolding way, like the busy wheeze of
+ a clicking music-box, "You may say what you like, with your
+ left-handed flatteries, in regard to Fortnoye, and you may
+ praise Ariadnes and widows to the end of the chapter. You are
+ sorry at this moment not to be at &Eacute;pernay to see the
+ destroyer of your peace married: you had rather assist at the
+ making of a wife than at the making of a widow."</p>
+
+ <p>I was just sending Fortnoye to the gloomiest shades of
+ Acheron when a strong hand entered the carriage-door, helped me
+ handsomely down the steps, and then began warmly to shake my
+ own. Fortnoye!&mdash;Fortnoye in flesh and blood was before me.
+ While my mouth was yet filled with maledictions he began to
+ pour out a storm of thanks with all his own particular warmth,
+ expressing the most effusive gratitude for the trouble I had
+ taken in forsaking my route to be his wife's bridesmaid. That
+ is what he called it. "She has but one other," said Fortnoye.
+ At the same time I began to recognize other faces not unknown
+ to me, crudely illuminated by the raw colors of the
+ railway-lights. They all had black wedding-suits and enormous
+ buttonhole nosegays of orange-flowers. I picked them out, with
+ a particular recognition for each: 'twas the civil engineer of
+ Noisy; the short gentleman named Somerard; James Athanasius
+ Grandstone, with his saintly aureole upon him in the shape of a
+ Yankee wide-awake; the nameless mutes, or rather chorus, of the
+ champagne-crypt; in short, my nest of serpents in all its
+ integrity. Still entangled with my slumbers, I hesitated to
+ respond to the friendly hands that were everywhere thrust
+ centripetally toward me.</p>
+
+ <p>I looked blackly at Hohenfels. He was chuckling.</p>
+
+ <p>At Heidelberg, making the acquaintance of M. Fortnoye
+ contemporaneously with my departure, he had become more
+ enthralled than he ever confessed to this radiant
+ traveler&mdash;whom he called a
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page13"
+ id="page13"></a>[pg 13]</span> packman, but regarded as a
+ Mercury&mdash;and his pretty scheme of matrimony in motion.
+ Even now, if I can believe my eyes, he goes up to the
+ "vintner" and "peddler" of his objurgations, and meekly
+ whispers into his ear with the air of a conspirator
+ reporting a plot to his chief. Having engaged to produce me
+ at the wedding of Fortnoye, and finding me unexpectedly
+ recusant, he had adopted a little stratagem for bringing me
+ to the scene while thinking to escape from it.</p>
+
+ <p>"Thou too, Brutus!" I said, and gave it up. It only remained
+ for me to return all round, after five minutes of petrified
+ stupidity, the hand-grasps that had been offered from every
+ quarter of the compass-box.</p>
+
+ <p>Next morning, at an early hour, I was interrupted by a
+ knock, just as Charles had buttoned my gaiters and the young
+ man from the perruquier's (who had stolen in with that air of
+ delicacy and of almost literary refinement which belongs to his
+ gentle profession) had lathered me. A nick he gave my chin at
+ the shock made my countenance all argent and gules, and the
+ visitor entering saw me thus emblazoned, while the barber and
+ Charles, "like two wild men supporters of a shield," could only
+ stare at the untimely apparition.</p>
+
+ <p>"Do you know him, Charles?" I asked, not recognizing my
+ guest, and putting over my painted face a mask of wet
+ toweling.</p>
+
+ <p>"I know him intimately," replied my jester-in-ordinary: "I
+ would thank Monsieur Paul just to tell me his name. Do you
+ remember, monsieur, a sort of beggar, with a wagon and a
+ stylish horse and a pretty wife, who limped a bit with his
+ right hand, or perhaps his left hand? Does monsieur know what I
+ mean? He used to come and see us at Passy; and monsieur even
+ had some traffic with him in a little matter of two
+ chickens."</p>
+
+ <p>"Father Joliet!" I cried.</p>
+
+ <p>"Present!" shouted the personage thus designated at my
+ appeal to his name. I turned round, toweled, and he grasped my
+ hands. The unusual hour, appropriate as I supposed only to some
+ porter or other stipendiary visitor of my hotel, caused to
+ shine out with startling refulgence the morning splendors in
+ which Papa Joliet had arrayed himself. He wore a courtly dress,
+ appropriate to the most formal possible ceremony; his black
+ suit was glossy; his hat was glossy; his varnished pumps were
+ more than glossy&mdash;they were phosphorescent. Gloves only
+ were wanting to his honest hands.</p>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:30%;">
+ <a href="images/013.png"
+ name="fig013"
+ id="fig013"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/013.png"
+ alt="PERRUQUIER." /></a>PERRUQUIER.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Soaped, napkined and generally extinguished, I could only
+ stammer, "You here in Brussels? What a droll meeting!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Wherefore droll?" asked Joliet, with a huge surprise, which
+ lasted him all through his next sentence. "I come here to marry
+ my daughter. Everything is ready; we count on your presence at
+ the wedding; the lawyer has drawn up the contract; and the
+ breakfast is now cooking at the best restaurant in the
+ place."</p>
+
+ <p>"Francine's wedding, my dear Joliet!" I exclaimed. And,
+ going back to my apprehensions at her furtive disappearance
+ from Carlsruhe, and to my conjectures of some amorous mystery
+ between her and her Yankee traducer, Kraaniff, I added gravely,
+ "It is very
+ creditable!"</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page14"
+ id="page14"></a>[pg 14]</span>
+
+ <p>"How, creditable&mdash;and droll?" repeated the honest man,
+ evidently much surprised at my own accumulating surprises. "Did
+ not you hear?"</p>
+
+ <div class="figleft"
+ style="width:30%;">
+ <a href="images/014-1.png"
+ name="fig014-1"
+ id="fig014-1"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/014-1.png"
+ alt="FATHER JOLIET." /></a>FATHER JOLIET.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>"Not the faintest word," I said, "but I am none the less
+ gratified to find this affair ending, as it should, in the
+ presence of a lawyer. As for your wedding-invitation, my good
+ friend, you are a little tardy in delivering it, for it is
+ exactly to-day that I am obliged to attend at the marriage of
+ one of my friends, M. Fortnoye."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, that is a good joke!" cried Joliet, breaking into an
+ explosion of laughter and clapping me pleasantly on the
+ shoulder&mdash;an action which caused a slight frown on the
+ part of Charles. "You always would have your jest, Monsieur the
+ American! Tease me and scare me as much as you like: I like
+ these hoaxes better before a wedding than after. Hold that," he
+ added, extending his hand as if it were a piece of
+ merchandise.</p>
+
+ <p>I "held" it, and he went on, dwelling slowly on his words:
+ "If you are at Henri Fortnoye's wedding you will be at Francine
+ Joliet's also, for both of these persons are to be married at
+ one church."</p>
+
+ <p>"Impossible!" I exclaimed, dropping the hand and stepping
+ back.</p>
+
+ <p>"What! again?" said Joliet, his manly face visibly
+ darkening. "Droll! and creditable! and impossible! Why
+ impossible?" Then he dropped his head and looked angrily at the
+ floor. "Ah, yes, even you," he said, his eyes still fixed on
+ the boards, "believed that a French girl, trained as French
+ girls are trained, would flirt and expose herself to remark;
+ and all on account of such a man as your compatriot, the other
+ American! Well! well! you ought to know your countrymen
+ best."</p>
+
+ <p>"I know of no harm," I interposed hastily. "I should always
+ have thought Kraaniff hard to swallow as a mere matter of
+ taste. I can but recollect, Father Joliet," I went on more
+ seriously, "that the last time I met you you begged me not to
+ talk of Francine if I would not break your heart. I have to add
+ to this the news brought me from Heidelberg, that this Kraaniff
+ was a serpent who had fascinated some young girl for an
+ approaching meal.&mdash;How dare you, Charles," I cried
+ suddenly, recalled to the consciousness of his presence by this
+ souvenir of his oratory, "stand here staring? Show the young
+ man out directly, and pay him."</p>
+
+ <p>I will not answer for Charles's having got much farther away
+ than the door. Joliet continued: "But his aunt knows him now
+ for what he is. Kraaniff, say you? I call him Kranich, though
+ he had better change his baptismal record than disgrace one of
+ the best names in Brussels."</p>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:40%;">
+ <a href="images/014-2.png"
+ name="fig014-2"
+ id="fig014-2"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/014-2.png"
+ alt="THE CATECHISM." /></a>THE CATECHISM.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>"Frau Kranich, then, my old friend, is really his aunt?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Madame Kranich, whom I have
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page15"
+ id="page15"></a>[pg 15]</span> known in your parlor, is
+ really Francine's godmother. Did you never know of all her
+ secret kindness? That rigid lady would commit a perjury to
+ deny one of her own good actions. Young Kranich has written
+ her a letter confessing his lies. Don't you know? The very
+ same day when you were determined to fight him in a
+ duel&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Certainly, certainly," I said, a little confused. "We will
+ change the subject and leave my ferocity alone. Let us
+ understand one another. In regard to Fortnoye's marriage, was
+ there not some talk of a Madame Ashburleigh?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I believe you. Madame Ashburleigh is the very key of the
+ manoeuvre. Madame Ashburleigh&mdash;don't you
+ perceive?&mdash;lost a child."</p>
+
+ <p>"For that matter, she has lost four. I know the lady
+ confidentially, and she told me their histories and present
+ address. Lucia lies in Glasgow, Hannibal at Nice, and Waterloo
+ sleeps somewhere hereabout, as well as another nameless little
+ dear."</p>
+
+ <p>"She is a good woman. She has collected all her proofs, and
+ has come hither with them voluntarily&mdash;has perhaps already
+ arrived. Brussels, where two of her marmots rest, is one of her
+ most frequent stations. That censorious Madame Kranich made a
+ scene, but she had to yield to conviction."</p>
+
+ <p>"A censorious Madame Kranich! Is the young duelist
+ married?"</p>
+
+ <p>"What? No, no! It is Francine's guardian I speak of. Of late
+ years she has become a sort of Puritan abbess, seeking the
+ Protestant society which abounds in Belgium, and lamenting her
+ husband, whom they say she used to drug with opium."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then is she not Kranich's aunt?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh yes, an aunt by marriage; but he is not her nephew: I
+ will die before I call him so."</p>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:35%;">
+ <a href="images/015.png"
+ name="fig015"
+ id="fig015"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/015.png"
+ alt="FRAU KRANICH." /></a>FRAU KRANICH.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>"Listen," said I, "Father Joliet. You are as full of
+ information as an oracle, but you are not coherent. This month
+ past I have been hunting down a chimaera, a hydra with a dozen
+ heads: each head shows me by turn the portrait of Fortnoye, or
+ Francine, or yourself, or Kranich, or Mrs. Ashburleigh. Ever
+ since Noisy I have been meandering through the folds of a
+ mystery. My head is turning with it. If you want to save me
+ from distraction, sit down in this chair and answer me a long
+ catechism, without saying a word but in reply to my
+ questions."</p>
+
+ <p>"I am sure I talk as plain as a professor. Look! You
+ frightened me at first with your doubts and your
+ impossibilities. You have only to make Kranich's aunt agree
+ with Francine's guardian, and at the same time forgive
+ Francine's husband for having assumed the undertaker's bill for
+ Madame Ashburleigh's baby."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, yes, my dear Joliet, you are clearer than Euclid." And
+ I administered a category of questions. Joliet, with his
+ fatherly joy bursting out of him in the longest of parentheses,
+ kept quiet in his refulgent shoes and answered as well as he
+ could.</p>
+
+ <div class="figleft"
+ style="width:30%;">
+ <a href="images/016.png"
+ name="fig016"
+ id="fig016"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/016.png"
+ alt="'TO MY ARMS.'" /></a>"TO MY ARMS."
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Francine, he protested, had never been
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page16"
+ id="page16"></a>[pg 16]</span> a flirt (I have met no
+ Frenchmen who were ignorant of that one English word, to
+ which they give a new value by pronouncing it in a very
+ orotund manner, as <i>flort</i>). When she came to be ten or
+ twelve, Frau Kranich&mdash;until then a well-preserved
+ lioness with an appetite for society&mdash;ceased to give
+ her dolls and promised to give her an education. At the same
+ time, the banker's widow left Paris, and repaired with her
+ charge to Brussels, where the little girl received some good
+ half-Jesuitical, half-English schooling, of the kind
+ suggested in the Bront&euml; novels. Her diploma attained,
+ Francine begged to accompany her English teacher back to
+ London: she wished to become a <i>meess</i>, she said, and
+ be competent to teach like a new Hypatia. She had hardly
+ bidden her kind protectress adieu when Frau Kranich's nephew
+ arrived at Brussels, exceedingly dissatisfied with his
+ American business in the bar-rooms of the grand duke of
+ Mississippi. A sordid jealousy of Mademoiselle Joliet's
+ claims upon his aunt took possession of this prudent spirit.
+ He took up a watch-post at a university town on the Rhine.
+ He began to whisper vague exaggerations of her coquetries
+ and liveliness, which the Protestant circle that revolved
+ about Madame Kranich did not fail to bear in to her. This
+ lady admired her nephew, sure that his want of manners was
+ the sign of a noble frankness. She wrote to Francine,
+ bidding her come immediately from London. The girl not
+ replying, the hopeful nephew was put upon her track. He went
+ away. His letters from England reported that Francine was no
+ longer in that country, but was probably come back to
+ Belgium, "I know not in what suburb of Brussels our very
+ independent miss may this instant be hiding," he wrote.</p>
+
+ <p>About the same time, in the circle of French exiles at
+ Brussels, a young <i>romantique</i> named Fortnoye was reported
+ as weeping and lavishing statues over the grave of an unknown
+ infant in the churchyard at Laaken. It was a delicious mystery.
+ Kind meddlers approached the sexton, who said that all he knew
+ of the babe's mother was that she was a beautiful lady from
+ London. Kranich carried the story dutifully to his aunt, adding
+ his own ingenious surmise: "Can Francine have become
+ sufficiently Anglicised to contract secret marriages with
+ roving revolutionists, and scamper about the country with
+ ardent young Frenchmen in the style of Gretna Green?" In fact,
+ it was really from London that Mrs. Ashburleigh was proceeding,
+ for the purpose of taking care, in the Rhenish city where he
+ was dying, of her handsome, dissipated, worthless husband.
+ Taken suddenly ill at Brussels, she left her infant to the
+ unequaled chill of a strange, unknown cemetery, hastening
+ thence with tears and despair to the bedside where duty called
+ her.</p>
+
+ <p>Has my reader forgotten the dim, tear-swollen story which I
+ heard&mdash;not at all improved in the telling&mdash;from my
+ generous young friend Grandstone&mdash;how an impulsive
+ Frenchman had laid to rest, in flowers and evergreens, the
+ unnamed baby of a woman he had never seen? Jealous as I was of
+ Fortnoye, I never could think without tenderness of this
+ singular action. To make the tomb of this helpless Innocence
+ the young man braved the curiosity of his
+ comrades&mdash;despised the rumor, the obloquy, and, hardest of
+ all, the jests. Well has the wise dramatist decided that
+ Ophelia must needs be laid in Yorick's
+ bed!</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page17"
+ id="page17"></a>[pg 17]</span>
+
+ <p>Poor Francine, gay, frivolous, innocently vain of her little
+ travesty of English behavior, found her accomplishments and
+ graces received by her guardian's circle with incomprehensible
+ coldness. Hurt and humiliated, she asked to pay a visit to her
+ father. The honest rustic received her with a miserable
+ confusion of doubt and severity, for her escapade to England
+ had never pleased him, and her return from her godmother's home
+ wore to him the air of a repudiation. At her father's house,
+ however, she was discovered by Fortnoye, who had never heard
+ the ingenious Kranich's theory of his own private wedding with
+ Francine, and who thought to find in her the veiled unknown of
+ the cemetery. He saw for the first time, in the flowery home at
+ Noisy, that fresh ingenuous beauty, a little over-cast with
+ disappointment. His generous nature was touched; and, with his
+ talent for administration and planning, he conceived the idea
+ of establishing Francine in the pretty bird's nest at
+ Carlsruhe, distant alike from the strongholds of her
+ calumniators, Belgium and France.</p>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:50%;">
+ <a href="images/017.png"
+ name="fig017"
+ id="fig017"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/017.png"
+ alt="THE FUTURE OF FFARINA." /></a>THE FUTURE OF
+ FFARINA.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Fortnoye now had an object in life. "There is a very young
+ person in the cemetery of Laaken who is much in need of a
+ chaperone," he said. The frank proofs of his own relations with
+ this churchyard would not only do credit to his own reputation,
+ but would gratify the best friends of Mademoiselle Joliet and
+ at least one other lady. To attain these proofs he had to step
+ over the coiling, writhing bodies of a whole nest of rumors.
+ When he seized by the throat the especial slander that he
+ himself was the husband of the babe's mother, he found written
+ on its crest the signature of John Kranich. He sought the aunt.
+ This lady gave him several interviews, the Lutheran prayer-book
+ for ever in her hand. "Why does the dear girl not come to me?"
+ she would say, weeping, but she refused to hear a word against
+ her precious nephew, the personification of bluff frankness. As
+ if to make crushing him impossible, young Kranich had now
+ withdrawn to America, leaving his reputation in that best
+ possible protection, the chivalry that is extended toward the
+ absent. Fortnoye was baffled. "I will ask the baby at its tomb
+ for its mother's and father's name," he cried. In the pretty
+ God's Acre he found a fresh harvest of flowers and a new statue
+ over the well-known grave. It was a pretty miniature of
+ Thorwaldsen's Psyche, on which the proud copyist had inscribed
+ his name. A respectful correspondence with Mrs. Ashburleigh, to
+ whom he was guided by the sculptor, and who was now taking the
+ waters at Wildbad, soon put the whole tangled story to rights.
+ Fortnoye had the happiness of conducting Francine, by this time
+ his affianced wife, to the good Frau Kranich, who, convinced
+ that she had wrongly judged her, threw her arms ardently around
+ her recovered jewel, letting the eternal little book fly from
+ her hand like a projectile.</p>
+
+ <p>"But the most singular part of the story," concluded Father
+ Joliet, "is the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page18"
+ id="page18"></a>[pg 18]</span> letter which Fortnoye, after
+ two or three quarrels, forced out of young Kranich when the
+ latter had returned to Europe, full of triumph and debts, to
+ take possession of his aunt for the rest of his life. Here
+ it is," added the good man, opening a pocket-book. "The
+ hand-writing is drunken, but the sense is clear as
+ Seltzer-water. The scholars tell me <i>in vino veritas
+ est</i>, but it appears to me that truth really comes out in
+ the repentance and headache that follow."</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:80%;">
+ <a href="images/018.png"
+ name="fig018"
+ id="fig018"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/018.png"
+ alt="HOHENFELS' FAILURE." /></a>HOHENFELS' FAILURE.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>"MY DEAR AUNT" (ran the letter which Charles had seen forced
+ from the alligator after his unlucky game of dominoes): "You
+ have known me as the soul of candor. It is this happy quality
+ which compels me to state (for I am something of a Rousseau)
+ that if I ever playfully accused your pretty pet Francine of
+ being a flirt, I knew nothing about it. The best proof is that
+ she absolutely refused to join her expectations with mine,
+ though I am something of an Adonis. If you believed that she
+ and the wine-peddler had made a match, I pity your credulity
+ and ignorance of human nature. I am certain that neither the
+ peddler nor myself would touch the enterprise until you had
+ shown exactly what you would (pecuniarily) do. For my part, I
+ have acted throughout on the most exact and advanced scientific
+ principles. Intending to modify the spirit-trade in America,
+ and especially to introduce the exclusive agency of the Farina
+ essences, I found that the sinew particularly needed for this
+ leap was capital. Desiring to absorb your bounties toward
+ Francine, I at first proposed matrimony. This offer was made
+ without any enmity toward the girl, as my next move was without
+ affection, though it seems to be resulting to her benefit. I
+ became her accuser as coolly as I had been her lover. Passion
+ has nothing to do with the combinations of strategic genius: I
+ am something of a Washington. My theory of her clandestine
+ marriage was one of the most masterly fictions of the
+ age&mdash;a plot worthy of Thackeray. If I could have succeeded
+ in mutilating the statue in the graveyard, I might have carried
+ it, while you would have admired my act of iconoclasm with all
+ your Puritan nature. In the momentary abandonment of my plans,
+ owing to the machinations of my enemies, you will conceive that
+ I am not very rich. My college-debts and other expenses I am
+ obliged to leave for your kind attention. The main point of
+ this letter, which M. Fortnoye has persuaded me to set down as
+ distinctly as in my present feeble state I can, is that
+ Francine is a pretty little maid who has never passed by Gretna
+ Green. There! that is my <i>credo</i>, and I will subscribe to
+ it,</p>
+
+ <p>"Your loving nephew, JOHN.</p>
+
+ <p>"P. S. Address, with such an enclosure as your generosity
+ will prompt, JEAN K. FFARINA, sole representative and
+ cosmetical chemist in America on behalf of the Farinas of
+ Cologne, at New Orleans <span class="pagenum"><a name="page19"
+ id="page19"></a>[pg 19]</span> where I am going to beat my
+ adversaries like Old HIC&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>At this point the tipsy scrawl became illegible.</p>
+
+ <p>"This is not a very handsome apology. Did Fortnoye accept
+ it?" I asked, turning over the clammy and malodorous epistle.
+ At this inquiry the crack of the door widened and Charles
+ appeared, on fire with enthusiasm, and so possessed with
+ self-importance that he forgot the betrayal of his
+ indiscretion.</p>
+
+ <p>"I can reply to that question," said Charles. "When M.
+ Fortnoye received the paper from the duelist he read it over
+ and said, 'You have meant to impose on me, monsieur, with an
+ incomplete confession. But, in return for your imperfect
+ restoration of Mademoiselle Joliet's portrait, you have
+ unconsciously set down such a masterpiece of yourself that I am
+ certain your aunt will see you as she never did before.'"</p>
+
+ <p>Charles, having thus added himself to our cabal without
+ rebuke, took a lively interest in what followed. The proud
+ father continued: "My son-in-law, after some business
+ preliminaries, wrote me a handsome letter demanding what he had
+ already effectively possessed himself of. I wrote to Francine,
+ already returned to her duties, to be a good girl and make her
+ husband obey her in all things."</p>
+
+ <p>"That may have been," said I, "what made Francine take to
+ laughing all day and all night, as I heard she did some little
+ time after my departure from her house. The next news of her,"
+ I pursued, "was that she had been spirited away by some sly old
+ kidnapper. I almost suspected Kranich."</p>
+
+ <p>"The old kidnapper," said Joliet, laughing heartily at the
+ compliment, "is the man now talking to you. I wanted to take
+ Francine to her godmother. I turned the key in the door at
+ Carlsruhe, set the geographers all upon their travels to
+ explore new worlds, and we have been living ever since quite
+ close to Madame Kranich, who treats me like an emperor."</p>
+
+ <p>It was easy now to understand why the young Kranich, as soon
+ as he could identify me as a protector of Francine, had been
+ thrown off his guard and tempted to attack me with his clumsy
+ abuse. It was not very mysterious, even, why he had wished all
+ handsome girls to be drowned in the Rhine. For him a pretty
+ damsel was simply a rival in trade.</p>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:50%;">
+ <a href="images/019.png"
+ name="fig019"
+ id="fig019"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/019.png"
+ alt="READING THE CONTRACT." /></a>READING THE
+ CONTRACT.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Had I stopped at Wildbad with the party of orpheonists, I
+ should have encountered rather sooner the fatal beauties of
+ Mary Ashburleigh. It was to meet her that Fortnoye had paused
+ at that resort, considering her introduction to Frau Kranich
+ almost indispensable to the success of his scheme. She had no
+ hesitation in following the protecting angel of her lost child.
+ "My object in this journey is a happy marriage," she had told
+ me when to my unworthy care her guardianship had been
+ transferred. If I timorously suspected the marriage to be her
+ own, whose fault was it but mine? My heart leaped up at the
+ successive stages of this recital, its hopes
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page20"
+ id="page20"></a>[pg 20]</span> confirmed by every additional
+ fact: the Dark Ladye's hand was certainly free. Fortnoye, I
+ should surmise, was not too desirous to abandon this
+ magnificent companion at Schwetzingen; but the serpent, he
+ knew, was left behind, in company with two or three of his
+ and my friends: it was necessary to take the youth by the
+ ear, as it were, and dismiss him from the country, without
+ loss of time, to his future of counter-jumping. His dueling
+ experience may be of some use to him among the bowie-knives
+ of Louisiana. If his subsequent path is not strewn with
+ roses, let him rejoice that it is at least lubricated with
+ cologne-water.</p>
+
+ <div class="figleft"
+ style="width:50%;">
+ <a href="images/020-1.png"
+ name="fig020-1"
+ id="fig020-1"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/020-1.png"
+ alt="INTERRUPTED REPOSE." /></a>INTERRUPTED REPOSE.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>An hour had passed, and into my room from his own adjoining
+ one now ambled amicably my friend the baron. He greeted Joliet
+ as an old friend. Many a smoking-match had they had in my
+ garden at Marly. But Hohenfels this morning was in robes of
+ state, with shoes that shone even beside old Father Joliet's,
+ and as a concession to elegance he had abandoned his cavernous
+ pipes in favor of cigarettes. A scroll of this description,
+ flavored with his Cologne pastille and very badly rolled, was
+ trying to exhale itself between his lips.</p>
+
+ <p>"What a genius for conversation you have to-day, my
+ Flemming! This hour I have rocked back and forth in bed, trying
+ to understand your observations or to cover my ears and go to
+ rest. Your tongue has been like the tongue of a monastery-bell
+ summoning all hands to penance." But I had hardly spoken ten
+ consecutive words. The ears of the baron were this morning
+ quite muffled, I think, with the abundance of his hair, which
+ he had evidently been dressing with an avalanche of soap and
+ water, for the topknot was as harsh and tight as a felt. He had
+ lemon-blossoms on his lappel and lemon kids on his fists.</p>
+
+ <p>It was then I remembered that my bags were all in the
+ steamer, where I had left them when surprised by Charles's
+ indisposition. My tin box would possibly yield me a
+ button-nosegay, but otherwise I might beat my breast, like the
+ wedding-guest in the <i>Ancient Mariner</i>, for I heard the
+ summons and was unable to attend in right attire. "We two must
+ take you out in the street and dress you," said Hohenfels.</p>
+
+ <p>Although I had never been dressed in the street, I yielded.
+ It was a grand public holiday, and the sounds of festivity,
+ which had floated into my chamber with the entrance of
+ Hohenfels, were in full cadence outside. Everybody was pouring
+ out to the city-gate, or returning from thence, where, in honor
+ of some visit from the king of the Belgians and count and
+ countess of Flanders, a festival was going on in imitation or
+ rehearsal of the grand annual <i>kermesse</i>. These festivals,
+ retained in Belgium with a delightful fidelity to the customs
+ of antique Brabant, would fit the brush of Teniers better than
+ the pen of a mere bewildered tourist. Still, I will try,
+ copying principally from the reports of Charles (who contrives
+ to peep at everything, with an interest whose amount is in
+ ratio with the square of his distance from his master), to give
+ a few features of the scene, which he spread in detail before
+ the attentive Josephine during many an evening after.</p>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:20%;">
+ <a href="images/020-2.png"
+ name="fig020-2"
+ id="fig020-2"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/020-2.png"
+ alt="COALS vs. COATS" /></a>COALS vs. COATS
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The principal fair-ground&mdash;though the
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page21"
+ id="page21"></a>[pg 21]</span> occasion crammed the whole
+ city with revelers&mdash;was just outside the gate. It was a
+ veritable town in miniature, with a pattern of checker-board
+ streets&mdash;Columbine street, Polichinelle street, Avenue
+ des Parades, Place des Parades, Street of the Chanson, and
+ the like. There were more than five hundred booths, all
+ numbered&mdash;shops and restaurants. There were the Salon
+ Curtius, the M&eacute;nagerie Bidel, the Bal Mabille, the
+ Caf&eacute; Bataclan, the American Tavern. From one of the
+ little costumers' shops, Charles&mdash;with a higher
+ evincement of antiquarian taste than I should have
+ expected&mdash;managed to bear away a pattern of wall-paper,
+ which I afterward conferred on Mary Ashburleigh with great
+ applause: it was Parisian of 1824, the epoch of Charles Dix,
+ and was entirely covered with giraffes in honor of that
+ puissant and elegant monarch. The above establishments were
+ near the entrance, to the right.</p>
+
+ <p>At the left were more attractions: another menagerie, a heap
+ of ostensible gold representing the five milliards paid by
+ France, a gallery of astonished wax soldiers representing the
+ Franco-Prussian war, a cook-shop with "mythologic"
+ confectionery. Farther on, in the Th&eacute;&acirc;tre Casti,
+ was exposed the "renowned buffoon Peppino," breveted by His
+ Majesty the "king of Egypt;" then came the Chiarini Theatre;
+ then the Th&eacute;&acirc;tre Adrien Delille, an enchantingly
+ pretty structure, where receptions were given by a little
+ creature who should have sat under a microscope: she was "the
+ Princess Felicia, aged thirteen, born at Clotat, near
+ Marseilles, weighing three kilogrammes and measuring forty-six
+ centim&egrave;tres&mdash;a ravishing figure, admirably
+ proportioned in her littleness and <i>tout &agrave; fait
+ sympathique!"</i></p>
+
+ <p>The announcements were heard, it was thought by Charles, to
+ the very centre of the city. A low-browed animal with rasped
+ hair was shouting, "Messieurs and ladies, come and
+ see&mdash;come and see the theatre of the galleys! The only one
+ in the world! This is the place to view the real instruments of
+ torture used on the prisoners&mdash;-chains four yards long and
+ balls of thirty-five pounds. All authentic, gentlemen and
+ ladies. You will see the poisoners of Marseilles, Grosjon who
+ killed his father, Madame Cottin who ate her baby. Come in,
+ come in, gentlemen and ladies! Fifteen centimes! 'Tis given
+ away! You enter and go out when you like. Come in! It is
+ educational: you see vice and crime depicted on the faces of
+ the criminals!"</p>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:40%;">
+ <a href="images/021.png"
+ name="fig021"
+ id="fig021"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/021.png"
+ alt="THE JESTER AT THE FEAST." /></a>THE JESTER AT THE
+ FEAST.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>In another place a malicious Flemish Figaro explained the
+ analogy betwen <i>een spinnekop</i> and <i>eene meisie</i>, the
+ perspiration streaming over his face; and my ancient
+ minnesinger's blood stirred within me at the report of the
+ pleasantries which were improvised by this Rabelais of the
+ people, and I remembered that I too was a Flemming.</p>
+
+ <p>The bands belonging to the different booths tried to play
+ each other down, forming a stupefying charivari, with tributary
+ processions that quite overflowed the city. The house of
+ "confections" yielded me no broadcloth of a cut or dimension
+ suitable to my figure. But my two friends chose me a hat, a
+ light pale-tot (my second purchase in that sort on this
+ eventful journey), a scented cambric handkerchief, a rosebud,
+ and a snowy waistcoat, in which, as in a whited sepulchre, I
+ concealed the decay of my toilet. These changes were judged to
+ be sufficient for my accoutrement. They might have done very
+ well, but on my way back I paused at a lace-shop window to
+ inspect some present for Francine. A band, with many banners
+ and figures in <span class="pagenum"><a name="page22"
+ id="page22"></a>[pg 22]</span> masquerade, swept past,
+ followed by a shouting crowd. My friends lost me in a
+ moment, and I lost my way. I turned into a street which I
+ was sure led to the hotel, gave it up for another, lost that
+ in a blind alley, and finally brought up in a steep, narrow
+ ca&ntilde;on, where I was forced to ask a direction. The
+ passer-by who obliged me was a man bearing a bag of
+ charcoal. He answered with a ready intelligence that did
+ honor to his heart and his sense of Progressive Geography.
+ But he left on my white waistcoat, alas! a charcoal sketch,
+ full of chiaroscuro and <i>coloris</i>, representing his
+ index-finger surrounded with a sort of cloud-effect. My
+ waistcoat had to be given over in favor of the elder garment
+ buttoned up in the all-concealing overcoat.</p>
+
+ <div class="figleft"
+ style="width:70%;">
+ <a href="images/022.png"
+ name="fig022"
+ id="fig022"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/022.png"
+ alt="ST. GUDOLE, BRUSSELS." /></a>ST. GUDOLE,
+ BRUSSELS.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The ceremonies of the day, I soon found, were to consist in
+ an early and informal breakfast at the house of Frau Kranich;
+ then the civil wedding at the mayor's office, followed by the
+ usual church-service, from which the Protestant godmother of
+ Francine begged to be excused; the day to wind up with a
+ general dinner at a place of resort outside the city at four
+ o'clock, the usual dining-hour in old Brabant.</p>
+
+ <p>The early breakfast gave a renewal of my friendship with
+ good Frau Kranich and a glimpse of the bride, with her sweet,
+ patient, dewy face shadowed like a honey-drop in the gauzy
+ calyx of her artisanne cap; for she was in the simplest of
+ morning dresses&mdash;something gray, with a clean white apron.
+ The quaint, old-fashioned house where we met was decorated with
+ exquisite trifles, the memorials of the mistress's old
+ fashionable taste, but scattered over the tables also were
+ lecture programmes, hospital reports and photographs of eminent
+ philosophers. As I took up for a plaything a gold pen-case,
+ well used, which rested on a magnificent old fan, the Kranich
+ said, with just a reminiscence of her former vivacity, "You
+ find me much changed, Mr. Flemming. I used to be the
+ grasshopper in the fable&mdash;now I am the ant."</p>
+
+ <p>"I bless any change, ma'am," said I, "which increases your
+ kindness toward this charming girl."</p>
+
+ <p>"Dear Mr. Flemming," said pretty Francine, "how nice and
+ shabby you look! You will do admirably to stand by a poor
+ girl&mdash;so poor that she has hardly a bridesmaid. I hope you
+ are as indigent as you were at Carlsruhe." Upon this I felt
+ very fatherly, and clasped her waist from behind as I kissed
+ her forehead.</p>
+
+ <p>The lawyer, a professionally bland old man, with a porous
+ bald head like an emu's egg, said as he was introduced, "Ah, I
+ have heard of you before, monsieur. You are the man of the two
+ chickens."</p>
+
+ <p>Joliet was so enchanted with this rare joke, laughing and
+ clapping all his nearer neighbors on the back, that I could not
+ but accept it graciously. For this exceptional day, at least, I
+ must bear my eternal nickname. Was not the maid now present
+ whose dower had been hatched by those well-omened fowls? and
+ was not the dower now coming to use? Hohenfels paired off with
+ the notary, and discussed with that parchment person the music
+ of Mozart, and, what <span class="pagenum"><a name="page23"
+ id="page23"></a>[pg 23]</span> would have been absurd and
+ incredible in any Anglo-Saxon country, the scribe understood
+ it!</p>
+
+ <p>Our party had to wait but ten minutes for the groom and his
+ men. Fortnoye, in a grand blue suit, with a wondrous dazzle of
+ frilling on his broad chest, looked a noble husband, but was
+ preoccupied and silent. His chorus supported
+ him&mdash;Grandstone, Somerard, my engineer and the
+ others&mdash;in dignified black clothes, official
+ boutonni&egrave;res and ceremonial cravats: they greeted Frau
+ Kranich with awe, and bowed before the polished head of the
+ lawyer with the parallelism of ninepins. My little group of
+ fellow-travelers was almost complete. The young duelist, of
+ course, was not expected or wanted. The Scotch doctor, Somerard
+ told me, had been obliged to fly to London, where a mammoth
+ meeting of the homoeopathic faith was in progress.</p>
+
+ <p>The great feature of the breakfast came on when every crumb
+ of breakfast had been eaten. Charles and the maid cleared away
+ the table, and the notary stood up to read the marriage
+ contract. The reading, ordinarily a dull affair, was in this
+ instance vivified by curious incidents. In the first place,
+ Frau Kranich. amending the injustice her over-credulity had
+ caused, gave her <i>prot&egrave;g&eacute;e</i> a
+ wedding-present of twenty thousand francs, accompanying the
+ gift with some singularly tart remarks about her nephew: this
+ sum was increased by the groom to sixty thousand. The second
+ incident was when Joliet, amid the almost incredulous surprise
+ of the whole table, raised the gift, by the addition of ten
+ thousand, to seventy thousand francs: the money was the product
+ of his former house and garden&mdash;that house of shreds and
+ patches which had cost him ten francs. When it came to affixing
+ the signatures, the notary appealed to Joliet for his name. He
+ could not sign it, being gouty and half forgetful of
+ pen-practice, but he responded to the question as bold as a
+ lion: "John Thomas Joliet, baron de Rouvi&egrave;re," throwing
+ to the lawyer a fine bunch of papers bearing witness to the
+ validity of the title; after which he added, no less proudly,
+ "wine-merchant, wholesale and retail, at the sign of the Golden
+ Chickens, Noisy."</p>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:70%;">
+ <a href="images/023.png"
+ name="fig023"
+ id="fig023"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/023.png"
+ alt="SQUARE OF THE H&Ocirc;TEL DE VILLE, BRUSSELS." />
+ </a>SQUARE OF THE H&Ocirc;TEL DE VILLE, BRUSSELS.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>In truth, Joliet's father had rightfully borne the title of
+ baron de Rouvi&egrave;re, but, ruined by '48, had abandoned the
+ practice of signing it. Joliet resumed it for this special
+ occasion, having every warrant for the act, but whispered to me
+ that he should never so call himself in future, greatly
+ preferring the enumeration of his qualities on his
+ business-card.</p>
+
+ <p>Poor Francine meanwhile had looked so timid and blushed so
+ that Frau Kranich nodded to her permission of absence. She gave
+ one glance at Fortnoye, buried her face in her hands, laughed a
+ sweet little gurgle, and fled. When her presence was again
+ necessary, she reappeared, drowned in white. We went to the
+ mayor's office, where she lost a pretty little surname that had
+ always seemed to fit her like a glove; then to the church, an
+ obscure one in the neighborhood of Frau Kranich's house. But at
+ the door of the sacred edifice the elder lady said, with much
+ conciliatory grace in her manner, "I claim exemption from
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page24"
+ id="page24"></a>[pg 24]</span> witnessing this part of the
+ ceremony; and you, Mr. Flemming, must resume or discover
+ your Protestantism and enter the carriage with me. I must
+ show you a little of the city while these young birds are
+ pairing."</p>
+
+ <p>No objection was made to this rather strange proposal. The
+ bride, between her father and husband, forgot that she had no
+ friend of her own sex to stand near her. We arranged for a
+ general meeting at the dinner.</p>
+
+ <p>In the carriage she said, "I brought you away because I am
+ devoured with uneasiness. Mrs. Ashburleigh wrote me that she
+ would certainly be here for at least the principal part of the
+ ceremony. I do not know what to make of it. It may be of no
+ use, but we will scour the city. These throngs, this noise,
+ make me uneasy. I fear some accident, having," she added with a
+ smile, "one lone woman's sympathy for another lone woman."</p>
+
+ <div class="figleft"
+ style="width:30%;">
+ <a href="images/024.png"
+ name="fig024"
+ id="fig024"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/024.png"
+ alt="DIVERS DIVERSIONS." /></a>DIVERS DIVERSIONS.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>I peered through the crowds at this, right and left, with
+ inexpressible emotion. Perhaps this accidental sort of quest
+ was that which destiny had arranged for the solution of my
+ life-problem. To light upon Mary Ashburleigh in these festal
+ throngs, perhaps wanting assistance, perhaps calling upon my
+ name even now through her velvet lips, was a chance the mere
+ notion of which made my blood leap.</p>
+
+ <p>When Brussels gives herself over to holiday-making, she does
+ it in a whole-souled and self-consistent way that has plenty of
+ attractiveness. The houses seemed to have turned themselves
+ inside out to replenish the streets. People in their best
+ clothes, equipages, processions, bands, troops of children,
+ filled the avenues. Some conjecture that there might have been
+ a mistake about the church took us to the cathedral of St.
+ Gudule. Here, amid the superb spectrums of the stained windows,
+ we searched through the vari-colored throngs that covered the
+ floor, but no familiar face looked upon us. Strange to us as
+ the old, impassive monumental dukes of Brabant who occupy the
+ niches, the people made way to let us pass from the doorway
+ between the lofty brace of towers to the high altar, which is a
+ juggler's apparatus, and has concealed machinery causing the
+ sacred wafer to come down seemingly of its own accord at the
+ moment when the priest is about to lift the Host. All was
+ unfamiliar and splendid, and we came away, feeling as if our
+ own little wedding-group would have been lost in so magnificent
+ a tabernacle. The Grande Place, on which lay the wedge-like
+ shadow of the high-towered H&ocirc;tel de Ville, was perhaps as
+ thronged a honeycomb of buzzing populace as when Alva looked
+ out upon it to see the execution of Egmont and Horn. Among all
+ the good-natured Netherlandish countenances that paved the
+ square there was none that responded to my own.</p>
+
+ <p>We drove vaguely through the principal streets, and then,
+ baffled, made our way to the faubourg in which is situated the
+ zoological garden, toward which a considerable portion of the
+ inhabitants was going even as ourselves. At the entrance our
+ carriage encountered that of the bride and groom, and soon the
+ whole party of the breakfast-table assembled by the gate, for
+ the great coffee-rooms at which our meal was laid were close by
+ the garden, and a promenade in this famous living museum was a
+ premeditated part of the day's enjoyment. We entered the
+ grounds in character, frankly putting forward our claims as a
+ wedding-procession. That is the delightful French custom among
+ those who are brought up as Francine had been: her father would
+ have been heartbroken to have been denied the proud exhibition
+ of his joy, and Fortnoye was too great a traveler, too
+ cosmopolitan, to object to a little family pageant that he had
+ seen equaled or exceeded in publicity in most of the Catholic
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page25"
+ id="page25"></a>[pg 25]</span> countries on the globe.
+ Francine, her artisanne cap for ever lost, her gleaming dark
+ hair set, like a Milky Way, with a half wreath of
+ orange-blossoms, the silvery gauzes of her protecting veil
+ floating back from her forehead, strayed on at the head of
+ the little parade. She was wrapped in the delicious reverie
+ of the wedding-day. She was not yellow nor meagre, nor
+ uglier than herself, as so many brides contrive to be. Her
+ air of delicacy and tenderness was a blossom of character,
+ not a canker of ill-health. Her color was hardly raised,
+ though her head was perpetually bent. Fortnoye, holding her
+ on his firm arm, seemed like a man walking through
+ enchantments. Just behind, protecting Madame Kranich with an
+ action of effusive gallantry that must have been seen to be
+ conceived, walked the baron de Rouvi&egrave;re, his brave
+ knotted hands, for which he had not found any gloves, busily
+ occupied in pointing out the animated rarities that to him
+ seemed most worthy of selection. The hilarious hyenas, the
+ seals, the polar bears plunging from their lofty rocks, all
+ attracted his commendation; and we, who walked behind in
+ such order as our friendships or familiarity taught us, were
+ perpetually tripping upon his honest figure brought to a
+ halt before some object more than usually interesting.
+ Exclamations of delight at the bride's beauty, politely
+ wrapped in whispers, arose on all sides as we penetrated the
+ throng: it was a proud thing to be a part of a procession so
+ distinguished. My good Joliet beamed with complacency, and
+ drove his little herd up and down and across and about till
+ the greater part of the garden was explored. The zoological
+ garden of Brussels has the beauty of not showing too
+ obviously the character of a prison. It is extensive,
+ umbrageous, and the poor captives within its borders have
+ enough air and space around their eyes to give them a
+ semblance of liberty. For the special feast-day on which we
+ visited it the place had been arranged with particular
+ adaptation to the character of the time. There were
+ elephant-races and rides upon the camels free to all ladies
+ who would make the venture. In addition to the zebras, gnus
+ and Shetlands, there was that species of race-horse which
+ never wins and never spoils a course, being of wood and
+ constructed to go round in a tent, and never
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page26"
+ id="page26"></a>[pg 26]</span> to arrive anywhere or lose
+ any prizes. The pelicans were in high excitement, for all
+ along their beautiful little river, where it winds through
+ bowery trees, a profusion of living fish had been emptied
+ and confined here and there by grated dams, so that the
+ awkward birds had opportunity to angle in perfect freedom
+ and to their hearts' content. In the more wooded part of the
+ garden a mimic hunt had been arranged, and sportsmen in
+ correct suits of green, with curly brass horns and baying
+ hounds, coursed through the grounds, following a stag which,
+ though mangy and asthmatic, may yet have been a descendant
+ of the fawn that fed Genevieve of Brabant. We had re-entered
+ one of the grand alleys, and were receiving again the little
+ tribute of encomiums which the greater privacy of the groves
+ had pretermitted&mdash;we were parading happily along,
+ conscious of nothing to be ashamed of, our orange-blossoms
+ glistening, our veil flying, our broadcloth and
+ wedding-favors gleaming&mdash;when we met another group,
+ which, though more furtively, bore that matrimonial
+ character which distinguished our own.</p>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:60%;">
+ <a href="images/025.png"
+ name="fig025"
+ id="fig025"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/025.png"
+ alt="THE MIMIC HUNT." /></a>THE MIMIC HUNT.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>At the head walked Mr. Cookson &amp; Jenkinson. He still
+ wore that species of shooting-costume which he had made his
+ uniform, but it was decked with roses, and his hands were
+ encased in milk-white gloves: on his hands, besides the gloves,
+ he had the two grammatical ladies from the Rhine steamboat in
+ guise of bridesmaids. Behind him walked Mary Ashburleigh. And
+ emerging from the skirts of Mary Ashburleigh's dress, with the
+ embarrassed happiness of a middle-aged bridegroom,
+ was&mdash;no? yes! no, no! but yes&mdash;was Sylvester Berkley.
+ I will not expose what I suffered to the curiosity of
+ imperfectly sympathetic strangers. I did not faint, and I
+ believe men in genuine despair never do so. But I felt that
+ weakness and unmanageableness of knee which comes with strong
+ mental anguish, and I sank back impotent upon the baron, whose
+ lingering legs repudiated the pressure, so that we both
+ accumulated miserably upon Grandstone. My eyes closed, and I
+ did not hear the Dark Ladye's salutations to Frau Kranich. But
+ I awoke to see with anguish a sight that drew involuntary
+ applause from all that careless crowd.</p>
+
+ <p>It was the salute of the two brides. Imagine, if you can,
+ two great purple pansies, flushed with all the perfumed sap of
+ an Eden spring-time, threaded with diamonds of myriad-faceted
+ dew,&mdash;imagine them leaning forward on their elastic stems
+ until both their soft velvet countenances cling together and
+ exchange mutually their caparisons of honeyed gems; then let
+ them sway gently back, and balance once more in their morning
+ splendor. Such was the effect when these two imperial creatures
+ approached each other and imprinted with lips and palms a
+ sister's salute. Mary Ashburleigh, whom the throng recognized
+ as a natural empress, was arrayed this morning as brides are
+ seldom arrayed, but with a sense of artistic obedience to her
+ own sumptuous nature and personality. The royal purple of her
+ velvets was cut, on skirt and bodice, into one continuous
+ fretwork of heavy scrolls and leafage, and through the crevices
+ of this textile carving shone the robe she carried beneath: it
+ was tawny yellow, for she wore under her outward dress a
+ complete robe of ancient lace, whose cobweb softness was more
+ than &mdash; only perceived as the slashes of
+ her velvets made it evident. It was such dressing as queens
+ alone should indulge in perhaps, but Mary Ashburleigh chose for
+ once to do justice to her style and her magnificence.</p>
+
+ <p>I was leaning against a tree, stunned in the sick sunshine.
+ I heard, while my eyes were closed, a sort of voluminous cloudy
+ roll, and the Dark Ladye was beside me. She whispered quickly
+ and volubly in my ear, "I tried to confide in you, but I could
+ not get it spoken. Yet I managed to confess that my heart had
+ been touched. It was only this summer&mdash;at the Molkencur
+ over Heidelberg&mdash;he lectured about the ruins. 'Twas
+ information&mdash;'twas rapture! I found at once he was the
+ Magician. We were quietly united at the embassy this morning.
+ And now he can leave that dreadful consulate and has got his
+ promotion, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page27"
+ id="page27"></a>[pg 27]</span> for he is to be
+ <i>charg&eacute;</i> here in Brussels. It is sudden, but we
+ were positively afraid to do it in any other way, I am such
+ a timid creature. When I saw the travelers' agent on the
+ steamboat, I was at first struck with his manly British
+ bearing and his resemblance to Sylvester. Then I found he
+ had the matrimonial prospectus, and perceived he might be a
+ link. He has managed everything beautifully. I had no
+ idea&mdash;With his assistance you need no more mind being
+ married than going into a shop for a plate of pudding. You
+ must come up and be presented, to show you bear no
+ malice."</p>
+
+ <p>I cannot tell how I did it, but I allowed Sylvester and the
+ agent to grasp my hands, one on either side. Berkley, as to his
+ collar, his cravat, his face and his white gloves, presented
+ one general surface of mat silver. He clasped me with some
+ affection, but his intellect had quite gone, and he said it was
+ a fine day.</p>
+
+ <p>I did not rally in the least until after my fourth glass of
+ champagne at the dinner. We made one party: indeed, Mrs.
+ Ashburleigh had brought her husband hither in that expectation.
+ Fortnoye vanished a minute to arrange the banquet-room; and as
+ his wife rushed in to find him, followed by the rest of us, he
+ snatched a great damask cloth from the table, and there was
+ such a set-out of flowers and viands as has seldom been seen in
+ Belgium or elsewhere. The table, instead of a cloth, was
+ entirely laid with; young emerald vine-leaves: our places were
+ marked, and at each plate was a gift for the bride, ostensibly
+ coming from the person who sat there, but really provided by
+ the forethought of Fortnoye. In front of my own cover two
+ pretty downy chicks were pecking in a cottage made of crystal
+ slats and heavily thatched with spun glass&mdash;the prettiest
+ birdcage in the world. On the eaves was an inscription: "The
+ Man of the Two Chickens." It happened that the little keepsake
+ I had found for Francine consisted of wheat-ears in pearls and
+ gold, adapted for brooch and eardrops; so I only had to drop
+ them in beside the chickens and the present was appropriate and
+ complete.</p>
+
+ <p>I cannot tell of the effect as Mary Ashburleigh swept into
+ that splendid banqueting-room, one long pyramid of velvet
+ pierced with webbed interstices of light. If the largest window
+ of St. Ursula's church had come down and entered the room, the
+ spectacle could not have been so superb. One item struck me:
+ the younger bride, of course, wore orange buds; but for the
+ Englishwoman, a beauty ripe with many summers, buds and
+ blossoms were inappropriate; she wore fruits: in the grand
+ coronal of plaits that massed itself upon her head were set,
+ like gems, three or four small, delicious, amber-scented
+ mandarin oranges. With this piece of exquisite apropos did the
+ infallible Mary Ashburleigh crown the edifice of her good
+ taste. The two brides sat opposite each other. A small watch,
+ which I had happened to buy at Coblenz, I managed to detach and
+ lay on the Dark Ladye's plate as my offering. On a card beside
+ it I merely wrote, "ANOTHER TIME!"</p>
+
+ <p>Who knows? Perhaps Sylvester may fill and founder as the
+ other has done. He looks miserably bilious and frightened.</p>
+
+ <p>I had rather partake of a rare dinner than describe one. The
+ wines alone represented all the cellars of the Rhine and the
+ whole champagne country. Fortnoye, who gave the feast,
+ entertained both Sylvester's party and his own with regal good
+ cheer. Think not that Henri Fortnoye was the ordinary
+ obfuscated, superfluous, bewildered bridegroom. On the
+ contrary, assuming immediately the head of his own table, he
+ took the responsibility of the party's merriment, and made the
+ good humor flow like the wine. I know not how it was, but ere
+ the meal was over I found myself joining in one of his
+ choruses; Frau Kranich forgot her asceticism and exhumed all
+ her youthful air of gayety; James Athanasius Grandstone
+ promised the host to set his wines running in every State of
+ America. But the prettiest moment was when the two brides rose
+ and touched glasses, mutually and to the health of the company,
+ apropos of a little wedding-song which Fortnoye had
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page28"
+ id="page28"></a>[pg 28]</span> composed and was trolling at
+ the head our willing chorus.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:75%;">
+ <a href="images/028-1.png"
+ name="fig028-1"
+ id="fig028-1"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/028-1.png"
+ alt="HOMEWARD BOUND." /></a>HOMEWARD BOUND.
+ </div>
+
+ <h3>CONCLUSION.</h3>
+
+ <p>I have arrived at Marly, and, with the ssistance of much
+ sarcasm from Hohenfels, am getting on with considerable spirit
+ at my Progressive Geography. When man's Hope ceases temporarily
+ to take a merely Human aspect, may it not suffer a fresh avatar
+ and begin in a new and Geographical form its beneficent career?
+ The Dark Ladye has sunk beneath my horizon, but speculations
+ over the Atlantean and Lunar Mountains are still succulent and
+ vivifying.</p>
+
+ <div class="figleft"
+ style="width:40%;">
+ <a href="images/028-2.png"
+ name="fig028-2"
+ id="fig028-2"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/028-2.png"
+ alt="CHARLES AND JOSEPHINE." /></a>CHARLES AND
+ JOSEPHINE.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>I fled, lashed by a hundred despairs and by many symptoms of
+ headache and dyspepsia, from the wedding-feast at Brussels.
+ Charles and the baron of Hohenfels accompanied me. It was a
+ night-train. The spectacle of so much wedded happiness was too
+ much for me, too much for Hohenfels. The effect was,
+ contrarily, rather stimulating to Charles, who has made a match
+ with Josephine, and with her assistance is now listening, the
+ tear of sensibility in his eye, to Mendelssohn's "Wedding
+ March" as executed by the village organ!</p>
+
+ <p>We passed Valenciennes, Somain, Donai, Arras, Amiens,
+ Clermont, Criel, Pontoise&mdash;the last points of merely
+ bodily travel that I shall ever make: here-after my itineracy
+ shall be entirely theoretical. We took a carriage at Pontoise,
+ and traversed the woods of Saint-Germain. As I neared home I
+ bowed right and left to amicable and smiling neighbors, who
+ waved me good-day <span class="pagenum"><a name="page29"
+ id="page29"></a>[pg 29]</span> from their doors. So did my
+ Newfoundland, who broke his chain and leaped upon my
+ shoulders, flourishing his tail&mdash;overjoyed to salute
+ the returning Ulysses.</p>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:40%;">
+ <a href="images/028-3.png"
+ name="fig028-3"
+ id="fig028-3"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/028-3.png"
+ alt="ARGUS AND ULYSSES." /></a>ARGUS AND ULYSSES.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>In the British Museum, among the Elgin Marbles, Phidias has
+ carved a pile of heaped-up marble waves, and out of them rise
+ the arms of Hyperion&mdash;the most beautiful arms in the
+ world. Homesick for heaven, those weary arms try to free
+ themselves of the clinging foam. Another minute and surely the
+ triumphant god will leap from his watery couch and guide with
+ unerring hands the coursers of the Dawn! But that reluctant
+ minute is eternal, and the divinity still remains incapable,
+ clogged and wrapped in the embrace of marble waves. Yet the
+ real sun every morning succeeds in equipping himself for his
+ journey, and arrives, glad, at his welcome bath in the western
+ sea.</p>
+
+ <p>The inference I draw is: If you want a career to be eternal
+ instead of transitory, hand it over to Art.</p>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:60%;">
+ <a href="images/029-1.png"
+ name="fig029-1"
+ id="fig029-1"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/029-1.png"
+ alt="'HAND IT OVER TO ART.'" /></a>"HAND IT OVER TO
+ ART."
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The true moral of it all is, that we are all savage myths of
+ the Course of the Sun. We disappear any number of times, but we
+ rise and trail new clouds of glory, and our readers or our
+ audiences perceive that it is the same old Hyperion back again.
+ The youth who by the faithful hound, half buried in the snow,
+ is found far up on the most inaccessible peaks of imagination,
+ is perceived to grasp still in his hand of ice that Germanesque
+ and strange device&mdash;<i>Auf Wiedersehen</i>.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:80%;">
+ <a href="images/029-2.png"
+ name="fig029-2"
+ id="fig029-2"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/029-2.png"
+ alt="Finis" /></a>
+ </div><span class="pagenum"><a name="page30"
+ id="page30"></a>[pg 30]</span>
+
+ <h2>FOLLOWING THE TIBER.</h2>
+
+ <h3>TWO PAPERS.&mdash;1.</h3>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:80%;">
+ <a href="images/030.png"
+ name="fig030"
+ id="fig030"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/030.png"
+ alt="NEAR THE SOURCE OF THE TIBER." /></a>NEAR THE
+ SOURCE OF THE TIBER.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>"Ecce Tiberum!" cried the Roman legions when they first
+ beheld the Scottish Tay. What power of association could have
+ made them see in the clear and shallow stream the likeless of
+ their tawny Tiber, with his full-flowing waters sweeping down
+ to the sea? Perhaps those soldiers under whose mailed and
+ rugged breasts lay so tender a thought of home came from the
+ northerly region among the Apennines, where a little bubbling
+ mountain-brook is the first form in which the storied Tiber
+ greets the light of day. One who has made a pilgrimage from its
+ mouth to its source thus describes the spot: "An old man
+ undertook to be our guide. By the side of the little stream,
+ which here constitutes the first vein of the Tiber, we
+ penetrated the wood. It was an immense beech-forest.... The
+ trees were almost all great gnarled veterans who had borne the
+ snows of many winters: now they stood basking above their
+ blackened shadows in the blazing sunshine. The little stream
+ tumbled from ledge to ledge of splintered rock, sometimes
+ creeping into a hazel thicket, green with long ferns and soft
+ moss, and then leaping once more merrily into the sunlight.
+ Presently it split into numerous little rills. We followed the
+ longest of these. It led us to a carpet of smooth green turf
+ amidst an opening in the trees; and there, bubbling out of the
+ green sod, embroidered with white strawberry-blossoms, the
+ delicate blue of the crane's bill and dwarf willow-herb, a
+ copious little stream arose. Here the old man paused, and
+ resting upon his staff, raised his age-dimmed eyes, and
+ pointing to the gushing water, said, <i>'E questo si chiama il
+ Tevere a Roma!'</i> ('And this is called the Tiber at Rome!')
+ ... We followed the stream from the spot where it issued out of
+ the beech-forest, over barren spurs
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page31"
+ id="page31"></a>[pg 31]</span> of the mountains crested with
+ fringes of dark pine, down to a lonely and desolate valley,
+ shut in by dim and misty blue peaks. Then we entered the
+ portals of a solemn wood, with gray trunks of trees
+ everywhere around us and impenetrable foliage above our
+ heads, the deep silence only broken by fitful songs of
+ birds. To this succeeded a blank district of barren shale
+ cleft into great gullies by many a wintry torrent. Presently
+ we found ourselves at an enormous height above the river, on
+ the ledge of a precipice which shot down almost
+ perpendicularly on one side to the bed of the stream.... A
+ little past this place we came upon a very singular and
+ picturesque spot. It was an elevated rock shut within a deep
+ dim gorge, about which the river twisted, almost running
+ round it. Upon this rock were built a few gloomy-looking
+ houses and a quaint, old-world mill. It was reached from the
+ hither side by a widely-spanning one-arched bridge. It was
+ called Val Savignone."<a id="footnotetag1"
+ name="footnotetag1"></a><a href="#footnote1"><sup>1</sup></a>
+ Beyond this, at a small village called Balsciano, the hills
+ begin to subside into gentler slopes, which gradually merge
+ in the plain at the little town of Pieve San Stefano.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:80%;">
+ <a href="images/031.png"
+ name="fig031"
+ id="fig031"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/031.png"
+ alt="CAPRESE." /></a>CAPRESE.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Thus far the infant stream has no history: its legends and
+ chronicles do not begin so early. But a few miles farther, on a
+ tiny branch called the Singerna, are the vestiges of what was
+ once a place of some importance&mdash;Caprese, where Michael
+ Angelo was born exactly four hundred years ago. His father was
+ for a twelvemonth governor of this place and Chiusi, five miles
+ off (not Lars Porsenna's Clusium, which is to the south, but
+ Clusium Novum), and brought his wife with him to inhabit the
+ <i>palazzo communale</i>. During his regency the painter of the
+ "Last Judgment," the sculptor of "Night and Morning," the
+ architect of St. Peter's cupola, first saw the light. Here the
+ history of the Tiber begins&mdash;here men first mingled blood
+ with its unsullied waves. On another little tributary is
+ Anghiara, where in 1440 a terrible battle was fought between
+ the Milanese troops, under command of the gallant free-lance
+ Piccinino, and the Floren-tines, led by Giovanni Paolo
+ (commonly called Giampaolo) Orsini; and a little
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page32"
+ id="page32"></a>[pg 32]</span> farther, on the main stream,
+ Citt&agrave; di Castello recalls the story of a long siege
+ which it valiantly sustained against Braccio da Montone,
+ surnamed Fortebraccio (Strongarm), another renowned soldier
+ of fortune of the fifteenth century.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:80%;">
+ <a href="images/032.png"
+ name="fig032"
+ id="fig032"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/032.png"
+ alt="LAKE THRASIMENE." /></a>LAKE THRASIMENE.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>As the widening flood winds on through the beautiful plain,
+ a broad sheet of water on the right spreads for miles to the
+ foot of the mountains, whose jutting spurs form many a bay,
+ cove and estuary. It was in the small hours of a night of misty
+ moonlight that our eyes, stretched wide with the new wonder of
+ beholding classic ground, first caught sight of this smooth
+ expanse gleaming pallidly amid the dark, blurred outlines of
+ the landscape and trees. The monotonous noise and motion of the
+ train had put our fellow-travelers to sleep, and when it
+ gradually ceased they did not stir. There was no bustle at the
+ little station where we stopped; a few drowsy figures stole
+ silently by in the dim light, like ghosts on the spectral shore
+ of Acheron; the whole scene was strangely unreal, phantasmal.
+ "What can it be?" we asked each other under our breaths. "There
+ is but one thing that it can be&mdash;Lake Thrasimene." And so
+ it was. Often since, both by starlight and daylight, we have
+ seen that watery sheet of fatal memories, but it never wore the
+ same shadowy yet impressive aspect as on our first
+ night-journey from Florence to Rome.</p>
+
+ <p>Not far from here one leaves the train for Perugia, seated
+ high on a bluff amid walls and towers. We had been told a good
+ deal of the terrors of the way&mdash;how so steep was the
+ approach that at a certain point horses give out and carriages
+ must be dragged up by oxen. It was with some surprise,
+ therefore, that we saw ordinary hotel omnibuses and carriages
+ waiting at the station. But we did not allow ourselves to feel
+ any false security: by and by we knew the tug must come. We set
+ off by a wide, winding road, uphill undoubtedly, but smooth and
+ easy: however, this was only the beginning; and as it grew
+ steeper and steeper, we waited in trepidation for the moment
+ when the heavy beasts should be hitched on to haul us up the
+ acclivity. We crawled up safely and slowly between orchards of
+ olive trees, which will grow wherever a goat can set its foot:
+ beneath us the great fertile vale of Umbria spread like a lake,
+ the encircling mountains, which had looked like a close chain
+ from <span class="pagenum"><a name="page33"
+ id="page33"></a>[pg 33]</span> below, unlinking themselves
+ to reveal gorges and glimpses of other valleys. Thus by
+ successive zigzags we mounted the broad turnpike-road, now
+ directly under the fortifications, now farther off, until we
+ saw them close above us, with the old citadel and the new
+ palace. And now surely the worst had come, but the carnage
+ turned a sharp corner, showing two more zigzags, forming a
+ long acute angle which carried us smoothly to the rocky
+ plateau on which the city stands, and we bowled in through
+ the old gate-way at a round trot, with the usual cracking of
+ whips and rattling and jingling of harness which announces
+ the arrival of travelers at minor places on the
+ Continent.</p>
+
+ <p>We were not comfortable at Perugia&mdash;and let no one
+ think to be so until there is a new hotel on a new
+ principle&mdash;but it is a place where one can afford to
+ forego creature comforts. Of all the towns on the Tiber, so
+ rich in heirlooms of antiquity and art, none can boast such
+ various wealth as this. The moment one leaves the centre of the
+ town, which is built on a table of rock, the narrow streets
+ plunge down on every side like dangerous broken flights of
+ stairs: they disappear under deep cavernous arches, so that if
+ you are below they seem to lead straight up through the
+ darkness to the soft blue heaven, while from above they seem to
+ go straight down into deep cellars, but cellars full of
+ slanting sunshine. And whether you look up or down, there is
+ always a picture in the dark frame against the bright
+ background&mdash;a woman in a scarlet kerchief with a
+ water-vessel of antique form, or a ragged brown boy leading a
+ ragged brown donkey, or a soldier in gay uniform striking a
+ light for his pipe. As soon as you leave the live part of the
+ town, with the few little <i>caff&egrave;s</i> and shops, and
+ the esplanades whence the thrice-lovely landscape unfolds
+ beneath your gaze, you wander among quiet little paved
+ <i>piazzas</i> with a bit of daisied grass in their midst,
+ surrounded by great silent buildings, whence through some
+ opening you descry a street which is a ravine, and the opposite
+ cliff rising high above you piled close with gray houses
+ overhung with shrubs and creepers, and little gardens in their
+ crevices like weeds between the stones of a wall; or you come
+ out upon a secluded gallery with tall, deserted-looking
+ mansions on one hand&mdash;except that at some sunny window
+ there is always to be seen a girl's head beside a pot of
+ carnations or nasturtiums&mdash;and on the other a parapet over
+ which you lean to see the town scrambling up the hillside,
+ while a great breadth of valley and hill and snow-covered
+ mountain stretches away below.</p>
+
+ <p>Then what historical associations, straggling away across
+ three thousand years to when Perugia was one of the thirty
+ cities of Etruria, and kept her independence through every
+ vicissitude until Augustus starved her out in 40 B.C.! Portions
+ of the wall, huge smooth blocks of travertine stone, are the
+ work of the vanished Etruscans, and fragments of several
+ gateways, with Roman alterations. One is perfect, imbedded in
+ the outer wall of the castle: it has a round-headed arch, with
+ six pilasters, in the intervals of which are three half-length
+ human figures and two horses' heads. On the southern slope of
+ the hill, three miles beyond the walls, a number of Etruscan
+ tombs were accidentally discovered by a peasant a few years
+ ago. The outer entrance alone had suffered, buried under the
+ rubbish of two millenniums: the burial-place of the Volumnii
+ has been restored externally after ancient Etruscan models, but
+ within it has been left untouched. Descending a long flight of
+ stone steps, which led into the heart of the hill, we passed
+ through a low door formerly closed by a single slab of
+ travertine, too ponderous for modern hinges. At first we could
+ distinguish nothing in the darkness, but by the uncertain
+ flaring of two candles, which the guide waved about
+ incessantly, we saw a chamber hewn in the rock, with a roof in
+ imitation of beams and rafters, all of solid tufa stone. A low
+ stone seat against the wall on each hand and a small hanging
+ lamp were all the furniture of this apartment, awful in its
+ emptiness and mystery. On every side there were dark openings
+ into cells whence came gleams
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page34"
+ id="page34"></a>[pg 34]</span> of white, indefinite forms: a
+ great Gorgon's head gazed at us from the ceiling, and from
+ the walls in every direction started the crested heads and
+ necks of sculptured serpents. We entered one by one the nine
+ small grotto-like compartments which surround the central
+ cavern: the white shapes turned out to be cinerary urns,
+ enclosing the ashes of the three thousand years dead
+ Volumnii. Urns, as we understand the word, they are not, but
+ large caskets, some of them alabaster, on whose lids recline
+ male figures draped and garlanded as for a feast: the
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page35"
+ id="page35"></a>[pg 35]</span> faces differ so much in
+ feature and expression that one can hardly doubt their being
+ likenesses: the figures, if erect, would be nearly two feet
+ in height. The sides of these little sarcophagi are covered
+ with <i>bassi-rilievi</i>, many of them finely executed: the
+ subjects are combats and that favorite theme the boar-hunt
+ of Kalydon; there was one which represented the sacrifice of
+ a child. The Medusa's head, as it is thought to be, recurs
+ constantly, treated with extraordinary power: we were
+ divided among ourselves whether it was Medusa or an Erinnys
+ with winged head. The sphinx appears several times: there
+ are four on the corners of an alabaster urn in the shape of
+ a temple, exquisite in form and features, and exceedingly
+ delicate in workmanship. Bulls' heads, with garlands
+ drooping between them, a well-known ornament of antique
+ altars, are among the decorations. But far the most
+ beautiful objects were the little hanging figures, which
+ seemed to have been lamps of a green bronze color, though we
+ were assured that they are <i>terra-cotta</i>: they are male
+ figures of exquisite grace and beauty, with a lightness and
+ airiness commonly given to Mercury; but these had large
+ angel pinions on the shoulders, and none on the head or
+ feet. There was not a scholar in the party, so we all
+ returned unenlightened, but profoundly interested and
+ impressed, and with that delightful sense of stimulated
+ curiosity which is worth more than all Eurekas. With the
+ exception of a few weapons and trinkets, which we saw at the
+ museum, this is all that remains of the mighty Etruscans,
+ save the shapes of the common red pottery which is spread
+ out wholesale in the open space opposite the cathedral on
+ market-days&mdash;the most graceful and useful which could
+ be devised, and which have not changed their model since
+ earlier days than the occupants of those tombs could
+ remember.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:100%;">
+ <a href="images/034.png"
+ name="fig034"
+ id="fig034"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/034.png"
+ alt="THE TIBER NEAR PERUGIA." /></a>THE TIBER NEAR
+ PERUGIA.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The conquering Roman has left his sign-manual everywhere,
+ but one is so used to him in Italy that the scantier records of
+ later ages interest us more here. Like every other old Italian
+ town, Perugia had its great family, the Baglioni, who lorded it
+ over the place, sometimes harshly and cruelly enough, sometimes
+ generously and splendidly&mdash;protectors of popular rights
+ and patrons of art and letters. Their mediaeval history is full
+ of picturesque incident and dramatic catastrophe: it would make
+ a most romantic volume, but a thick one. At length the
+ Perugians, master and men, grew too turbulent, and Pope Paul
+ III. put them down, and sat upon them, so to speak, by building
+ the citadel.</p>
+
+ <p>But time would fail us to tell of the Baglioni, or Pope Paul
+ the Borghese, or Fortebraccio, the chivalric <i>condottiere</i>
+ who led the Perugians to war against their neighbors of Todi,
+ or even the still burning memories of the sack of Perugia by
+ command of the present pope. We can no longer turn our thoughts
+ from the treasures of art which make Perugia rich above all
+ cities of the Tiber, save Rome alone. We cannot tarry before
+ the cathedral, noble despite its incompleteness and the
+ unsightly alterations of later times, and full of fine
+ paintings and matchless wood-carving and wrought metal and
+ precious sculptures; nor before the Palazzo Communale, another
+ grand Gothic wreck, equally dignified and degraded; nor even
+ beside the great fountain erected six hundred years ago by
+ Nicolo and Giovanni da Pisa, the chiefs and founders of the
+ Tuscan school of sculpture; nor beneath the statue of Pope
+ Julius III., which Hawthorne has made known to all; for there
+ are a score of churches and palaces, each with its priceless
+ Perugino, and drawings and designs by his pupil Raphael in his
+ lovely "first manner," which has so much of the Eden-like
+ innocence of his master; and the Academy of Fine Arts, where
+ one may study the Umbrian school at leisure; and last, but not
+ least, the Sala del Cambio, or Hall of Exchange, where Perugino
+ may be seen in his glory. It is not a hall of imposing size, so
+ that nothing interferes with the impression of the frescoes
+ which gaze upon you from every side as you enter. Or no; they
+ do not gaze upon you nor return your glance, but look sweetly
+ and serenely forth, as if with eyes never bent
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page36"
+ id="page36"></a>[pg 36]</span> on earthly things. The
+ right-hand wall is dedicated to the sibyls and prophets, the
+ left to the greatest sages and heroes of antiquity. There is
+ something capricious or else enigmatical in the mode of
+ presenting many of them&mdash;the dress, attitude and
+ general appearance often suggest a very different person
+ from the one intended&mdash;but the grace and loveliness of
+ some, the dignity and elevation of others, the expression of
+ wisdom in this face, of celestial courage in that, the calm
+ and purity and beauty of all, give them an indescribable
+ charm and potency. At the end of the room facing the door
+ are the "Nativity" and "Transfiguration," the latter,
+ infinitely beautiful and religious, full of quiet
+ concentrated feeling. We were none of us critics: none of us
+ had got beyond the stage when the sentiment of a work of art
+ is what most affects our enjoyment of it; and we all
+ confessed how much more impressive to us was this
+ Transfiguration, with its three quiet spectators, than the
+ world-famous one at the Vatican. Although there are
+ masterpieces of Perugino's in nearly every great European
+ collection, I cannot but think one must go to Perugia to
+ appreciate fully the limpid clearness, the pensive, tranquil
+ suavity, which reigns throughout his pictures in the
+ countenances, the landscape, the atmosphere.</p>
+
+ <div class="figcenter"
+ style="width:80%;">
+ <a href="images/036.png"
+ name="fig036"
+ id="fig036"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/036.png"
+ alt="TODI." /></a>TODI.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>We found it hard to rob Perugia even of a day for a
+ pilgrimage to the tomb of Saint Francis at Assisi, yet could
+ not leave the neighborhood without making it. We took the
+ morning-train for the little excursion, meaning to drive back,
+ and crossed the Tiber for the first time on the downward
+ journey at Ponte San Giovanni. We got out at the station of
+ Santa Maria degli Angeli, so named from the immense church
+ built over the cell where Saint Francis lived and died and the
+ little chapel where he prayed. The Porzionuncula it was called,
+ or "little share," being all that he deemed needful for man's
+ abode on earth, and more than needful. It was hither that he
+ came in the heyday of youth, forsaking the house of his wealthy
+ father, the love of his mother, a life of pleasure with his gay
+ companions, and dedicated himself to poverty and preaching the
+ word of God. One of our party had said that she considered
+ Saint Francis the author of much evil, and as having done
+ irreparable harm to the Italian people in sanctifying dirt and
+ idleness. But apostles are not
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page37"
+ id="page37"></a>[pg 37]</span> to be judged by the abuse of
+ their doctrine; and although it cannot be denied that Saint
+ Francis encouraged beggary by forbidding his followers to
+ possess aught of their own, he enjoined that they should
+ labor with their hands for several hours daily. And to me it
+ seemed as if out of Palestine there could be no spot of
+ greater significance and sacredness to any Christian than
+ this, where in a sanguinary and licentious age a young man
+ suddenly broke all the bonds of self, and taught in his own
+ person humility, renunciation and brotherly love as they had
+ hardly been taught since his Master's death. The sternness
+ of his personal self-denial is only equaled by his sweetness
+ toward all living things: not men alone, but animals, birds,
+ fishes, the frogs, the crickets, shared his love, and were
+ called brother and sister by him. The great and
+ instantaneous movement which he produced in his own time was
+ no short-lived blaze of fanaticism, for its results have
+ lasted from the twelfth century to our own; and although we
+ may well believe that the day is past for serving Christ by
+ going barefoot and living on alms, the spirit of Saint
+ Francis's doctrine, charity, purity, self-abnegation, might
+ do as much for modern men as for those of six hundred years
+ ago. Believing all this, we were not sorry that our
+ uncompromising friend had stayed behind, and it was in a
+ reverent mood that we left the little stone
+ chamber&mdash;which shrinks to lowlier proportions by
+ contrast with the enormous dome above it&mdash;and turned to
+ climb the long hill which leads to the magnificent monument
+ which enthusiasm raised over him who in life had coveted so
+ humble a home.</p>
+
+ <div class="figright"
+ style="width:60%;">
+ <a href="images/037.png"
+ name="fig037"
+ id="fig037"><img width="100%"
+ src="images/037.png"
+ alt="CHURCH AND CONVENT OF SAINT FRANCIS, AT ASSISI." />
+ </a>CHURCH AND CONVENT OF SAINT FRANCIS, AT ASSISI.
+ </div>
+
+ <p>The cliff on which Assisi stands rises abruptly on the side
+ toward the Tiber: long lines of triple arches, which look as if
+ hewn in the living stone, stretch along its face, one above
+ another, like galleries, the great mass of the church and
+ convent, with its towers and gables and spire-like cypress
+ trees, crowning all. It is this marriage of the building to the
+ rock, these lower arcades which rise halfway between the valley
+ and the plateau seeking the help of the solid crag to sustain
+ the upper ones and the vast superimposed structure, that makes
+ the distant sight of Assisi so striking, and almost overwhelms
+ you with a sense of its greatness as the winding road brings
+ you close below on your way up to the town. It is a triple
+ church. The uppermost one, begun two years after the saint's
+ death, has a magnificent Gothic west front and high steps
+ leading from the piazza, and a rich side-portal with a still
+ higher flight leading from a court on a lower level. As we
+ entered, the early afternoon sun was streaming in through the
+ immense rose-window and flooding the vast nave, illumining the
+ blue star-studded vault of the lofty roof and the grand, simple
+ frescoes of Cimabue and Giotto on the walls. Thence we
+ descended to the second church, in whose darkness our vision
+ groped, half blind from the sudden change; but gradually
+ through the dusk we began to discern low vaults stretching
+ heavily across pillars which look like stunted giants, so short
+ are they and so tremendously thick-set, the high altar enclosed
+ by an elaborate grating, the little side-chapels like so many
+ black cells, and through the gloom a twinkle and glimmer of
+ gold and color and motes floating in furtive sunbeams that had
+ strayed in through the superb stained glass of the infrequent
+ windows. The <span class="pagenum"><a name="page38"
+ id="page38"></a>[pg 38]</span> frescoes of Giotto and his
+ school enrich every spandril and interspace with their
+ simple, serious forms&mdash;no other such place to study the
+ art of that early day&mdash;but a Virgin enthroned among
+ saints by Lo Spagna, a disciple of Perugino's, made a pure
+ light in the obscurity: it had all the master's golden
+ transparency, like clear shining after the rain. From this
+ most solemn and venerable place we went down to the lowest
+ church, the real sepulchre: it was darker than the one we
+ had left, totally dark it seemed to me, and contracted,
+ although&mdash;it is in the form of a Greek cross&mdash;each
+ arm is sixty feet: in fact, it is only a crypt of unusual
+ size; and although here were the saint's bones in an urn of
+ bronze, we were conscious of a weakening of the impression
+ made by the place we had just left. No doubt it is because
+ the crypt is of this century, while the other two churches
+ are of the thirteenth.</p>
+
+ <p>There are other things to be seen at Assisi; and after
+ dining at the little Albergo del Leone, which, like every part
+ of the town except the churches, is remarkably clean, my
+ companion set out to climb up to the castle, and I wandered
+ back to the great church. As I sat idly on the steps a monk
+ accosted me, and finding that I had not seen the convent,
+ carried me through labyrinthine corridors and galleries, down
+ long flights of subterranean stone steps, one after another,
+ until I thought we could not be far from the centre of the
+ earth, when he suddenly turned aside into a vast cloister with
+ high arched openings and led me to one of them. Oh, the beauty,
+ the glory, the wonder of the sight! We were halfway down the
+ mountain-side, hanging between the blue heaven and the billowy
+ Umbrian plain, with its verdure and its azure fusing into tints
+ of dreamy softness as they vanished in the deep violet shadows
+ of thick-crowding mountains, on whose surfaces and gorges lay
+ changing colors of the superbest intensity. Poplars and willows
+ showed silvery among the tender green of other deciduous trees
+ in their fresh spring foliage and the deep velvet of the
+ immortal cypresses and the blossoming shrubs, which looked like
+ little puffs of pink and white cloud resting on the bosom of
+ the valley. A small, clear mountain-stream wound round the
+ headland to join the Tiber, which divides the landscape with
+ its bare, pebbly bed. It was almost the same view that one has
+ from twenty places in Perugia, but coming out upon it as from
+ the bowels of the earth, framed in its huge stone arch, it was
+ like opening a window from this world into Paradise.</p>
+
+ <p>Slowly and lingeringly I left the cloister, and panted up
+ the many steps back to the piazza to await my companion and the
+ carriage which was to take us back to Perugia. The former was
+ already there, and in a few minutes a small omnibus came
+ clattering down the stony street, and stopping beside us the
+ driver informed us that he had come for us. Our surprise and
+ wrath broke forth. Hours before we had bespoken a little open
+ carriage, and it was this heavy, jarring, jolting vehicle which
+ they had sent to drive us ten miles across the hills. The
+ driver declared, with truly Italian volubility and command of
+ language and gesture, that there was no other means of
+ conveyance to be had; that it was excellent, swift, admirable;
+ that it was what the signori always went from Assisi to Perugia
+ in; that, in fine, we had engaged it, and <i>must</i> take it.
+ My companion hesitated, but I had the advantage here, being the
+ one who could speak Italian; so I promptly replied that we
+ would not go in the omnibus under any circumstances. The whole
+ story was then repeated with more adjectives and superlatives,
+ and gestures of a form and pathos to make the fortune of a
+ tragic actor. I repeated my refusal. He began a third time: I
+ sat down on the steps, rested my head on my hand and looked at
+ the carvings of the portal. This drove him to frenzy: so long
+ as you answer an Italian he gets the better of you; entrench
+ yourself in silence and he is impotent. The driver's impotence
+ first exploded in fury and threats: at least we should pay for
+ the omnibus, for his time, for his trouble; yes, pay the whole
+ way to Perugia and back, and his <i>buon' mano</i> besides. All
+ the beggars who haunt the
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page39"
+ id="page39"></a>[pg 39]</span> sanctuary of their patron had
+ gathered about us, and from playing Greek chorus now began
+ to give us advice: "Yes, we would do well to go: the only
+ carriage in Assisi, and excellent, admirable!" The numbers
+ of these vagrants, their officiousness, their fluency, were
+ bewildering. "But what are we to do?" asked my anxious
+ companion. "Why, if it comes to the worst, walk down to the
+ station and take the night-train back." He walked away
+ whistling, and I composed myself to a visage of stone and
+ turned my eyes to the sculptures once more. Suddenly the
+ driver stopped short: there was a minute's pause, and then I
+ heard a voice in the softest accents asking for something to
+ buy a drink. I turned round&mdash;beside me stood the driver
+ hat in hand: "Yes, the signora is right, quite right: I go,
+ but she will give me something to get a drink?" I nearly
+ laughed, but, biting my lips, I said firmly, "A drink? Yes,
+ if it be poison." The effect was astounding: the man uttered
+ an ejaculation, crossed himself, mounted his box and drove
+ off; the beggars shrank away, stood aloof and exchanged
+ awestruck whispers; only a few liquid-eyed little
+ ragamuffins continued to turn somersets and stand on their
+ heads undismayed.</p>
+
+ <p>Half an hour elapsed: the sun was beginning to descend, when
+ the sound of wheels was again heard, and a light wagon with
+ four places and a brisk little horse came rattling down the
+ street. A pleasant-looking fellow jumped down, took off his hat
+ and said he had come to drive us to Perugia. We jumped up
+ joyfully, but I asked the price. "Fifty francs"&mdash;a sum
+ about equivalent to fifty dollars in those regions. I smiled
+ and shook my head: he eagerly assured me that this included his
+ <i>buon mano</i> and the cost of the oxen which we should be
+ obliged to hire to drag us up some of the hills. I shook my
+ head again: he shrugged and turned as if to go. My unhappy
+ fellow-traveler started forward: "Give him whatever he asks and
+ let us get away." I sat down again on the steps, saying in
+ Italian, as if in soliloquy, that we should have to go by the
+ train, after all. Then the new-comer cheerfully came back:
+ "Well, signora, whatever you please to give." I named half his
+ price&mdash;an exorbitant sum, as I well knew&mdash;and in a
+ moment more we were skimming along over the hard, smooth
+ mountain-roads: we heard no more of those mythical beasts the
+ oxen, and in two hours were safe in Perugia.</p>
+
+ <h2>THE PARADOX.</h2>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>I wish that the day were over,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The week, the month and the year;</p>
+
+ <p>Yet life is not such a burden</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">That I wish the end were near.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>And my birthdays come so swiftly</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">That I meet them grudgingly:</p>
+
+ <p>Would it be so were I longing</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">For the life that is to be?</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Nay: the soul, though ever reaching</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">For that which is out of sight,</p>
+
+ <p>Yet soars with reluctant motion,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Since there is no backward flight.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="author">CHARLOTTE F.
+ BATES.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page40"
+ id="page40"></a>[pg 40]</span>
+
+ <h2>A NIGHT AT COCKHOOLET CASTLE.</h2>
+
+ <h3>I.</h3>
+
+ <p>Cockhoolet was the name of the place: it was a farm of which
+ the Ormistons were and had been tenants for several
+ generations. A father, mother and five olive-branches made up
+ the family. A healthy, happy, united, thriving family they
+ were, and as such much respected. There were two sons and three
+ daughters, the eldest of whom was Bessie, the "Rose of
+ Cockhoolet," as she was called; for that she had all the beauty
+ and sweetness of the rose was generally allowed, although there
+ were people who could not be made to see this&mdash;people who
+ were probably idiopts; not idiots&mdash;although they might
+ have a streak of idiocy in them, too, perhaps&mdash;but
+ idiopts, or persons who were color-blind. None of the young men
+ of the district were color-blind.</p>
+
+ <p>The clergyman of the parish in which Cockhoolet was
+ situated, and at whose church the Ormistons attended, was an
+ old man comparatively, whose sermons were old-fashioned, and
+ not given forth with the fire of youth: he was not one you
+ would have expected to be very popular, especially with the
+ young; yet various young men from considerable distances were
+ attracted to his church, and, generally speaking, they settled
+ themselves in pews opposite the gallery in front of which sat
+ Mr. Ormiston and his family. Any person who chanced to be in
+ the vicinity, if of discerning powers, might have been
+ conscious of the electricity in the air. Dull people neither
+ saw nor felt it.</p>
+
+ <p>Bessie Ormiston was not dull, but, being a modest girl, she
+ would rather not have been stared at; and, being a good girl,
+ she thought people might be better employed in church: still,
+ she was only a girl, and it would not be the truth to say she
+ was mortally offended. Did the person ever exist who was
+ offended at an honest compliment? If he ever did, he ought to
+ have been fed on sarcasm for the rest of his days.</p>
+
+ <p>Not only was Bessie pretty&mdash;she was also rich. A
+ grand-uncle had left her five thousand pounds, her brothers and
+ sisters getting only one thousand each. There is no use in
+ asking reasons for this: simply, the Rose was born with a
+ silver spoon in her mouth. Perhaps, indeed, the old man did not
+ know he had so much money, for it was as residuary legatee that
+ Bessie got the five thousand pounds, and it was not thought she
+ would get anything like that: people remarked, in the language
+ of the district, which was apt occasionally to be strong and
+ graphic rather than elegant,&mdash;people remarked that "old
+ Ormiston had cut up well." Five thousand charms added to those
+ Bessie already possessed&mdash;not to mention that her father
+ was a rich man&mdash;made her most miraculously charming: like
+ Tibby Fowler of the Glen, whose perplexities of this kind have
+ been embalmed in song, she had wealth of wooers, and wealth, it
+ is well known, makes wit waver.</p>
+
+ <p>It is a saying that an Englishman's house is his castle, but
+ the phrase is understood to be figurative: Mr. Ormiston's house
+ was his castle without a figure. Cockhoolet Castle is very old,
+ at least one part of it is, having been built probably about
+ the year 1400. A more modern part was built in 1527, while the
+ most modern part of all was added in 1726: this last division
+ of it is used as the farm-house. The rooms have been painted
+ and papered in the present style of house decoration, and in
+ the sitting-rooms, in addition to the little old windows, the
+ thick walls have been pierced and a large bow-window put in
+ with fine effect. There are three narrow stone staircases
+ leading up the three divisions of the castle; there are long
+ passages; there are sudden short flights of steps taking you up
+ or down into all manner <span class="pagenum"><a name="page41"
+ id="page41"></a>[pg 41]</span> of cornered rooms; there is a
+ hall which might hold the population of the county. Keeping
+ up one of the spiral staircases, you come out on the roof,
+ round which there is a walk guarded by a low stone coping:
+ should you want to fling yourself over, you have ample
+ opportunity. There are stone sentry-boxes where you can sit
+ hidden from the wind and everything else, and look far and
+ wide over the country, and down into the garden if you can
+ do so without growing giddy. There is also a dungeon
+ tenanted by nothing more subject to suffering than potatoes
+ and other roots, for which it is a most favorable
+ receptable, the walls being so thick and the roof so low
+ that cold cannot get in in winter nor heat in summer: there
+ is only a single narrow slit in the wall for the admission
+ of light, but it is comforting to know that the doomed
+ wretches who inhabited it in past ages had at least a
+ temperate climate.</p>
+
+ <p>There is the room Queen Mary Stuart slept in when she
+ occasionally visited in the vicinity. The reader is perhaps not
+ familiar with Queen Mary's name in connection with Cockhoolet
+ Castle, but there may be other facts about her of which he is
+ also ignorant. Does he know, for instance, that she had a
+ daughter by her third marriage, whom, as an infant, she
+ despatched to France to be reared in a nunnery, "that she may
+ not," said the unhappy queen, "run the risk of having such a
+ lot as I have"? Does he know that John Knox was possessed by a
+ mad passion of love for Mary Stuart? It has always been thought
+ otherwise&mdash;that in point of fact he held her in contempt;
+ but as it is proverbial that "nippin' and scartin' (figurative
+ of course) is Scotch folks' wooin'," there may be truth in the
+ new discovery. But true or not true, it is enough to make the
+ bold Reformer blush standing on the top of his pillar in the
+ necropolis of Glasgow: perhaps he <i>is</i> blushing, if he
+ were near enough to see.</p>
+
+ <p>Be that as it may, there is no manner of doubt that Mary
+ Stuart honored Cockhoolet Castle by abiding under its roof when
+ it suited her to do so. Have not I, the present writer, stood
+ in the room she slept in&mdash;looked from the small windows
+ set in the ten-foot thick wall from which she looked? Have I
+ not gazed over the same country, up to the same skies, into the
+ same moon at which she gazed? Could her face be more fair than
+ that of the present Rose of Cockhoolet, her thoughts more
+ innocent, her reveries more sweet, than those of Bessie
+ Ormiston, who in the course of time had succeeded to the room
+ which had been consecrated by royal slumbers?</p>
+
+ <p>It is a matter of certainty that Mary Stuart planted a tree
+ fast by Cockhoolet Castle&mdash;she would not have been herself
+ if she had not done that&mdash;and a magnificent tree it is,
+ very old and quite big enough for its age. The queen must have
+ been fond of planting trees, and, considering the number she
+ planted, it is astonishing how she found time for so many less
+ innocent employments: she must have improved each shining hour,
+ and, poor woman! she had not too many of these.</p>
+
+ <p>There is a walk also, called the Lady's Walk, leading away
+ from the castle up a bosky dell, where a burn amuses itself
+ playing at hide-and-seek, but, like a little child, betrays its
+ hiding-places by its voice, and comes out into the light again
+ and laughs at its own joke. Did the queen ever wander here? did
+ she ever "paidle in the burn when summer days were fine"? did
+ its murmur ever soothe her ear? did she ever see her fair face
+ in its pools, or drop bitter tears to mingle and; flow on with
+ its waters?</p>
+
+ <p>The burn has kept trotting through the dell for six thousand
+ years, singing its song all the time, and its speed is as good
+ and its voice as clear and musical as when the morning stars
+ sang together and all the sons of God shouted for joy. Many a
+ wild story it could tell if its murmur could be understood; but
+ it is a murmur only&mdash;a murmur which crept into the ears of
+ C&aelig;sar's legions, of Queen Mary, of Bessie Ormiston, and
+ will creep into yours, O reader! if you like to go and explore
+ the Lady's Walk, when you can interpret the murmur for
+ yourself, as all your predecessors no doubt did. In
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page42"
+ id="page42"></a>[pg 42]</span> days of old it fed the moat,
+ traces of which are to be seen round the castle still,
+ although it has long since been filled up and covered, like
+ the park of which it forms part, with rich natural pasture,
+ soft, thick and velvety. In short, Cockhoolet had everything
+ that a castle ought to have, and wanted nothing that a
+ castle ought not to want, not even a ghost.</p>
+
+ <p>It was not the ghost of Mary Stuart: that would have been
+ too shocking&mdash;a ghost without a head, or having a head and
+ a broad vivid ray of red encircling its neck. Such a ghost
+ would have made every one who saw it lose his senses.
+ Cockhoolet Castle had a ghost: so much was certain, but
+ hitherto no one had ever either seen or heard it. How, then,
+ was it certain? Why ask a question like that? Is it reasonable
+ to pin a human being down to prove a ghost? Will not
+ presumptive evidence do? Strange things had happened, must have
+ happened, at the castle: is it for a moment to be supposed that
+ these things had happened and all gone scot free?&mdash;in
+ other words, that not one of them had left a ghost? It is not
+ to be supposed.</p>
+
+ <h3>II.</h3>
+
+ <p>It was Christmas Day. Christmas Day is not solemnized and
+ festivalized in Scotland as it is in England; still, the
+ observance of it in some shape is creeping in more and more. It
+ was Christmas, and Mr. and Mrs. Ormiston had gone to be present
+ at a feast from which they were not expected to return till the
+ following day. There were left at home the Rose, as head of the
+ family for the time being; her sisters, Bell and Jessie,
+ supposed to be little girls still, although the supposition
+ made them very indignant; and her two brothers, John and
+ William. A guest aad two servants made up the known inhabitants
+ of the house.</p>
+
+ <p>The guest was a young man who had arrived before the heads
+ of the house left, and had been laughingly charged by them to
+ see that the children did not work mischief. He was an old
+ friend of the family; at least as old a friend as he was a man,
+ and she had been in the world a quarter of a century. We shall
+ call him Edwin: that name will do as well as another; indeed,
+ better, for he might not like his own made public. It need
+ hardly be said that among the rest young Edwin loved, and, like
+ his namesake in the ballad, he never talked of love. This might
+ be stupid, but the stupidity which springs from true modesty is
+ not to be classed with the stupidity which springs from want of
+ brains, even when, as is quite likely, the consequences are to
+ the full as disastrous. Now, how is a young lady to understand
+ or bring things to a bearing in a case like this? The Rose
+ could not go up to Edwin and tell him she was not a goddess;
+ neither could she say, "Although I have five thousand
+ pounds&mdash;and you know it, and I know that you know it, and
+ you know that I know that you know it&mdash;I am quite ready to
+ believe that you love me, and would love me if I hadn't a
+ farthing:" she could not say this, but she thought it, she
+ worried herself thinking over it, and, being a sensible girl
+ with a humble opinion of herself, she came to the conclusion
+ that she had been altogether mistaken&mdash;that Edwin did not
+ care for her, at least not as she cared for him, otherwise why
+ should he not say so? "If," she thought&mdash;"if I were in his
+ place and he in mine, neither money nor pride, nor anything
+ else, would keep me silent." And the roses in her face deepened
+ in color as she thought of her own silly folly in allowing her
+ feelings to be drawn in, and she determined her folly should
+ cease from that hour; which determination had the effect of
+ bringing sharp, short speeches about Edwin's ears tinged with
+ sarcasm that were meant to convey to him the conviction that
+ she did not care a pin about him; and they answered the purpose
+ admirably.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Love is a fickle game, which they</p>
+
+ <p>Whose stakes are deepest worst can play,</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Edwin was at Cockhoolet that Christmas Day by the same
+ fatality that causes a moth to hover round a brilliant light;
+ and when her sister told Bessie that Edwin had come and was
+ putting his horse into the stable, she said, "Is Mr. Forrester
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page43"
+ id="page43"></a>[pg 43]</span> here again? He must surely be
+ dull at home." But of course she received him with friendly
+ civility.</p>
+
+ <p>Edwin employed the forenoon out of doors with the boys and
+ two other visitors. A Mr. and Mrs. Parker arriving
+ unexpectedly, who were anxious to see the castle, the afternoon
+ was spent in going through every part of it from dungeon to
+ roof.</p>
+
+ <p>Bessie carried the keys: she was ch&acirc;telaine, seneschal
+ and cicerone, all rolled in one.</p>
+
+ <p>Going up the narrow stairs, the party had to climb Indian
+ file: in the passages they could spread out a little, and in
+ some of the rooms in the uninhabited portion they had to walk
+ circumspectly, as if they were crossing water on
+ stepping-stones, for the flooring was wanting in some places,
+ leaving a stretch of bare rafters. Bessie tripped lightly over
+ them, and then turned to wait for the others. "Don't be
+ frightened," she said: "these rafters are as sound as the day
+ they were laid down. The flooring has not rotted: it must have
+ been taken up for some purpose. They did not know how to scamp
+ work in those days."</p>
+
+ <p>"If we fall through, where shall we go?" inquired Mrs.
+ Parker, looking down into what seemed deep mysterious
+ darkness.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, not very far; but don't fall: it won't be pleasant,"
+ said Bessie: "you would alight on very hard stones."</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Forrester got on the roof first, and handed up the
+ ladies; and they all stood looking out over the country. It was
+ not a cold, bleak, snowy day, as Christmas in northern
+ latitudes has a right to be. The winter had been mild&mdash;one
+ of a series of mild winters, overturning the old traditions of
+ frosts and snow-storms that lasted for months, and to a great
+ extent stopped traffic and labor, and made traveling difficult
+ and wearisome. This Christmas was different. The year was dying
+ with calmness and dignity, and with a smile on its face, as you
+ might take the pale gleam of sunshine to be; and if you were a
+ little sad in mood you could suppose there was a wistfulness in
+ the smile that was spread over the still, soft face of Nature.
+ Cockhoolet stood high, and the country immediately round it was
+ flat, and much of it moorland.</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>If you climb to our castle's top,</p>
+
+ <p>I don't see where your eye can stop;</p>
+
+ <p>For when you've passed the corn-field country,</p>
+
+ <p>Where vineyards leave off flocks are packed,</p>
+
+ <p>And sheep-range leads to cattle-tract,</p>
+
+ <p>And cattle-tract to open chase,</p>
+
+ <p>And open chase to the very base</p>
+
+ <p>O' the mountain.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>Strike out the vineyards and that description will apply
+ very well to Cockhoolet; and in addition you ought to have seen
+ from its roof Edinburgh and the sea; but on this day the sea
+ wore a garment of mist, and had wrapped the metropolis in it
+ also, as it not unfrequently does. You ought to have seen more
+ than one range of hills too, yet except by eyes well acquainted
+ with them their outlines could hardly be distinguished from the
+ leaden gray clouds lying in bands along the horizon.</p>
+
+ <p>But as the party stood on the roof the clouds began to rise,
+ tower upon tower, against the sky, and the sun, who retires
+ early at this season, went behind them, when, instead of the
+ pale, wistful gleam he had been keeping up all day, he suddenly
+ threw a deep bright golden border on all the edges of the dark
+ misty battlements which had piled themselves like castles of
+ the Titans: a big rift appearing at their base, there poured
+ through it, filling up the space, a great belt of crimson rays
+ streaked with gray, as if from burning ashes falling into it,
+ and like the dense glow from a furnace, giving the idea that
+ the cloud-building was on fire, and that the flames from below,
+ shooting up inside the dark walls, were the cause of the
+ brilliant illumination that shone round every pinnacle and
+ coign of vantage. It was a grand and a curious sight. You could
+ fancy the sun looking across to the old Castle of Edinburgh
+ standing on its rock, and saying, "Can you do anything like
+ this with all the gas and paddelle you can lay your hands on?"
+ Precisely this idea struck Mrs. Parker, for she said, "I think
+ that is as good a sight as the castle the night the prince was
+ married."</p>
+
+ <p>"That was a very good sight in its way," said Mr. Parker,
+ "but we can <span class="pagenum"><a name="page44"
+ id="page44"></a>[pg 44]</span> hardly hope to compete with
+ the sun, my dear: he has all his materials within himself,
+ and we have to pay for them."</p>
+
+ <p>"Do you know, Miss Ormiston," said Mrs. Parker, "one of the
+ buildings they said had such a fine effect put me in mind of a
+ trunk studded with brass nails&mdash;the initials of the happy
+ pair in gas-jets looked like the name of the owner of the
+ trunk. All the time I was on the street I could not get that
+ notion out of my head; and I was sorry, for I am sure it cost a
+ great deal of money to light it up, and I really wished to
+ think it grand."</p>
+
+ <p>"We were all in town that night," said John
+ Ormiston&mdash;"papa and mamma, and the whole of us, and Mr.
+ Forrester, who made eight."</p>
+
+ <p>"I thought it a beautiful sight," said Bessie.</p>
+
+ <p>"I never enjoyed anything more in my life," said Mr.
+ Forrester, who on that occasion had been Miss Ormiston's escort
+ through the streets, in which they lost their party, and had
+ the supreme bliss of wandering together in the crowd, when Mr.
+ Forrester almost forgot that Miss Ormiston was a goddess with
+ five thousand earthly charms, and Miss Ormiston had compared
+ his merits as a guide and protector with those of her brothers,
+ and found he was much more considerate, and made her wish law,
+ which they were often far from doing. In point of fact, a thaw
+ had been very imminent, but, alas! since then a sharp frost had
+ set in between them, as unaccountably as frosts frequently do
+ set in.</p>
+
+ <p>"I think, now," said Mrs. Parker, "a fine old castle like
+ this ought to have had a grander name: don't you think so, Miss
+ Ormiston?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, I do, and it had, originally. There was a monastery
+ here at one time, over in that field with the trees in the
+ corner of it: it was called the abbey of Cakeholy, and when the
+ castle was built it got the name of Cakeholy Castle, after the
+ abbey. The name Cakeholy, tradition says, arose from the fact
+ that an extraordinary saint, whose wants had been relieved at
+ the monastery, blessed all the bread that should ever be baked
+ there, and the bread ever after had a great sustaining power in
+ it; so that pilgrims from Edinburgh and the North, going to the
+ southern shrines, all passed this way to get themselves
+ supplied with the holy cakes. At the Reformation the abbey was
+ destroyed, and became a ruin haunted by owls, so that, partly
+ in derision and partly as suiting the altered circumstances,
+ the common people corrupted the name into Cockhoolet; and in
+ process of time it was given to the castle also, and stuck to
+ it. That is the history of a name which is certainly neither
+ romantic, nor high-sounding."</p>
+
+ <p>"How interesting!" said Mrs. Parker. "If I were you, I would
+ go back to the old name: there is a reverence about it there is
+ not about the other. Only think of bands of pilgrims coming
+ across the moor there!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, in their gowns and rope girdles, with wallets and
+ scallop-shells," said Bessie. "It must have been a curious old
+ world then: one could sit here and muse by the hour on all that
+ has come and gone. I often bring up my work or my book here in
+ summer and think of it."</p>
+
+ <p>"I do like old things," said Mrs. Parker, "and old families
+ and old names. Our name, for instance, has no smack of age
+ about it, and it is so short and perky: it must have been given
+ to some one who had to do with parks."</p>
+
+ <p>"But parks may be a very old institution," said Bessie, "if
+ we looked into the thing, though not so old as Forrester: that
+ is an ancient name," glancing at Edwin, who was leaning against
+ a sentry-box listening and watching the sun putting out the
+ lights in his bed-chamber; "yet not nearly so ancient as
+ Ormiston. I always feel it is fitting we should live in an old
+ castle, we are so ancient ourselves."</p>
+
+ <p>"Are we?" said John: "I never knew that before."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ormiston," she said, "is perhaps as pure a Saxon word as
+ now exists. It was during the Roman invasion our ancestor led
+ an army through a dense mist against the invaders: just as he
+ came up with them the sun shone out and the mist. The legions
+ were taken by surprise, for the advancing enemy had
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page45"
+ id="page45"></a>[pg 45]</span> been hidden by the mist, and
+ they were utterly routed. The Saxon king&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"What was his name?" asked John.</p>
+
+ <p>"John," she said, "don't seek to be wise above what is
+ revealed. The king called our ancestor to the front and made
+ him earl of Ormiston on the spot&mdash;'Gold-Mist-on;' that is,
+ 'Be ever in the van;' and a proud race were the earls of
+ Ormiston, and well they answered to the name. But their
+ fortunes waned when the modern upstart, the Norman William,
+ laid his greedy hands on everything for himself and his mob of
+ pirates, and at present we are only middle-class people, but
+ our blood must be the bluest of the blue."</p>
+
+ <p>"Mine must be as blue," said Edwin, "for the Forresters came
+ in with the trees, and the trees were early settlers."</p>
+
+ <p>"But the mists were first by a very long time," answered
+ Bessie.</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't believe that story," said John. "I have read about
+ the Cakeholy business somewhere, but you have made that
+ Or-Mist-on affair out of your own head: isn't that true,
+ Bessie?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I am not bound to answer unbelievers, John."</p>
+
+ <p>"Besides," said John, "Ormiston is far; liker French than
+ Saxon."</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Parker," said Bessie, "there was an abbot John of
+ Cakeholy who flourished in the thirteenth century: his ghost is
+ said to revisit its old habitation, or rather the place where
+ it stood. I should like to meet it and have a talk over things;
+ it would be very interesting."</p>
+
+ <p>"Would you not be terrified?" asked Mrs. Parker.</p>
+
+ <p>"If I saw what I believed to be a ghost, I should die of
+ terror," said Bessie; "especially if I was alone and it was the
+ dead of night; but I have no faith whatever in ghosts."</p>
+
+ <p>"It is getting rather chilly," said Mrs. Parker.</p>
+
+ <p>"Perhaps we had better go down now, then," Miss Ormiston
+ said. "Mr. Forrester, would you come out of your brown study
+ and let us pass?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Certainly. I'll see you all safe off the battlements. I
+ wasn't in a brown study: I was in a mist."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then take care: people in a mist always think they are
+ going the right way when they are going directly wrong."</p>
+
+ <p>"If I only knew the right way!" he said.</p>
+
+ <p>"That's true, Mr. Forrester," said Mrs. Parker. "If we only
+ knew the right way; and people tell you to be guided by
+ Providence, but I say I never know when it is Providence and
+ when it is myself;" and she threaded her way down the narrow
+ stairs, followed by the rest of the party.</p>
+
+ <h3>III.</h3>
+
+ <p>The dining-room, with its low roof, its crimson walls, dark
+ furniture and handsome fire (the fires at Cockhoolet were
+ always handsome: Bessie was the architect and superintended the
+ building herself; they never looked harum-scarum nor
+ meaningless nor thoughtless, nor as if they were not meant to
+ burn; they combined taste, comfort, and, as a consequence,
+ economy; everything tasteful and comfortable is in the long run
+ economical), its table-cloth, glistening like the summit of the
+ Alps and laden with good things, looked a place where people
+ even not in love with each other might, unless naturally
+ perverse, be very happy.</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Parker, being from town, was in raptures with every
+ country eatable, especially the scones, which she found were
+ manufactured by Miss Ormiston herself.</p>
+
+ <p>"And have they," asked Mr. Parker, "the sustaining power
+ that the cakes made here of old had?"</p>
+
+ <p>"If you eat enough of them you may get to Edinburgh to-night
+ before you are very hungry," said John.</p>
+
+ <p>"The abbey cakes were unleavened," Bessie explained, "which
+ these are not, so that they are less substantial fare."</p>
+
+ <p>"What do you raise them with?" asked Mrs. Parker.</p>
+
+ <p>"Butter, milk and carbonate of soda," said Miss
+ Ormiston.</p>
+
+ <p>"We call Bessie a doctor of the Carbon," said John: "she
+ makes very good scones, although you would hardly go from here
+ to Canterbury on the strength of one of
+ them."</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page46"
+ id="page46"></a>[pg 46]</span>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Forrester, are you dull?" asked Jessie: "you are not
+ saying anything."</p>
+
+ <p>"I am too busy eating the holy cakes, Jessie," said Edwin:
+ "your sister is a master in her art."</p>
+
+ <p>"I say," Jessie went on, "are you ever dull at home? When I
+ told Bessie that you had come she was surprised, and said that
+ you must surely be dull at home. I am sorry for you if you are:
+ you should come here oftener&mdash;we are never dull here."</p>
+
+ <p>"Perhaps," said Edwin, "your sister thinks I come too often,
+ as it is."</p>
+
+ <p>Bessie was so deeply engaged pressing Mr. Parker to eat
+ strawberry jam, with cheeks the color of the fruit, that of
+ course she could not have heard what her sister had been
+ saying.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh no, I don't think she thinks that at all," Jessie said:
+ "we never think any one can come too often. Bessie, can Mr.
+ Forrester come too often?"</p>
+
+ <p>But still Miss Ormiston was so occupied with Mr. Parker that
+ she did not hear.</p>
+
+ <p>And Mrs. Parker said, "It is a most intensely interesting
+ old place, this: do not people come to look at it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh yes," replied Bessie, "especially in summer: we
+ generally have several parties every week. One of the servants
+ takes them over the castle&mdash;grand people often, with
+ carriages and livery servants."</p>
+
+ <p>"Do you not keep a book for them to write their names
+ in?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No, we have never done that."</p>
+
+ <p>"I would do it if I were you: it would be interesting to
+ know who comes and how many. Why, very remarkable people may
+ have been here without your knowing."</p>
+
+ <p>"I doubt we are not sufficiently alive to our privileges,"
+ Bessie said.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's fine moonlight," said the boys, who, seeing that they
+ and every one had ceased eating, were impatient to be out
+ again. "Come, Mr. Parker, we'll show you the echo: Mr.
+ Forrester, come."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll go too," said Mrs. Parker; and they all went but the
+ Rose, who stayed behind for a little to direct about household
+ matters.</p>
+
+ <p>The echo was a favorite with the boys, it gave such
+ unlimited scope to their powers of shouting: it was the
+ <i>sight</i> they most enjoyed exhibiting to strangers. And it
+ was an echo that could repeat every word of a sentence with
+ such perfection that it was difficult to believe that it was
+ not a human being shouting back from the other side of the
+ park, where stood some houses inhabited by the farm-servants
+ and their families.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hallo, Abbot John! is that you?" shouted one of the boys,
+ and the other cried, "Yes, I'm taking a walk," so quickly that
+ the one sentence seemed the answer to the other, and both came
+ back loud and distinct on the still night-air.</p>
+
+ <p>"Are the Ormistons ancient? It's all fudge," shouted
+ John.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well," said Mr. Parker, "that's the most perfect echo I
+ ever heard. I've no doubt the holy fathers of the Middle Ages
+ knew of it, and used it in some shape to keep the superstitious
+ people in awe."</p>
+
+ <p>"It is awesome," said his wife, "here in the moonlight, with
+ the old castle so near: if I were alone, positively I should
+ feel eerie."</p>
+
+ <p>"Are you dull at home, Mr. Forrester?" was sent out from the
+ depths of Will's chest, and sent back again just as Bessie came
+ out and joined the party.</p>
+
+ <p>"Boys! boys!" she said, "don't be foolish."</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, it was what you said yourself," her sister
+ remarked.</p>
+
+ <p>"<i>Are</i> you ever dull?" the lad shouted again.</p>
+
+ <p>"Often," answered Edwin, and "Often" came back
+ instantly.</p>
+
+ <p>"In that case, Mr. Forrester," said Mrs. Parker, "why don't
+ you get a wife? There's no company for a young man like a good
+ wife. Here's Miss Ormiston; I don't think you could do
+ better."</p>
+
+ <p>Think of the delicate wound of these young people being thus
+ openly probed in broad moonlight in the presence of so many
+ people! What could Mrs. Parker be thinking of? Not of her own
+ love-passages surely, or, if she was, they must have been of a
+ blunter order than those of the Rose and her lover.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh no," said Bessie in cool, indifferent
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page47"
+ id="page47"></a>[pg 47]</span> tones: "Mr. Forrester knows
+ better than that."</p>
+
+ <p>"There!" said Edwin, "you see, Mrs. Parker, I have been
+ refused."</p>
+
+ <p>"'Faint heart never won fair lady,'" said Mrs. Parker.</p>
+
+ <p>The boys hallooed this sentiment to the echo, and the echo
+ took it up and sent it back so vigorously that even a timid man
+ might have been inspired. "Mary Stuart," "Henry Darnley,"
+ "James Bothwell," the lads went on calling to the echo
+ alternately&mdash;names which are not mere echoes even after
+ three hundred years, but live on by sheer force of tragic
+ romance. And it was possible that here, on this very spot, that
+ historical trio had stood and laughed and talked and amused
+ themselves as the young Ormistons and their visitors were
+ doing. What words had they used to rouse the echo? If only it
+ could be made to give them back now, what a wonderful echo it
+ would be! The world would come to listen to it. Would it tell
+ of the passions of love and ambition, grief and hatred, all
+ hurrying their victims to their doom? or was the place sacred
+ only to gentler memories and softer moods&mdash;the scene of
+ enjoyment and freedom from care for however short a time? Who
+ can tell?</p>
+
+ <p>There was a woman in the village of Cockhoolet who was
+ ninety-eight years old, having all her faculties not perhaps
+ quite so fresh as when she was nineteen, but in wonderful
+ preservation after having been in daily use for little short of
+ a century. She was one of a long-lived race: her father had
+ been eighty-nine when he died, and her grandfather ninety-nine.
+ Now, it is perfectly possible&mdash;and, as the family had been
+ on the spot for centuries, it is even probable&mdash;that her
+ great-grandfather might have dug the hole in which Mary planted
+ her tree, or he may have saddled the queen's horse when she
+ went hunting, or stood by the roadside and lifted his bonnet as
+ she and her gay train swept by. Or he may have been despatched
+ upon royal errands through the subterranean passage which is
+ said to exist all the way between Cockhoolet Castle and
+ Edinburgh&mdash;the private telegraph of those days, when wires
+ in the air or under the sea by which to send messages would
+ have cost the inventors their lives as guilty of witchcraft.
+ While shaking hands with this old woman and speaking to her,
+ you lost sight of her and the present time and felt the air of
+ the sixteenth century blow in your face. Mary came up before
+ you in moving habit as she lived&mdash;the young Mary who
+ caught all hearts, not heartless herself, and laid hold of mere
+ straws to save herself as she drifted desperately with
+ circumstances; not the woman who has been painted as an actor
+ from first to last, as coming forth draped for effect at the
+ very closing scene,&mdash;not that woman, but the girlish queen
+ who laughed and called to the echo, and forgot the cares of a
+ kingdom while she could.</p>
+
+ <h3>IV.</h3>
+
+ <p>"They are a nice family, those Ormistons," said Mr. Parker
+ to his wife as they drove to the railway-station in the
+ moonlight.</p>
+
+ <p>"Very," said Mrs. Parker; "and Mr. Forrester is a nice lad.
+ I hope he and Miss Ormiston will make it out: I did my best for
+ them."</p>
+
+ <p>"They'll be quite able to do the best for themselves: it is
+ always better to let things of that kind alone."</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't know that," said Mrs. Parker: "if a little shove is
+ all that is needed, it is a pity not to give it."</p>
+
+ <p>"But what if your shove sends people separate? That's not
+ what you intended, I fancy?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No fear: people are not so easily separated as all
+ that."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, we have had an uncommonly pleasant visit: I only wish
+ the heads of the house had been at home."</p>
+
+ <p>Either the attachment of this pair must have been pretty
+ evident to ordinary capacities, or Mrs. Parker must have been
+ of a matchmaking turn of mind; probably the latter, for Bessie
+ at least was sure that no mortal guessed her secret; which was
+ a great comfort to her, seeing that Edwin was so indifferent.
+ Alas! there is no rose without a thorn, or if there is it is a
+ scentless, useless thing,
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page48"
+ id="page48"></a>[pg 48]</span> most likely incapable of
+ giving either pleasure or pain.</p>
+
+ <p>The Parkers had left early. When the young people went
+ in-doors again it was only seven o'clock: the girls proposed a
+ game at hide-and-seek, and Bessie seconded the proposal; for
+ you see it would have been rather a formidable business to sit
+ down and entertain Mr. Forrester all the evening with
+ conversation, rational or otherwise; and although at the moment
+ she was in the dignified position of lady of the castle, she
+ could not the less enjoy a game amazingly.</p>
+
+ <p>The theatre of operations was wisely restricted, because if
+ they had gone all over the castle they might have hidden
+ themselves so that the game would have been endless; therefore
+ they kept to the under part of the inhabited region. At length,
+ tiring of this, they changed their game to blindman's buff, and
+ went to the kitchen to play it, there being more room and fewer
+ obstacles there; besides that, it was empty of tenants at the
+ time, the servants having gone to see some of the
+ neighbors.</p>
+
+ <p>It was a curious old kitchen, with a very low roof, and
+ having a fireplace in a big semicircular stone recess. Many a
+ boar's head had revolved there, and many a venison pasty had
+ sent forth its fragrance to greet the tired hunters returning
+ from the chase. The fire glowed in its deep recess like the eye
+ of an old-world monster in a cavern, till one of the boys
+ seized the poker and made it flame up, throwing its blaze out
+ as far as it could for its walls, and making the kitchen and
+ the group standing in it like a picture by Rembrandt.</p>
+
+ <p>"Who's to be blind man first?" cried the girls.</p>
+
+ <p>"Edwin: that will be the best fun," the boys said.</p>
+
+ <p>"Very well, I sha'n't be long blind," said Edwin: "I shall
+ soon catch some of you. Who'll tie the handkerchief?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Bessie: she always ties it. Go and kneel to her, and she'll
+ tie it so that you won't see."</p>
+
+ <p>What must Mr. Forrester have felt while being blinded by the
+ Rose? Only, he had long been accustomed to be if not blinded,
+ at least dazed, by her. The boys led him into the middle of the
+ floor and dispersed themselves into corners. While he stood in
+ the attitude of listening intently, he was conscious of a very
+ gentle movement near him, and instantly closed his arms round
+ it, as he thought, and encountered empty air, while with a
+ shout of laughter the children cried, "Bessie was too quick for
+ you. There, quick! quick! Edwin!" He sprang to the corner the
+ voices came from, and the boys rushed along the wall to avoid
+ his arms spread out to catch them, when suddenly the doorbell
+ rang.</p>
+
+ <p>At the sound Edwin put up his hand to take off the
+ handkerchief, but the boys cried, "Don't take it off: if it's
+ any one, Bessie can speak to them in the dining-room: we don't
+ need to stop our game."</p>
+
+ <p>They were not aware that to Mr. Forrester the game without
+ Bessie was like <i>Hamlet</i> with the part of Hamlet left
+ out.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes," said Bessie, "just go on, and I'll see who is at the
+ door." As she left the kitchen she honored Mr. Forrester with a
+ good long look: people can feel so much at ease looking at a
+ blind person.</p>
+
+ <p>The door was chained for greater security, and Bessie did
+ not take off the chain: she merely opened the door as far as it
+ would open, but seeing no one, she opened it fully and went out
+ on the steps; still she saw no person, although she thought
+ whoever rang the bell had not had time to get out of sight.
+ Waiting a little without result, she went back to the
+ kitchen.</p>
+
+ <p>"Who was it?" cried the children.</p>
+
+ <p>"No one," she said.</p>
+
+ <p>"But the bell rang," said John.</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course it did," Will corroborated.</p>
+
+ <p>"And somebody must have rung it," John said.</p>
+
+ <p>"Some one for a trick, I suppose," Bessie said, "although I
+ don't know how he disappeared so fast."</p>
+
+ <p>Without further remark the game was resumed. Edwin had
+ caught John, and John had caught Bessie, and when he was
+ putting the handkerchief round her eyes Mr. Forrester said,
+ "You are making <span class="pagenum"><a name="page49"
+ id="page49"></a>[pg 49]</span> it far too tight, John: you
+ are hurting your sister."</p>
+
+ <p>"No fear," said John: "none of us have soft heads here. Is
+ it too tight, Bessie?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Rather, but I can bear it: go on."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll slacken it first," Edwin said.</p>
+
+ <p>"Thank you, that will do. Now move off or I'll catch you."
+ She went very vigorously to work, and sent them all flying
+ round the kitchen, when the bell rang, and rang loudly,
+ again.</p>
+
+ <p>John darted to the door and flung it wide, sure that he
+ would see the person who rang it, whether running away or not;
+ but there was no one, and the whole party followed him out, and
+ they surveyed round and round, but all was still and quiet and
+ vacant, the moonlight making it impossible that any figure
+ should be there without being seen.</p>
+
+ <p>Now, if you lived in an ordinary house in an ordinary street
+ in an ordinary town, an incident like this would create no
+ surprise. It happens often: true, it is not a very new or
+ bright joke, still it is a joke that boys and girls enjoy, and
+ will continue to enjoy. But away in the country, at an old
+ castle, with no house within a quarter of a mile of it, the
+ case is very different. How was it to be accounted for?</p>
+
+ <p>The Ormistons came in, the girls looking scared, and the
+ boys laughing and saying that Mary Stuart or Darnley or
+ Bothwell, whose names they had made so free with shouting to
+ the echo, must have heard themselves called and were ringing
+ the bell, although not allowed to show themselves; but even as
+ they said it the boys would fain have whistled to keep their
+ courage up.</p>
+
+ <p>"I wish papa and mamma had been at home," said Bell.</p>
+
+ <p>"Or if only the Parkers could have been persuaded to stay
+ all night," suggested Jessie.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nonsense!" Bessie said. "Some one is playing us a trick,
+ but we don't need to let it spoil our game;" and she put the
+ handkerchief over her eyes. "Look here, Edwin: will you tie
+ this? You do it better than John."</p>
+
+ <p>"He doesn't," said John. "I believe he leaves it so that you
+ can see. I'll do it. No, I won't make it too tight."</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't you think, Jessie," Edwin asked, "that I could
+ protect you, in case of danger, as well as the Parkers?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't know. Perhaps if you were like yourself, but you're
+ not like yourself."</p>
+
+ <p>"He's as dull as ditch-water," said John.</p>
+
+ <p>"But," said Jessie, taking his hand with a feeling of
+ security, "you're better than nothing&mdash;a great deal better
+ than nothing."</p>
+
+ <p>"Thank you, Jessie, thank you! A man is the better for a
+ little encouragement, you know;" and he looked at the Rose, but
+ she was blind; which made her easier looked at, to be sure, but
+ there was less chance of an answer, encouraging or
+ otherwise.</p>
+
+ <p>They had got up the spirit of the game again, and were going
+ on briskly, when they were all brought to a stand by the bell
+ ringing for the third time.</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't stop," cried Bessie: "go on with the game and take no
+ notice unless it rings again;" and as a leader who must show no
+ fear she chased her sisters round the kitchen, making them flee
+ to avoid being caught, when, as if in answer to her remark, the
+ bell did ring again.</p>
+
+ <p>This was too much. They all ran to the door, but neither
+ human being nor ghost was to be seen.</p>
+
+ <p>"I say," said John to his brother, "you and I will go out
+ and watch. Edwin, you'll stay with the girls&mdash;they are
+ frightened&mdash;and if the bell rings again we'll see who does
+ it."</p>
+
+ <p>"You have more need of Edwin than we have, John," Bessie
+ said: "it will take you all to catch a ghost."</p>
+
+ <p>"Come away, then," cried John; and he posted his sentinels
+ at different angles, where each could have his eye on the door.
+ The girls shut themselves in the house, and outside and in they
+ awaited the result.</p>
+
+ <p>There was no result.</p>
+
+ <p>Ordinary sentinels can pace to and fro to make the moments
+ go more quickly, but Edwin and John and William were compelled
+ to stand without speech or
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page50"
+ id="page50"></a>[pg 50]</span> motion, as to betray their
+ presence would have been to defeat their purpose. At the end
+ of half an hour their patience was worn out, and they came
+ to the conclusion that whoever was playing the trick knew
+ that they were watching; so they went in, and hardly were
+ they in and the door shut when the bell rang again.</p>
+
+ <p>John rushed from the kitchen, whither he had gone for
+ something, but the others, being in the dining-room and nearer
+ the door, reached it before him; and again nothing was to be
+ seen but the still calm night, in which hung the moon with all
+ her accustomed unimpassioned serenity. What cared she for
+ ghosts? Perhaps she is only a ghost herself, else why, with all
+ her pale quiet ways, does she never turn round and show herself
+ thoroughly? No doubt she has reasons of her own, whether they
+ are good or not: her sex is apt to be both capricious and
+ persistent&mdash;two qualities which she possesses in
+ perfection.</p>
+
+ <p>The Ormistons and Edwin stood out on the broad walk before
+ the door, none of them feeling very comfortable, if the truth
+ must be told, but none of them showing their feelings except
+ Bell and Jessie, who openly declared that they were very much
+ frightened.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nonsense!" said Bessie. "Who is going to be frightened at a
+ silly trick?"</p>
+
+ <p>"But it may be somebody wanting to get in to do us
+ harm&mdash;kill us perhaps," suggested Bell.</p>
+
+ <p>"People who want to get into a house for bad ends don't ring
+ the front doorbell, or any bell," said Bessie.</p>
+
+ <p>At this junction two figures appeared in the distance
+ advancing along the road to the castle&mdash;soon made out to
+ be the servants, so that they at least were guiltless in the
+ affair.</p>
+
+ <p>"It has not been them, you see," cried John.</p>
+
+ <p>"No," Bessie said, "and you are not to say anything about it
+ to them when they come: if they know anything of it, it will
+ soon leak out; and if they don't tell, they will be quite
+ frightened: they are as easily frightened as Bell or Jessie
+ here."</p>
+
+ <h3>V.</h3>
+
+ <p>All this time Mr. Forrester was feeling&mdash;not frightened
+ certainly, but&mdash;perplexed; and while he could not but
+ admire Miss Ormiston's coolness and courage, he could not help
+ wishing that she had been just a little bit chicken-hearted: it
+ would have been so delightful to have to act as protector and
+ supporter. But there was no opening whatever for such a
+ position: she took the mysterious affair into her own hands and
+ pooh-poohed it entirely.</p>
+
+ <p>They were accustomed to early hours at Cockhoolet, but when
+ the time came for going to bed the girls declared they were too
+ frightened to go up stairs alone. "It would be far better,"
+ they both said, "for us to stay here all together in this room
+ till morning: we could sit up quite well."</p>
+
+ <p>"Absurd!" said Bessie.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, we could not sleep even if we were in bed," they
+ protested.</p>
+
+ <p>"No fear," said the ch&acirc;telaine. "If you were to sit up
+ all night you would be like ghosts yourselves to-morrow
+ morning. Come, I'll go with you and sit beside you till you
+ sleep. But wait a minute till I come back."</p>
+
+ <p>When they were bidding Mr. Forrester good-night he said to
+ the girls, "If anything happens let me know."</p>
+
+ <p>"Nothing will happen," said Bessie: "the bell is quiet now
+ and the servants are sound asleep. I have just been looking at
+ them, and the sooner we follow their example the better."</p>
+
+ <p>"What are we to do if we hear the bell ring again?" John
+ asked.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nothing. Keep below the blankets, John," his sister said.
+ "It will ring a loud peal indeed if you hear it: I think a
+ cannon might be fired at your ear without disturbing you."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's a mistake," said John, "I am a remarkably light
+ sleeper: a fly on my nose will make me turn round any
+ time."</p>
+
+ <p>"I believe that, but it won't waken you. Good-night;" and
+ she took a hand of each of her sisters and went off with all
+ the dignity beseeming her position as head of the family and
+ governor of the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page51"
+ id="page51"></a>[pg 51]</span> castle. Her presence being
+ withdrawn, Edwin felt much as you do on a March day when the
+ sun goes under a cloud, although he had not enjoyed the sun
+ either, owing to the undercurrent of east wind that
+ continually chilled him. He almost determined to give it up.
+ Of what use was it? Evidently she did not care for him, and
+ the words, "Mr. Forrester here again! he must surely be dull
+ at home," sounded in his ears. Very east-windy they were;
+ still, he loved her with a great love, and he could not give
+ her up: he was in a mist, and could see neither to go back
+ nor forward.</p>
+
+ <p>"I say, Edwin," said John confidentially, "what do you think
+ about this bell business? Of course one couldn't speak of it
+ before the girls, they are frightened enough
+ already&mdash;Bessie too, although she pretends not. What's
+ your own private opinion about it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, it must be a ghost," said Edwin: "they do things of
+ that kind, you know&mdash;turn tables and rap and so on. I've
+ been thinking I must be an unconscious medium."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well," said John, "I, for one, don't believe in that kind
+ of thing: if the spirits ever told anything worth hearing, or
+ did anything worth doing, it might be different; but would
+ Darnley or Bothwell or the abbot, or even any of the smaller
+ fry of monks, come back here to ring a bell? I know in their
+ place it's what I wouldn't do myself."</p>
+
+ <p>"It would depend on where they are and how employed," said
+ Edwin: "like some other people, they may be dull at home."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah, that's what Bessie said that's sticking in your throat.
+ Man, it's no use minding what girls say: I never do.</p>
+
+ <p>"The spirits must be deplorably dull if ringing a bell is a
+ diversion to them."</p>
+
+ <p>"They may enjoy mystifying us," said Edwin. "Who knows but
+ they are listening just now, and laughing in whatever they may
+ have instead of sleeves?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm not frightened," said Will, "but I don't like subjects
+ of this kind at bedtime, so I wish you wouldn't say any more
+ about it."</p>
+
+ <p>"It seems, however, that the bell was rung by invisible
+ agency," said John.</p>
+
+ <p>"Come, come, we'll stop talking and go to bed," Edwin
+ said.</p>
+
+ <p>"But, Edwin," said Will with big eyes, out of which he could
+ not keep a frightened look, "do you think a spirit did it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No: it is a trick, and you'll find out who did it before
+ long."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well," said John, "it was a stupid trick, but cleverly
+ done&mdash;very cleverly done, or whoever did it would not have
+ escaped me."</p>
+
+ <p>"I should not like to sleep alone to-night," Will said to
+ his brother in confidence when they were in their own room,
+ "and I don't believe you would either, although you don't say
+ so. I wonder if Edwin likes it, away from every one too, in
+ that room with the hole in its roof? I wonder papa does not get
+ that hole mended?"</p>
+
+ <p>"He has often spoken about it," said John, "but if I slept
+ in that room I should rather like the hole. It's uncommon:
+ every room hasn't a hole in its roof. If you couldn't sleep,
+ for instance, you'd have only to stare at the hole, and you
+ would doze off before you knew."</p>
+
+ <p>"Staring at it would only keep me from sleeping," Will said:
+ "I should always think something was looking at me through
+ it."</p>
+
+ <p>"What could look at you but light&mdash;moonlight or
+ daylight from the room above? In the dark you would the
+ hole."</p>
+
+ <p>"Let's sleep," said Will; and, forgetting ghosts and bells
+ and all influences, the two boys were soon asleep.</p>
+
+ <p>It is to be hoped the girls were asleep also; indeed, there
+ is little doubt the younger ones were. But Bessie, with the
+ cares of a castle on her head, the mysteries of the evening to
+ perplex her, and an unfortunate love-affair going more and more
+ awry, how was it with her?</p>
+
+ <p>And Edwin, in his remote room with its hole in the roof, how
+ did he fare? He had gone up a stone staircase, through a long
+ passage and down a short flight of steps, into a room large,
+ somewhat low in ceiling, and, with the exception
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page52"
+ id="page52"></a>[pg 52]</span> of the hole, most comfortably
+ appointed. It felt warm, rather too warm, and he did not
+ replenish the fire, preferring to let it go out. The room
+ and the way to it were both very familiar to him, and, like
+ John, he enjoyed the hole: staring at it made you sleep, and
+ when not sleeping your fancy could play round it to any
+ extent. On this night the light of the moon, shining in at
+ the shutterless windows of the empty room above, fell across
+ its floor, and gleamed down through the opening.</p>
+
+ <p>A superstitious person with a talent for being eerie would
+ have had nice scope for being frightened out of his senses in a
+ situation like this&mdash;alone in a distant room of an old
+ castle where bells rang mysteriously, and with borrowed
+ moonlight peering down from above like a ghost looking for
+ ghosts. But Mr. Forrester was not superstitious&mdash;not in
+ the least. He feared nothing material or immaterial
+ except&mdash;and it was a curious exception&mdash;except Bessie
+ Ormiston; yet it is true he loved her, perfectly as he thought,
+ but there was a flaw somewhere: it was not the perfect love
+ that casteth out fear. The turning of a straw, however, might
+ make it that, but who was to turn the straw? He feared to do
+ it, and she would not. Notwithstanding these perturbed and
+ cantankerous circumstances, these two people, being young and
+ naturally sleepy, slept.</p>
+
+ <p>How long he had been sleeping Edwin did not know, when he
+ awoke suddenly, as if he had been startled by some noise.
+ However, he might have been dreaming: he did not know. The fire
+ was thoroughly out and black, there was no ray of light from
+ the roof, and the window-curtains being closely drawn, if there
+ was any light outside it was effectually shut out: the room was
+ as dark as midnight.</p>
+
+ <p>He rose, and finding his way to the table groped for a box
+ of matches that he had noticed lying there, and lighted his
+ lamp, when, looking at his watch, he found the hour to be
+ half-past three. Before going to bed again he thought he would
+ see what night it was. Accordingly, he opened the curtains and
+ shutters and gazed forth. The moon had disappeared&mdash;which
+ was not remarkable, as it was past her hour for
+ retiring&mdash;and the night was very dark and hazy. But a
+ remarkable object met his eye. But from an angle of the house,
+ and toward the corner of the field which had been the site of
+ the ancient monastery, there stood a column five or six feet in
+ height of what through the haze appeared luminous vapor. It
+ seemed such an altogether unaccountable thing, standing there,
+ that Edwin pushed the window open and rubbed his eyes to get a
+ better sight of it. He expected it would disappear in some way
+ almost immediately, but it did not: there it stood, perfectly
+ still and perfectly distinct, at the corner of the field, where
+ there was absolutely nothing to cause it. He watched it for a
+ considerable time, and as his eye got accustomed to peering
+ into the darkness, he could see there was nothing near it, and
+ not a sound disturbed the stillness of the night.</p>
+
+ <p>"That's not a trick," he thought: "no one would think it
+ worth while to play a trick, certain of being without an
+ audience either to see or hear it. I question even if it is the
+ abbot himself; or if he likes to air himself there in the
+ middle of a winter night, he must be too hot at home, if not
+ too dull."</p>
+
+ <p>A filmy mantle of pale white vapor is surely a more likely
+ garment for a spirit to snatch up and wrap round him when about
+ to indulge in an earthly tour than the conventional and
+ traditionary white sheet: in point of fact, for the sheet he
+ must wait till he arrives in our world, and when he does arrive
+ he must of necessity help himself to it; which I, for one,
+ should be sorry to think any well-conditioned ghost would do;
+ but light, pale shadowy light, lying about everywhere for the
+ picking up, what so suitable as raiment for a being who has
+ nothing to wear?</p>
+
+ <p>It could not but occur to Edwin, Had the abbot come back to
+ his old haunt on some errand? Had he a benevolent ghostly
+ interest in its present inhabitants? Here was a work in which
+ even a spirit of mark might engage without loss of
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page53"
+ id="page53"></a>[pg 53]</span> dignity and with perfect
+ propriety. He might turn tables on the perverse
+ circumstances that kept two young people separate; and if
+ marriages are made in heaven, an angel need not despise such
+ a mission as making two lovers happy.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well" thought Edwin, "if you are Abbot John, how do you
+ like to see the dear old stones of your monastery built into
+ dykes? or would you have preferred seeing them applied to villa
+ purposes?" If it were the abbot, Edwin felt he would like to
+ have that familiar kind of intercourse with him which in our
+ country is known as twa-handed crack; and if it were not the
+ abbot, he had a wonderful curiosity to know what it
+ was&mdash;to have it accounted for. There it stood, apparently
+ as firm and sure as the first moment he had seen it; and a
+ cause it must have.</p>
+
+ <p>Accordingly, he dressed himself with the intention of
+ proceeding to the spot to interview the abbot and see what kind
+ of stuff he was made of. Mr. Forrester took the lamp in his
+ hand and opened the room-door softly: not that he thought any
+ one would hear him, but soft sounds best become the stillness
+ of the night. As he went down the stairs he became conscious of
+ a cold air playing about, as if from an open door or window. He
+ set his lamp on the stone sill of the passage-window, and had
+ his hand on the key of the outer door to unlock it, when he
+ heard a quick, sudden scream, apparently from the oldest part
+ of the building. He listened intently for a second, but there
+ was no repetition of it, and everything was perfectly
+ quiet.</p>
+
+ <p>"That was human," he said to himself; and seizing his lamp
+ he ran along till he came to the door of the ancient keep,
+ which was standing open: he took the way he and the rest of the
+ party had gone the previous afternoon, and found the doors that
+ were usually kept locked all open. Going on very hurriedly, he
+ came to the room where the bare rafters were the only flooring,
+ and at the other end of it he saw something like a white heap
+ gleaming. He strode across instantly, and stooping with the
+ light in hand discovered Bessie Ormiston lying in a dead faint
+ just at the edge of one of the rafters: the least movement
+ would have sent her down on the hard pavement below. He did not
+ stop to think how she came to be there: setting his lamp where
+ it would light him across the dangerous flooring, he lifted her
+ up and threaded the passages and stairs in the darkness till he
+ laid her safe on the dining-room sofa, still unconscious.</p>
+
+ <p>Kneeling beside her in the darkness, he felt that her face
+ and hands were very cold. He did not know what to do. If she
+ had been any other person, he would have had his senses about
+ him, but, being who she was, they had scattered themselves, and
+ he felt dazed. The fire was not quite out, and he thought of
+ smashing up a chair to make it burn, but searching in the
+ coal-scuttle at the side, of the fireplace, he found both
+ sticks and coals, and heaped them on: then he lighted the lamp
+ that was still standing on the table. All this was the work of
+ a minute or two. A fainting-fit was quite beyond the range of
+ his experience, but he had some vague idea that in cases of the
+ kind water should be dashed in the face or a smelling-bottle
+ held to the nostrils or brandy poured down the throat; but none
+ of these things were at hand, and as he looked at Bessie,
+ hesitating what to do, he saw the color steal back to her face,
+ and she opened her eyes and suddenly shut them. When she opened
+ them again she took his presence as a matter of course, and
+ said, "I sometimes walk in my sleep, I know, but I am not in
+ the habit of fainting;" and she smiled, looking much more like
+ the lily than the rose.</p>
+
+ <p>"I hope not," he said.</p>
+
+ <p>"It was the fright I got when I woke and saw where I was. I
+ shouldn't have been frightened, for I knew the place as well as
+ I know this room, and could have found my way back in the
+ dark."</p>
+
+ <p>"What can I get for you?&mdash;you must have something." It
+ is an awkward thing when a nurse has to seek directions from a
+ patient.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nothing," she said: "I can take nothing, and I am quite
+ well. I can't think how I was so foolish as to scream, and I am
+ sorry for disturbing
+ you."</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page54"
+ id="page54"></a>[pg 54]</span>
+
+ <p>"You did not disturb me: if I had been asleep I should never
+ have heard you."</p>
+
+ <p>"I wish you had been asleep."</p>
+
+ <p>"You might have fallen through the rafters and been hurt or
+ perished of cold."</p>
+
+ <p>"I shouldn't have fallen through the rafters: I should have
+ come to myself and have walked back quite well alone; but I am
+ not the less obliged to you."</p>
+
+ <p>"I should say not," he said with a curl of sarcasm. "Then is
+ there nothing I can do for you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Nothing, unless, indeed, you could get hot water for me to
+ wash my feet in. Sleeping as I was, I had the good sense to put
+ on a thick shawl, but I made my excursion barefoot: they say
+ walking barefoot improves one's carriage."</p>
+
+ <p>"Bessie, I never know what to make of you."</p>
+
+ <p>"If you know what to make of yourself it's a great matter:
+ sometimes people don't know that," she said, rather
+ wearily.</p>
+
+ <p>"I had better make myself scarce at present, probably?" he
+ said.</p>
+
+ <p>"I think so."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then good-night. You won't faint again?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No: good-night."</p>
+
+ <p>He left the room and shut the door gently, but when a few
+ paces away some impulse moved him to go back: she might faint
+ again, and he would ask if he should send one of the servants
+ to her.</p>
+
+ <p>When he opened the door she was sitting with her face hidden
+ in her hands. At the sound of the door opening she glanced up,
+ and Edwin saw tears.</p>
+
+ <p>She turned away instantly. He went up to her and said, "I
+ did not mean to intrude. I forgot to ask if I should tell one
+ of the servants to come."</p>
+
+ <p>"No, you needn't."</p>
+
+ <p>"Bessie," he said, "you are not well, and something is
+ vexing you. Could you not tell me about it. I mean nothing but
+ kindness."</p>
+
+ <p>"I know you don't," she said almost fiercely, "and I hate
+ kindness: it's an insult."</p>
+
+ <p>He stood in blank astonishment, "An insult?" he said.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, an insult; and if you were not obtuse you would see
+ it. But you don't see and you don't feel, or you would never
+ have tried to make any one care for you for whom you did not
+ care a bit. But I won't care for you, and I don't."</p>
+
+ <p>Off her guard, she had been stung into this. She was
+ standing away from him, her head erect and her eyes gleaming
+ through tears: Mary Stuart herself could not have been more
+ effective.</p>
+
+ <p>"Care for you! not care for you!" he said in a voice he
+ could hardly control. "I have cared for you as I never cared
+ for a thing on earth: I have loved and shall love you as I have
+ never loved a human being."</p>
+
+ <p>"How am I to believe it? Why did you not say it? Why did you
+ not say it without making me ashamed of myself?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ashamed! Oh, Bessie, I only feared to annoy you."</p>
+
+ <p>"Annoy!"</p>
+
+ <p>He gathered her to him and kissed her.</p>
+
+ <p>A castle all to themselves at four o'clock in the morning is
+ a piece of fortune that rarely falls to lovers, and they need
+ not expect it; but those great thick walls were no way taken by
+ surprise: they had not been confidants of this kind of thing
+ off and on for four or five hundred years to be taken by
+ surprise now. Whether after such long familiarity with the old
+ story they felt it any way stale, you will readily believe they
+ did not say.</p>
+
+ <h3>VI.</h3>
+
+ <p>"I've forgotten the abbot entirely," said Edwin when he had
+ time to come to himself after the first draught of miraculous
+ champagne. "I was on my way to investigate his ghost when I
+ heard an unaccountable scream."</p>
+
+ <p>"I never screamed before, and I don't think I shall ever
+ scream again: I don't know how I have been so weak
+ to-night."</p>
+
+ <p>"Weakness always draws out kindness," said Edwin.</p>
+
+ <p>"I would rather be weak than obtuse," said Bessie.</p>
+
+ <p>"But it is better to be only obtuse than
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page55"
+ id="page55"></a>[pg 55]</span> both. I know someone who was
+ both."</p>
+
+ <p>Well, what was I to think, and what could I do?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Nothing better than you did&mdash;make a declar&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"What were you saying about the abbot's ghost?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I was on my way to have an interview with it
+ when&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"What was it like, and where did you find it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It was like a column of light standing not far from the
+ house near the corner of the abbey-field."</p>
+
+ <p>"And you did not think of any explanation of the
+ phenomenon?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No, I did not: it seemed more mysterious even than the
+ ringing of the bell."</p>
+
+ <p>"To obtuse people it does."</p>
+
+ <p>"I thought the abbot might be feeling without a home, and
+ sympathized with him, I assure you, very heartily."</p>
+
+ <p>"I can tell you what it is: the servants had to rise at
+ three this morning to work. It is the light shining out from
+ the laundry-window: I've seen it often enough."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, it was a providential ghost for you and Edwin."</p>
+
+ <p>"[illegible]" said John when they were assembled at
+ breakfast next morning, looking no worse for the excitement of
+ the previous evening, having all slept well: if the bell had
+ rung it had disturbed no one at all. Mr. Forrester and Bessie
+ had not made any one the wiser of the well-timed appearance of
+ the abbot's ghost which had played such an effective part in
+ their previous night's drama,&mdash;"I say," he said looking at
+ Mr. Forrester and then at Bessie, "there is some understanding
+ between you two; you are always looking at each other, and when
+ you entered the room this morning you [illegible], and started
+ off [illegible] been caught. But I have [illegible] this
+ time."</p>
+
+ <p>Bessie realized that her secret had become common property,
+ and blushed becomingly.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Forrester said, "What have you suspected, John?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That Bessie and you laid your heads together to make the
+ bell ring last night to frighten us. Remember, I'm not stupid
+ altogether."</p>
+
+ <p>"I assure you, John, I had nothing to do with the ringing of
+ the bell," Bessie said.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nor had I," said Edwin.</p>
+
+ <p>"That's queer, then," said John; "but I'm sure there's
+ something of some kind between you two: you're planning
+ something, I know. What is it?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Wise people don't reveal their plans to every one till near
+ the time for executing them, John," said Edwin.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, very well," John answered: "you can keep them to
+ yourselves. I dare say it's nothing of consequence;" and having
+ finished his breakfast, John was off to his out-door business.
+ The shortest cut to his destination&mdash;and he always took
+ short cuts&mdash;was through the kitchen, and as he hastily
+ brushed along the wall toward the door he was brought up
+ suddenly by a loud peal of the bell, and he looked at one of
+ the servants, who was working at the table, as much as to say,
+ "Do you hear that?"</p>
+
+ <p>She answered his look: "Yes, I ha'en, but there's naebody at
+ the door. It was yu that rang the bell: ye cam against that bag
+ of worsted clues for durning that I hung on the bell-wine
+ yesterday. When onybody happens to touch it the weight o' 't
+ gars the bell ring; I would hae to ta'en off."</p>
+
+ <p>With this simple and inglorious explanation John rushed to
+ the dining-room where he found Mrs. Forrester and the
+ ch&acirc;telaine in deep Conspiracy again; and to this hour the
+ ghost of Cockhoolet is a matter (if you can use that word in
+ connection with a ghost at all) of faith and not of sight.</p>
+
+ <p>When Mrs. and Mrs. Ormiston returned they found that their
+ eldest daughter was engaged to be married, which surprised them
+ as little as it did the old woman but moved them a good deal
+ more.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page56"
+ id="page56"></a>[pg 56]</span>
+
+ <h2>THE LEADEN ARROW.</h2>
+
+ <p>A wondrous half-century was that which forms an isthmus
+ rather than a bridge between the Middle Ages and the times
+ termed Modern. Exit the Last of the Barons&mdash;enter the
+ printing-press. Exit Boabdil el Chico&mdash;enter Columbus and
+ Da Gama. The plot thickened as the <i>cinquecenti</i> hove in
+ view. The last years were the most pregnant. While the last
+ sigh of the Moor was dying into the murmurs of the Xenil, that
+ solitary shout that will ring while earth lasts went up from
+ the bows of the Pinta. Together came America and the sea-way to
+ India and&mdash;the rifle. For in 1498, when Buonarotti was at
+ his prime, Raphael, fifteen years old, had just taken his seat
+ at the paternal easel, and the scenes of the <i>Lusiad</i> were
+ in progress, "barrels were first grooved at Venice."</p>
+
+ <p>Who grooved them we are not told. The name of that artist
+ has not survived, though we still remember his contemporary
+ townsman, Titian. Strictly, he is not entitled to the
+ immortality of an originator. That belongs to the unknown
+ savage who, in the miocene era probably, first gave a twist to
+ the feather of his arrow, thereby communicating to it a
+ revolving motion at right angles to the line of flight, and
+ making it an "arm of precision." But pre-historic artillery we
+ may dismiss or leave to Milton. The blind bard omits to inform
+ us whether the guns used in the great pounding-match between
+ Lucifer and Michael were smooth-bores or rifles. The strong
+ presumption is that they were exclusively the former, and that
+ a well-served battery of Parrotts would have silenced them in
+ fifteen minutes. By giving him a few pieces of the kind the
+ poet would have further brightened the feather he sets in
+ Satan's cap as the benefactor of mankind by inventing gunpowder
+ and shortening wars. The bow he presents to us as an old and
+ familiar weapon even at the date of that first and greatest of
+ pitched battles. Its claim, as the parent of projectile
+ implements, is recognized in the common etymology of <i>arcus,
+ arcualia</i>&mdash;artillery. Arblast, arquebuse, blunderbuss,
+ mark a humbler collateral descent in the same verbal family.
+ The ballista, or fifty-man-power bow, constituted the heavy,
+ and the individual article the light, artillery of twenty
+ centuries ago. Slings and javelins, being for hand-to-hand
+ fighting (David was near enough to hold an easy conversation
+ with Goliath before bringing him down), can hardly be brought
+ within the designation. The twang of either heavy or light was
+ but a thin contribution to the orchestra of battle compared to
+ "the diapason of the cannonade." How much we have lost in the
+ absence of this element of tremendous noise from the conflicts
+ of ancient days! What a tool it would have been in Homer's
+ hands! How trivial, to the author of the book of Job, would
+ have seemed the noise of the captains and the shouting! We
+ cannot, indeed, quite suppress the fancy that some mightier
+ counter-concussion must have filled the air at Thrasimene, when
+ "an earthquake reeled unheededly away:" <i>Nemo pugnantium
+ senserit</i>, avers Livy. But nothing is said of it. The old
+ heroes died in silence, like the wolf "biting hard among the
+ dying dogs."</p>
+
+ <p>A well-known essay of a modern poet beautifully uses this
+ piece of the modern machinery of his craft. Dryden here makes
+ distance mellow the thunder of a naval fight into a musical
+ undertone. The great sea-fight between the duke of York and the
+ Dutch, fought within hearing of London, left "the town almost
+ empty" of its anxious citizens, whose "dreadful suspense would
+ not allow them to rest at home," but drew them into the eastern
+ fields and suburbs, "all seeking the noise in the depth of
+ silence." Dryden and three friends took a barge and descended
+ the river. Once clear of the crowded port above Greenwich,
+ "they ordered the watermen to let fall their
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page57"
+ id="page57"></a>[pg 57]</span> oars more gently; and then,
+ every one favoring his own curiosity with a strict silence,
+ it was not long ere they perceived the air to break about
+ them like the noise of distant thunder or of swallows in a
+ chimney; those little undulations of sound, though almost
+ vanishing before they reached them, yet still seeming to
+ retain somewhat of their first horror which they had between
+ the fleets. After they had attentively listened till such
+ time as the sound by little and little went from them,
+ Eugenius, lifting up his head and taking notice of it, was
+ the first who congratulated to the rest that happy omen of
+ our nation's victory."</p>
+
+ <p>This, the eloquent eolian music of distant and unseen
+ battle, was unheard by the ancient cities and their chroniclers
+ and poets. It will grow again less familiar as rifled ordnance
+ is introduced, with its thinner and sharper style of
+ expression. Waterloo appears to have been heard farther than
+ Sedan or Metz, although its pieces were but popguns compared
+ with those that spoke the requiem of the Third Napoleon. And
+ perhaps, if we allow for smallness in number and calibre, those
+ employed by Robert the Bruce at the battle of Werewater in
+ 1327&mdash;said to be the first recorded occasion in
+ Europe&mdash;were more vociferous than their successors of
+ to-day. Few and cumbrous they must indeed have been, since
+ Edward III. could only bring four into the field at
+ Cr&eacute;cy; and they did far less service than the twanging
+ cloth-yard shaft in deciding the event of that conflict.</p>
+
+ <p>It was not till centuries later that the rifle perceptibly
+ exerted its treble voice in the multitudinous debates of the
+ <i>ultima ratio</i>. Shrill as John Randolph's, its pipe, once
+ set up, was very attentively and respectfully listened to. Like
+ his, it spoke from the woods of America. "Stand your ground, my
+ brave fellows," shouted Colonel Washington under the sycamores
+ of the Monongahela on the 9th of July, 1755, "and draw your
+ sights for the honor of old Virginia!" The colonial rifle
+ covered the retreat of the British queen's-arm, if retreat such
+ a rout as Braddock's could be called.</p>
+
+ <p>It is about the same time that we find a British writer, who
+ had witnessed the efficiency of the rifle as a companion
+ implement to the axe in pushing European settlement on this
+ continent, saying, "Whatever state shall thoroughly comprehend
+ the nature and advantages of rifle-pieces, and, having
+ facilitated and completed their construction, shall introduce
+ into its armies their general use, with a dexterity in the
+ management of them, will by this means acquire a superiority
+ which will almost equal anything that has been done at any time
+ by the particular excellence of any one kind of firearms, and
+ will perhaps fall but little short of the wonderful effects
+ which histories relate to have been formerly produced by the
+ first inventors of firearms."</p>
+
+ <p>This was written in 1748, at which time the rifle was used
+ only by the hunters of the Alps and the hunters of the American
+ backwoods; the latter having doubtless derived it from the
+ former through German immigration. Bull's conservatism,
+ however, was in the way. The lessons of Fort Duquesne, of
+ Saratoga and of New Orleans were successively wasted on him. He
+ did arm one regiment, the Ninety-fifth, with this weapon toward
+ the close of the last century, but for a long time it stood
+ alone in the royal service. Austria had previously maintained
+ some corps of Tyrolese J&auml;gers. The French fought through
+ all the wars of their Revolution without having recourse to the
+ rifle, save in the campaign of 1793. It is singular that the
+ keen eye of Napoleon failed to detect its value, especially
+ when we note the use he made of light troops. The fate of
+ Nelson justifies the idea that a large body of good riflemen
+ might have changed the issue of Trafalgar.</p>
+
+ <p>Curiously enough, the French, who were the last to realize
+ the merits of the rifle, were the first to institute those
+ improvements which caused, within the present generation, its
+ universal substitution for the musket. The Gallic pioneer was
+ Delvigne, but his first improvements proved, as Pat might say,
+ no improvement at all. The inconvenience of slow
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page58"
+ id="page58"></a>[pg 58]</span> loading was the most obvious.
+ Delvigne's remedy was to give the ball increased windage; in
+ other words, to diminish its diameter comparatively with
+ that of the bore. The ball thus went easily down to the
+ shoulders of the chamber containing the charge. Arrived
+ there, a smart rap with the ramrod moulded it to the
+ grooves. But it also flattened the top, and forced the
+ bottom partly into the chamber. Thus misshapen at birth, the
+ bullet was cast upon the world to an erratic and fruitless
+ career.</p>
+
+ <p>In 1828 a second Frenchman took the tube in hand. Colonel
+ Thouvenin abandoned the chamber, and filled up much of the
+ place it had occupied with a cylindrical steel pillar, or
+ <i>tige</i>, which projected from the breech-plug
+ longitudinally into the barrel. This formed a little anvil
+ whereon the bullet was to be beaten into the grooves. But the
+ bottom was flattened, and the powder acted only on the
+ periphery of the ball instead of the centre, tending thus to
+ give it an oblique direction.</p>
+
+ <p>Here Delvigne picked up the weapon for another trial. He
+ accomplished far the most important advance yet seen&mdash;an
+ advance relatively as great as Watt's separate condenser in the
+ steam-engine. He retained the <i>tige</i>, but he <i>changed
+ the spherical ball into a cylinder with a conical point</i>, as
+ we now have it. In this he, in effect, reached the ultimatum of
+ progress as regards the general form of the projectile. He
+ assimilated it to Newton's solid of least resistance. That
+ primeval missile, the arrow, had for unnumbered centuries
+ presented to the eyes of men an illustration of a simple truth
+ which scientific formula succeeded, scarce a couple of
+ centuries since, in evolving. "The bridge was built," as the
+ old sapper told his commander, "before them picters" (the
+ engineer's designs) "came." The arrow-head describes, as it
+ whirls through the air, a solid varying from a cone only so far
+ as its edges vary from straight lines. This variation serves to
+ blend the cone with the cylinder formed by the revolution of
+ the arrow-head and the feather. The difference in length
+ between the ball and the arrow is due to the necessities of the
+ case. The least practicable length is best for both. The office
+ of the spirally-wound feather in communicating a rotary motion,
+ and thereby balancing, by an opposite force, the tendency of
+ the missile to swerve in any given direction, is fulfilled by
+ the spiral groove of the rifle. Of course, the ordinary smooth
+ musket is unfitted to the conico-cylindrical ball. Discharged
+ from such a barrel, there being nothing to keep the point in
+ the direction of its flight, it soon tumbles over, like an
+ arrow without a feather, and strikes wide of the mark.</p>
+
+ <p>Delvigne's new gun came into use in 1840. The long
+ matchlocks of the Arabs had been very worrying to the French in
+ Algiers. It was a common pastime of the Ishmaelites to pick off
+ the Gauls at a distance which left Brown Bess helpless.
+ Protruded over an almost inaccessible crag, the former
+ primitive instrument would plump its ball into the ranks of the
+ Giaour in the dell below with a precision and an effect hardly
+ requited by victories in the open field or by the cave-smokings
+ of His Grace of Malakoff. Delvigne's arm was accordingly
+ supplied to the Chasseurs d'Orl&eacute;ans, and in their hands
+ served the desired purpose. The matchlock met its match.</p>
+
+ <p>Under M. Delvigne's system, however, the ball was not always
+ well forced into the grooves. The <i>tige</i>, too, made
+ cleaning difficult: it often got crooked, and it sometimes
+ broke off. A M. Tamisier did something toward removing the
+ former difficulty by cutting very shallow grooves on the ball
+ itself. The other called forth the ingenuity of the now famous
+ Mini&eacute;, who made his first appearance in 1847-1848, and
+ whose name has attained the same kind of lethal immortality
+ with the names of Shrapnell, Congreve and Rodman. M.
+ Mini&eacute; abandoned the <i>tige</i> entirely. He scooped out
+ the base of the ball and inserted into it an iron cup. This cup
+ was driven into the ball by the explosion, and forced the soft
+ lead into the grooves. The leading objection to the
+ Mini&eacute; ball in this form was that the device did its work
+ too thoroughly. The iron was often driven so deep into the lead
+ as to tear off the solid point and
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page59"
+ id="page59"></a>[pg 59]</span> scatter the whole projectile
+ into two or three pieces. This mitrailleuse-like
+ distribution of disrupted spheres or leaden asteroids was
+ obviated by the abandonment of the iron cup, the powder
+ being left to act on the lead itself. Two or three channels
+ cut around the neck of the bullet helped to keep the point
+ in line, and aided at the same time the fastening of the
+ cartridge. Thus came its final metamorphosis to the buzzing
+ little torment that has been at intervals for the last
+ twenty years flying over all the continents and perplexing
+ the nations.</p>
+
+ <p>It was not till 1852 that the Enfield rifle was settled on
+ as the standard weapon of the British army. Machinery and
+ machinists were imported for its fabrication from the United
+ States, the appliances of our government armories being copied,
+ and Colonel Bruton, of the Harper's Ferry Works, employed to
+ set them going. Prior to that time all firearms of public or
+ private manufacture, in England, had been made by hand, the
+ interchangeability of all the parts of any given number of guns
+ being an end accomplished in this country alone. The advantage
+ of having every corresponding detail of each piece a fac simile
+ of the same part in all the firelocks of an army must have been
+ perceived from the time when such weapons were first invented;
+ and nothing but the most inveterate conservatism, or the
+ steadiest opposition of that stamp which mobbed
+ threshing-machines and the spinning-jenny, could have so long
+ staved off its practical adoption.</p>
+
+ <p>Once awakened, however, England became, as she usually does,
+ active, innovating and experimental enough. Rifled cannon,
+ breech-loaders and armored ships&mdash;all the legitimate
+ offspring of the Venetian barrel and its American
+ employment&mdash;have kept her ever since in a ferment of
+ boards, commissions and target-firing. But these would carry us
+ beyond our prescribed limit into a boundless field of inquiry
+ and description. It would be like passing from a notice of the
+ tubular boiler of Stephenson's Rocket to a discussion of the
+ vast railway system it begot.</p>
+
+ <p>The Crimean war afforded the first test, on a large scale,
+ in civilized warfare, of the issue between smooth and twist.
+ How the conoidal bullet and rifled barrel, opposed at Inkermann
+ to the antiquated Russian musket, tore through the dense
+ columns which had forced their way to the brow of the plateau,
+ driving the stolid Muscovites, "incapable of panic," back into
+ the ravine pell-mell&mdash;how, at many periods of the siege of
+ Sebastopol, the rifle-pits did more to cripple the defence than
+ did the mortars and battering-guns&mdash;we need not recount.
+ These pits, and the rope mantlets wherewith they obliged the
+ Russians to cover their embrasures, were pronounced by Captain
+ (since General) George B. McClellan, in his report of the
+ United States Military Commission, about the only marked
+ novelties of the siege. Of both, <i>mutatis mutandis</i>, he
+ and his opponents made effective use in our civil war.</p>
+
+ <p>Nor shall we pick our perilous way among the Sniders,
+ Chassepots, Z&uuml;ndnadelgewehre, and
+ Z&uuml;ndnadelb&uuml;chsen whose various charms absorb the
+ military mind at this day. The debate among them is but as to
+ the best utilization of the old arrow-theory. The oblong
+ projectile, that goes singing on its winding way, is common to
+ them all. Slipped in at the back door or rammed home at the
+ front, delicately stirred up by the insinuating needle and its
+ titbit of fulminate or bluntly ordered off by the snappish
+ percussion-cap, it is the same obedient and faithful messenger,
+ and goes on its appointed errand in much the same style.</p>
+
+ <p>Under the ancient r&eacute;gime of the musket it required
+ the soldier's weight in lead to kill him. Its point-blank range
+ was about sixty yards, but precision even at that short
+ distance it by no means possessed. At the battle of Fontenoy
+ the English and French Guards, drawn up in opposite lines,
+ conversed with each other prior to firing, like two groups of
+ friends across the street. "Gentlemen of the French Guards,
+ fire!" was the courteous invitation of the British commander.
+ "The French Guards never fire first," was the reply. And not
+ till then did punctilio come to an end. Such
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page60"
+ id="page60"></a>[pg 60]</span> a colloquy in our day would
+ need to be carried on with forty-horse power
+ speaking-trumpets, or with the thunderous articulation of
+ that between the bellowing Alps and echoing Jura. Even
+ smooth-bore field-pieces, with point-blank of three hundred
+ and twenty yards and service range of one thousand, have to
+ keep their distance. It is a rare thing now for cannon to be
+ captured by a charge of cavalry or the bayonet. The rifle
+ destroys <i>quantum suff.</i> of their horses, and, their
+ support overpowered, they remain a helpless prey.</p>
+
+ <p>For this default of the blustering cannon in the trying of
+ conclusions with its quiet little cousin, the natural remedy is
+ to improve its interior in the same manner. This has been done,
+ and with marvelous effect in some respects. But the rifled
+ cannon, though extensively used both on sea and land, throwing
+ shot and shell five miles, and at close range through iron
+ plates a foot thick, cannot be yet styled a perfected weapon.
+ It may be in a very few years, thanks to the ardent anxiety, on
+ the part of the several peoples composing "the parliament of
+ man, the federation of the world," to excel each other in the
+ "brain-spattering, windpipe-slitting art." At present it is
+ maintained by very good American authority that for use under
+ some conditions, at short or moderate range, the smooth gun of
+ large calibre is more effective than a rifled gun throwing a
+ missile of the same weight. Our monitors continue to be armed
+ with the fifteen-inch Rodman, very recent experiments being
+ cited to prove its penetrating effect on iron plates greater
+ than that of the European rifled guns. This, of course, at very
+ close range.</p>
+
+ <p>The rifle is, in its simplest form, a more complex
+ instrument than the smooth-bored piece, and will always require
+ superior intelligence to manage it. The army which naturally
+ possesses this requisite in the highest degree will best handle
+ this decisive weapon, and be, other things equal, the strongest
+ army. This consideration operates in favor of our people, among
+ whom the rifle has always been in so much more constant and
+ familiar use than with those of other countries. Our broad
+ forests will have to be cleared and our mountain-chains, east
+ and west, more densely settled than Switzerland, before the
+ distinction of a nation of marksmen can be lost to us. So far,
+ there is little evidence of this change. The deer and the
+ wild-turkey are nearly as abundant on the Atlantic slope of the
+ Alleghanies as they ever were. Probably there are more of both
+ in Virginia than at the time of the settlement of Jamestown.
+ Like the quail and the bee, they are favored by a certain
+ advance of population and cultivation.</p>
+
+ <p>Another species of aborigine does not similarly thrive in
+ the path of the rifle. The Indian of the Plains is still
+ troublesome occasionally, but far less so than when blue-coats
+ and blunderbusses joined forces against him. The odds then were
+ often on his side, for many of the red men were armed with the
+ rifle, while the troops had but the musket and carbine. The
+ appearance of the breech-loading rifle in the hands of the
+ United States dragoons on the frontier just fifteen years ago
+ let in new light upon the Camanche and Apache mind. Up to that
+ period the badgering of a detachment of "heavies" was a
+ favorite pastime with these gentry. They got up their "spring
+ fights" with as much coolness and regularity as the early
+ patriarchs of Texas are related to have done, and not merely,
+ as in the case of the latter, in utter contempt, but directly
+ at the expense, of the constituted authorities. Tying a bag of
+ dried mule-meat and pounded corn to the peak of his saddle,
+ fashioning a small supply of arrows, or balls if he boasted the
+ spectre of a gun, coloring the inferior half of his
+ frontispiece a rich vermilion and the upper a delicate green,
+ with ramifications of lampblack coursing tastefully along the
+ cheek-bones and the bridge of the nose, twisting a crane's
+ feather into the tail of his horse, and giving his affectionate
+ squaw a farewell kick, the cavalier of the prairie was ready
+ for a raid on the Long-knives. Making a rapid night-march or
+ two, he would carry the "latest intelligence from the Indian
+ country" to the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page61"
+ id="page61"></a>[pg 61]</span> border ranches of Texas or
+ New Mexico. Stampeding all the horses and mules that stood
+ or ranged convenient, and under favorable circumstances some
+ cattle and sheep, and "gobbling" on occasion some incautious
+ Cyrion or Phyllis of the Western Arcadia, the marauder made
+ for the mountains. By the time he had well passed the last
+ outpost the hue-and-cry was at his heels, followed, after an
+ easy-going delay, by the lumbering dragoon. The soldier,
+ armed with ineffectual sabre and carbine, encumbered with a
+ variety of traps about as useful as they, usually managed,
+ if not forced to put back by stress of provisions, to come
+ up with him in the gates of the hills. There an idle
+ interchange of arrow and round ball between hollow and cliff
+ wound up the eventful history of the chase. As a rule, no
+ marked chastisement was inflicted on the Indian: he realized
+ in peace the proceeds of his little speculation.</p>
+
+ <p>Now, Mini&eacute;, like the Harpagon of his countryman, has
+ "changed all that." The retreating heathen flies to his hills
+ in vain. They do not cover him, but the rifle does. Cantering
+ to the summit of a knoll, he waves his compliments to the
+ distant dragoon with a gesture of derision, more expressive
+ than elegant, he has acquired from the white. Turning calmly to
+ depart, as he sinks below the crest of the hill a sagittiform
+ bullet, fired at five hundred yards' distance with all the
+ science and talent purchasable with thirteen dollars a month
+ and rations, plumps into the rump of his unhappy pony, and the
+ Stoic of the woods is unhorsed. Reared on horseback, and weak
+ in the legs from long addiction to that mode of locomotion,
+ this is a <i>casus omissus</i> in Lo's tactics. Scant time,
+ however, has he for reflection. He gathers up himself and his
+ drapery as well as circumstances will allow, and scuttles
+ hurriedly off, a fluttering chaos of rags and feathers. It is
+ too late. Heaven is on the side of the best artillery. A few
+ minutes and the Philistines are upon him. Burnside's or
+ Remington's last patent again lifts up its voice, and the
+ triumph of civilization is complete.</p>
+
+ <p>The prairie Indian, unlike his congener of the woods, has as
+ yet been but partially able to substitute gunpowder for the
+ bow. The advantage he has in the protection afforded him by the
+ desolation of his waterless <i>mesas</i> and sage-covered hills
+ is thus in great measure neutralized. What, when he does
+ possess the modern firearm, he is capable of doing with it, the
+ achievements of the Modocs in their volcanic stronghold will
+ attest. But these were few, and soon went down. The extinction
+ of the tribes west and south of the Rio Grande and the Humboldt
+ cannot be many years postponed. The red rover of that region
+ will disappear as a combatant in the same way, and before the
+ same weapon, as his brother nomad of Algeria, the earliest
+ victim of the conoidal bullet. The spherical ball has done its
+ appointed part in disposing of the aborigines east of the
+ Mississippi, where forests covered the land and trees generally
+ intercepted the sight at a hundred or a hundred and fifty
+ yards. With the extension of Caucasian empire to the Plains
+ came an extension of the range of vision, which necessitated an
+ advance in the range of the rifle. The weapon of Sharpe figured
+ for the first time in the van when the woods of Missouri were
+ passed and the open plains of Kansas reached. There its office
+ was, unfortunately, the strife of white against white. The
+ largest possible range, the greatest possible number of shots
+ in a given time, were demanded in a war wherein the opposing
+ armies were seldom within five miles of each other, or more
+ than one man hurt to five hundred charges of powder burned. How
+ the Lenni Lenape must have opened their eyes at this
+ reproduction of the drama of a century ago when the whites,
+ English and French, were fighting each other for the possession
+ of the Delawares' lands in Pennsylvania! The feeble remnant of
+ the compatriots of Logan had "moved on," under pressure of a
+ very urgent police, a thousand miles westward to a reservation
+ not a great deal larger, when portioned out, than that last
+ reservation allotted to all men; and the pale-faces who had
+ hung upon his track he now saw fighting for
+ that.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page62"
+ id="page62"></a>[pg 62]</span>
+
+ <p>From its warlike aspect it is pleasant to turn to the
+ contributions of the rifle to peaceful amusement, if not
+ peaceful industry. Contemptuously giving the go-by to its
+ minutest phase in this field&mdash;the "parlor rifle," with a
+ target against the chimney-piece or meandering, in feline form,
+ along our neighbor's roof-tree&mdash;we go forth, with Snider
+ and sunrise, to the forest fastness. Our companions throng,
+ tall, bronzed, close-knit and sinewy, true children of the
+ four-grooved, from frosty Caucasus, the Hartz, the Alps, the
+ Dovrafjeld, the Grampians, the Himmalaya, the Adirondack, the
+ Alleghany, the Nevada. The chamois, the ibex, the red deer, the
+ Virginia deer, the wapiti, the gour, or the royal tiger may be
+ the game in hand. The tiger we are accustomed to associate
+ exclusively with the dank jungles of Lower India, but he
+ climbs, each summer, the great passes of Central Asia, "the
+ roof of the world," and makes his way to the frontier of
+ Siberia, beyond 50&deg; north.</p>
+
+ <p>The equipment of the mountain-rifleman is characterized by
+ simplicity and a strict attention to business. The nature of
+ the ground over which he works inexorably prescribes this. The
+ superfluities of the fox-hunter or the partridge-shooter with
+ his dog-cart cannot be his. Hatchet, pouch, knife and knapsack,
+ with alpenstock on occasion, about comprise his kit. He may be
+ attended by a hound or two, but not a pack. He wants no
+ yelling. He hears but</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i10">the Spirit of the Mist,</p>
+
+ <p>And it speaks to the Spirit of the Fell.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>For little hollows and little hills Scott's dogs, that</p>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p class="i6">raved through the hollow pass amain,</p>
+
+ <p>Chiding the rocks that yelled again,</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>may have been highly effective when his medi&aelig;val
+ sportsmen, who carried no guns, could keep within a furlong of
+ them. But in the depths of the great mountains, with
+ point-blank range of six hundred yards and long pops of nearly
+ twice that, they would be preposterous. Fancy the Quorndon or
+ the Pytchley on the flanks of the Matterhorn!</p>
+
+ <p>Chamois-hunting, the sporting specialty of the Swiss and the
+ Tyrolese, appears to be dying out. The hunter of our day keeps
+ it up rather as a tradition than as a practical pursuit. He
+ rarely bags a "goat," for goats are very few to bag, and those
+ few even more supernaturally fleet and sure of foot and keen of
+ nose than their less-hunted ancestors. Still, somewhere in that
+ upper world of lilac-white that melts into the clouds in vast
+ but distance-softened chasms of viscid ice and rifts of gray
+ gneiss, there is an object for him. In some nook or on some
+ crag of the square leagues of desert that swell around him a
+ troop of the desiderated ruminants is grazing, if grazing it
+ can be called where grass is none. He is very sure of that.
+ Even from the door of his chalet he scans the slopes in the
+ half hope of detecting a flock or a single goat. His father and
+ his grandfather before him had looked forth from the same door
+ on the same scene, snuffed the same "caller air," mentally
+ shaped the same pretext for yielding to the same spirit of
+ adventure begotten of the peaks and by going forth to battle
+ with the solitude, and hunted patiently, sometimes with
+ success, oftener without, the progenitors of the same quarry.
+ So he prepares himself anew for the wild and perilous tramp. A
+ day&mdash;two or three days&mdash;may pass without the
+ compassing of a shot, or even hearing the whistle of the
+ sentinel goat as he shrills the alarm far out of range and
+ leads his fellows in twenty minutes to crags the hunter cannot
+ reach in as many hours. Death crouches in the treacherous
+ snow-crust beneath or the poised avalanche above. A false step
+ or an inch's miscalculation of leap may make him a waif for the
+ l&auml;mmergeier or land him among the buried villages of the
+ last century. He toils on until success or starvation sends him
+ home. In the former case he out-generals his shy game after a
+ series of manoeuvres to which the deepest stratagems of our
+ Indians are straightforwardness personified. He gets a long
+ shot at a distance that would make the musket or buckshot as
+ useless as a sabre. The certainty may be apparent that the
+ animal, if hit mortally, must fall some hundreds of feet,
+ perhaps into an inaccessible
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page63"
+ id="page63"></a>[pg 63]</span> chasm. There is no help for
+ that. Now or never! The short rifle, assisted by a portable
+ rest, is called on for its best. The concentrated energy of
+ the whole chase is thrown into the long and carefully
+ calculated aim. A thin spurt of white smoke jets forth; a
+ sharp report echoes "from peak to peak the rattling crags
+ among;" half a dozen chamois whisk around the next
+ rock-buttress, and "one more unfortunate" tumbles from the
+ verge into vacancy. The labor of days is rewarded. Securing
+ the scanty venison if he can, the hunter is off for his
+ hillside burrow, advertising his approach by an exultant
+ jodel of extra nerve-splitting power.</p>
+
+ <p>In Great Britain the rifle, ancient or modern, like, indeed,
+ any other firearm, has yet to establish itself as a democratic
+ "institution." Her forests are not forests in our sense, and
+ her mountain-dwellers know little of the rifle. In the duke of
+ Athol's seventy-mile forest, with scarce a tree save planted
+ larches, the stag roams by thousands, but of course the
+ game-laws interpose, as they did eight hundred years ago,
+ between him and the (biped) hind. He is still the reserved
+ luxury of the Norman. So with the leagues of upland where His
+ Grace of Sutherland has made the Highlander give place to the
+ hart, the "lassie wi' the lint-white locks" to the Cheviot
+ ewe&mdash;where, in short, the white Celt has been improved out
+ of existence as remorselessly as the red man in America, and
+ that in favor not of a superior race of men, but of
+ <i>fer&aelig; natur&aelig;</i>. Into these and similar
+ districts, at stated seasons, sundry squads of gentlemen are
+ turned loose. They either "pay their shot," as <i>Punch</i> has
+ it, in the shape of rent, or are the guests of the noble
+ proprietors. Their devices for circumventing the antlered
+ monarch of the waste are amply detailed by Scrope, Hawker,
+ Herbert and also by the late Edwin Landseer doing the pictorial
+ department with a success attributable chiefly to his
+ management of landscape effect, for his dogs, deer and other
+ animals from his &AElig;sop's fable-like groups to his four
+ duplicated lions in Trafalgar Square, belong&mdash;heretic that
+ we are to say it!&mdash;properly to still life, their want of
+ action and <i>verve</i> placing them beneath comparison with
+ the works of either one of a score of Flemish and French
+ painters, from Rubens and Snyders down to Bonheur and Vernet.
+ That his unsold pictures have brought, since his death,
+ something like half a million proves nothing. Time was when the
+ worthless canvases of West and Morland were equally
+ transmutable into gold.</p>
+
+ <p>Like other forms of British field-sports, deer-stalking is
+ sufficiently intricate and artificial. It is obviously the
+ occupation of men whose primary object is more to kill time
+ than to kill deer. According to print, from type and plate, the
+ stag, a reduced edition of the American wapiti, is, in the
+ heart of a little kingdom of some hundreds of souls to the
+ square mile, as little accustomed to the sight of man and as
+ hard to approach as he would be on the head-waters of the
+ Yellowstone. If five or six hours' worming, <i>ventre &agrave;
+ terre</i>, up the bed of a mountain-torrent, with not even a
+ rowan-bush to aid concealment, succeed in bringing the
+ sports-man within two hundred yards of his unconscious game, it
+ is a good day's performance. How, the dun deer's hide once
+ perforated, the "tail" of game-keepers, beaters and volunteer
+ hangers-on is gathered up, the comforting toothfu' of
+ usquebaugh absorbed by the toilers of the brae, the victim
+ "gralloched" and suspended across the inevitable gray Highland
+ pony that makes such a capital "first light" for the
+ foreground, and the line of triumphant march taken up for
+ hunting-box, clachan or castle, have we not been told to
+ repletion? The tool used on these occasions is up to the latest
+ requirements of modern science. Whitworth and Lancaster, thanks
+ to their projectile's being wedged in so tight as to cause an
+ occasional misunderstanding it and the breech-plug as to which
+ was expected to move, have grown unpopular. The style and the
+ patentee vary every year or two or oftener, breech-loading and
+ the elongated bullet being the only persistent features.</p>
+
+ <p>Among the commonalty of Britain,
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page64"
+ id="page64"></a>[pg 64]</span> within a very few years past,
+ rifle-clubs and matches have been brought greatly into vogue
+ under government encouragement. Austria, <i>tu infelix</i>
+ this time, having served unwillingly as an experimental
+ target, with the most distinguished and gratifying success
+ to the experimenters, at Solferino and Sadowa, gave a new
+ impetus to the rifle movement in England, as France, a
+ trifle later, did to the Battle-of-Dorking school of
+ prophetic literature. Thus it happens that the rifle is
+ taking its place gradually by the side of fat Durhams,
+ gooseberries, lop eared rabbits and the Derby as a popular
+ sensation. Johnny sends over a "team," evidently in his
+ judgment a whole one, to "shoot the American continent." His
+ next deputation ought to be sent, after vanquishing the
+ "blarsted" Gothamites, to the recesses of the Alleghany, and
+ pitted there against the woodsman with his ancient weapon
+ carrying a round ball of seventy-five to the pound, five
+ feet long and decorated with tin sights, double trigger and
+ mayhap flint-lock. The adventurers would beat in the long
+ run, but they would go home not wholly unlearned. Should
+ they stay to a turkey-shoot, they would see in it the
+ Occidental analogue of their own public matches&mdash;more
+ picturesque, if not quite so prim and scientific. Strictly,
+ it presupposes conditions non-existent in England&mdash;a
+ community, for instance, first of hunters, and second of
+ hunters with the rifle.</p>
+
+ <p>This recreation, primarily belonging to localities where
+ large game, such as deer and wild-turkeys, is found, has spread
+ down to the cities, where it breaks out in a sporadic form
+ about Christmas. But the hills are its home&mdash;the
+ foot-hills, notably, of the Appalachian range, the domestic
+ turkey not being very common higher up, nor its wild original
+ ("original," we insist, <i>pace</i> the <i>Agricultural
+ Report</i> ornithologist, who finds an ineffaceable distinction
+ in the fact that the tail-ring of the one is sometimes, and
+ that of the other never, white!) lower down.</p>
+
+ <p>We mind us of an ancient town in the Valley of Virginia,
+ settled nearly a century and a half ago by riflemen, sheltered
+ by them through a stormy infancy, and still steeped in the
+ traditions of the implement in question. Spitted by the
+ railway, the hub of many turnpikes, and surrounded by a
+ thickly-peopled country, it is yet near enough to the mountains
+ to receive from them each winter quite a delegation of their
+ inhabitants. Last year wild-turkeys were shot within the
+ corporate limits, a deer was chased within half a mile of them,
+ and a fine specimen of <i>Felis Canadensis</i> was killed in an
+ orchard still nearer.</p>
+
+ <p>Four miles west of the town the fertile limestone
+ <i>carse</i> swells into the shady hills, clad largely with
+ pine, that form the long glacis of the Alleghanies. These hills
+ are peopled principally by a hardy race not unlike the German
+ woodsmen, whose blood, indeed, a great many of them share, as
+ their surnames, though sadly thinned down into English spelling
+ and pronunciation, denote. They inherit, likewise, their fancy
+ for the rifle. Allied with the axe, which, like Talleyrand's
+ supposititious frontiersman, they have not forgotten, it
+ supplies them materially with sport and subsistence. Their
+ land, where arable at all, being unproductive as a rule,
+ wood-chopping is their most profitable branch of farming. A
+ score or two of them drive into town daily, each with his
+ four-, three- or two-horse cargo of wood. The pile is
+ frequently topped off with a brace or two of ruffed grouse,
+ there called pheasant, or a wild-turkey, less often a deer, and
+ more often hares; which last multiply along the narrow
+ intervales in extraordinary numbers. We have seen three
+ sledge-loads of hares&mdash;say two thousand in all&mdash;on
+ the street of a winter's day.</p>
+
+ <p>This sappy and sapid contribution to its comfort and luxury
+ the town often repays with a jug of whisky as an addendum to
+ the cash receipts; although it must not be inferred from this
+ that the hillmen are noted for a weakness in that direction.
+ Generally, they are as sober as they are hard-working,
+ independent and honest. The few who do take kindly to strong
+ waters are so hardened by a life of toil and exposure that the
+ enemy is a lifetime in bringing them down.. One little old
+ hook-nosed fellow was an <span class="pagenum"><a name="page65"
+ id="page65"></a>[pg 65]</span> every-day feature of the road
+ for fifteen or twenty years. In that entire period he was
+ rarely, if once, seen to go out sober. He drove but two
+ horses, which were apparently coeval with himself. Long
+ practice had taught them perfectly how to accommodate
+ themselves to their master's failing. The saddle-horse
+ adapted his movements with vigilant dexterity to the rolling
+ and pitching aloft. On more than one occasion the woodman
+ was found lying in the road by the side or under the feet of
+ his faithful and motionless team. Poor old Jack! thou hast
+ "gone under," deeper than that, at last, leaving behind thee
+ the savor of an honest name, slightly modified by that of
+ corn whisky.</p>
+
+ <p>The Hayfield Inn, a little hostelrie on the Northern "pike,"
+ is the scene of many a turkey-shoot. Between the hill and the
+ road, at the foot of a ravine that runs down at right angles,
+ room enough has been scooped out, partly by the rains and
+ partly by the pick, for the house, offices and microscopic yard
+ decorated with hollyhocks and larkspurs. Across the highway
+ stands a capacious barn, with open space for wagons, and
+ between it and the brook beyond stretches a narrow meadow,
+ whence a vivid imagination has extracted the name of the
+ caravanserai. The open space flanking the house and road is the
+ rifle-course, so to speak. When occupied of a mellow October
+ afternoon by a party of the autochthones, in their pea-jackets
+ of blue or hickory homespun, it presents a gay and cheery
+ spectacle. Festooning fence and tree around them, the Virginia
+ creeper, or <i>Ampelopsis</i>, shames vermilion against the
+ mass of pines that glooms skyward beyond. Other tints of
+ vegetable decay fringe the brook where it winds from side to
+ side of the long strip of grass, green from the autumnal rain.
+ Little reck the assembled marksmen of Nature's
+ stage-decorations. One group will be mentally weighing the
+ turkeys, another discussing the distance&mdash;too long or too
+ short for the peculiar powers of this or the other individual
+ or his weapon. Around the rude target kneel two or three,
+ scoring on it each man his "centre," above or below, to the
+ right or left, of the true centre, to counteract the
+ ascertained obliquity of his eye or his gun. Here a six-foot
+ Stoic, the Nestor of the glen, is very formally going through
+ the ceremony of loading. Another is slowly, and with the
+ precision of an astronomer, adjusting the tin slides which
+ protect his barrel from the glitter of the sun. The chatter of
+ a bevy of country maidens ripples from over the way. The horses
+ whinny under their square-skirted saddles, or stand "hard by
+ their chariots champing golden corn," like the horses of
+ Nestor, Agamemnon, Homer and Gladstone before Dr. Schliemann's
+ Troy; the yearlings in the meadow alternately gaze and graze;
+ the guinea-fowl now and then honors the shout over a good shot
+ with its harsh but well-meant rattle; the rifle speaks at
+ measured intervals; the prizes thin off to the remainder
+ gobbler; and so, with the quiet characteristic of
+ rifle-matches, the evening draws toward the dew. The
+ smoke-whitened guns are carefully swabbed with tow and prepared
+ for their rest as tenderly as infants. Dobbin is rescued from
+ the (fence) stake to hie hill-ward with his master, cantering
+ exultant or jogging grumly according to the result of the
+ "event;" and the metropolis of Petticoat Gap&mdash;for such, in
+ the vernacular and on the maps, is its unfortunate
+ designation&mdash;relapses into virtuous repose.</p>
+
+ <p>The implement employed at these rural reunions is rarely the
+ breech-loader, or even the short gun. It promises to hold its
+ ground for years yet, gradually yielding to the little modern
+ tool. The essential characteristics of this we have described
+ as they exist and will probably remain. Variations in the
+ rifling and&mdash;where muzzle-loading is abandoned&mdash;in
+ the appliances of the chamber will continue to be made, as they
+ have heretofore been made without number numberless. The
+ patterns now fashionable will give place to others, in their
+ turn to be dropped like a last year's coat. Remington,
+ Winchester and the rest will retire in favor of new contrivers,
+ devoted, like them, to the simple task of facilitating the
+ flight of the leaden arrow with its grooved feather in steel or
+ iron. With <span class="pagenum"><a name="page66"
+ id="page66"></a>[pg 66]</span> them will rise and fall a
+ parallel series of names on a broader and more sonorous
+ field&mdash;the field of heavy artillery, the ponderous
+ Wiard being full brother to the liliputian Sharpe. Rifled
+ cannon certainly present problems far more complicated than
+ the small-arm. They can by no means be considered, as yet,
+ so near perfection. It is boldly maintained by many experts,
+ both here and in England, that the "smashing" power at
+ point-blank range of such smooth-bores as the Rodman 12-inch
+ and 15-inch is greater than that of the rifle of the same
+ weight. The question is so closely involved with that of
+ armor-plates for ships and ports, and that with buoyancy and
+ other naval requirements, and economy and stability on land,
+ that a long period must elapse ere the reaching of fixed
+ conclusions. Within the present generation wooden
+ line-of-battle ships, with sails alone, have ruled the wave.
+ These have given place to the steam-liners that began and
+ closed their brief career at Sebastopol and Bomarsund; and
+ the prize-belt is now borne, among the bruisers of the main,
+ by the mob of iron-clads, infinitely diverse of aspect and
+ some of them shapeless, like the geologic monsters that
+ weltered in the primal deep. Which of these is to triumph
+ ultimately and devour its misshapen kindred, or whether they
+ are not all to go down before the torpedo, that carries no
+ gun and fires no shot, is a "survival-of-the-fittest"
+ question to be solved by Darwins yet to come. But it is
+ tolerably safe to say that where the best shooting is to be
+ done it will continue to be done with the conico-cylindrical
+ missile, spirally revolving around the line of flight; that
+ is, with the arrow-rifle.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">EDWARD C. BRUCE.</p>
+
+ <h2>TWO MIRRORS.</h2>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>My love but breathed upon the glass,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And, lo! upon the crystal sheen</p>
+
+ <p>A tender mist did straightway pass,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And raised its jealous veil between.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>But quick, as when Aurora's face</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Is hid behind some transient shroud,</p>
+
+ <p>The sun strikes through with golden grace,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And she emerges from the cloud;</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>So from her eyes celestial light</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Shines on the mirror's cloudy plain,</p>
+
+ <p>And swift the envious mist takes flight,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And shows her lovely face again.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>When o'er the mirror of my heart,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Wherein her image true endures,</p>
+
+ <p>Some misty doubt doth sudden start,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">And all the sweet reflex obscures,</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>There beams such glow from her clear eyes</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">That swift the rising mists are laid;</p>
+
+ <p>And, fixed again, her image lies,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">All lovelier for the passing shade.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p class="author">F.A.
+ HILLARD.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page67"
+ id="page67"></a>[pg 67]</span>
+
+ <h2>MALCOLM.</h2>
+
+ <h3>BY GEORGE MACDONALD, AUTHOR OF "ANNALS OF A QUIET
+ NEIGHBORHOOD," "ROBERT FALCONER," ETC.</h3>
+
+ <h3>CHAPTER LXIV.</h3>
+
+ <h3>THE LAIRD AND HIS MOTHER.</h3>
+
+ <p>When Malcolm and Joseph set out from Duff Harbor to find the
+ laird, they could hardly be said to have gone in search of him:
+ all in their power was to seek the parts where he was
+ occasionally seen, in the hope of chancing upon him; and they
+ wandered in vain about the woods of Fife House all that week,
+ returning disconsolate every evening to the little inn on the
+ banks of the Wan Water. Sunday came and went without yielding a
+ trace of him; and, almost in despair, they resolved, if
+ unsuccessful the next day, to get assistance and organize a
+ search for him. Monday passed like the days that had preceded
+ it, and they were returning dejectedly down the left bank of
+ the Wan Water in the gloaming, and nearing a part where it is
+ hemmed in by precipitous rocks and is very narrow and deep,
+ crawling slow and black under the lofty arch of an ancient
+ bridge that spans it at one leap, when suddenly they caught
+ sight of a head peering at them over the parapet. They dared
+ not run for fear of terrifying him if it should be the laird,
+ and hurried quietly to the spot. But when they reached the end
+ of the bridge its round back was bare from end to end. On the
+ other side of the river the trees came close up, and pursuit
+ was hopeless in the gathering darkness.</p>
+
+ <p>"Laird, laird! they've ta'en awa' Phemy, an' we dinna ken
+ whaur to luik for her," cried the poor father aloud.</p>
+
+ <p>Almost the same instant, and as if he had issued from the
+ ground, the laird stood before them. The men started back with
+ astonishment&mdash;soon changed into pity, for there was light
+ enough to see how miserable the poor fellow looked. Neither
+ exposure nor privation had thus weighed upon him: he was simply
+ dying of fear. Having greeted Joseph with embarrassment, he
+ kept glancing doubtfully at Malcolm, as if ready to run on his
+ least movement. In few words Joseph explained their
+ quest&mdash;with trembling voice and tears that would not be
+ denied enforcing the tale. Ere he had done the laird's jaw had
+ fallen and further speech was impossible to him. But by
+ gestures sad and plain enough he indicated that he knew nothing
+ of her, and had supposed her safe at home with her parents. In
+ vain they tried to persuade him to go back with them, promising
+ every protection: for sole answer he shook his head
+ mournfully.</p>
+
+ <p>There came a sudden gust of wind among the branches. Joseph,
+ little used to trees and their ways with the wind, turned
+ toward the sound, and Malcolm unconsciously followed his
+ movement. When they turned again the laird had vanished, and
+ they took their way homeward in sadness.</p>
+
+ <p>What passed next with the laird can be but conjectured. It
+ came to be well enough known afterward where he had been
+ hiding; and had it not been dusk as they came down the
+ river-bank the two men might, looking up to the bridge from
+ below, have had it suggested to them. For in the half-spandrel
+ wall between the first arch and the bank they might have spied
+ a small window looking down on the sullen, silent gloom,
+ foam-flecked with past commotion, that crept languidly away
+ from beneath. It belonged to a little vaulted chamber in the
+ bridge, devised by some vanished lord as a kind of
+ summer-house&mdash;long neglected, but having in it yet a
+ mouldering table, a broken chair or two and a rough bench. A
+ little path led steep from the end of the parapet down to its
+ hidden door. It was now used only by the game-keepers for traps
+ and fishing-gear and odds and ends of things, and was generally
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page68" id="page68"></a>[pg 68]</span>
+ supposed to be locked up. The laird had, however, found it
+ open, and his refuge in it had been connived at by one of the
+ men, who, as they heard afterward, had given him the key and
+ assisted him in carrying out a plan he had devised for
+ barricading the door. It was from this place he had so suddenly
+ risen at the call of Blue Peter, and to it he had as suddenly
+ withdrawn again&mdash;to pass in silence and loneliness through
+ his last purgatorial pain.<a id="footnotetag2"
+ name="footnotetag2"></a><a href="#footnote2"><sup>2</sup></a></p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Stewart was sitting in her drawing-room alone: she
+ seldom had visitors at Kirkbyres&mdash;not that she liked being
+ alone, or indeed being there at all, for she would have lived
+ on the Continent, but that her son's trustees, partly to
+ indulge their own aversion to her, taking upon them a larger
+ discretionary power than rightly belonged to them, kept her too
+ straitened, which no doubt in the recoil had its share in poor
+ Stephen's misery. It was only after scraping for a whole year
+ that she could escape to Paris or Homburg, where she was at
+ home. There her sojourn was determined by her good or ill
+ fortune at faro.</p>
+
+ <p>What she meditated over her knitting by the
+ firelight&mdash;she had put out her candles&mdash;it would be
+ hard to say, perhaps unwholesome to think: there are souls to
+ look into which is, to our dim eyes, like gazing down from the
+ verge of one of the Swedenborgian pits.</p>
+
+ <p>But much of the evil done by human beings is as the evil of
+ evil beasts: they know not what they do&mdash;an excuse which,
+ except in regard to the past, no man can make for himself,
+ seeing the very making of it must testify its falsehood.</p>
+
+ <p>She looked up, gave a cry and started to her feet: Stephen
+ stood before her, halfway between her and the door. Revealed in
+ a flicker of flame from the fire, he vanished in the following
+ shade, and for a moment she stood in doubt of her seeing sense.
+ But when the coal flashed again there was her son, regarding
+ her out of great eyes that looked as if they had seen death. A
+ ghastly air hung about him, as if he had just come back from
+ Hades, but in his silent bearing there was a sanity, even
+ dignity, which strangely impressed her. He came forward a pace
+ or two, stopped, and said, "Dinna be frichtit, mem. I'm come.
+ Sen' the lassie hame an' du wi' me as ye like. I canna haud aff
+ o' me. But I think I'm deein', an' ye needna misguide me."</p>
+
+ <p>His voice, although it trembled a little, was clear and
+ unimpeded, and, though weak in its modulation, manly.</p>
+
+ <p>Something in the woman's heart responded. Was it motherhood
+ or the deeper godhead? Was it pity for the dignity housed in
+ the crumbling clay, or repentance for the son of her womb? Or
+ was it that sickness gave hope, and she could afford to be
+ kind?</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't know what you mean, Stephen," she said, more gently
+ than he had ever heard her speak.</p>
+
+ <p>Was it an agony of mind or of body, or was it but a
+ flickering of the shadows upon his face? A moment, and he gave
+ a half-choked shriek and fell on the floor. His mother turned
+ from him with disgust and rang the bell. "Send Tom here," she
+ said.</p>
+
+ <p>An elderly, hard-featured man came.</p>
+
+ <p>"Stephen is in one of his fits," she said.</p>
+
+ <p>The man looked about him: he could see no one in the room
+ but his mistress.</p>
+
+ <p>"There he is," she continued, pointing to the floor. "Take
+ him away. Get him up to the loft and lay him in the hay."</p>
+
+ <p>The man lifted his master like an unwieldy log and carried
+ him, convulsed, from the room.</p>
+
+ <p>Stephen's mother sat down again by the fire and resumed her
+ knitting.</p>
+
+ <h3>CHAPTER LXV.</h3>
+
+ <h3>THE LAIRD'S VISION.</h3>
+
+ <p>Malcolm had just seen his master set out for his solitary
+ ride when one of the maids informed him that a man from
+ Kirkbyres wanted him. Hiding his
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page69"
+ id="page69"></a>[pg 69]</span> reluctance, he went with her
+ and found Tom, who was Mrs. Stewart's grieve and had been
+ about the place all his days.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Stephen's come hame, sir," he said, touching his
+ bonnet, a civility for which Malcolm was not grateful.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's no possible," returned Malcolm. "I saw him last
+ nicht."</p>
+
+ <p>"He cam aboot ten o'clock, sir, an' hed a turn o' the fa'in'
+ sickness o' the spot. He's verra ill the noo, an' the mistress
+ sent me ower to speir gien ye wad obleege her by gaein' to see
+ him."</p>
+
+ <p>"Has he ta'en till's bed?" asked Malcolm.</p>
+
+ <p>"We pat him infill 't, sir. He's ravin' mad, an' I'm
+ thinkin' he's no far frae his hin'er en'."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll gang wi' ye direckly," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+ <p>In a few minutes they were riding fast along the road to
+ Kirkbyres, neither with much to say to the other, for Malcolm
+ distrusted every one about the place, and Tom was by nature
+ taciturn.</p>
+
+ <p>"What garred them sen' for me, div ye ken?" asked Malcolm at
+ length when they had gone about halfway.</p>
+
+ <p>"He cried oot upo' ye i' the nicht," answered Tom.</p>
+
+ <p>When they arrived Malcolm was shown into the drawing-room,
+ where Mrs. Stewart met him with red eyes. "Will you come and
+ see my poor boy?" she said.</p>
+
+ <p>"I wull du that, mem. Is he verra ill?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Very. I'm afraid he is in a bad way."</p>
+
+ <p>She led him to a dark, old-fashioned chamber, rich and
+ gloomy. There, sunk in the down of a huge bed with carved ebony
+ posts, lay the laird, far too ill to be incommoded by the
+ luxury to which he was unaccustomed. His head kept tossing from
+ side to side and his eyes seemed searching in vacancy.</p>
+
+ <p>"Has the doctor been to see 'im, mem?" asked Malcolm.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, but he says he can't do anything for him."</p>
+
+ <p>"Wha waits upon 'im, mem?"</p>
+
+ <p>"One of the maids and myself."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll jist bide wi' 'im."</p>
+
+ <p>"That will be very kind of you."</p>
+
+ <p>"I s' bide wi' 'im till I see 'im oot o' this, ae w'y or
+ ither,", added Malcolm, and sat down by the bedside of his poor
+ distrustful friend. There Mrs. Stewart left him.</p>
+
+ <p>The laird was wandering in the thorny thickets and slimy
+ marshes which, haunted by the thousand misshapen horrors of
+ delirium, beset the gates of life. That one so near the light
+ and slowly drifting into it should lie tossing in hopeless
+ darkness! Is it that the delirium falls, a veil of love, to
+ hide other and more real terrors?</p>
+
+ <p>His eyes would now and then meet those of Malcolm as they
+ gazed tenderly upon him, but the living thing that looked out
+ of the windows was darkened and saw him not. Occasionally a
+ word would fall from him, or a murmur of half-articulation
+ float up like the sound of a river of souls; but whether
+ Malcolm heard, or only seemed to hear, something like this, he
+ could not tell, for he could not be certain that he had not
+ himself shaped the words by receiving the babble into the
+ moulds of the laird's customary thought and speech: "I dinna
+ ken whaur I cam frae&mdash;I kenna whaur I'm gaein'
+ till.&mdash;Eh, gien He wad but come oot an' shaw
+ Himsel'!&mdash;O Lord! tak the deevil aff o' my puir
+ back.&mdash;O Father o' lichts! gar him tak the hump wi' him. I
+ hae no fawvor for't, though it's been my constant compainion
+ this mony a lang."</p>
+
+ <p>But in general he only moaned, and after the words thus
+ heard or fashioned by Malcolm lay silent and nearly still for
+ an hour.</p>
+
+ <p>All the waning afternoon Malcolm sat by his side, and
+ neither mother, maid nor doctor came near them.</p>
+
+ <p>"Dark wa's an' no a breath!" he murmured or seemed to murmur
+ again. "Nae gerse nor flooers nor bees! I hae na room for my
+ hump, an' I canna lie upo' 't, for that wad kill me. Wull I
+ <i>ever</i> ken whaur I cam frae? The wine's unco guid. Gie me
+ a drap mair, gien ye please, Lady Horn.&mdash;I thought the
+ grave was a better place. I hae lain safter afore I
+ dee'd.&mdash;Phemy! Phemy! Rin, Phemy, rin! I s' bide wi' them
+ this time. Ye rin,
+ Phemy!"</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page70"
+ id="page70"></a>[pg 70]</span>
+
+ <p>As it grew dark the air turned very chill, and snow began to
+ fall thick and fast. Malcolm laid a few sticks on the
+ smouldering peat-fire, but they were damp and did not catch.
+ All at once the laird gave a shriek, and crying out, "Mither!
+ mither!" fell into a fit so violent that the heavy bed shook
+ with his convulsions. Malcolm held his wrists and called aloud.
+ No one came, and, bethinking himself that none could help, he
+ waited in silence for what would soon follow.</p>
+
+ <p>The fit passed quickly, and he lay quiet. The sticks had
+ meantime dried, and suddenly they caught fire and blazed up.
+ The laird turned his face toward the flame; a smile came over
+ it; his eyes opened wide, and with such an expression of seeing
+ gazed beyond Malcolm that he turned his in the same
+ direction.</p>
+
+ <p>"Eh, the bonny man! The bonny man!" murmured the laird.</p>
+
+ <p>But Malcolm saw nothing, and turned again to the laird: his
+ jaw had fallen, and the light was fading out of his face like
+ the last of a sunset. He was dead.</p>
+
+ <p>Malcolm rang the bell, told the woman who answered it what
+ had taken place, and hurried from the house, glad at heart that
+ his friend was at rest.</p>
+
+ <p>He had ridden but a short distance when he was overtaken by
+ a boy on a fast pony, who pulled up as he neared him.</p>
+
+ <p>"Whaur are ye for?" asked Malcolm. "I'm gaein' for Mistress
+ Cat'nach," answered the boy.</p>
+
+ <p>"Gang yer w'ys than, an' dinna haud the deid waitin'," said
+ Malcolm with a shudder.</p>
+
+ <p>The boy cast a look of dismay behind him and galloped
+ off.</p>
+
+ <p>The snow still fell and the night was dark. Malcolm spent
+ nearly two hours on the way, and met the boy returning, who
+ told him that Mrs. Catanach was not to be found.</p>
+
+ <p>His road lay down the glen, past Duncan's cottage, at whose
+ door he dismounted, but he did not find him. Taking the bridle
+ on his arm, he walked by his horse the rest of the way. It was
+ about nine o'clock, and the night very dark. As he neared the
+ house, he heard Duncan's voice. "Malcolm, my son! Will it pe
+ your ownself?" it said.</p>
+
+ <p>"It wull that, daddy," answered Malcolm.</p>
+
+ <p>The piper was sitting on a fallen tree, with the snow
+ settling softly upon him.</p>
+
+ <p>"But it's ower cauld for ye to be sittin' there i' the snaw,
+ an' the mirk tu," added Malcolm.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ta tarkness will not be ketting to ta inside of her,"
+ returned the seer. "Ah, my poy! where ta light kets in, ta
+ tarkness will pe ketting in too. This now, your whole pody will
+ pe full of tarkness, as ta Piple will say, and Tuncan's pody
+ tat will pe full of ta light." Then with suddenly changed tone
+ he said, "Listen, Malcolm, my son! Shell pe ferry uneasy till
+ you'll wass pe come home."</p>
+
+ <p>"What's the maitter noo, daddy?" returned Malcolm. "Onything
+ wrang aboot the hoose?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Something will pe wrong, yes, put she'll not can tell
+ where. No, her pody will not pe full of light! For town here,
+ in ta curset Lowlands, ta sight has peen almost cone from her,
+ my son. It will now pe no more as a co creeping troo' her, and
+ shell nefer see plain no more till she'll pe come pack to her
+ own mountains."</p>
+
+ <p>"The puir laird's gane back to his," said Malcolm. "I won'er
+ gien he kens yet, or gien he gangs speirin' at ilk ane he meets
+ gien he can tell him whaur he cam frae. He's mad nae mair, ony
+ gait."</p>
+
+ <p>"How? Will he pe not tead? Ta poor lairt! Ta poor maad
+ lairt!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ay, he's deid: maybe that's what'll be troublin' yer sicht,
+ daddy."</p>
+
+ <p>"No, my son. Ta maad lairt was not ferry maad, and if he was
+ maad he was not paad, and it was not ta plame of him: he was
+ coot always, howefer."</p>
+
+ <p>"He wass that, daddy."</p>
+
+ <p>"But it will pe something ferry paad, and it will pe efer
+ troubling her speerit. When she'll pe take ta pipes to pe
+ amusing herself, and will plow 'Till an crodh a' Dhonnaehaidh'
+ ('Turn the Cows, Duncan'), out will pe come' Cumhadh an fhir
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page71"
+ id="page71"></a>[pg 71]</span> mhoir' ('The Lament of the
+ Big Man'). Aal is not well, my son."</p>
+
+ <p>"Weel, dinna distress yersel', daddy. Lat come what wull
+ come. Foreseein' 's no forefen'in'. Ye ken yersel' at mony 's
+ the time the seer has broucht the thing on by tryin' to haud it
+ aff."</p>
+
+ <p>"It will be true, my son. Put it would aalways haf
+ come."</p>
+
+ <p>"Nae doubt. Sae ye jist come in wi' me, daddy, an' sit doon
+ by the ha' fire, an' I'll come to ye as sune's I've been to see
+ 'at the maister disna want me. But ye'll better come up wi' me
+ to my room first," he went on, "for the maister disna like to
+ see me in onything but the kilt."</p>
+
+ <p>"And why will he not pe in ta kilts aal as now?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I hae been ridin', ye ken, daddy, an' the trews fits the
+ saiddle better nor the kilts."</p>
+
+ <p>"She'll not pe knowing tat. Old Allister, your
+ creat&mdash;her own crandfather, was ta pest horseman ta worlt
+ efer saw, and he'll nefer pe hafing ta trews to his own lecks
+ nor ta saddle to his horse's pack. He'll chust make his men pe
+ strap on an old plaid, and he'll be kive a chump, and away they
+ wass, horse and man, one peast, aal two of tem poth
+ together."</p>
+
+ <p>Thus chatting, they went to the stable, and from the stable
+ to the house, where they met no one, and went straight up to
+ Malcolm's room, the old man making as little of the long ascent
+ as Malcolm himself.</p>
+
+ <h3>CHAPTER LXVI.</h3>
+
+ <h3>THE CRY FROM THE CHAMBER.</h3>
+
+ <p>Brooding&mdash;if a man of his temperament may ever be said
+ to brood&mdash;over the sad history of his young wife and the
+ prospects of his daughter, the marquis rode over fields and
+ through gates&mdash;he never had been one to jump a fence in
+ cold blood&mdash;till the darkness began to fall; and the
+ bearings of his perplexed position came plainly before him.</p>
+
+ <p>First of all, Malcolm acknowledged and the date of his
+ mother's death known, what would Florimel be in the eyes of the
+ world? Supposing the world deceived by the statement that his
+ mother died when he was born, where yet was the future he had
+ marked out for her? He had no money to leave her, and she must
+ be helplessly dependent on her brother.</p>
+
+ <p>Malcolm, on the other hand, might make a good match, or,
+ with the advantages he could secure him in the army, still
+ better in the navy, well enough push his way in the world.</p>
+
+ <p>Miss Horn could produce no testimony, and Mrs. Catanach had
+ asserted him to be the son of Mrs. Stewart. He had seen enough,
+ however, to make him dread certain possible results if Malcolm
+ were acknowledged as the laird of Kirkbyres. No: there was but
+ one hopeful measure, one which he had even already approached
+ in a tentative way&mdash;an appeal, namely, to Malcolm himself,
+ in which, while acknowledging his probable rights, but
+ representing in the strongest manner the difficulty of proving
+ them, he would set forth in their full dismay the consequences
+ to Florimel of their public recognition, and offer, upon the
+ pledge of his word to a certain line of conduct, to start him
+ in any path he chose to follow.</p>
+
+ <p>Having thought the thing out pretty thoroughly, as he
+ fancied, and resolved at the same time to feel his way toward
+ negotiations with Mistress Catanach, he turned and rode
+ home.</p>
+
+ <p>After a tolerable dinner he was sitting over a bottle of the
+ port which he prized beyond anything else his succession had
+ brought him, when the door of the dining-room opened suddenly
+ and the butler appeared, pale with terror. "My lord! my lord!"
+ he stammered as he closed the door behind him.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well? What the devil's the matter now? Whose cow's
+ dead?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Your lordship didn't hear it, then?" faltered the
+ butler.</p>
+
+ <p>"You've been drinking, Bings," said the marquis, lifting his
+ seventh glass of port.</p>
+
+ <p>"<i>I</i> didn't say I heard it, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"Heard what, in the name of
+ Beelzebub?"</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page72"
+ id="page72"></a>[pg 72]</span>
+
+ <p>"The ghost, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"The what?" shouted the marquis.</p>
+
+ <p>"That's what they call it, my lord. It's all along of having
+ that wizard's chamber in the house, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"You're a set of fools," said the marquis&mdash;"the whole
+ kit of you!"</p>
+
+ <p>"That's what I say, my lord. I don't know what to do with
+ them, stericking and screaming. Mrs. Courthope is trying her
+ best with them, but it's my belief she's about as bad
+ herself."</p>
+
+ <p>The marquis finished his glass of wine, poured out and drank
+ another, then walked to the door. When the butler opened it a
+ strange sight met his eyes. All the servants in the house, men
+ and women, Duncan and Malcolm alone excepted, had crowded after
+ the butler, every one afraid of being left behind; and there
+ gleamed the crowd of ghastly faces in the light of the great
+ hall-fire. Demon stood in front, his mane bristling and his
+ eyes flaming. Such was the silence that the marquis heard the
+ low howl of the waking wind, and the snow like the patting of
+ soft hands against the windows. He stood for a moment, more
+ than half enjoying their terror, when from somewhere in the
+ building a far-off shriek, shrill and piercing, rang in every
+ ear. Some of the men drew in their breath with a gasping sob,
+ but most of the women screamed outright; and that set the
+ marquis cursing.</p>
+
+ <p>Duncan and Malcolm had but just entered the bed-room of the
+ latter when the shriek rent the air close beside, and for a
+ moment deafened them. So agonized, so shrill, so full of dismal
+ terror was it, that Malcolm stood aghast, and Duncan started to
+ his feet with responsive outcry. But Malcolm at once recovered
+ himself. "Bide here till I come back," he whispered, and
+ hurried noiselessly out.</p>
+
+ <p>In a few minutes he returned, during which all had been
+ still. "Noo, daddy," he said, "I'm gaein' to drive in the door
+ o' the neist room. There's some deevilry at wark there. Stan'
+ ye i' the door, an' ghaist or deevil 'at wad win by ye, grip
+ it, an' haud on like Demon the dog."</p>
+
+ <p>"She will so, she will so," muttered Duncan in a strange
+ tone. "Ochone! that she'll not pe hafing her turk with her!
+ Ochone! ochone!"</p>
+
+ <p>Malcolm took the key of the wizard's chamber from his chest
+ and his candle from the table, which he set down in the
+ passage. In a moment he had unlocked the door, put his shoulder
+ to it and burst it open. A light was extinguished, and a
+ shapeless figure went gliding away through the gloom. It was no
+ shadow, however, for, dashing itself against a door at the
+ other side of the chamber, it staggered back with an
+ imprecation of fury and fear, pressed two hands to its head,
+ and, turning at bay, revealed the face of Mrs. Catanach.</p>
+
+ <p>In the door stood the blind piper with outstretched arms and
+ hands ready to clutch, the fingers curved like claws, his knees
+ and haunches bent, leaning forward like a rampant beast
+ prepared to spring. In his face was wrath, hatred, vengeance,
+ disgust&mdash;an enmity of all mingled kinds.</p>
+
+ <p>Malcolm was busied with something in the bed, and when she
+ turned Mrs, Catanach saw only Duncan's white face of hatred
+ gleaming through the darkness. "Ye auld donnert deevil!" she
+ cried, with an addition too coarse to be set down, and threw
+ herself upon him.</p>
+
+ <p>The old man said never a word, but with indrawn breath
+ hissing through his clenched teeth clutched her, and down they
+ went together in the passage, the piper undermost. He had her
+ by the throat, it is true, but she had her fingers in his eyes,
+ and, kneeling on his chest, kept him down with a vigor of
+ hostile effort that drew the very picture of murder. It lasted
+ but a moment, however, for the old man, spurred by torture as
+ well as hate, gathered what survived of a most sinewy strength
+ into one huge heave, threw her back into the room, and rose
+ with the blood streaming from his eyes, just as the marquis
+ came round the near end of the passage, followed by Mrs.
+ Courthope, the butler, Stoat and two of the footmen. Heartily
+ enjoying a row, he stopped instantly, and, signing a halt to
+ his followers, stood listening to the
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page73"
+ id="page73"></a>[pg 73]</span> mud-geyser that now burst
+ from Mrs. Catanach's throat.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ye blin' abortion o' Sawtan's soo!" she cried, "didna I tak
+ ye to du wi' ye as I likit? An' that deil's tripe ye ca' yer
+ oye (<i>grandson</i>)&mdash;He! he! <i>him</i> yer gran'son!
+ He's naething but ane o' yer hatit Cawm'ells!"</p>
+
+ <p>"A teanga a' diabhuil mhoir, tha thu ag d&egrave;namh breug
+ (O tongue of the great devil! thou art making a lie)," screamed
+ Duncan, speaking for the first time.</p>
+
+ <p>"God lay me deid i' my sins gien he be onything but a
+ bastard Cawm'ell!" she asseverated with a laugh of demoniacal
+ scorn. "Yer dautit (<i>petted</i>) Ma'colm's naething but the
+ dyke-side brat o' the late Grizel Cawm'ell, 'at the fowk tuik
+ for a sant 'cause she grat an' said naething. I laid the
+ Cawm'ell pup i' yer boody (<i>scarecrow</i>) airms wi' my ain
+ han's, upo' the tap o' yer curst scraighin' bagpipes 'at sae
+ aften drave the sleep frae my een. Na, ye wad nane o' me! But I
+ ga'e ye a Cawm'ell bairn to yer hert for a' that, ye auld,
+ hungert, weyver (<i>spider</i>)-leggit, worm-aten idiot!"</p>
+
+ <p>A torrent of Gaelic broke from Duncan, into the midst of
+ which rushed another from Mrs. Catanach, similar, but coarse in
+ vowel and harsh in consonant sounds. The marquis stepped into
+ the room. "What is the meaning of all this?" he said with
+ dignity.</p>
+
+ <p>The tumult of Celtic altercation ceased. The old piper drew
+ himself up to his full height and stood silent. Mrs. Catanach,
+ red as fire with exertion and wrath, turned ashy pale. The
+ marquis cast on her a searching and significant look.</p>
+
+ <p>"See here, my lord," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+ <p>Candle in hand, his lordship approached the bed. At the same
+ moment Mrs. Catanach glided out with her usual downy step, gave
+ a wink as of mutual intelligence to the group at the door, and
+ vanished.</p>
+
+ <p>On Malcolm's arm lay the head of a young girl. Her thin,
+ worn countenance was stained with tears and livid with
+ suffocation. She was recovering, but her eyes rolled stupid and
+ visionless.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's Phemy, my lord&mdash;Blue Peter's lassie, 'at was
+ tint," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+ <p>"It begins to look serious," said the marquis.&mdash;"Mrs.
+ Catanach! Mrs. Courthope!"</p>
+
+ <p>He turned toward the door. Mrs. Courthope entered, and a
+ head or two peeped in after her. Duncan stood as before, drawn
+ up and stately, his visage working, but his body motionless as
+ the statue of a sentinel.</p>
+
+ <p>"Where is the Catanach woman gone?" cried the marquis.</p>
+
+ <p>"Cone!" shouted the piper. "Cone! and her huspant will be
+ waiting to pe killing her! Och nan ochan!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Her husband!" echoed the marquis.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ach! she'll not can pe helping it, my lort&mdash;no more
+ till one will pe tead; and tat should pe ta woman, for she'll
+ pe a paad woman&mdash;ta worstest woman efer was married, my
+ lort."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's saying a good deal," returned the marquis.</p>
+
+ <p>"Not one wort more as enough, my lort," said Duncan. "She
+ was only pe her next wife, put, ochone! ochone! why did she'll
+ pe marry her? You would haf stapt her long aco, my lort, if
+ she'll was your wife and you was knowing ta tamned fox and
+ padger she was pe. Ochone! and she tidn't pe have her turk at
+ her hench nor her sgian in her hose."</p>
+
+ <p>He shook his hands like a despairing child, then stamped and
+ wept in the agony of frustrated rage.</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Courthope took Phemy in her arms and carried her to her
+ own room, where she opened the window and let the snowy wind
+ blow full upon her. As soon as she came quite to herself,
+ Malcolm set out to bear the good tidings to her father and
+ mother.</p>
+
+ <p>Only a few nights before had Phemy been taken to the room
+ where they found her. She had been carried from place to place,
+ and had been some time, she believed, in Mrs. Catanach's own
+ house. They had always kept her in the dark, and removed her at
+ night blindfolded. When asked if she had never cried out
+ before, she said she had been too frightened; and when
+ questioned as to what had made her do so then, she knew nothing
+ of it: she remembered only that a horrible creature appeared by
+ the bedside, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page74"
+ id="page74"></a>[pg 74]</span> after which all was blank. On
+ the floor they found a hideous death-mask, doubtless the
+ cause of the screams which Mrs. Catanach had sought to
+ stifle with the pillows and bed-clothes.</p>
+
+ <p>When Malcolm returned he went at once to the piper's
+ cottage, where he found him in bed, utterly exhausted and as
+ utterly restless. "Weel, daddy," he said, "I doobt I daurna
+ come near ye noo."</p>
+
+ <p>"Come to her arms, my poor poy," faltered Duncan. "She'll pe
+ sorry in her sore heart for her poy. Nefer you pe minding, my
+ son: you couldn't help ta Cam'ell mother, and you'll pe her own
+ poy however. Ochone! it will pe a plot upon you aal your tays,
+ my son, and she'll not can help you, and it'll pe preaking her
+ old heart."</p>
+
+ <p>"Gien God thoucht the Cam'ells worth makin', daddy, I dinna
+ see 'at I hae ony richt to compleen 'at I cam' o' them."</p>
+
+ <p>"She hopes you'll pe forgifing ta plind old man, however.
+ She couldn't see, or she would haf known at once petter."</p>
+
+ <p>"I dinna ken what ye're efter noo, daddy," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+ <p>"That she'll do you a creat wrong, and she'll be ferry sorry
+ for it, my son."</p>
+
+ <p>"What wrang did ye ever du me, daddy?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That she was let you crow up a Cam'ell, my poy. If she tid
+ put know ta paad blood was pe in you, she wouldn't pe tone you
+ ta wrong as pring you up."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's a wrang no ill to forgi'e, daddy. But it's a pity ye
+ didna lat me lie, for maybe syne Mistress Catanach wad hae
+ broucht me up hersel', an' I micht hae come to something."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ta duvil mhor (<i>great</i>) would pe in your heart and
+ prain and poosom, my son."</p>
+
+ <p>"Weel, ye see what ye hae saved me frae."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes; put ta duvil will be to pay, for she couldn't safe you
+ from ta Cam'ell plood, my son. Malcolm, my poy," he added after
+ a pause, and with the solemnity of a mighty hate, "ta efil
+ woman herself will pe a Cam'ell&mdash;ta woman Catanach will pe
+ a Cam'ell, and her nainsel' she'll not know it pefore she'll be
+ in ta ped with ta worstest Cam'ell tat ever God made; and she
+ pecks his pardon, for she'll not pelieve He wass making ta
+ Cam'ells."</p>
+
+ <p>"Divna ye think God made me, daddy?" asked Malcolm.</p>
+
+ <p>The old man thought for a little. "Tat will tepend on who
+ was pe your father, my son," he replied. "If he too will be a
+ Cam'ell&mdash;ochone! ochone! Put tere may pe some coot plood
+ co into you&mdash;more as enough to say God will pe make you,
+ my son. Put don't pe asking, Malcolm&mdash;ton't you'll pe
+ asking."</p>
+
+ <p>"What am I no to ask, daddy?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ton't pe asking who made you, who was ta father to you, my
+ poy. She would rather not pe knowing, for ta man might pe a
+ Cam'ell poth. And if she couldn't pe lofing you no more, my
+ son, she would pe tie before her time, and her tays would pe
+ long in ta land under ta crass, my son."</p>
+
+ <p>But the remembrance of the sweet face whose cold loveliness
+ he had once kissed was enough to outweigh with Malcolm all the
+ prejudices of Duncan's instillation, and he was proud to take
+ up even her shame. To pass from Mrs. Stewart to her was to
+ escape from the clutches of a vampire demon to the arms of a
+ sweet mother-angel.</p>
+
+ <p>Deeply concerned for the newly-discovered misfortunes of the
+ old man to whom he was indebted for this world's life at least,
+ he anxiously sought to soothe him; but he had far more and far
+ worse to torment him than Malcolm even yet knew, and with
+ burning cheeks and bloodshot eyes he lay tossing from side to
+ side, now uttering terrible curses in Gaelic and now weeping
+ bitterly. Malcolm took his loved pipes, and with the gentlest
+ notes he could draw from them tried to charm to rest the
+ ruffled waters of his spirit; but his efforts were all in vain,
+ and believing at length that he would be quieter without him,
+ he went to the House and to his own room.</p>
+
+ <p>The door of the adjoining chamber stood open, and the
+ long-forbidden room lay exposed to any eye. Little did Malcolm
+ think as he gazed around it that it was the room in which he
+ had first breathed <span class="pagenum"><a name="page75"
+ id="page75"></a>[pg 75]</span> the air of the world; in
+ which his mother had wept over her own false position and
+ his reported death; and from which he had been carried, by
+ Duncan's wicked wife, down the ruinous stair and away to the
+ lip of the sea, to find a home in the arms of the man whom
+ he had just left on his lonely couch torn between the
+ conflicting emotions of a gracious love for him and the
+ frightful hate of her.</p>
+
+ <h3>CHAPTER LXVII.</h3>
+
+ <h3>FEET OF WOOL.</h3>
+
+ <p>The next day, Miss Horn, punctual as Fate, presented herself
+ at Lossie House, and was shown at once into the marquis's
+ study, as it was called. When his lordship entered she took the
+ lead the moment the door was shut. "By this time, my lord,
+ ye'll doobtless hae made up yer min' to du what's richt?" she
+ said.</p>
+
+ <p>"That's what I have always wanted to do," returned the
+ marquis.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hm!" remarked Miss Horn as plainly as inarticulately.</p>
+
+ <p>"In this affair," he supplemented; adding, "It's not always
+ so easy to tell what <i>is</i> right."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's no aye easy to luik for 't wi' baith yer een," said
+ Miss Horn.</p>
+
+ <p>"This woman Catanach&mdash;we must get her to give credible
+ testimony. Whatever the fact may be, we must have strong
+ evidence. And there comes the difficulty, that she has already
+ made an altogether different statement."</p>
+
+ <p>"It gangs for naething, my lord. It was never made afore a
+ justice o' the peace."</p>
+
+ <p>"I wish you would go to her and see how she is
+ inclined."</p>
+
+ <p>"Me gang to Bawbie Catanach!" exclaimed Miss Horn. "I wad as
+ sune gang an' kittle Sawtan's nose wi' the p'int o' 's tail.
+ Na, na, my lord. Gien onybody gang till her wi' my wull, it s'
+ be a limb o' the law. I s' hae nae cognostin' wi' her."</p>
+
+ <p>"You would have no objection, however; to my seeing her, I
+ presume&mdash;just to let her know that we have an inkling of
+ the truth?" said the marquis.</p>
+
+ <p>Now, all this was the merest talk, for of course Miss Horn
+ could not long remain in ignorance of the declaration her fury
+ had, the night previous, forced from Mrs. Catanach; but he
+ must, he thought, put her off and keep her quiet, if possible,
+ until he had come to an understanding with Malcolm, after which
+ he would no doubt have his trouble with her.</p>
+
+ <p>"Ye can du as yer lordship likes," answered Miss Horn, "but
+ I wadna hae 't said o' me 'at I had ony dealin's wi' her. Wha
+ kens but she micht say ye tried to bribe her? There's naething
+ she wad bogle at gien she thoucht it worth her while. No 'at I
+ 'm feart at her. Lat her lee! I'm no sae blate but&mdash;Only
+ dinna lippen till a word she says, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>The marquis hesitated. "I wonder whether the real source of
+ my perplexity occurs to you, Miss Horn," he said at length.
+ "You know I have a daughter?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Weel eneuch that, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"By my second marriage."</p>
+
+ <p>"Nae merridge ava', my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"True, if I confess to the first."</p>
+
+ <p>"A' the same whether or no, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then you see," the marquis went on, refusing offence, "what
+ the admission of your story would make of my daughter?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That's plain eneuch, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, if I have read Malcolm right he has too much regard
+ for his&mdash;mistress&mdash;to put her in such a false
+ position."</p>
+
+ <p>"That is, my lord, ye wad hae yer lawfu' son beir the
+ lawless name."</p>
+
+ <p>"No, no: it need never come out what he is. I will provide
+ for him&mdash;as a gentleman, of course."</p>
+
+ <p>"It canna be, my lord. Ye can du naething for him, wi' that
+ face o' his, but oot comes the trouth as to the father o' 'im;
+ an' it wadna be lang afore the tale was ekit oot wi' the name
+ o' his mither&mdash;Mistress Catanach wad see to that, gien
+ 'twas only to spite me&mdash;an' I wunna hae my Grizel ca'd
+ what she is not for ony lord's dauchter i' the three
+ kynriks."</p>
+
+ <p>"What <i>does</i> it matter, now she's dead and gone?" said
+ the marquis, false to the dead in his love for the
+ living.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page76"
+ id="page76"></a>[pg 76]</span>
+
+ <p>"Deid an' gane, my lord? What ca' ye deid an' gane? Maybe
+ the great anes o' the yerth get sic a forlethie
+ (<i>surfeit</i>) o' grand'ur 'at they're for nae mair, an' wad
+ perish like the brute beast. For onything I ken, they may hae
+ their wuss, but for mysel', I wad warstle to haud my sowl
+ waukin' (<i>awake</i>) i' the verra article o' deith, for the
+ bare chance o' seein' my bonny Grizel again. It's a mercy I hae
+ nae feelin's," she added, arresting her handkerchief on its way
+ to her eyes, and refusing to acknowledge the single tear that
+ ran down her cheek.</p>
+
+ <p>Plainly she was not like any of the women whose characters
+ the marquis had accepted as typical of womankind.</p>
+
+ <p>"Then you won't leave the matter to her husband and son?" he
+ said reproachfully.</p>
+
+ <p>"I tellt ye, my lord, I wad du naething but what I saw to be
+ richt. Lat this affair oot o' my han's I daurna. That laad ye
+ micht work to onything 'at made agane himsel'. He's jist like
+ his puir mither there."</p>
+
+ <p>"If Miss Campbell <i>was</i> his mother," said the
+ marquis.</p>
+
+ <p>"Miss Cam'ell!" cried Miss Horn. "I'll thank yer lordship to
+ ca' her by her ain, an' that's Lady Lossie."</p>
+
+ <p>What of the something ruinous heart of the marquis was
+ habitable was occupied by his daughter, and had no
+ accommodation at present either for his dead wife or his living
+ son. Once more he sat thinking in silence for a while. "I'll
+ make Malcolm a post-captain in the navy and give you a thousand
+ pounds," he said at length, hardly knowing that he spoke.</p>
+
+ <p>Miss Horn rose to her full height and stood like an angel of
+ rebuke before him. Not a word did she speak, only looked at him
+ for a moment and turned to leave the room. The marquis saw his
+ danger, and striding to the door stood with his back against
+ it.</p>
+
+ <p>"Think ye to scare <i>me</i>, my lord?" she asked with a
+ scornful laugh. "Gang an' scare the stane lion-beast at yer
+ ha'-door. Haud oot o' the gait an' lat me gang."</p>
+
+ <p>"Not until I know what you are going to do," said the
+ marquis very seriously.</p>
+
+ <p>"I hae naething mair to transac' wi' yer lordship. You an'
+ me 's strangers, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"Tut! tut! I was but trying you."</p>
+
+ <p>"An' gien I had ta'en the disgrace ye offert me, ye wad hae
+ drawn back?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No, certainly."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ye wasna tryin' me, then: ye was duin' yer best to corrup'
+ me."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm no splitter of hairs."</p>
+
+ <p>"My lord, it's nane but the corrup'ible wad seek to
+ corrup'."</p>
+
+ <p>The marquis gnawed a nail or two in silence. Miss Horn
+ dragged an easy-chair within a couple of yards of him.</p>
+
+ <p>"We'll see wha tires o' this ghem first, my lord," she said
+ as she sank into its hospitable embrace.</p>
+
+ <p>The marquis turned to lock the door, but there was no key in
+ it. Neither was there any chair within reach, and he was not
+ fond of standing. Clearly, his enemy had the advantage.</p>
+
+ <p>"Hae ye h'ard o' puir Sandy Graham&mdash;hoo they're
+ misguidin' him, my lord?" she asked with composure.</p>
+
+ <p>The marquis was first astounded, and then tickled by her
+ assurance. "No," he answered.</p>
+
+ <p>"They hae turnt him oot o' hoose an' ha'&mdash;schuil, at
+ least, an' hame," she rejoined. "I may say they hae turnt him
+ oot o' Scotlan', for what presbytery wad hae him efter he had
+ been fun' guilty o' no thinkin' like ither fowk? Ye maun stan'
+ his guid freen', my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"He shall be Malcolm's tutor," answered the marquis, not to
+ be outdone in coolness, "and go with him to Edinburgh&mdash;or
+ Oxford, if he prefers it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Never yerl o' Colonsay had a better," said Miss Horn.</p>
+
+ <p>"Softly, softly, ma'am," returned the marquis. "I did not
+ say he should go in that style."</p>
+
+ <p>"He s' gang as my lord o' Colonsay or he s' no gang at
+ <i>your</i> expense, my lord," said his antagonist.</p>
+
+ <p>"Really, ma'am, one would think you were my grandmother, to
+ hear you order my affairs for me."</p>
+
+ <p>"I wuss I war, my lord: I sud gar ye hear risson upo' baith
+ sides o' yer heid, I s' warran'."</p>
+
+ <p>The marquis laughed. "Well, I can't
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page77"
+ id="page77"></a>[pg 77]</span> stand here all day," he said,
+ impatiently swinging one leg.</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm weel awaur o' that, my lord," answered Miss Horn,
+ rearranging her scanty skirt.</p>
+
+ <p>"How long are you going to keep me, then?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I wadna hae ye bide a meenute langer nor's agreeable to
+ yersel'. But <i>I</i>'m in nae hurry sae lang's ye're afore me.
+ Ye're nae ill to luik at, though ye maun hae been bonnier the
+ day ye wan the hert o' my Grizel."</p>
+
+ <p>The marquis uttered an oath and left the door. Miss Horn
+ sprang to it, but there was the marquis again. "Miss Horn," he
+ said, "I beg you will give me another day to think of
+ this."</p>
+
+ <p>"Whaur's the use? A' the thinkin' i' the warl' canna alter a
+ single fac'. Ye maun do richt by my laddie o' yer ainsel', or I
+ maun gar ye."</p>
+
+ <p>"You would find a lawsuit heavy, Miss Horn."</p>
+
+ <p>"An' ye wad fin' the scandal o' 't ill to bide, my lord. It
+ wad come sair upo' Miss&mdash;I kenna what name she has a richt
+ till, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>The marquis uttered a frightful imprecation, left the door,
+ and, sitting down, hid his face in his hands.</p>
+
+ <p>Miss Horn rose, but instead of securing her retreat,
+ approached him gently and stood by his side. "My lord," she
+ said, "I canna thole to see a man in tribble. Women's born till
+ 't, an' they tak it an' are thankfu'; but a man never gies in
+ till 't, an' sae it comes harder upo' him nor upo' them. Hear
+ me, my lord: gien there be a man upo' this earth wha wad shield
+ a woman, that man's Ma'colm Colonsay."</p>
+
+ <p>"If only she weren't his sister!" murmured the marquis.</p>
+
+ <p>"An' jist bethink ye, my lord: wad it be onything less nor
+ an imposition to lat a man merry her ohn tellt him what she
+ was?"</p>
+
+ <p>"You insolent old woman!" cried the marquis, losing his
+ temper, discretion and manners all together. "Go and do your
+ worst, and be damned to you!"</p>
+
+ <p>So saying, he left the room, and Miss Horn found her way out
+ of the house in a temper quite as fierce as his&mdash;in
+ character, however, entirely different, inasmuch as it was
+ righteous.</p>
+
+ <p>At that very moment Malcolm was in search of his master, and
+ seeing the back of him disappear in the library, to which he
+ had gone in a half-blind rage, he followed him. "My lord!" he
+ said.</p>
+
+ <p>"What do you want?" returned his master in a rage. For some
+ time he had been hauling on the curb-rein, which had fretted
+ his temper the more, and when he let go the devil ran away with
+ him.</p>
+
+ <p>"I thoucht yer lordship wad like to see an auld stair I cam
+ upo' the ither day, 'at gangs frae the wizard's
+ chaumer&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Go to hell with your damned tomfoolery!" said the marquis.
+ "If ever you mention that cursed hole again I'll kick you out
+ of the house."</p>
+
+ <p>Malcolm's eyes flashed and a fierce answer rose to his lips,
+ but he had seen that his master was in trouble, and sympathy
+ supplanted rage. He turned and left the room in silence.</p>
+
+ <p>Lord Lossie paced up and down the library for a whole
+ hour&mdash;a long time for him to be in one mood. The mood
+ changed color pretty frequently during the hour, however, and
+ by degrees his wrath assuaged. But at the end of it he knew no
+ more what he was going to do than when he left Miss Horn in the
+ study. Then came the gnawing of his usual ennui and
+ restlessness: he must find something to do.</p>
+
+ <p>The thing he always thought of first was a ride, but the
+ only animal of horse-kind about the place which he liked was
+ the bay mare, and her he had lamed. He would go and see what
+ the rascal had come bothering about&mdash;alone, though, for he
+ could not endure the sight of the fisher-fellow, damn him!</p>
+
+ <p>In a few minutes he stood in the wizard's chamber, and
+ glanced around it with a feeling of discomfort rather than
+ sorrow&mdash;of annoyance at the trouble of which it had been
+ for him both fountain and storehouse, rather than regret for
+ the agony and contempt which his selfishness had brought upon
+ the woman he loved: then spying the door in the farthest
+ corner, he made for it, and in a
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page78"
+ id="page78"></a>[pg 78]</span> moment more, his curiosity
+ now thoroughly roused, was slowly gyrating down the steps of
+ the old screw-stair.</p>
+
+ <p>But Malcolm had gone to his own room, and, hearing some one
+ in the next, half suspected who it was, and went in. Seeing the
+ closet-door open, he hurried to the stair, and shouted, "My
+ lord! my lord! or whaever ye are! tak care hoo ye gang or ye'll
+ get a terrible fa'."</p>
+
+ <p>Down a single yard the stair was quite dark, and he dared
+ not follow fast for fear of himself falling and occasioning the
+ accident he feared. As he descended he kept repeating his
+ warnings, but either his master did not hear or heeded too
+ little, for presently Malcolm heard a rush, a dull fall and a
+ groan. Hurrying as fast as he dared with the risk of falling
+ upon him, he found the marquis lying amongst the stones in the
+ ground entrance, apparently unable to move, and white with
+ pain. Presently, however, he got up, swore a good deal and
+ limped swearing into the house.</p>
+
+ <p>The doctor, who was sent for instantly, pronounced the
+ knee-cap injured, and applied leeches. Inflammation set in, and
+ another doctor and surgeon were sent for from Aberdeen. They
+ came, applied poultices, and again leeches, and enjoined the
+ strictest repose. The pain was severe, but to one of the
+ marquis's temperament the enforced quiet was worse.</p>
+
+ <h3>CHAPTER LXVIII.</h3>
+
+ <h3>HANDS OF IRON.</h3>
+
+ <p>The marquis was loved by his domestics, and his accident,
+ with its consequences, although none more serious were
+ anticipated, cast a gloom over Lossie House. Far apart as was
+ his chamber from all the centres of domestic life, the pulses
+ of his suffering beat as it were through the house, and the
+ servants moved with hushed voice and gentle footfall.</p>
+
+ <p>Outside, the course of events waited upon his recovery, for
+ Miss Horn, was too generous not to delay proceedings while her
+ adversary was ill. Besides, what she most of all desired was
+ the marquis's free acknowledgment of his son; and after such a
+ time of suffering and constrained reflection as he was now
+ passing through he could hardly fail, she thought, to be more
+ inclined to what was just and fair.</p>
+
+ <p>Malcolm had of course hastened to the schoolmaster with the
+ joy of his deliverance from Mrs. Stewart, but Mr. Graham had
+ not acquainted him with the discovery Miss Horn had made, or
+ her belief concerning his large interest therein, to which
+ Malcolm's report of the wrath-born declaration of Mrs. Catanach
+ had now supplied the only testimony wanting, for the right of
+ disclosure was Miss Horn's. To her he had carried Malcolm's
+ narrative of late events, tenfold strengthening her position;
+ but she was anxious in her turn that the revelation concerning
+ his birth should come to him from his father. Hence, Malcolm
+ continued in ignorance of the strange dawn that had begun to
+ break on the darkness of his origin.</p>
+
+ <p>Miss Horn had told Mr. Graham what the marquis had said
+ about the tutorship, but the schoolmaster only shook his head
+ with a smile, and went on with his preparations for
+ departure.</p>
+
+ <p>The hours went by, the days lengthened into weeks, and the
+ marquis's condition did not improve. He had never known
+ sickness and pain before, and like most of the children of this
+ world counted them the greatest of evils; nor was there any
+ sign of their having as yet begun to open his eyes to what
+ those who have seen them call truths&mdash;those who have never
+ even boded their presence count absurdities.</p>
+
+ <p>More and more, however, he desired the attendance of
+ Malcolm, who was consequently a great deal about him, serving
+ with a love to account for which those who knew his nature
+ would not have found it necessary to fall back on the instinct
+ of the relation between them. The marquis had soon satisfied
+ himself that that relation was as yet unknown to him, and was
+ all the better pleased with his devotion and
+ tenderness.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page79"
+ id="page79"></a>[pg 79]</span>
+
+ <p>The inflammation continued, increased, spread, and at length
+ the doctors determined to amputate. But the marquis was
+ absolutely horrified at the idea&mdash;shrank from it with
+ invincible repugnance. The moment the first dawn of
+ comprehension vaguely illuminated their periphrastic approaches
+ he blazed out in a fury, cursed them frightfully, called them
+ all the contemptuous names in his rather limited vocabulary,
+ and swore he would see them&mdash;uncomfortable first.</p>
+
+ <p>"We fear mortification, my lord," said the physician
+ calmly.</p>
+
+ <p>"So do I. Keep it off," returned the marquis.</p>
+
+ <p>"We fear we cannot, my lord." It had, in fact, already
+ commenced.</p>
+
+ <p>"Let it mortify, then, and be damned," said his
+ lordship.</p>
+
+ <p>"I trust, my lord, you will reconsider it," said the
+ surgeon. "We should not have dreamed of suggesting a measure of
+ such severity had we not had reason to dread that the further
+ prosecution of gentler means would but lessen your lordship's
+ chance of recovery."</p>
+
+ <p>"You mean, then, that my life is in danger?"</p>
+
+ <p>"We fear," said the physician, "that the amputation proposed
+ is the only thing that can save it."</p>
+
+ <p>"What a brace of blasted bunglers you are!" cried the
+ marquis, and, turning away his face, lay silent.</p>
+
+ <p>The two men looked at each other and said nothing.</p>
+
+ <p>Malcolm was by, and a pang shot to his heart at the verdict.
+ The men retired to consult. Malcolm approached the bed. "My
+ lord!" he said gently.</p>
+
+ <p>No reply came.</p>
+
+ <p>"Dinna lea 's oor lanes, my lord&mdash;no yet," Malcolm
+ persisted. "What's to come o' my leddy?"</p>
+
+ <p>The marquis gave a gasp. Still he made no reply.</p>
+
+ <p>"She has naebody, ye ken, my lord, 'at ye wad like to lippen
+ her wi'."</p>
+
+ <p>"You must take care of her when I am gone, Malcolm,"
+ murmured the marquis; and his voice was now gentle with sadness
+ and broken with misery.</p>
+
+ <p>"Me, my lord!" returned Malcolm. "Wha wad min' me? An' what
+ cud I du wi' her? I cudna even hand her ohn wat her feet. Her
+ leddy's maid cud du mair wi' her, though I wad lay doon my life
+ for her, as I tauld ye, my lord; an' she kens 't weel
+ eneuch."</p>
+
+ <p>Silence followed. Both men were thinking.</p>
+
+ <p>"Gie me a richt, my lord, an' I'll du my best," said
+ Malcolm, at length breaking the silence.</p>
+
+ <p>"What do you mean?" growled the marquis, whose mood had
+ altered.</p>
+
+ <p>"Gie me a legal richt, my lord, an' see gien I dinna."</p>
+
+ <p>"See what?"</p>
+
+ <p>"See gien I dinna luik weel efter my leddy."</p>
+
+ <p>"How am I to see? I shall be dead and damned."</p>
+
+ <p>"Please God, my lord, ye'll be alive an' weel&mdash;in a
+ better place, if no here to luik efter my leddy yersel'."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I dare say," muttered the marquis.</p>
+
+ <p>"But ye'll hearken to the doctors, my lord," Malcolm went
+ on, "an' no dee wantin' time to consider o' 't."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, yes: to-morrow I'll have another talk with them. We'll
+ see about it. There's time enough yet. They're all coxcombs,
+ every one of them. They never give a patient the least credit
+ for common sense."</p>
+
+ <p>"I dinna ken, my lord," said Malcolm doubtfully.</p>
+
+ <p>After a few minutes' silence, during which Malcolm thought
+ he had fallen asleep, the marquis resumed abruptly. "What do
+ you mean by giving you a legal right?" he said.</p>
+
+ <p>"There's some w'y o' makin' ae body guairdian till anither,
+ sae 'at the law 'll uphaud him&mdash;isna there, my lord?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, surely. Well! Rather odd&mdash;wouldn't it be?&mdash;a
+ young fisher-lad guardian to a marchioness! Eh? They say
+ there's nothing new under the sun, but that sounds rather like
+ it, I think."</p>
+
+ <p>Malcolm was overjoyed to hear him speak with something like
+ his old manner. He felt he could stand any amount of chaff from
+ him now, and so the proposition he had made in seriousness he
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page80"
+ id="page80"></a>[pg 80]</span> went on to defend in the hope
+ of giving amusement, yet with a secret wild delight in the
+ dream of such full devotion to the service of Lady
+ Florimel.</p>
+
+ <p>"It wad soon' queer eneuch, my lord, nae doobt, but fowk
+ maunna min' the soon' o' a thing gien 't be a' straucht an'
+ fair, an' strong eneuch to stan'. They cudna lauch me oot o' my
+ richts, be they 'at they likit&mdash;Lady Bellair or ony o'
+ them&mdash;na, nor jaw me oot o' them aither."</p>
+
+ <p>"They might do a good deal to render those rights of little
+ use," said the marquis.</p>
+
+ <p>"That wad come till a trial o' brains, my lord," returned
+ Malcolm: "an' ye dinna think I wadna hae the wit to speir
+ advice; an', what's mair, to ken whan it was guid, an' tak it.
+ There's lawyers, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"And their expenses?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ye cud lea' sae muckle to be waured (<i>spent</i>) upo' the
+ cairryin' oot o' yer lordship's wull."</p>
+
+ <p>"Who would see that you applied it properly?"</p>
+
+ <p>"My ain conscience, my lord, or Mr. Graham gien ye
+ likit."</p>
+
+ <p>"And how would you live yourself?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ow! lea' ye that to me, my lord. Only dinna imagine I wad
+ be behauden to yer lordship. I houp I hae mair pride nor that.
+ Ilka poun'-not', shillin' an' bawbee sud be laid oot for
+ <i>her</i>, an' what was left hainet (<i>saved</i>) for
+ her."</p>
+
+ <p>"By Jove! it's a daring proposal!" said the marquis; and,
+ which seemed strange to Malcolm, not a single thread of
+ ridicule ran through the tone in which he made the remark.</p>
+
+ <p>The next day came, but brought neither strength of body nor
+ of mind with it. Again his professional attendants besought
+ him, and he heard them more quietly, but rejected their
+ proposition as positively as before. In a day or two he ceased
+ to oppose it, but would not hear of preparation. Hour glided
+ into hour, and days had gathered to a week, when they assailed
+ him with a solemn and last appeal.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nonsense!" answered the marquis. "My leg is getting better.
+ I feel no pain&mdash;in fact, nothing but a little faintness.
+ Your damned medicines, I haven't a doubt."</p>
+
+ <p>"You are in the greatest danger, my lord. It is all but too
+ late even now."</p>
+
+ <p>"To-morrow, then, if it must be. To-day I could not endure
+ to have my hair cut, positively; and as to having my leg
+ off&mdash;pooh! the thing's preposterous."</p>
+
+ <p>He turned white and shuddered, for all the nonchalance of
+ his speech.</p>
+
+ <p>When to-morrow came there was not a surgeon in the land who
+ would have taken his leg off. He looked in their faces, and
+ seemed for the first time convinced of the necessity of the
+ measure.</p>
+
+ <p>"You may do as you please," he said: "I am ready."</p>
+
+ <p>"Not to-day, my lord," replied the doctor&mdash;"your
+ lordship is not equal to it to-day."</p>
+
+ <p>"I understand," said the marquis, and paled frightfully and
+ turned his head aside.</p>
+
+ <p>When Mrs. Courthope suggested that Lady Florimel should be
+ sent for, he flew into a frightful rage, and spoke as it is to
+ be hoped he had never spoken to a woman before. She took it
+ with perfect gentleness, but could not repress a tear. The
+ marquis saw it, and his heart was touched. "You mustn't mind a
+ dying man's temper," he said.</p>
+
+ <p>"It's not for myself, my lord," she answered.</p>
+
+ <p>"I know: you think I'm not fit to die; and, damn it! you are
+ right. Never one was less fit for heaven or less willing to go
+ to hell."</p>
+
+ <p>"Wouldn't you like to see a clergyman, my lord?" she
+ suggested, sobbing.</p>
+
+ <p>He was on the point of breaking out into a still worse
+ passion, but controlled himself. "A clergyman!" he cried: "I
+ would as soon see the undertaker. What could he do but tell me
+ I was going to be damned&mdash;a fact I know better than he
+ can? That is, if it's not all an invention of the cloth, as, in
+ my soul, I believe it is. I've said so any time these forty
+ years."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, my lord! my lord! do not fling away your last
+ hope."</p>
+
+ <p>"You imagine me to have a chance, then? Good soul! you don't
+ know any better."</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page81"
+ id="page81"></a>[pg 81]</span>
+
+ <p>"The Lord is merciful."</p>
+
+ <p>The marquis laughed&mdash;that is, he tried, failed, and
+ grinned.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Cairns is in the dining-room, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"Bah! A low pettifogger, with the soul of a bullock. Don't
+ let me hear the fellow's name. I've been bad enough, God knows,
+ but I haven't sunk to the level of <i>his</i> help yet. If he's
+ God Almighty's factor, and the saw holds, 'Like master, like
+ man,' well, I would rather have nothing to do with either."</p>
+
+ <p>"That is, if you had the choice, my lord," said Mrs.
+ Courthope, her temper yielding somewhat, though in truth his
+ speech was not half so irreverent as it seemed to her.</p>
+
+ <p>"Tell him to go to hell. No, don't: set him down to a bottle
+ of port and a great sponge-cake, and you needn't tell him to go
+ to heaven, for he'll be there already. Why, Mrs. Courthope, the
+ fellow isn't a gentleman. And yet all he cares for the cloth is
+ that he thinks it makes a gentleman of him&mdash;as if anything
+ in heaven, earth or hell could work that miracle!"</p>
+
+ <p>In the middle of the night, as Malcolm sat by his bed,
+ thinking him asleep, the marquis spoke suddenly. "You must go
+ to Aberdeen to-morrow, Malcolm," he said.</p>
+
+ <p>"Verra weel, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"And bring Mr. Glennie, the lawyer, back with you."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"Go to bed, then."</p>
+
+ <p>"I wad raither bide, my lord. I cudna sleep a wink for
+ wantin' to be back aside ye."</p>
+
+ <p>The marquis yielded, and Malcolm sat by him all the night
+ through. He tossed about, would doze off and murmur strangely,
+ then wake up and ask for brandy and water, yet be content with
+ the lemonade Malcolm gave him.</p>
+
+ <p>Next day he quarreled with every word that Mrs. Courthope
+ uttered, kept forgetting he had sent Malcolm away, and was
+ continually wanting him. His fits of pain were more severe,
+ alternated with drowsiness, which deepened at times to
+ stupor.</p>
+
+ <p>It was late before Malcolm returned. He went instantly to
+ his bedside.</p>
+
+ <p>"Is Mr. Glennie with you?" asked his master feebly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"Tell him to come here at once."</p>
+
+ <p>When Malcolm returned with the lawyer the marquis directed
+ him to place a table and chair by the bedside, light four
+ candles, provide everything necessary for writing and go to
+ bed.</p>
+
+ <h3>CHAPTER LXIX.</h3>
+
+ <h3>THE MARQUIS AND THE SCHOOLMASTER.</h3>
+
+ <p>Before Malcolm was awake his lordship had sent for him. When
+ he re-entered the sick chamber Mr. Glennie had vanished, the
+ table had been removed, and, instead of the radiance of the
+ wax-lights, the cold gleam of a vapor-dimmed sun, with its
+ sickly blue-white reflex from the widespread snow, filled the
+ room. The marquis looked ghastly, but was sipping chocolate
+ with a spoon.</p>
+
+ <p>"What w'y are ye the day, my lord?" asked Malcolm.</p>
+
+ <p>"Nearly well," he answered; "but those cursed carrion-crows
+ are set upon killing me&mdash;damn their souls!"</p>
+
+ <p>"We'll hae Leddy Florimel sweirin' awfu' gien ye gang on
+ that gait, my lord," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+ <p>The marquis laughed feebly.</p>
+
+ <p>"An' what's mair," Malcolm continued, "I doobt they're some
+ partic'lar aboot the turn o' their phrases up yonner, my
+ lord."</p>
+
+ <p>The marquis looked at him keenly. "You don't anticipate that
+ inconvenience for me?" he said. "I'm pretty sure to have my
+ billet where they're not so precise."</p>
+
+ <p>"Dinna brak my hert, my lord," cried Malcolm, the tears
+ rushing to his eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>"I should be sorry to hurt you, Malcalm," rejoined the
+ marquis gently, almost tenderly. "I won't go there if I can
+ help it&mdash;I shouldn't like to break any more
+ hearts&mdash;but how the devil am I to keep out of it? Besides,
+ there are people up there I don't want to meet: I have no fancy
+ for being made ashamed <span class="pagenum"><a name="page82"
+ id="page82"></a>[pg 82]</span> of myself. The fact is, I'm
+ not fit for such company, and I don't believe there is any
+ such place. But if there be, I trust in God there isn't any
+ other, or it will go badly with your poor master, Malcolm.
+ It doesn't look <i>like</i> true&mdash;now does it? Only
+ such a multitude of things I thought I had done with for
+ ever keep coming up and grinning at me. It nearly drives me
+ mad, Malcolm; and I would fain die like a gentleman, with a
+ cool bow and a sharp face-about."</p>
+
+ <p>"Wadna ye hae a word wi' somebody 'at kens, my lord?" said
+ Malcolm, scarcely able to reply.</p>
+
+ <p>"No," answered the marquis fiercely. "That Cairns is a
+ fool."</p>
+
+ <p>"He's a' that, an' mair, my lord. I didna mean
+ <i>him</i>."</p>
+
+ <p>"They're all fools together."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ow, na, my lord. There's a heap o' them no muckle better,
+ it may be; but there's guid men an' true amang them, or the
+ Kirk wad hae been wi' Sodom and Gomorrah by this time. But it's
+ no a minister I wad hae yer lordship confar wi'."</p>
+
+ <p>"Who, then? Mrs. Courthope, eh?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ow na, my lord&mdash;no Mistress Courthoup. She's a guid
+ body, but she wadna believe her ain een gien onybody ca'd a
+ minister said contrar' to them."</p>
+
+ <p>"Who the devil do you mean, then?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Nae deevil, but an honest man 'at's been his warst enemy
+ sae lang 's I hae kent him&mdash;Maister Graham, the
+ schuil-maister."</p>
+
+ <p>"Pooh!" said the marquis with a puff. "I'm too old to go to
+ school."</p>
+
+ <p>"I dinna ken the man 'at isna a bairn till <i>him</i>, my
+ lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"In Greek and Latin?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I' richteousness an' trouth, my lord&mdash;in what's been
+ an' what is to be."</p>
+
+ <p>"What! has he the second sight, like the piper?"</p>
+
+ <p>"He <i>has</i> the second sicht, my lord, but ane 'at gangs
+ a sicht farther nor my auld daddy's."</p>
+
+ <p>"He could tell me, then, what's going to become of me?"</p>
+
+ <p>"As weel 's ony man, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's not saying much, I fear."</p>
+
+ <p>"Maybe mair nor ye think, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, take him my compliments and tell him I should like to
+ see him," said the marquis after a minute's silence.</p>
+
+ <p>"He'll come direckly, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"Of course he will," said the marquis.</p>
+
+ <p>"Jist as readily, my lord, as he wad gang to ony tramp 'at
+ sent for 'im at sic a time," returned Malcolm, who did not
+ relish either the remark or its tone.</p>
+
+ <p>"What do you mean by that? <i>You</i> don't think it such a
+ serious affair, do you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"My lord, ye haena a chance."</p>
+
+ <p>The marquis was dumb. He had actually begun once more to
+ buoy himself up with earthly hopes.</p>
+
+ <p>Dreading a recall of his commission, Malcolm slipped from
+ the room, sent Mrs. Courthope to take his place, and sped to
+ the schoolmaster. The moment Mr. Graham heard the marquis's
+ message he rose without a word and led the way from the
+ cottage. Hardly a sentence passed between them as they went,
+ for they were on a solemn errand.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Graham's here, my lord," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+ <p>"Where? Not in the room?" returned the marquis.</p>
+
+ <p>"Waitin' at the door, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"Bah! You needn't have been so ready. Have you told the
+ sexton to get a new spade? But you may let him in; and leave
+ him alone with me."</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Graham walked gently up to the bedside.</p>
+
+ <p>"Sit down, sir," said the marquis courteously, pleased with
+ the calm, self-possessed, unobtrusive bearing of the man. "They
+ tell me I'm dying, Mr. Graham."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'm sorry it seems to trouble you, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"What! wouldn't it trouble you, then?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't think so, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah! you're one of the elect, no doubt?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That's a thing I never did think about, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"What do you think about, then?"</p>
+
+ <p>"About God."</p>
+
+ <p>"And when you die you'll go straight to heaven, of
+ course?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't know, my lord. That's
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page83"
+ id="page83"></a>[pg 83]</span> another thing I never trouble
+ my head about."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah! you're like me, then. <i>I</i> don't care much about
+ going to heaven. What do you care about?"</p>
+
+ <p>"The will of God. I hope your lordship will say the
+ same."</p>
+
+ <p>"No I won't: I want my own will."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, that is to be had, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"How?"</p>
+
+ <p>"By taking his for yours as the better of the two, which it
+ must be every way."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's all moonshine."</p>
+
+ <p>"It <i>is</i> light, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, I don't mind confessing, if I am to die, I should
+ prefer heaven to the other place, but I trust I have no chance
+ of either. Do you now honestly believe there are two such
+ places?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't know, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"You don't know? And you come here to comfort a dying
+ man!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Your lordship must first tell me what you mean by 'two
+ <i>such</i> places.' And as to comfort, going by my notions, I
+ cannot tell which you would be more or less comfortable in; and
+ that, I presume, would be the main point with your
+ lordship."</p>
+
+ <p>"And what, pray, sir, would be the main point with you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"To get nearer to God."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, I can't say <i>I</i> want to get nearer to God. It's
+ little he's ever done for me."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's a good deal he has tried to do for you, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, who interfered? Who stood in his way, then?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yourself, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"I wasn't aware of it. When did he ever try to do anything
+ for me and I stood in his way?"</p>
+
+ <p>"When he gave you one of the loveliest of women, my lord,"
+ said Mr. Graham with solemn, faltering voice, "and you left her
+ to die in neglect and her child to be brought up by
+ strangers."</p>
+
+ <p>The marquis gave a cry. The unexpected answer had roused the
+ slowly-gnawing death and made it bite deeper.</p>
+
+ <p>"What have <i>you</i> to do," he almost screamed, "with my
+ affairs? It was for <i>me</i> to introduce what I chose of
+ them. You presume."</p>
+
+ <p>"Pardon me, my lord: you led me to what I was bound to say.
+ Shall I leave you, my lord?"</p>
+
+ <p>The marquis made no answer. "God knows I loved her," he said
+ after a while with a sigh.</p>
+
+ <p>"You loved her, my lord?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I did, by God!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Love a woman like that and come to this?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Come to this? We must all come to this, I fancy, sooner or
+ later. Come to what, in the name of Beelzebub?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That, having loved a woman like her, you are content to
+ lose her. In the name of God, have you no desire to see her
+ again?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It would be an awkward meeting," said the marquis.</p>
+
+ <p>His was an old love, alas! He had not been capable of the
+ sort that defies change. It had faded from him until it seemed
+ one of the things that are not. Although his being had once
+ glowed in its light, he could now speak of a meeting as
+ awkward.</p>
+
+ <p>"Because you wronged her?" suggested the schoolmaster.</p>
+
+ <p>"Because they lied to me, by God!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Which they dared not have done had you not lied to them
+ first."</p>
+
+ <p>"Sir!" shouted the marquis, with all the voice he had
+ left.&mdash;"O God, have mercy! I <i>cannot</i> punish the
+ scoundrel."</p>
+
+ <p>"The scoundrel is the man who lies, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"Were I anywhere else&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"There would be no good in telling you the truth, my lord.
+ You showed her to the world as a woman over whom you had
+ prevailed, and not as the honest wife she was. What <i>kind</i>
+ of a lie was that, my lord? Not a white one, surely?"</p>
+
+ <p>"You are a damned coward to speak so to a man who cannot
+ even turn on his side to curse you for a base hound. You would
+ not dare it but that you know I cannot defend myself."</p>
+
+ <p>"You are right, my lord: your conduct is indefensible."</p>
+
+ <p>"By Heaven! if I could but get this cursed leg under me, I
+ would throw you out of the window."</p>
+
+ <p>"I shall go by the door, my lord.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page84"
+ id="page84"></a>[pg 84]</span> While you hold by your sins,
+ your sins will hold by you. If you should want me again I
+ shall be at your lordship's command."</p>
+
+ <p>He rose and left the room, but had not reached his cottage
+ before Malcolm overtook him with a second message from his
+ master. He turned at once, saying only, "I expected it."</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Graham," said the marquis, looking ghastly, "you must
+ have patience with a dying man. I was very rude to you, but I
+ was in horrible pain."</p>
+
+ <p>"Don't mention it, my lord. It would be a poor friendship
+ that gave way for a rough word."</p>
+
+ <p>"How can you call yourself my friend?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I should be your friend, my lord, if it were only for your
+ wife's sake. She died loving you. I want to send you to her, my
+ lord. You will allow that, as a gentleman, you at least owe her
+ an apology."</p>
+
+ <p>"By Jove, you are right, sir! Then you really and positively
+ believe in the place they call heaven?"</p>
+
+ <p>"My lord, I believe that those who open their hearts to the
+ truth shall see the light on their friends' faces again, and be
+ able to set right what was wrong between them."</p>
+
+ <p>"It's a week too late to talk of setting right."</p>
+
+ <p>"Go and tell her you are sorry, my lord&mdash;that will be
+ enough for her."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ah! but there's more than her concerned."</p>
+
+ <p>"You are right, my lord. There is another&mdash;One who
+ cannot be satisfied that the fairest works of his hands, or
+ rather the loveliest children of his heart, should be treated
+ as you have treated women."</p>
+
+ <p>"But the Deity you talk of&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"I beg your pardon, my lord: I talked of no deity. I talked
+ of a living Love that gave us birth and calls us his children.
+ Your deity I know nothing of."</p>
+
+ <p>"Call Him what you please: <i>He</i> won't be put off so
+ easily."</p>
+
+ <p>"He won't be put off, one jot or one tittle. He will forgive
+ anything, but He will pass nothing. Will your wife forgive
+ you?"</p>
+
+ <p>"She will, when I explain."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then why should you think the forgiveness of God, which
+ created her forgiveness, should be less?"</p>
+
+ <p>Whether the marquis could grasp the reasoning may be
+ doubtful.</p>
+
+ <p>"Do you really suppose God cares whether a man comes to good
+ or ill?"</p>
+
+ <p>"If He did not, He could not be good Himself."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then you don't think a good God would care to punish poor
+ wretches like us?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Your lordship has not been in the habit of regarding
+ himself as a poor wretch. And, remember, you can't call a child
+ a poor wretch without insulting the father of it."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's quite another thing."</p>
+
+ <p>"But on the wrong side for your argument, seeing the
+ relation between God and the poorest creature is infinitely
+ closer than that between any father and his child."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then He can't be so hard on him as the parsons say."</p>
+
+ <p>"He will give him absolute justice, which is the only good
+ thing. He will spare nothing to bring his children back to
+ Himself, their sole well-being. What would you do, my lord, if
+ you saw your son strike a woman?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Knock him down and horsewhip him."</p>
+
+ <p>It was Mr. Graham who broke the silence that followed: "Are
+ you satisfied with yourself, my lord?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No, by God!"</p>
+
+ <p>"You would like to be better?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I would."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then you are of the same mind with God."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, but I'm not a fool. It won't do to say I should like
+ to be. I must be it, and that's not so easy. It's damned hard
+ to be good. I would have a fight for it, but there's no time.
+ How is a poor devil to get out of such an infernal scrape?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Keep the commandments."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's it, of course; but there's no time, I tell
+ you&mdash;no time; at least, so those cursed doctors will keep
+ telling me."</p>
+
+ <p>"If there were but time to draw
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page85"
+ id="page85"></a>[pg 85]</span> another breath, there would
+ be time to begin."</p>
+
+ <p>"How am I to begin? Which am I to begin with?"</p>
+
+ <p>"There is one commandment which includes all the rest."</p>
+
+ <p>"Which is that?"</p>
+
+ <p>"To believe in the Lord Jesus Christ."</p>
+
+ <p>"That's cant."</p>
+
+ <p>"After thirty years' trial of it, it is to me the essence of
+ wisdom. It has given me a peace which makes life or death all
+ but indifferent to me, though I would choose the latter."</p>
+
+ <p>"What am I to believe about Him, then?"</p>
+
+ <p>"You are to believe <i>in</i> Him, not about Him."</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't understand."</p>
+
+ <p>"He is our Lord and Master, Elder Brother, King, Saviour,
+ the divine Man, the human God: to believe in Him is to give
+ ourselves up to Him in obedience&mdash;to search out his will
+ and do it."</p>
+
+ <p>"But there's no time, I tell you again," the marquis almost
+ shrieked.</p>
+
+ <p>"And I tell you there is all eternity to do it in. Take Him
+ for your master, and He will demand nothing of you which you
+ are not able to perform. This is the open door to bliss. With
+ your last breath you can cry to Him, and He will hear you as He
+ heard the thief on the cross, who cried to Him dying beside
+ him: 'Lord, remember me when Thou comest into Thy
+ kingdom.'&mdash;'To-day shalt thou be with me in paradise.' It
+ makes my heart swell to think of it, my lord. No
+ cross-questioning of the poor fellow, no preaching to him. He
+ just took him with Him where He was going, to make a man of
+ him."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, you know something of my history: what would you have
+ me do now?&mdash;at once, I mean. What would the Person you are
+ speaking of have me do?"</p>
+
+ <p>"That is not for me to say, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"You could give me a hint."</p>
+
+ <p>"No. God is telling you Himself. For me to presume to tell
+ you would be to interfere with Him. What He would have a man do
+ He lets him know in his mind."</p>
+
+ <p>"But what if I had not made up my mind before the last
+ came?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Then I fear He would say to you, 'Depart from me, thou
+ worker of iniquity.'"</p>
+
+ <p>"That would be hard when another minute might have done
+ it."</p>
+
+ <p>"If another minute would have done it, you would have had
+ it."</p>
+
+ <p>A paroxysm of pain followed, during which Mr. Graham
+ silently left him.</p>
+
+ <h3>CHAPTER LXX.</h3>
+
+ <h3>END OR BEGINNING?</h3>
+
+ <p>When the fit was over and he found Mr. Graham was gone, he
+ asked Malcolm, who had resumed his watch, how long it would
+ take Lady Florimel to come from Edinburgh.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Crathie left wi' fower horses frae the Lossie Airms
+ last nicht, my lord," said Malcolm; "but the ro'ds are ill, an'
+ she winna be here afore some time the morn."</p>
+
+ <p>The marquis stared aghast: they had sent for her without his
+ orders. "What <i>shall</i> I do?" he murmured. "If once I look
+ in her eyes, I shall be damned.&mdash;Malcolm!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"Is there a lawyer in Portlossie?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, my lord: there's auld Maister Carmichael."</p>
+
+ <p>"He won't do: he was my brother's rascal. Is there no one
+ besides?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No in Portlossie, my lord. There can be nane nearer than
+ Duff Harbor, I doobt."</p>
+
+ <p>"Take the chariot and bring him here directly. Tell them to
+ put four horses to: Stokes can ride one."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll ride the ither, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"You'll do nothing of the kind: you're not used to the
+ pole."</p>
+
+ <p>"I can tak the leader, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"I tell you you're to do nothing of the kind," cried the
+ marquis angrily. "You're to ride inside, and bring
+ Mr.&mdash;what's his name?&mdash;back with you."</p>
+
+ <p>"Soutar, my lord, gien ye please."</p>
+
+ <p>"Be off, then. Don't wait to feed. The brutes have been
+ eating all day, and <span class="pagenum"><a name="page86"
+ id="page86"></a>[pg 86]</span> they can eat all night. You
+ must have him here in an hour."</p>
+
+ <p>In an hour and a quarter Miss Horn's friend stood by the
+ marquis's bedside, Malcolm was dismissed, but was presently
+ summoned again to receive more orders.</p>
+
+ <p>Fresh horses were put to the chariot, and he had to set out
+ once more&mdash;this time to fetch a justice of the peace, a
+ neighbor laird. The distance was greater than to Duff Harbor;
+ the roads were worse; the north wind, rising as they went, blew
+ against them as they returned, increasing to a violent gale;
+ and it was late before they reached Lossie House.</p>
+
+ <p>When Malcolm entered he found the marquis alone.</p>
+
+ <p>"Is Morrison here at last?" he cried, in a feeble, irritated
+ voice.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"What the devil kept you so long? The bay mare would have
+ carried me there and back in an hour and a half."</p>
+
+ <p>"The roads war verra heavy, my lord. An' jist hear till the
+ win'."</p>
+
+ <p>The marquis listened a moment, and a frightened expression
+ grew over his thin, pale, anxious face. "You don't know what
+ depends on it," he said, "or you would have driven better.
+ Where is Mr. Soutar?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I dinna ken, my lord. I'm only jist come, an' I've seen
+ naebody."</p>
+
+ <p>"Go and tell Mrs. Courthope I want Soutar. You'll find her
+ crying somewhere&mdash;the old chicken!&mdash;because I swore
+ at her. What harm could that do the old goose?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It'll be mair for love o' yer lordship than fricht at the
+ sweirin', my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>"You think so? Why should <i>she</i> care? Go and tell her
+ I'm sorry. But really she ought to be used to me by this time.
+ Tell her to send Soutar directly."</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Soutar was not to be found, the fact being that he had
+ gone to see Miss Horn. The marquis flew into an awful rage, and
+ began to curse and swear frightfully.</p>
+
+ <p>"My lord! my lord!" said Malcolm, "for God's sake, dinna
+ gang on that gait. He canna like to hear that kin' o' speech;
+ an' frae ane o' his ain' tu!"</p>
+
+ <p>The marquis stopped, aghast at his presumption and choking
+ with rage, but Malcolm's eyes filled with tears, and, instead
+ of breaking out again, his master turned his head away and was
+ silent.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Soutar came.</p>
+
+ <p>"Fetch Morrison," said the marquis, "and go to bed."</p>
+
+ <p>The wind howled terribly as Malcolm ascended the stairs and
+ half felt his way, for he had no candle, through the long
+ passages leading to his room. As he entered the last a huge
+ vague form came down upon him like a deeper darkness through
+ the dark. Instinctively he stepped aside. It passed
+ noiselessly, with a long stride, and not even a rustle of its
+ garments&mdash;at least Malcolm heard nothing but the roar of
+ the wind. He turned and followed it. On and on it went, down
+ the stair, through a corridor, down the great stone turnpike
+ stair, and through passage after passage. When it came into the
+ more frequented and half-lighted thoroughfares of the house it
+ showed as a large figure in a long cloak, indistinct in
+ outline.</p>
+
+ <p>It turned a corner close by the marquis's room. But when
+ Malcolm, close at its heels, turned also, he saw nothing but a
+ vacant lobby, the doors around which were all shut. One after
+ another he quickly opened them, all except the marquis's, but
+ nothing was to be seen. The conclusion was that it had entered
+ the marquis's room. He must not disturb the conclave in the
+ sick chamber with what might be but "a false creation
+ proceeding from the heat-oppressed brain," and turned back to
+ his own room, where he threw himself on his bed and fell
+ asleep.</p>
+
+ <p>About twelve Mrs. Courthope called him: his master was
+ worse, and wanted to see him.</p>
+
+ <p>The midnight was dark and still, for the wind had ceased.
+ But a hush and a cloud seemed gathering in the stillness and
+ darkness, and with them came the sense of a solemn celebration,
+ as if the gloom were canopy as well as pall&mdash;black, but
+ bordered and hearted with purple and gold; and the terrible
+ stillness seemed to tremble as with the
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page87"
+ id="page87"></a>[pg 87]</span> inaudible tones of a great
+ organ at the close or commencement of some mighty
+ symphony.</p>
+
+ <p>With beating heart he walked softly toward the room where,
+ as on an altar, lay the vanishing form of his master, like the
+ fuel in whose dying flame was offered the late and ill-nurtured
+ sacrifice of his spirit.</p>
+
+ <p>As he went through the last corridor leading thither, Mrs.
+ Catanach, type and embodiment of the horrors that haunt the
+ dignity of death, came walking toward him like one at home, her
+ great round body lighty upborne on her soft foot. It was no
+ time to challenge her presence, and yielding her the half of
+ the narrow way he passed without a greeting. She dropped him a
+ courtesy with an up-look and again a veiling of her wicked
+ eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>The marquis would not have the doctors come near him, and
+ when Malcolm entered there was no one in the room but Mrs.
+ Courthope. The shadow had crept far along the dial. His face
+ had grown ghastly, the skin had sunk to the bones, and his eyes
+ stood out as if from much staring into the dark. They rested
+ very mournfully on Malcolm for a few moments, and then closed
+ softly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Is she come yet?" he murmured, opening them wide with
+ sudden stare.</p>
+
+ <p>"No, my lord."</p>
+
+ <p>The lids fell again, softly, slowly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Be good to her, Malcolm," he murmured.</p>
+
+ <p>"I wull, my lord," said Malcolm solemnly.</p>
+
+ <p>Then the eyes opened and looked at him: something grew in
+ them, a light as of love, and drew up after it a tear; but the
+ lips said nothing. The eyelids fell again, and in a minute more
+ Malcolm knew by his breathing that he slept.</p>
+
+ <p>The slow night waned. He woke sometimes, but soon dozed off
+ again. The two watched by him till the dawn. It brought a still
+ gray morning, without a breath of wind and warm for the season.
+ The marquis appeared a little revived, but was hardly able to
+ speak. Mostly by signs he made Malcolm understand that he
+ wanted Mr. Graham, but that some one else must go for him. Mrs.
+ Courthope went.</p>
+
+ <p>As soon as she was out of the room he lifted his hand with
+ effort, laid feeble hold on Malcolm's jacket, and, drawing him
+ down, kissed him on the forehead. Malcolm burst into tears and
+ sank weeping by the bedside.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Graham, entering a little after, and seeing Malcolm on
+ his knees, knelt also and broke into a prayer.</p>
+
+ <p>"O blessed Father!" he said, "who knowest this thing, so
+ strange to us, which we call death, breathe more life into the
+ heart of Thy dying son, that in the power of life he may front
+ death. O Lord Christ! who diedst Thyself, and in Thyself
+ knowest it all, heal this man in his sore need&mdash;heal him
+ with strength to die."</p>
+
+ <p>A faint <i>Amen</i> came from the marquis.</p>
+
+ <p>"Thou didst send him into the world: help him out of it. O
+ God! we belong to Thee utterly. We dying men are Thy children,
+ O living Father! Thou art such a father that Thou takest our
+ sins from us and throwest them behind Thy back. Thou cleansest
+ our souls as Thy Son did wash our feet. We hold our hearts up
+ to Thee: make them what they must be, O Love! O Life of men! O
+ Heart of hearts! Give Thy dying child courage and hope and
+ peace&mdash;the peace of Him who overcame all the terrors of
+ humanity, even death itself, and liveth for evermore, sitting
+ at Thy right hand, our God-brother, blessed to all ages.
+ Amen."</p>
+
+ <p>"Amen!" murmured the marquis, and, slowly lifting his hand
+ from the coverlid, he laid it on the head of Malcolm, who did
+ not know it was the hand of his father blessing him ere he
+ died.</p>
+
+ <p>"Be good to her," said the marquis once more.</p>
+
+ <p>But Malcolm could not answer for weeping, and the marquis
+ was not satisfied. Gathering all his force, he said again, "Be
+ good to her."</p>
+
+ <p>"I wull, I wull," burst from Malcolm in sobs; and he wailed
+ aloud.</p>
+
+ <p>The day wore on, and the afternoon came. Still Lady Florimel
+ had not arrived, and still the marquis
+ lingered.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page88"
+ id="page88"></a>[pg 88]</span>
+
+ <p>As the gloom of the twilight was deepening into the early
+ darkness of the winter night he opened wide his eyes, and was
+ evidently listening. Malcolm could hear nothing, but the light
+ in his master's face grew and the strain of his listening
+ diminished. At length Malcolm became aware of the sound of
+ wheels, which came rapidly nearer, till at last the carriage
+ swung up to the hall-door. A moment, and Lady Florimel was
+ flitting across the room.</p>
+
+ <p>"Papa! papa!" she cried, and, throwing her arm over him,
+ laid her cheek to his.</p>
+
+ <p>The marquis could not return her embrace: he could only
+ receive her into the depths of his shining, tearful eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>"Flory!" he murmured, "I'm going away. I'm going&mdash;I've
+ got&mdash;to make an&mdash;apology. Malcolm, be
+ good&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>The sentence remained unfinished. The light paled from his
+ countenance: he had to carry it with him. He was dead.</p>
+
+ <p>Lady Florimel gave a loud cry. Mrs. Courthope ran to her
+ assistance. "My lady's in a dead faint," she whispered, and
+ left the room to get help.</p>
+
+ <p>Malcolm lifted Lady Florimel in his great arms and bore her
+ tenderly to her own apartment. There he left her to the care of
+ her women and returned to the chamber of death.</p>
+
+ <p>Meantime, Mr. Graham and Mr. Soutar had come. When Malcolm
+ re-entered the schoolmaster took him kindly by the arm and
+ said, "Malcolm, there can be neither place nor moment fitter
+ for the solemn communication I am commissioned to make to you:
+ I have, as in the presence of your dead father, to inform you
+ that you are now marquis of Lossie; and God forbid you should
+ be less worthy as marquis than you have been as fisherman!"</p>
+
+ <p>Malcolm stood stupefied. For a while he seemed to himself to
+ be turning over in his mind something he had heard read from a
+ book, with a nebulous notion of being somehow concerned in it.
+ The thought of his father cleared his brain. He ran to the dead
+ body, kissed its lips as he had once kissed the forehead of
+ another, and falling on his knees wept, he knew not for what.
+ Presently, however, he recovered himself, rose, and, rejoining
+ the two men, said, "Gentlemen, hoo mony kens this turn o'
+ things?"</p>
+
+ <p>"None but Mr. Morrison, Mrs. Catanach and ourselves&mdash;so
+ far as I know," answered Mr. Soutar.</p>
+
+ <p>"And Miss Horn," added Mr. Graham, "She first brought out
+ the truth of it, and ought to be the first to know of your
+ recognition by your father."</p>
+
+ <p>"I s' tell her mysel'," returned Malcolm. "But, gentlemen, I
+ beg o' ye, till I ken what I'm aboot an' gie ye leave, dinna
+ open yer moo' to leevin' cratur' aboot this. There's time
+ eneuch for the warl' to ken 't."</p>
+
+ <p>"Your lordship commands me," said Mr. Soutar.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, Malcolm, until you give me leave," said Mr.
+ Graham.</p>
+
+ <p>"Whaur's Mr. Morrison?" asked Malcolm.</p>
+
+ <p>"He is still in the house," said Mr. Soutar.</p>
+
+ <p>"Gang till him, sir, an' gar him promise, on the word o' a
+ gentleman, to haud his tongue. I canna bide to hae't blaret a'
+ gait an' a' at ance. For Mistress Catanach, I s' deal wi' her
+ mysel'."</p>
+
+ <p>The door opened, and, in all the conscious dignity conferred
+ by the immunities and prerogatives of her calling, Mrs.
+ Catanach walked into the room.</p>
+
+ <p>"A word wi' ye, Mistress Catanach," said Malcolm.</p>
+
+ <p>"Certainly, my lord," answered the howdy with mingled
+ presumption and respect, and followed him to the dining-room.
+ "Weel, my lord&mdash;" she began, before he had turned from
+ shutting the door behind them, in the tone and with the
+ air&mdash;or rather <i>airs</i>&mdash;of having conferred a
+ great benefit, and expecting its recognition.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mistress Catanach," interrupted Malcolm, turning and facing
+ her, "gien I be un'er ony obligation to you, it's frae anither
+ tongue I maun hear't. But I hae an offer to mak ye: Sae lang as
+ it disna coom oot 'at I'm onything better nor a fisherman born,
+ ye s' hae yer twinty poun' i' the year, peyed ye quarterly.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page89"
+ id="page89"></a>[pg 89]</span> But the moment fowk says wha
+ I am ye touch na a poun'-not' mair, an' I coont mysel' free
+ to pursue onything I can pruv agane ye."</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Catanach attempted a laugh of scorn, but her face was
+ gray as putty and its muscles declined response.</p>
+
+ <p>"<i>Ay</i> or <i>no</i>?" said Malcolm. "I winna gar ye
+ sweir, for I wad lippen to yer aith no a hair."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ay, my lord," said the howdy, reassuming at least outward
+ composure, and with it her natural brass, for as she spoke she
+ held out her open palm.</p>
+
+ <p>"Na, na," said Malcolm, "nae forhan' payments. Three months
+ o' tongue-haudin', an' there's yer five poun'; an' Maister
+ Soutar o' Duff Harbor 'ill pay 't intill yer ain han'. But
+ brack troth wi' me, an' ye s' hear o' 't; for gien ye war hangt
+ the warl' wad be a' the cleaner. Noo quit the hoose, an' never
+ lat me see ye aboot the place again. But afore ye gang I gie ye
+ fair warnin' 'at I mean to win at a' yer byganes."</p>
+
+ <p>The blood of red wrath was seething in Mrs. Catanach's face:
+ she drew herself up and stood flaming before him, on the verge
+ of explosion.</p>
+
+ <p>"Gang frae the hoose," said Malcolm, "or I'll set the muckle
+ hun' to shaw ye the gait."</p>
+
+ <p>Her face turned the color of ashes, and with hanging cheeks
+ and scared but not the less wicked eyes she hurried from the
+ room. Malcolm watched her out of the house, then, following her
+ into the town, brought Miss Horn back with him to aid in the
+ last earthly services, and hastened to Duncan's cottage.</p>
+
+ <p>But, to his amazement and distress, it was forsaken and the
+ hearth cold. In his attendance on his father he had not seen
+ the piper&mdash;he could not remember for how many days; and on
+ inquiry he found that, although he had not been missed, no one
+ could recall having seen him later than three or four days
+ agone. The last he could hear of him was that about a week
+ before a boy had spied him sitting on a rock in the Baillies'
+ Barn with his pipes in his lap. Searching the cottage, he found
+ that his broadsword and dirk, with all his poor finery, were
+ gone.</p>
+
+ <p>That same night Mrs. Catanach also disappeared.</p>
+
+ <p>A week after, what was left of Lord Lossie was buried.
+ Malcolm followed the hearse with the household. Miss Horn
+ walked immediately behind him, on the arm of the schoolmaster.
+ It was a great funeral, with a short road, for the body was
+ laid in the church&mdash;close to the wall, just under the
+ crusader with the Norman canopy.</p>
+
+ <p>Lady Florimel wept incessantly for three days; on the fourth
+ she looked out on the sea and thought it very dreary; on the
+ fifth she found a certain gratification in hearing herself
+ called the marchioness; on the sixth she tried on her mourning
+ and was pleased; on the seventh she went with the funeral and
+ wept again; on the eighth came Lady Bellair, who on the ninth
+ carried her away.</p>
+
+ <p>To Malcolm she had not spoken once.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Graham left Portlossie.</p>
+
+ <p>Miss Horn took to her bed for a week.</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Crathie removed his office to the House itself, took
+ upon him the function of steward as well as factor, had the
+ state-rooms dismantled, and was master of the place.</p>
+
+ <p>Malcolm helped Stoat with the horses and did odd jobs for
+ Mr. Crathie. From his likeness to the old marquis, as he was
+ still called, the factor had a favor for him, firmly believing
+ the said marquis to be his father and Mrs. Stewart his mother;
+ and hence it came that he allowed him a key to the library.</p>
+
+ <p>The story of Malcom's plans and what came of them requires
+ another book.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page90"
+ id="page90"></a>[pg 90]</span>
+
+ <h2>THE STAGE IN ITALY.</h2>
+
+ <p>The Italians are undoubtedly the most theatre-loving people
+ in the world. With them the play-house takes the place to a
+ great extent of drawing-room and evening lounge. Almost every
+ Italian family of any social position possesses a box at one of
+ the principal theatres, where visits are received and many a
+ scene from the <i>School for Scandal</i> is enacted whilst the
+ fair gossip-mongers flirt and sip ices. In winter the opera is
+ the standard amusement of the fashionable world, while the
+ favorite resort in summer is the <i>diurno</i> or open air
+ theatre, which is in the form of an amphitheatre, the stage
+ with its accessories facing an unroofed enclosure, with the
+ seats arranged in tiers one above another, and fenced off by an
+ iron balustrade from a terrace which serves the purpose of a
+ gallery. A vast covered corridor is nearly always to be found
+ adjacent to the <i>diurno</i>, beneath which the audience can
+ take refuge in case of a shower, walk between the acts and
+ indulge in <i>bebite</i>&mdash;cooling drinks, such as sherbets
+ and beer. The <i>abbonamento</i> (or subscription) to a diurno
+ costs from three to ten dollars for the season of thirty or
+ forty representations. When a dramatic company is about to
+ visit a city the manager first secures his <i>abbonati</i>, for
+ according to their number he is able to regulate his expenses,
+ as he counts little on chance spectators, and is sure to have
+ almost always to play before the same audience.</p>
+
+ <p>The lyric stage in Italy takes precedence of the dramatic,
+ and in the large cities, Milan, Venice, Genoa, Florence, Rome
+ and Naples, the production of a new opera is considered a
+ national event, forming for many days previous to its
+ production the chief topic of conversation in salons and
+ <i>caff&egrave;s</i>. No such enthusiasm is manifested in
+ regard to the first representation of a new play; and although
+ the house may be crowded and the author called before the
+ curtain, he may deem himself happy if his drama is played four
+ times during the season; whereas a popular opera will be given
+ night after night for two months. An opera, if it has any
+ merit, may be the means of carrying the fame of Italian genius
+ to the farthest limits of the earth, but it is a chance if the
+ comedy which pleases at Venice will be appreciated in the least
+ degree at Rome or Naples, such are the variations in manners
+ and customs, especially amongst the lower orders, between one
+ Italian province and another. Hence, opera is greatly fostered
+ and protected. There are a dozen musical <i>conservatori</i>,
+ public and private, in each of the principal cities, for the
+ training of singers, and prizes are accorded to them out of
+ funds especially set apart for the purpose by the government,
+ which also grants large annual subsidies to the leading lyric
+ theatres, such as the Scala at Milan, the San Carlo at Naples,
+ the Fenice at Venice, the Pergola at Florence, the Carlo Felice
+ at Genoa, the Communale at Bologna, and the Apollo at Rome. The
+ dramatic stage has none of these aids, the various companies
+ have to pay their own expenses, and, whatever may be the merits
+ of the artists who compose them, they scarcely ever obtain any
+ special recognition from the government. Although the smallest
+ Italian city possesses its theatre, and some of the
+ capitals&mdash;Milan and Naples, for instance&mdash;at least a
+ dozen, there is no training-school for the stage in any part of
+ the country. Nor is there such an institution as the English
+ Dramatic College, where decayed artists can retire when their
+ day of glory is past and they have become poor and lonely. Each
+ city has one theatre, the largest and most magnificent,
+ reserved exclusively for operatic performances, and where the
+ unmusical drama is scarcely ever tolerated. I once saw Ristori
+ act in Metastasio's <i>Dido</i> at the Scala for the benefit of
+ the wounded <span class="pagenum"><a name="page91"
+ id="page91"></a>[pg 91]</span> during the war for Italian
+ independence; but this was the only occasion in fifty years
+ on which an actress had declaimed in that enormous edifice,
+ and nothing but patriotic charity would have excused such an
+ infringement of time-honored etiquette. When, therefore, the
+ Italian opera-houses close for the season, they are never
+ reopened for the accommodation of wandering "stars." The
+ consequence of this is, that the drama is banished to the
+ inferior theatres, and whilst thousands of francs are spent
+ on the scenery of a new opera or ballet, the poor player has
+ to content himself with an indifferent stage and wretched
+ decorations. In short, to quote an observation made to me
+ recently by Signor Salvini, "Theatrical affairs are just the
+ opposite in Italy to what they are in America. In Italy the
+ opera-bill is never changed more than three times in as many
+ months: in America it varies almost every evening. In Italy
+ the play-bill is renewed nightly, while in this country and
+ in England a drama, if good, may have a run of over a
+ hundred representations." Nothing surprised Salvini more
+ during his stay in the United States than the splendor of
+ the <i>mise en sc&egrave;ne</i> of some of the New York
+ plays, but he accounted for it easily enough. The managers
+ of most of the New York, Paris and London theatres do not
+ hesitate to lavish large sums of money upon their
+ decorations and scenery, because should the piece fail for
+ which they were painted they can be used in some other. The
+ Italian theatres are nearly always the property either of
+ some nobleman or of a company of speculators, whose
+ principal object is to make as much money out of them, and
+ spend as little upon them, as possible. They are rented out
+ for a month or so to one or other of the many troupes of
+ actors which are constantly wandering about the country, and
+ which bring their own scenery and dresses with them,
+ generally of the cheapest and most tawdry description.</p>
+
+ <p>A Tuscan proverb says, "<i>Figlio d'attore, attore</i>"
+ ("The son of an actor is always an actor"); and this in Italy
+ is pretty sure to be the case. The three greatest living
+ actors, Salvini, Rossi and Majeroni, belong to families which
+ have long been popular on the stage, and so do the actresses
+ Ristori and Sedowsky. Signora Ristori made her d&eacute;but as
+ an infant in the cradle, and was for years a member of a troupe
+ the leading lady of which was her late mother, Signora
+ Maddalena Ristori, a woman of great talent and merit, whose
+ death at an advanced age has recently occasioned her celebrated
+ daughter poignant grief. There still exists in Italy a Venetian
+ troupe of comedians whose ancestors were the first interpreters
+ of the comedies of Goldoni, and several of them claim descent
+ from players who enacted the tragedies and comedies of serious
+ classical literature before the courts of Lucrezia Borgia and
+ Leonora d'Este. In glancing over an Italian play-bill one is
+ invariably struck by the fact that many of the artists bear the
+ same name, and are evidently connected by ties of consanguinity
+ or of marriage. In the Ristori troupe, for instance, there are
+ several actors calling themselves by the same name as that
+ great artist, and who are doubtless of her family. The Salvini
+ company embraces, besides the two brothers Tommaso and
+ Alessandro, several Piamontis, two or three Piccininis and two
+ Colonellos. I once knew in Italy a manager named Spada who
+ directed a little troupe of buffo actors consisting of his
+ grandfather and grandmother, father and mother, three or four
+ uncles and aunts, two brothers, and one or two sisters, in
+ addition to himself, his wife and children. Such facts are in
+ part accounted for by the social status&mdash;or rather want of
+ status&mdash;of the profession. Down to within a very recent
+ period ecclesiastical censures weighed heavily upon all actors,
+ and Christian burial was denied them unless during their final
+ illness they had formally declared their intention to abandon
+ the stage in case of recovery. So severe a condemnation on the
+ part of the clergy naturally produced a strong prejudice
+ against those who connected themselves in any way with the
+ stage; and it is only recently that in Italy, a land where
+ social changes are slow, the
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page92"
+ id="page92"></a>[pg 92]</span> doors of her somewhat formal
+ society have been opened to admit even persons so
+ distinguished in every sense of the word as are Ristori,
+ Piamonti, Salvini and Rossi. The social unfriendliness of
+ the audiences&mdash;who can applaud so enthusiastically that
+ a stranger witnessing for the first time their noisy
+ demonstrations would easily believe every man and woman in
+ the theatre ready to die for the sake of the admired
+ artist&mdash;is doubtless the cause of the patriarchal
+ system observable in the formation of Italian dramatic
+ companies. The members thereof prefer adopting their
+ fathers' profession rather than enter another where they
+ would be constantly mortified by being pointed at as the
+ children of actors.</p>
+
+ <p>A little research into the history of the stage in Italy
+ will enlighten the reader as to the true cause both of the
+ harsh condemnation of the Church and of the prejudice of
+ society against this great profession. The plays of the old
+ Romans were proverbially loose both in their plots and
+ dialogues, and Juvenal has spoken of the actors of his time
+ with the bitterest contempt. During the Middle Ages the members
+ of the various religious confraternities monopolized the stage
+ with their sacred dramas and mysteries, and the "profane
+ stage," as an Italian writer calls it, was so degraded that
+ more than once both the Church and State had to use their
+ influence to put down performances which were too infamous to
+ be here described. When the Renaissance came the drama was
+ reinstated in the position it occupied during the days of Roman
+ civilization, but the plays of this period were merely
+ imitations of the Latin comedies; and if we may judge by the
+ most celebrated of them which still exists&mdash;the
+ <i>Mandragora</i> of Macchiavelli, for example&mdash;far
+ exceeded their models in obscenity. When Benedict XIV. ascended
+ the pontifical throne he established a severe censorship, and
+ inaugurated the harsh system to which I have already alluded,
+ with the effect of banishing immoral productions from the
+ stage, though without improving its intellectual tone. In the
+ eighteenth century Goldoni appeared and gave to the world his
+ graceful comedies, which were followed by the lyric dramas of
+ Metastasio and the lofty tragedies of Alfieri. Since then there
+ has been a succession of able dramatists&mdash;Monti, Gozzi,
+ Manzoni, Pellico, Ippolito d'Asti, etc.; and as the class of
+ plays acted was elevated, so the character of the performers
+ was also improved. From being dissolute they became generally
+ respectable; and at present it may be safely asserted that a
+ better-conducted, more frugal or industrious class of men and
+ woman can scarcely be found than are the Italian players. That
+ class of actresses with whom their profession is only a means
+ of displaying their beauty and splendid but often ill-gotten
+ robes and jewelry, is little known in Italy, Such persons would
+ be scarcely tolerated either by their comrades or by the
+ public. Indeed, although within the past few years, owing to
+ the unsettled state of affairs, a great many plays of
+ questionable morality have been acted, especially in Rome,
+ still the tone of the performances usually witnessed in an
+ Italian theatre is greatly above the average of what even
+ Americans applaud; and a French play has to go through more
+ careful pruning for the Italian stage than for ours.</p>
+
+ <p>The Italian actors have always been in the habit of forming
+ themselves into troupes, or, as they call them,
+ <i>compagnie</i>, placed under the direction of one person, who
+ is both manager and principal performer. They divide these
+ troupes according to the various kinds of acting; thus, there
+ are companies of tragic, melodramatic and comic actors, but it
+ is very rare to find a combination of tragedy and comedy in the
+ same entertainment. There are at present about eighty different
+ troupes of actors in Italy, including those devoted to the
+ marionnette and dialect performances. The principal are the
+ "Salvini," "Ristori," "Majeroni," "Sedowsky," and "Rossi" for
+ tragedy, the "Bellotti Bon" for high comedy, and the "De
+ Mestri" for farce and vaudeville. The "Ristori," "Salvini" and
+ "Rossi" troupes have been the round of the world.
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page93"
+ id="page93"></a>[pg 93]</span> The "Bellotti Bon" has, I
+ believe, never quitted Italy. It is a remarkable combination
+ of well-trained actors, devoted exclusively to the
+ representation of modern society plays and dramas, mostly
+ translated or adapted from the French. Bellotti-Bon, the
+ director, is not excelled in his own line even on the stage
+ of the Th&eacute;&acirc;tre Fran&ccedil;ais. His company is
+ rich, and its scenery and dresses are tasteful. The late
+ Signora Cazzola, formerly the leading lady of this troupe,
+ was perhaps the best high-comedy and dramatic actress Italy
+ has produced. Signer Salvini informed me that Alexandre
+ Dumas <i>fils</i> told him he preferred this lady's
+ interpretation of the <i>r&ocirc;le</i> of Marguerite
+ Gauthier (Camille) in <i>La Dame aux Cam&eacute;lias</i> to
+ that of Madame Doche, who created the part. She produced a
+ great effect when the dying Camille looks at herself in the
+ glass for the first time after her long illness. Instead of
+ screaming or fainting, as is usual with most actresses who
+ undertake the character, Signora Cazzola stood for a long
+ time gazing intently at the havoc disease had wrought upon
+ her lovely countenance. Then, with a deep sigh and an
+ expression of intense agony, she turned the mirror with its
+ back toward her, implying that she could never again endure
+ the pain of seeing herself reflected upon its truth-telling
+ surface. On the toilette-table was a vase full of
+ camellias&mdash;those beautiful but scentless flowers which
+ were emblematic of her brilliant but artificial life. Taking
+ one of these in her hand, she plucked it to pieces leaf by
+ leaf, and when the last petal fell to the ground went
+ quietly back to her bed, there hopelessly to await the
+ coming on of death. Her parting with Armand was very
+ pathetic, and her death, although harrowing and true to
+ Nature, was not revolting, its horrors being moderated by
+ artistic good sense and delicacy. This great artiste died
+ young, worn out by the strong emotions she not only
+ represented, but actually felt.</p>
+
+ <p>Signora Cazzola, together with Virginia Marini and Isolina
+ Piamonti, was a pupil of Signor Salvini. Virginia Marini is
+ well considered in Italy, and used to be the leading lady in
+ the Salvini troupe. She now directs a company of her own, and
+ has been succeeded in her former position by the estimable
+ Signora Piamonti, whom Salvini declares to be one of the most
+ versatile artistes he has ever known, equally good in the
+ highest tragedy or the liveliest farce. Her Dalilla in
+ <i>Samson</i> was much admired in America, but her rendering of
+ the <i>r&ocirc;le</i> of Francesca di Rimini in the tragedy of
+ that name is perhaps her greatest performance.</p>
+
+ <p>Signora Sedowsky is undoubtedly the greatest tragic actress
+ of Italy. She is perhaps less stately and grand than Ristori,
+ but in fire and depth of feeling she greatly surpasses this
+ eminent trag&eacute;dienne. Her Ph&egrave;dre is pronounced by
+ excellent judges equal to that of Rachel. Signora Sedowsky was
+ born at Naples, and is the proprietress of three large theatres
+ in that city. She is the wife of a wealthy nobleman.
+ Notwithstanding her rank, she still keeps on the stage, but is
+ received with honor in the first society. She has never acted
+ out of Italy, and very rarely beyond the walls of Naples.</p>
+
+ <p>The superlative merits of Signora Ristori are so well known
+ in America that the mere mention of her name is sure to recall
+ some of the most delightful evenings ever spent by many of my
+ readers. Her genius and beauty, her majesty and glorious method
+ of declamation, have won her a foremost rank in her profession,
+ and her virtues and nobility of conduct the esteem of all who
+ have ever known her. There are indeed few women more estimable
+ than Adelaide Ristori, Marchioness Capranica del Grillo. It may
+ be a matter of surprise to some who are not aware of the fact
+ when I tell them that in Italy Ristori is more famous in comedy
+ than in tragedy. She is inimitable in such parts as the hostess
+ in Goldoni's clever comedy of <i>La Locandiera</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>Of all Italian actors, Gustavo Modena was the most renowned.
+ He is to the stage of his native land what Garrick was to that
+ of England, and his conception of the various parts in classic
+ drama, <span class="pagenum"><a name="page94"
+ id="page94"></a>[pg 94]</span> his "points," and even his
+ dress, have become traditional, and are almost invariably
+ retained by his followers. I never saw him act, but I once
+ heard him recite in a private <i>salon</i> his famous
+ <i>r&ocirc;le</i> of Saul in Alfieri's tragedy of that name.
+ In person he was tall and largely built, His countenance was
+ not prepossessing, and, like Michael Angelo, he had a broken
+ nose. His eye could assume a terrific aspect, and his voice
+ was rich, powerful and varied in its tone. At times it
+ rolled like thunder, while at other moments it was as soft
+ and tender as the sweetest notes of a flute. Signor Modena
+ died some years ago. He was the master of Salvini, and to
+ him that illustrious actor does not hesitate to attribute
+ much of his fame.</p>
+
+ <p>Rossi, the only living rival of Salvini, is still a young
+ man, and doubtless has great talents. I think him even more
+ impetuous and ardent than Salvini, but he is less intellectual,
+ and his elocution is decidedly inferior.</p>
+
+ <p>Majeroni is an actor of the same school, but he is becoming
+ old, and has a tendency to rant.</p>
+
+ <p>Tommaso Salvini, our late visitor, is of Milanese parentage,
+ and was born in the Lombard capital on January 1, 1830. His
+ father, as I have already said, was an able actor, and his
+ mother a popular actress named Guglielmina Zocchi. When quite a
+ boy he showed a rare talent for acting, and performed in
+ certain plays given during the Easter holidays in the school
+ where he was educated, with such rare ability that his father
+ determined to devote him to the stage. For this purpose he
+ placed him under the tuition of the great Modena, who conceived
+ much affection for him. The training received thus early from
+ such able hands soon bore fruits, and before he was thirteen
+ Salvini had already won a kind of renown in juvenile
+ characters. At fifteen he lost both his parents, and the
+ bereavement so preyed upon his spirits that he was obliged to
+ abandon his career for two years, and returned once more under
+ the tuition of Modena. When he again emerged from retirement he
+ joined the Ristori troupe, and shared with that great actress
+ many a triumph. In 1849, Salvini entered the army of Italian
+ independence, and fought valiantly for the defence of his
+ country, receiving in recognition of his services several
+ medals of honor. Peace being proclaimed, he again appeared upon
+ the stage in a company directed by Signer Cesare Dondini. He
+ played in the <i>Edipo</i> of Nicolini&mdash;a tragedy written
+ expressly for him&mdash;and achieved a great success. Next he
+ appeared in Alfieri's <i>Saul</i>, and then all Italy declared
+ that Modena's mantle had fallen on worthy shoulders. His fame
+ was now prodigious, and wherever he went he was received with
+ boundless enthusiasm. He visited Paris, where he played
+ Orasmane, Orestes, Saul and Othello. On his return to Florence
+ he was hospitably entertained by the marquis of Normanby, then
+ English ambassador to the court of Tuscany, and this
+ enlightened nobleman strongly encouraged him to extend his
+ repertory of Shakespearian characters. In 1865 occurred the
+ sixth centenary of Dante's birthday, and the four greatest
+ Italian actors were invited to perform in Silvio Pellico's
+ tragedy of <i>Francesca di Rimini</i>, which is founded on an
+ episode in the <i>Divina Commedia</i>. The cast originally
+ stood on the play-bills thus: Francesca, Signora Ristori;
+ Lancelotto, Signor Rossi; Paulo, Signor Salvini; and Guido,
+ Signor Majeroni. It happened, however, that Rossi, who was
+ unaccustomed to play the part of Lancelotto, felt timid at
+ appearing in a character so little suited to him. Hearing this,
+ Signor Salvini, with exquisite politeness and good-nature,
+ volunteered to take the insignificant part, relinquishing the
+ grand <i>r&ocirc;le</i> of Paulo to his junior in the
+ profession. He created by the force of his genius an impression
+ in the minor part which is still vivid in the minds of all who
+ witnessed the performance. The government of Florence, grateful
+ for his urbanity, presented him with a statuette of Dante, and
+ King Victor Emmanuel rewarded him with the title of knight of
+ the Order of the Saints Maurice and Lazarus. Later he received
+ from the same monarch a diamond ring, with the rank of officer
+ in the Order of the Crown
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page95"
+ id="page95"></a>[pg 95]</span> of Italy. In 1868, Signer
+ Salvini visited Madrid, where his acting of the death of
+ Conrad in <i>La Morte Civile</i> produced such an impression
+ that the easily-excited Madrilese rushed upon the stage to
+ ascertain whether the death was actual or fictitious. The
+ queen, Isabella II., conferred upon the great actor many
+ marks of favor, and so shortly afterward did King Louis of
+ Portugal, who frequently entertained him at the royal palace
+ of Lisbon.</p>
+
+ <p>Signor Salvini's recent visit to America I need scarcely
+ mention: its triumphs are still fresh in the memory of the
+ public, and the only drawback to its complete success was the
+ unhappy fact that the eminent artist did not appeal to his
+ audiences in their own language.</p>
+
+ <p>I know of nothing more remarkable than the difference which
+ exists between the Salvini of the stage and the Salvini of
+ private life, the one so imposing, impetuous and fiery, the
+ other so gentle, urbane, and even retiring. He is a gentleman
+ possessing the manners of the good old school&mdash;courtly and
+ somewhat ceremonious, reminding one of those Italian nobles of
+ the sixteenth century of whom we lead in the novels of Giraldo
+ Cinthio and Fiorentino&mdash;<i>uomini illustri, e di civil
+ costumi</i>. His greeting is cordial and his conversation
+ delightful, full of anecdote and marked with enthusiasm for his
+ art. When I first became acquainted with him I was of opinion
+ that his interpretation of Hamlet was based only upon the
+ translated text, but in the course of a very long conversation
+ on the subject I discovered that he was well acquainted
+ (through literal translations) not only with the text, but also
+ with the notes and comments of our leading critics. In speaking
+ of the part in which he is altogether unrivaled he said, "I am
+ of opinion that Shakespeare intended Othello to be a Moor of
+ Barbary or some other part of Northern Africa, of whom there
+ were many in Italy during the sixteenth century. I have met
+ several, and think I imitate their ways and manners pretty
+ well. You are aware, however, that the historical Othello was
+ not a black at all. He was a white man, and a Venetian general
+ named Mora. His history resembles that of Shakespeare's hero in
+ many particulars. Giraldo Cinthio, probably for better effect,
+ made out of the name Mora, <i>moro</i>, a blackamoor; and
+ Shakespeare, unacquainted with the true story, followed this
+ old novelist's lead; and it was well he did so, for have we not
+ in consequence the most perfect delineation of the
+ peculiarities of Moorish temperament ever conceived?" The
+ costumes worn by Salvini in this play are copied from those
+ depicted in certain Venetian pictures of the fifteenth century
+ in which several Moorish officers appear. It took him many
+ years to master this <i>r&ocirc;le</i>, and he assured me he
+ could not play it more than three times in succession without
+ experiencing terrible fatigue. "It is a matter of wonder to
+ me," he observed, "that English actors can play a great
+ character like this so many nights in succession; and, above
+ all, that they retain self-possession whilst the fidgety noise
+ of scene-shifting is going on behind them. To avoid this, I
+ have been obliged to cut <i>Othello</i> into six acts, and to
+ make many changes in <i>Hamlet</i>." The intensity of feeling
+ with which he throws himself into the part he is representing
+ was especially evident on the occasion of his playing Saul.
+ After the performance I was invited to go behind the scenes to
+ speak with him, and was surprised as well as pained to find him
+ utterly exhausted. I could not help saying, "How can you exert
+ yourself thus to please so few people?" There were scarcely
+ four hundred persons assembled to see this sublime performance.
+ He answered with honest simplicity, "They have paid their
+ money, and are entitled to the best I can do for them; besides
+ that, when I am on the stage I forget the world and all that is
+ in it, and live the character I represent." "You will," said I,
+ "make a grand Lear." "Yes," he replied, "I think I shall be
+ able to make something out of the old king. I have been reading
+ the tragedy for some time, but it will still take me two years
+ to study it thoroughly."</p>
+
+ <p>Salvini related to me several anecdotes which show how quick
+ he is to master <span class="pagenum"><a name="page96"
+ id="page96"></a>[pg 96]</span> any difficulties accident
+ throws in his way. "Once I bought," he said, "a play of a
+ poor young writer which I thought I could make something of;
+ but when we came to rehearse it for the last time before
+ representation, it seemed to me utterly flat and
+ unprofitable. The piece was called <i>La Suonatrice
+ d'Arpa</i> ('The Harp-Girl'). The actors all said the last
+ act was so stupid that we should make a <i>fiasco</i>. I at
+ last hit upon an idea. We had, however, only a few hours to
+ execute it in. I changed the story: instead of the play
+ ending happily, I made the father kill his daughter
+ accidentally, and then die of grief. All the dialogue had to
+ be improvised by the leading actress and myself. I played
+ the father, and Signora Piamonti the daughter. Such was the
+ success of our invention that the piece was played eight
+ nights in succession, and a rival actor, hearing of the
+ triumph achieved by <i>The Harp-Girl</i>, bought from the
+ author for a handsome sum the privilege of acting it in
+ certain districts which were not included in my purchase of
+ the drama. Not being aware of the alterations we had made,
+ and performing it according to the letter of the text, he
+ made <i>un fiasco solenne</i>&mdash;a dead failure."</p>
+
+ <p>After the first performance of <i>Za&iuml;re</i> I took the
+ liberty of observing to Salvini that a superb piece of
+ "business" which marks his acting in the last act was not to be
+ found in the text. "Oh," he replied, "I will tell you the
+ origin of it. I was playing at Naples, and one night, when I
+ threw the body of my murdered wife upon the ottoman in the last
+ act, my burnouse fell off and fixed itself to my waist like a
+ tail. I saw at once that if I was not careful I should provoke
+ laughter, and instantly imagined that I would pretend to
+ believe the clinging drapery was the wounded Za&iuml;re
+ grasping me behind. I appeared to dread even to look round,
+ lest I should encounter her pallid face. I hesitated, I
+ trembled, and when with a supreme effort I at last grasped the
+ burnouse and cast it from me, I still lacked the courage to
+ ascertain what it really was, and stood shivering before the
+ white heap it made upon the floor. Finally, just as I thought
+ public curiosity to know what I was going to do began to grow
+ weary, I stooped down and seizing the white mantle dashed it
+ from me with contempt, showing by the gesture that I had
+ discovered what it was, and felt anger that such a trifle
+ should thus alarm a bold man who had committed murder." This
+ pantomime obtained for Salvini at the New York Academy of Music
+ one of his greatest ovations.</p>
+
+ <p>When asked why he did not learn English, "Ah!" he replied,
+ "I am too old; and even if I mastered it, I could not control
+ my knowledge of it. When excited I should be lapsing into
+ Italian, which would be very absurd. You asked me the other day
+ why I do not play Orestes. I should make a queer young Greek
+ with an Apollo-like figure now-a-days! The time was when I
+ looked the part and acted it well, and then I liked to play it.
+ I must leave it, with many other good things, to younger men."
+ Speaking about dramatic elocution, he said, "The best method is
+ obtained by close observation of Nature, and above all by
+ earnestness. If you can impress people with the conviction that
+ you feel what you say, they will pardon many shortcomings. And,
+ above all, study, study, study! All the genius in the world
+ will not help you along with any art unless you become a hard
+ student. It has taken me years to master a single part."</p>
+
+ <p>Salvini's visit to America has been fruitful of a double
+ good. He has shown forth the splendor of Italian genius, even
+ revealing to us new marvels in that mine of wealth, the works
+ of the greatest Bard of the English-speaking race; and he has
+ gone back to Italy to tell her people of things he has seen in
+ the New World which his great compatriot discovered&mdash;as
+ wonderful in their way as any related by Othello to Desdemona's
+ willing ear.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">R.
+ DAVEY.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page97"
+ id="page97"></a>[pg 97]</span>
+
+ <h2>THREE FEATHERS.</h2>
+
+ <h3>BY WILLIAM BLACK, AUTHOR OF "A PRINCESS OF THULE."</h3>
+
+ <h3>CHAPTER XX.</h3>
+
+ <h3>TINTAGEL'S WALLS.</h3>
+
+ <p>What was the matter with Harry Trelyon? His mother could not
+ make out; and there never had been much confidence between
+ them, so that she did not care to ask. But she watched, and she
+ saw that he had, for the time at least, forsaken his accustomed
+ haunts and ways and become gloomy, silent and self-possessed.
+ Dick was left neglected in the stables: you no longer heard his
+ rapid clatter along the highway, with the not over-melodious
+ voice of his master singing "The Men of Merry, Merry England"
+ or "The Young Chevalier." The long and slender fishing-rod
+ remained on the pegs in the hall, although you could hear the
+ flop of the small burn-trout of an evening when the flies were
+ thick over the stream. The dogs were deprived of their
+ accustomed runs; the horses had to be taken out for exercise by
+ the groom; and the various and innumerable animals about the
+ place missed their doses of alternate petting and teasing, all
+ because Master Harry had chosen to shut himself up in his
+ study.</p>
+
+ <p>The mother of the young man very soon discovered that her
+ son was not devoting his hours of seclusion in that
+ extraordinary museum of natural history to making trout-flies,
+ stuffing birds and arranging pinned butterflies in cases, as
+ was his custom. These were not the occupations which now kept
+ Master Harry up half the night. When she went in of a morning,
+ before he was up, she found that he had been covering whole
+ sheets of paper with careful copying out of passages taken at
+ random from the volumes beside him. A Latin grammar was
+ ordinarily on the table&mdash;a book which the young gentleman
+ had brought back from school free from thumb-marks.
+ Occasionally a fencing-foil lay among these evidences of study,
+ while the small aquaria, the cases of stuffed animals with
+ fancy backgrounds and the numerous bird-cages had been thrust
+ aside to give fair elbow-room.</p>
+
+ <p>"Perhaps," said Mrs. Trelyon to herself with much
+ satisfaction&mdash;"perhaps, after all, that good little girl
+ has given him a hint about Parliament, and he is preparing
+ himself."</p>
+
+ <p>A few days of this seclusion, however, began to make the
+ mother anxious; and so one morning she went into his room. He
+ hastily turned over the sheet of paper on which he had been
+ writing: then he looked up, not too well pleased.</p>
+
+ <p>"Harry, why do you stay in-doors on such a beautiful
+ morning? It is quite like summer."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, I know," he said. "I suppose we shall soon have a
+ batch of parsons here: summer always brings them. They come out
+ with the hot weather&mdash;like butterflies."</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Trelyon was shocked and disappointed: she thought Wenna
+ Rosewarne had cured him of his insane dislike to
+ clergymen&mdash;indeed, for many a day gone by he had kept
+ respectfully silent on the subject.</p>
+
+ <p>"But we shall not ask them to come if you'd rather not," she
+ said, wishing to do all she could to encourage the reformation
+ of his ways. "I think Mr. Barnes promised to visit us early in
+ May, but he is only one."</p>
+
+ <p>"And one is worse than a dozen. When there's a lot you can
+ leave 'em to fight it out among themselves. But one!&mdash;to
+ have one stalking about an empty house, like a ghost dipped in
+ ink! Why can't you ask anybody but clergymen, mother? There are
+ whole lots of people would like to run down from London for a
+ fortnight before getting into the thick of the season: there's
+ the Pomeroy girls as good as offered to come."</p>
+
+ <p>"But they can't come by themselves," Mrs. Trelyon said with
+ a feeble protest.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh yes, they can: they're ugly enough
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page98"
+ id="page98"></a>[pg 98]</span> to be safe anywhere. And why
+ don't you get Juliott up? She'll be glad to get away from
+ that old curmudgeon for a week. And you ought to ask the
+ Trewhellas, father and daughter, to dinner: that old fellow
+ is not half a bad sort of fellow, although he's a
+ clergyman."</p>
+
+ <p>"Harry," said his mother, interrupting him, "I'll fill the
+ house if that will please you; and you shall ask just
+ whomsoever you please."</p>
+
+ <p>"All right," said he: "the place wants waking up."</p>
+
+ <p>"And then," said the mother, wishing to be still more
+ gracious, "you might ask Miss Rosewarne to dine with us: she
+ might come well enough, although Mr. Roscorla is not here."</p>
+
+ <p>A sort of gloom fell over the young man's face again: "I
+ can't ask her&mdash;you may if you like."</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Trelyon stared: "What is the matter, Harry? Have you
+ and she quarreled? Why, I was going to ask you, if you were
+ down in the village to-day, to say that I should like to see
+ her."</p>
+
+ <p>"And how could I take such a message?" the young man said,
+ rather warmly, "I don't see why the girl should be ordered up
+ to see you as if you were conferring a favor on her by joining
+ in this scheme. She's very hard-worked; you have got plenty of
+ time; you ought to call on her and study her convenience,
+ instead of making her trot all the way up here whenever you
+ want to talk to her."</p>
+
+ <p>The pale and gentle woman flushed a little, but she was
+ anxious not to give way to petulance just then: "Well, you are
+ quite right, Harry: it was thoughtless of me. I should like to
+ go down and see her this morning; but I have sent Jakes over to
+ the blacksmith's, and I am afraid of that new lad."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I will drive you down to the inn. I suppose among them
+ they can put the horses to the wagonette," the young man said,
+ not very graciously: and then Mrs. Trelyon went off to get
+ ready.</p>
+
+ <p>It was a beautiful, fresh morning, the far-off line of the
+ sea still and blue, the sunlight lighting up the wonderful
+ masses of primroses along the tall banks, the air sweet with
+ the resinous odor of the gorse. Mrs. Trelyon looked with a
+ gentle and childlike pleasure on all these things, and was
+ fairly inclined to be very friendly with the young gentleman
+ beside her. But he was more than ordinarily silent and morose.
+ Mrs. Trelyon knew she had done nothing to offend him, and
+ thought it hard she should be punished for the sins of anybody
+ else.</p>
+
+ <p>He spoke scarcely a word to her as the carriage rolled along
+ the silent highways. He drove rapidly and carelessly down the
+ steep thoroughfare of Eglosilyan, although there were plenty of
+ loose stones about. Then he pulled sharply up in front of the
+ inn, and George Rosewarne appeared.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Rosewarne, let me introduce you to my mother. She wants
+ to see Miss Wenna for a few moments, if she is not
+ engaged."</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Rosewarne took off his cap, assisted Mrs. Trelyon to
+ alight, and then showed her the way into the house.</p>
+
+ <p>"Won't you come in, Harry?" his mother said.</p>
+
+ <p>"No."</p>
+
+ <p>A man had come out to the horses' heads.</p>
+
+ <p>"You leave 'em alone," said the young gentleman: "I sha'n't
+ get down."</p>
+
+ <p>Mabyn came out, her bright young face full of pleasure.</p>
+
+ <p>"How do you do, Mabyn?" he said coldly, and without offering
+ to shake hands.</p>
+
+ <p>"Won't you come in for a minute?" she said, rather
+ surprised.</p>
+
+ <p>"No, thank you. Don't you stay out in the cold: you've got
+ nothing round your neck."</p>
+
+ <p>Mabyn went away without saying a word, but thinking that the
+ coolness of the air was much less apparent than that of his
+ manner and speech.</p>
+
+ <p>Being at length left to himself, he turned his attention to
+ the horses before him, and eventually, to pass the time, took
+ out his pocket-handkerchief and began to polish the silver on
+ the handle of the whip. He was disturbed in this peaceful
+ occupation by a very timid voice, which said, "Mr. Trelyon." He
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page99"
+ id="page99"></a>[pg 99]</span> turned round and found that
+ Wenna's wistful face was looking up to him, with a look in
+ it partly of friendly gladness and partly of anxiety and
+ entreaty. "Mr. Trelyon," she said, with her eyes cast down,
+ "I think you are offended with me. I am very sorry: I beg
+ your forgiveness."</p>
+
+ <p>The reins were fastened up in a minute, and he was down in
+ the road beside her. "Now look here, Wenna," he said. "What
+ could you mean by treating me so unfairly? I don't mean in
+ being vexed with me, but in shunting me off, as it were,
+ instead of having it out at once. I don't think it was
+ fair."</p>
+
+ <p>"I am very sorry," she said. "I think I was very wrong, but
+ you don't know what a girl feels about such things. Will you
+ come into the inn?"</p>
+
+ <p>"And leave my horses? No," he said, good-naturedly. "But as
+ soon as I get that fellow out, I will; so you go in at once,
+ and I'll follow you directly. And mind, Wenna, don't you be so
+ silly again, or you and I may have a real quarrel; and I know
+ that would break your heart."</p>
+
+ <p>The old pleased smile lit up her face again as she turned
+ and went in-doors: he meanwhile proceeded to summon a hostler
+ by shouting his name at the pitch of his voice.</p>
+
+ <p>The small party of women assembled in the parlor were a
+ trifle embarrassed: it was the first time that the great lady
+ of the neighborhood had honored the inn with a visit. She
+ herself was merely quiet, gentle and pleased, but Mrs.
+ Rosewarne, with her fine eyes and her sensitive face all lit up
+ and quickened by, the novel excitement, was all anxiety to
+ amuse and interest and propitiate her distinguished guest.
+ Mabyn, too, was rather shy and embarrassed: she said things
+ hastily, and then seemed afraid of her interference. Wenna was
+ scarcely at her ease, because she saw that her mother and
+ sister were not; and she was very anxious, moreover, that these
+ two should think well of Mrs. Trelyon and be disposed to like
+ her.</p>
+
+ <p>The sudden appearance of a man with a man's rough ways and
+ loud voice seemed to shake these feminine elements better
+ together, and to clear the air of timid apprehensions and
+ cautions. Harry Trelyon came into the room with quite a marked
+ freshness and good-nature on his face. His mother was
+ surprised: what had completely changed his manner in a couple
+ of minutes?</p>
+
+ <p>"How are you, Mrs. Rosewarne?" he cried in his off-hand
+ fashion. "You oughtn't to be in-doors on such a morning, or we
+ shall never get you well, you know; and the doctor will be
+ sending you to Penzance or Devonport for a change. Well, Mabyn,
+ have you convinced anybody yet that your farm-laborers with
+ their twelve shillings a week are better off than the
+ slate-workers with their eighteen? You'd better take your
+ sister's opinion on that point, and don't squabble with me.
+ Mother, what's the use of sitting here? You bring Miss Wenna
+ with you into the wagonette, and talk to her there about all
+ your business-affairs, and I'll take you for a drive. Come
+ along. And of course I want somebody with me: will you come,
+ Mrs. Rosewarne, or will Mabyn? You can't?&mdash;then Mabyn
+ must. Go along, Mabyn, and put your best hat on, and make
+ yourself uncommonly smart, and you shall be allowed to sit next
+ the driver&mdash;that's me."</p>
+
+ <p>And indeed he bundled the whole of them about until they
+ were seated in the wagonette just as he had indicated; and away
+ they went from the inn-door.</p>
+
+ <p>"And you think you are coming back in half an hour?" he said
+ to his companion, who was much pleased and very proud to occupy
+ such a place. "Oh no, you're not. You're a young and simple
+ thing, Mabyn. These two behind us will go on talking now for
+ any time about yards of calico and crochet-needles and twopenny
+ subscriptions, while you and I, don't you see, are quietly
+ driving them over to Tintagel&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, Mr. Trelyon!" said Mabyn.</p>
+
+ <p>"You keep quiet. That isn't the half of what's going to
+ befall you. I shall put up the horses at the inn, and I shall
+ take you all down to the beach for a scramble to improve your
+ appetite; and at the said inn you shall have luncheon with me,
+ if you're all very good and
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page100"
+ id="page100"></a>[pg 100]</span> behave yourselves. Then we
+ shall drive back just when we particularly please. Do you
+ like the picture?"</p>
+
+ <p>"It is delightful: oh, I am sure Wenna will enjoy it," Mabyn
+ said. "But don't you think, Mr. Trelyon, that you might ask her
+ to sit here? One sees better here than sitting sideways in a
+ wagonette."</p>
+
+ <p>"They have their business-affairs to settle."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes," said Mabyn petulantly, "that is what every one says:
+ nobody expects Wenna ever to have a moment's enjoyment to
+ herself. Oh, here is old Uncle Cornish&mdash;he's a great
+ friend of Wenna's: he will be dreadfully hurt if she passes him
+ without saying a word."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then we shall pull up and address Uncle Cornish. I believe
+ he used to be the most thieving old ruffian of a poacher in
+ this county."</p>
+
+ <p>There was a hale old man of seventy or so seated on a low
+ wall in front of one of the gardens, his face shaded from the
+ sunlight by a broad hat, his lean gray hands employed in
+ buckling up the leathern leggings that encased his spare
+ calves. He got up when the horses stopped, and looked in rather
+ a dazed fashion at the carriage.</p>
+
+ <p>"How do you do this morning, Mr. Cornish?" Wenna said.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, now, to be sure!" the old man said, as if reproaching
+ his own imperfect vision. "'Tis a fine marnin', Miss Wenna, and
+ y&uuml; be agwoin' for a drive."</p>
+
+ <p>"And how is your daughter-in-law, Mr. Cornish? Has she sold
+ the pig yet?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Naw, she hasn't sold the peg. If y&uuml; be agwoin'
+ thr&uuml; Trevalga, Miss Wenna, just y&uuml; stop and have a
+ look at that peg: y&uuml;'ll be 'mazed to see en. 'Tis many a
+ year agone sence there has been such a peg by me. And perhaps
+ y&uuml;'d take the laste bit o' refrashment, Miss Wenna, as
+ y&uuml; go by: Jane would get y&uuml; a coop o' tay to
+ once."</p>
+
+ <p>"Thank you, Mr. Cornish, I'll look in and see the pig some
+ other time: to-day we sha'n't be going as far as Trevalga."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, won't you?" said Master Harry in a low voice as he
+ drove on. "You'll be in Trevalga before you know where you
+ are."</p>
+
+ <p>Which was literally the case. Wenna was so much engaged in
+ her talk with Mrs. Trelyon that she did not notice how far away
+ they were getting from Eglosilyan; but Mabyn and her companion
+ knew. They were now on the high uplands by the coast, driving
+ between the beautiful banks, which were starred with primroses
+ and stitchwort and red dead-nettle and a dozen other bright and
+ tender-hued firstlings of the year. The sun was warm on the
+ hedges and the fields, but a cool breeze blew about these lofty
+ heights, and stirred Mabyn's splendid masses of hair as they
+ drove rapidly along. Far over on their right, beyond the
+ majestic wall of cliff, lay the great blue plain of the sea;
+ and there stood the bold brown masses of the Sisters Rocks,
+ with a circle of white foam round their base. As they looked
+ down into the south the white light was so fierce that they
+ could but faintly discern objects through it; but here and
+ there they caught a glimpse of a square church-tower or of a
+ few rude cottages clustered on the high plain, and these seemed
+ to be of a transparent gray in the blinding glare of the
+ sun.</p>
+
+ <p>Then suddenly in front of them they found a deep chasm, with
+ the white road leading down through its cool shadows. There was
+ the channel of a stream, with the rocks looking purple amid the
+ gray bushes; and here were rich meadows, with cattle standing
+ deep in the grass and the daisies; and over there, on the other
+ side, a strip of forest, with the sunlight shining along one
+ side of the tall and dark-green pines. As they drove down into
+ this place, which is called the Rocky Valley, a magpie rose
+ from one of the fields and flew up into the firs.</p>
+
+ <p>"That is sorrow," said Mabyn.</p>
+
+ <p>Another one rose and flew up to the same spot.</p>
+
+ <p>"And that is joy," she said, with her face brightening.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, but I saw another as we came to the brow of the hill,
+ and that means a marriage," her companion remarked to
+ her.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page101"
+ id="page101"></a>[pg 101]</span>
+
+ <p>"Oh no," she said quite eagerly, "I am sure there was no
+ third one: I am certain there were only two. I am quite
+ positive we only saw two."</p>
+
+ <p>"But why should you be so anxious?" Trelyon said, "You know
+ you ought to be looking forward to a marriage, and that is
+ always a happy thing. Are you envious, Mabyn?"</p>
+
+ <p>The girl was silent for a moment or two. Then she said, with
+ a sudden bitterness in her tone, "Isn't it a fearful thing to
+ have to be civil to people whom you hate? Isn't it, when they
+ come and establish a claim on you through some one you care
+ for? You look at them&mdash;yes, you can look at them&mdash;and
+ you've got to see them kiss some one that you love; and you
+ wonder she doesn't rush away for a bit of caustic and cauterize
+ the place, as you do when a mad dog bites you."</p>
+
+ <p>"Mabyn," said the young man beside her, "you are a most
+ unchristian sort of person this morning. Who is it you hate in
+ such a fashion? Will you take the reins while I walk up the
+ hill?"</p>
+
+ <p>Mabyn's little burst of passion still burned in her cheeks
+ and gave a proud and angry look to her mouth, but she took the
+ reins all the same, and her companion leapt to the ground. The
+ banks on each side of the road going up this hill were tall and
+ steep: here and there great masses of wild flowers were
+ scattered among the grass and the gorse. From time to time he
+ stopped to pick up a handful, until, when they had got up to
+ the high and level country again, he had brought together a
+ very pretty bouquet of wild blossoms. When he got into his seat
+ and took the reins again he carelessly gave the bouquet to
+ Mabyn.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, how pretty!" she said; and then she turned round:
+ "Wenna, are you very much engaged? Look at the pretty bouquet
+ Mr. Trelyon has gathered for you."</p>
+
+ <p>Wenna's quiet face flushed with pleasure when she took the
+ flowers, and Mrs. Trelyon looked pleased and said they were
+ very pretty. She evidently thought that her son was greatly
+ improved in his manners when he condescended to gather flowers
+ to present to a girl. Nay, was he not at this moment devoting a
+ whole forenoon of his precious time to the unaccustomed task of
+ taking ladies for a drive? Mrs. Trelyon regarded Wenna with a
+ friendly look, and began to take a greater liking than ever to
+ that sensitive and expressive face and to the quiet and earnest
+ eyes.</p>
+
+ <p>"But, Mr. Trelyon," said Wenna, looking round, "hadn't we
+ better turn? We shall be at Trevenna directly."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, you are quite right," said Master Harry: "you will be
+ at Trevenna directly, and you are likely to be there for some
+ time. For Mabyn and I have resolved to have luncheon there, and
+ we are going down to Tintagel, and we shall most likely climb
+ to King Arthur's Castle. Have you any objections?"</p>
+
+ <p>Wenna had none. The drive through the cool and bright day
+ had braced up her spirits. She was glad to know that everything
+ looked promising about this scheme of hers. So she willingly
+ surrendered herself to the holiday, and in due time they drove
+ into the odd and remote little village and pulled up in front
+ of the inn.</p>
+
+ <p>So soon as the hostler had come to the horses' heads the
+ young gentleman who had been driving jumped down and assisted
+ his three companions to alight: then he led the way into the
+ inn. In the doorway stood a stranger, probably a commercial
+ traveler, who, with his hands in his pockets, his legs apart
+ and a cigar in his mouth, had been visiting those three ladies
+ with a very hearty stare as they got out of the carriage.
+ Moreover, when they came to the doorway he did not budge an
+ inch nor did he take his cigar from his mouth; and so, as it
+ had never been Mr. Trelyon's fashion to sidle past any one,
+ that young gentleman made straight for the middle of the
+ passage, keeping his shoulders very square. The consequence was
+ a collision. The imperturbable person with his hands in his
+ pockets was sent staggering against the wall, while his cigar
+ dropped on the stone. "What the devil&mdash;!" he was beginning
+ to say, when Trelyon got the three women past him and into the
+ small parlor. Then he went back: "Did you
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page102"
+ id="page102"></a>[pg 102]</span> wish to speak to me, sir?
+ No, you didn't: I perceive you are a prudent person. Next
+ time ladies pass you, you'd better take your cigar out of
+ your mouth or somebody'll destroy that two-pennyworth of
+ tobacco for you. Good-morning."</p>
+
+ <p>Then he returned to the little parlor, to which a waitress
+ had been summoned: "Now, Jinny, pull yourself together and
+ let's have something nice for luncheon&mdash;in an hour's time,
+ sharp. You will, won't you? And how about that Sillery with the
+ blue star&mdash;not the stuff with the gold head that some
+ abandoned ruffian in Plymouth brews in his back garden. Well,
+ can't you speak?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, sir," said the bewildered maid.</p>
+
+ <p>"That's a good thing&mdash;a very good thing," said he,
+ putting the shawls together on a sofa. "Don't you forget how to
+ speak until you get married. And don't let anybody come into
+ this room. And you can let my man have his dinner and a pint of
+ beer. Oh, I forgot: I'm my own man this morning, so you needn't
+ go asking for him. Now, will you remember all these
+ things?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, sir; but what would you like for luncheon?"</p>
+
+ <p>"My good girl, we should like a thousand things such as
+ Tintagel never saw, but what you've got to do is to give us the
+ nicest things you've got: do you see? I leave it entirely in
+ your hands. Come along, young people."</p>
+
+ <p>And so he bundled his charges out again into the main street
+ of the village; and somehow it happened that Mabyn addressed a
+ timid remark to Mrs. Trelyon, and that Mrs. Trelyon, in
+ answering it, stopped for a moment; so that Master Harry was
+ sent to Wenna's side, and these two led the way down the wide
+ thoroughfare. There were few people visible in the
+ old-fashioned place: here and there an aged crone came out to
+ the door of one of the rude stone cottages to look at the
+ strangers. Overhead the sky was veiled over with a thin fleece
+ of white cloud, but the light was intense for all that, and
+ indeed the colors of the objects around seemed all the more
+ clear and marked.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, Miss Wenna," said the young man gayly, "how long are
+ we to remain good friends? What is the next fault you will have
+ to find with me? Or have you discovered something wrong
+ already?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh no," she said with a quiet smile, "I am very good
+ friends with you this morning. You have pleased your mother
+ very much by bringing her for this drive."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, nonsense!" he said. "She might have as many drives as
+ she chose; but presently you'll find a lot of those parsons
+ back at the house, and she'll take to her white gowns again,
+ and the playing of the organ all the day long, and all that
+ sham stuff. I tell you what it is: she never seems alive, she
+ never seems to take any interest in anything, unless you're
+ with her. Now, you will see how the novelty of this
+ luncheon-party in an inn will amuse her; but do you think she
+ would care for it if she and I were here alone?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Perhaps you never tried?" Miss Wenna said gently.</p>
+
+ <p>"Perhaps I knew she wouldn't come. However, don't let's have
+ a fight, Wenna: I mean to be very civil to you to-day&mdash;I
+ do, really."</p>
+
+ <p>"I am so much obliged to you," she said meekly. "But pray
+ don't give yourself unnecessary trouble."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh," said he, "I'd always be civil to you if you would
+ treat me decently. But you say far more rude things than I
+ do&mdash;in that soft way, you know, that looks as if it were
+ all silk and honey. I do think you've awfully little
+ consideration for human failings. If one goes wrong in the
+ least thing, even in one's spelling, you say something that
+ sounds as pleasant as possible, and all the same it transfixes
+ one just as you stick a pin through a beetle. You are very
+ hard, you are&mdash;mean with those who would like to be
+ friends with you. When it's mere strangers and cottagers and
+ people of that sort, who don't care a brass farthing about you,
+ then I believe you're all gentleness and kindness; but to your
+ real friends the edge of a saw is smooth compared to you."</p>
+
+ <p>"Am I so very harsh to my friends?" the young lady said in a
+ resigned way.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page103"
+ id="page103"></a>[pg 103]</span>
+
+ <p>"Oh, well," he said, with some compunction, "I don't quite
+ say that, but you could be much more pleasant if you liked, and
+ a little more charitable to their faults. You know there are
+ some who would give a great deal to win your approval; and
+ perhaps when you find fault they are so disappointed that they
+ think your words are sharper than you mean; and sometimes they
+ think you might give them credit for trying to please you, at
+ least."</p>
+
+ <p>"And who are these persons?" Wenna said, with another smile
+ stealing over her face.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh," said he rather shamefacedly, "there's no need to
+ explain anything to you: you always see it before one need put
+ it in words."</p>
+
+ <p>Well, perhaps it was in his manner or in the tone of his
+ voice that there was something which seemed at this moment to
+ touch her deeply, for she half turned and looked up at his face
+ with her honest and earnest eyes, and said to him kindly, "Yes,
+ I do know without you telling me; and it makes me happy to hear
+ you talk so; and if I am unjust to you, you must not think it
+ intentional. And I shall try not to be so in the future."</p>
+
+ <p>Mrs. Trelyon was regarding with a kindly look the two young
+ people walking on in front of her. Whatever pleased her son
+ pleased her, and she was glad to see him enjoy himself in so
+ light-hearted a fashion. These two were chatting to each other
+ in the friendliest manner: sometimes they stopped to pick up
+ wild flowers: they were as two children together under the fair
+ and light summer skies.</p>
+
+ <p>They went down and along a narrow valley, until they
+ suddenly stood in front of the sea, the green waters of which
+ were breaking in upon a small and lonely creek. What strange
+ light was this that fell from the white skies above, rendering
+ all the objects around them sharp its outline and intense in
+ color? The beach before them seemed of a pale lilac, where the
+ green waves broke in a semicircle of white. On their right some
+ masses of ruddy rock jutted out into the cold sea, and there
+ were huge black caverns into which the waves dashed and roared.
+ On their left and far above them towered a great and isolated
+ rock, its precipitous sides scored here and there with twisted
+ lines of red and yellow quartz; and on the summit of this bold
+ headland, amid the dark green of the sea-grass, they could see
+ the dusky ruins&mdash;the crumbling walls and doorways and
+ battlements&mdash;of the castle that is named in all the
+ stories of King Arthur and his knights. The bridge across to
+ the mainland has, in the course of centuries, fallen away, but
+ there, on the other side of the wide chasm, were the ruins of
+ the other portions of the castle, scarcely to be distinguished
+ in parts from the grass-grown rocks. How long ago was it since
+ Sir Tristram rode out here to the end of the world, to find the
+ beautiful Isoulde awaiting him&mdash;she whom he had brought
+ from Ireland as an unwilling bride to the old king Mark? And
+ what of the joyous company of knights and ladies who once held
+ high sport in the courtyard there? Trelyon, looking shyly at
+ his companion, could see that her eyes seemed centuries away
+ from him. She was quite unconscious of his covertly staring at
+ her, for she was absently looking at the high and bare
+ precipices, the deserted slopes of dark sea-grass and the
+ lonely and crumbling ruins. She was wondering whether the
+ ghosts of those vanished people ever came back to this lonely
+ headland, where they would find the world scarcely altered
+ since they had left it. Did they come at night, when the land
+ was dark, and when there was a light over the sea only coming
+ from the stars? If one were to come at night alone, and to sit
+ down here by the shore, might not one see strange things far
+ overhead or hear some sound other than the falling of the
+ waves?</p>
+
+ <p>"Miss Wenna," he said&mdash;and she started
+ suddenly&mdash;"are you bold enough to climb with me up to the
+ castle? I know my mother would rather stay here."</p>
+
+ <p>She went with him mechanically. She followed him up the rude
+ steps cut in the steep slopes of slate, holding his hand where
+ that was possible, but her head was so full of dreams that she
+ answered <span class="pagenum"><a name="page104"
+ id="page104"></a>[pg 104]</span> him when he spoke only with
+ a vague yes or no. When they descended again they found that
+ Mabyn had taken Mrs. Trelyon down to the beach, and had
+ inveigled her into entering a huge cavern, or rather a
+ natural tunnel, that went right through underneath the
+ promontory on which the castle is built. They were in a sort
+ of green-hued twilight, a scent of seaweed filling the damp
+ air, and their voices raising an echo in the great hall of
+ rock.</p>
+
+ <p>"I hope the climbing has not made you giddy," Mrs. Trelyon
+ said in her kind way to Wenna, noticing that she was very
+ silent and distrait.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh no," Mabyn said promptly. "She has been seeing ghosts.
+ We always know when Wenna has been seeing ghosts: she remains
+ so for hours."</p>
+
+ <p>And, indeed, at this time she was rather more reserved than
+ usual all during their walk back to luncheon and while they
+ were in the inn; and yet she was obviously very happy, and
+ sometimes even amused by the childlike pleasure which Mrs.
+ Trelyon seemed to obtain from these unwonted experiences.</p>
+
+ <p>"Come, now, mother," Master Harry said, "what are you going
+ to do for me when I come of age next month? Fill the house with
+ guests&mdash;yes, you promised that&mdash;with not more than
+ one parson to the dozen? And when they're all feasting and
+ gabbling, and missing the targets with their arrows, you'll
+ slip quietly away, and I'll drive you and Miss Wenna over here,
+ and you'll go and get your feet wet again in that cavern, and
+ you'll come up here again and have an elegant luncheon, just
+ like this. Won't that do?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't quite know about the elegance of the luncheon, but
+ I'm sure our little excursion has been very pleasant. Don't you
+ think so, Miss Rosewarne?" Mrs. Trelyon said.</p>
+
+ <p>"Indeed I do," said Wenna, with her big, earnest eyes coming
+ back from their trance.</p>
+
+ <p>"And here is another thing," remarked young Trelyon.
+ "There's a picture I've seen of the heir coming of
+ age&mdash;he's a horrid, self-sufficient young cad, but never
+ mind&mdash;and it seems to be a day of general jollification.
+ Can't I give a present to somebody? Well, I'm going to give it
+ to a young lady who never cares for anything but what she can
+ give away again to somebody else; and it is&mdash;well, it
+ is&mdash;Why don't you guess, Mabyn?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't know what you mean to give Wenna," said Mabyn
+ naturally.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, you silly! I mean to give her a dozen
+ sewing-machines&mdash;a baker's dozen&mdash;thirteen. There!
+ Oh, I heard you as you came along. It was all, 'Three
+ sewing-machines will cost so much, and four sewing-machines
+ will cost so much, and five sewing-machines will cost so much.
+ And a penny a week from so many subscribers will be so much,
+ and twopence a week from so many will be so much;' and all this
+ as if my mother could tell you how much twice two was. My
+ arithmetic ain't very brilliant, but as for hers&mdash;And
+ these you shall have, Miss Wenna&mdash;one baker's dozen of
+ sewing-machines, as per order, duly delivered, carriage
+ free&mdash;empty casks and bottles to be returned."</p>
+
+ <p>"That is very kind of you, Mr. Trelyon," Wenna
+ said&mdash;and all the dreams had gone straight out of her head
+ so soon as this was mentioned&mdash;"but we can't possibly
+ accept them. You know our scheme is to make the sewing club
+ quite self-supporting&mdash;no charity."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, what stuff!" the young gentleman cried. "You know you
+ will give all your labor and supervision for nothing: isn't
+ that charity? And you know you will let off all sorts of people
+ owing you subscriptions the moment some blessed baby falls ill.
+ And you know you won't charge interest on all the outlay. But
+ if you insist on paying me back for my sewing-machines out of
+ the overwhelming profits at the end of next year, then I'll
+ take the money. I'm not proud."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then we will take six sewing-machines from you, if you
+ please, Mr. Trelyon, on those conditions," said Wenna gravely.
+ And Master Harry&mdash;with a look toward Mabyn which was just
+ about as good as a wink&mdash;consented.</p>
+
+ <p>As they drove quietly back again to Eglosilyan, Mabyn had
+ taken her former <span class="pagenum"><a name="page105"
+ id="page105"></a>[pg 105]</span> place by the driver, and
+ found him uncommonly thoughtful. He answered her questions,
+ but that was all; and it was so unusual to find Harry
+ Trelyon in this mood that she said to him, "Mr. Trelyon,
+ have you been seeing ghosts, too?"</p>
+
+ <p>He turned to her and said, "I was thinking about something.
+ Look here, Mabyn: did you ever know any one, or do you know any
+ one, whose face is a sort of barometer to you? Suppose that you
+ see her look pale and tired or sad in any way, then down go
+ your spirits, and you almost wish you had never been born. When
+ you see her face brighten up and get full of healthy color, you
+ feel glad enough to burst out singing or go mad: anyhow, you
+ know that everything's all right. What the weather is, what
+ people may say about you, whatever else may happen to you,
+ that's nothing: all you want to see is just that one person's
+ face look perfectly bright and perfectly happy, and nothing can
+ touch you then. Did you ever know anybody like that?" he added
+ rather abruptly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh yes," said Mabyn, in a low voice: "that is when you are
+ in love with some one. And there is only one face in all the
+ world that I look to for all these things, there is only one
+ person I know who tells you openly and simply in her face all
+ that affects her, and that is our Wenna. I suppose you have
+ noticed that, Mr. Trelyon?"</p>
+
+ <p>But he did not make any answer.</p>
+
+ <h3>CHAPTER XXI.</h3>
+
+ <h3>CONFESSION.</h3>
+
+ <p>The lad lay dreaming in the warm meadows by the side of a
+ small and rapid brook, the clear waters of which plashed and
+ bubbled in the sunlight as they hurried past the brown stones.
+ His fishing-rod lay beside him, hidden in the long grass and
+ the daisies. The sun was hot in the valley&mdash;shining on a
+ wall of gray rock behind him, and throwing purple shadows over
+ the clefts; shining on the dark bushes beside the stream and on
+ the lush green of the meadows; shining on the trees beyond, in
+ the shadow of which some dark red cattle were standing. Then
+ away on the other side of the valley rose gently-sloping woods,
+ gray and green in the haze of the heat, and over these again
+ was the pale blue sky with scarcely a cloud in it. It was a hot
+ day to be found in spring-time, but the waters of the brook
+ seemed cool and pleasant as they gurgled by, and occasionally a
+ breath of wind blew over from the woods. For the rest, he lay
+ so still on this fine, indolent, dreamy morning that the birds
+ around seemed to take no note of his presence, and one of the
+ large woodpeckers, with his scarlet head and green body
+ brilliant in the sun, flew close by him and disappeared into
+ the bushes opposite like a sudden gleam of color shot by a
+ diamond.</p>
+
+ <p>"Next month," he was thinking to himself as he lay with his
+ hands behind his head, not caring to shade his handsome and
+ well-tanned face from the warm sun&mdash;"next month I shall be
+ twenty-one, and most folks will consider me a man. Anyhow, I
+ don't know the man whom I wouldn't fight or run or ride or
+ shoot against for any wager he liked. But of all the people who
+ know anything about me, just that one whose opinion I care for
+ will not consider me a man at all, but only a boy. And that
+ without saying anything. You can tell, somehow, by a mere look,
+ what her feelings are; and you know that what she thinks is
+ true. Of course it's true&mdash;I am only a boy. What's the
+ good of me to anybody? I could look after a farm&mdash;that is,
+ I could look after other people doing their work&mdash;but I
+ couldn't do any work myself. And that seems to me what she is
+ always looking at: 'What's the good of you, what are you doing,
+ what are you busy about?' It's all very well for her to be
+ busy, for she can do a hundred thousand things, and she is
+ always at them. What can I do?"</p>
+
+ <p>Then his wandering day-dreamings took another turn: "It was
+ an odd thing for Mabyn to say&mdash;'<i>That is when you are in
+ love with some one</i>.' But those girls take everything for
+ love. They don't know how you can admire, almost
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page106"
+ id="page106"></a>[pg 106]</span> to worshiping, the goodness
+ of a woman, and how you are anxious that she should be well
+ and happy, and how you would do anything in the world to
+ please her, without fancying straight away that you are in
+ love with her, and want to marry her and drive about in the
+ same carriage with her. I shall be quite as fond of Wenna
+ Rosewarne when she is married, although I shall hate that
+ little brute with his rum and his treacle. The cheek of him,
+ in asking her to marry him, is astonishing. He is the most
+ hideous little beast that could have been picked out to
+ marry any woman, but I suppose he has appealed to her
+ compassion, and then she'll do anything. But if there was
+ anybody else in love with her, if she cared the least bit
+ about anybody else, wouldn't I go straight to her and insist
+ on her shunting that fellow aside? What claim has he on any
+ other feeling of hers but her compassion? Why, if that
+ fellow were to come and try to frighten her, and if I were
+ in the affair, and if she appealed to me even by a look,
+ then there would be short work with something or
+ somebody."</p>
+
+ <p>He got up hastily, with something of a gloomy and angry look
+ on his face. He did not notice that he had startled all the
+ birds around from out of the bushes. He picked up his rod and
+ line in a morose fashion, not seeming to care about adding to
+ the half dozen small and red-speckled trout he had in his
+ basket.</p>
+
+ <p>While he was thus irresolutely standing he caught sight of a
+ girl's figure coming rapidly along the valley under the shadow
+ of some ash trees growing by the stream. It was Wenna Rosewarne
+ herself, and she seemed to be hurrying toward him. She was
+ carrying some black object in her arms.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, Mr. Trelyon," she said, "what am I to do with this
+ little dog? I saw him kicking in the road and foaming at the
+ mouth; and then he got up and ran, and I caught him&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>Before she had time to say anything more the young man made
+ a sudden dive at the dog, caught hold of him and turned and
+ heaved him into the stream. He fell into a little pool of clear
+ brown water: he spluttered and paddled there for a second, then
+ he got his footing and scrambled across the stones up to the
+ opposite bank, where he began shaking the water from his coat
+ among the long grass.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, how could you be so disgracefully cruel?" she said,
+ with her face full of indignation.</p>
+
+ <p>"And how could you be so imprudent?"' he said quite as
+ vehemently. "Why, whose is the dog?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I don't know."</p>
+
+ <p>"And you catch up some mongrel little cur in the middle of
+ the highway&mdash;He might have been mad."</p>
+
+ <p>"I knew he wasn't mad," she said: "it was only a fit; and
+ how could you be so cruel as to throw him into the river?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh," said the young man, coolly, "a clash of cold water is
+ the best thing for a dog that has a fit. Besides, I don't care
+ what he had or what I did with him, so long as you are safe.
+ Your little finger is of more consequence than the necks of all
+ the curs in the country."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, it is mean of you to say that," she retorted warmly.
+ "You have no pity for those wretched little things that are at
+ every one's mercy. If it were a handsome and beautiful dog,
+ now, you would care for that, or if it were a dog that was
+ skilled in getting game for you, you would care for that."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, certainly," he said: "these are dogs that have
+ something to recommend them."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, and every one is good to them: they are not in need of
+ your favor. But you don't think of the wretched little brutes
+ that have nothing to recommend them, that only live on
+ sufferance, that every one kicks and despises and starves."</p>
+
+ <p>"Well," said he with some compunction, "look there! That new
+ friend of yours&mdash;he's no great beauty, you must
+ confess&mdash;is all right now. The bath has cured him. As soon
+ as he's done licking his paws he'll be off home, wherever that
+ may be. But I've always noticed that about you, Wenna: you're
+ always on the side of things that are ugly and
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page107"
+ id="page107"></a>[pg 107]</span> helpless and useless in the
+ world; and you're not very just to those who don't agree
+ with you. For after all, you know, one wants time to acquire
+ that notion of yours&mdash;that it is only weak and
+ ill-favored creatures that are worthy of the least
+ consideration."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes," she said rather sadly, "you want time to learn
+ that."</p>
+
+ <p>He looked at her. Did she mean that her sympathy with those
+ who were weak and ill-favored arose from some strange
+ consciousness that she herself was both? His cheeks began to
+ burn red. He had often heard her hint something like that, and
+ yet he had never dared to reason with her or show her what he
+ thought of her. Should he do so now?</p>
+
+ <p>"Wenna," he said, blushing hotly, "I can't make you out
+ sometimes. You speak as if no one cared for you. Now, if I were
+ to tell you&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, I am not so ungrateful," she said hastily. "I know that
+ two or three do; and&mdash;and, Mr. Trelyon, do you think you
+ could coax that little dog over the stream again? You see he
+ has come back again&mdash;he can't find his way home."</p>
+
+ <p>Mr. Trelyon called to the dog: it came down to the river's
+ side, and whined and shivered on the brink.</p>
+
+ <p>"Do you care a brass farthing about the little beast?" he
+ said to Wenna.</p>
+
+ <p>"I must put him on his way home," she answered.</p>
+
+ <p>Thereupon the young man went straight through the stream to
+ the other side, jumping the deeper portions of the channel: he
+ caught up the dog and brought it back to her; and when she was
+ very angry with him for this mad performance, he merely kicked
+ some of the water out of his trousers and laughed.</p>
+
+ <p>Then a smile broke over her face also. "Is that an example
+ of what people would do for me?" she said shyly. "Mr. Trelyon,
+ you must keep walking through the warm grass till your feet are
+ dry; or will you come along to the inn, and I shall get you
+ some shoes and stockings? Pray do, and at once. I am rather in
+ a hurry."</p>
+
+ <p>"I'll go along with you, anyway," he said, "and put this
+ little brute into the highway. But why are you in a hurry?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Because," said Wenna, as they set out to walk down the
+ valley&mdash;"because my mother and I are going to Penzance the
+ day after to-morrow, and I have a lot of things to get
+ ready."</p>
+
+ <p>"To Penzance?" said he with a sudden falling of the
+ face.</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes. She has been dreadfully out of sorts lately, and she
+ has sunk into a kind of despondent state. The doctor says she
+ must have a change&mdash;a holiday, really&mdash;to take her
+ away from the cares of the house&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, Wenna, it's you who want the holiday&mdash;it's you
+ who have the cares of the house," Trelyon said warmly.</p>
+
+ <p>"And so I have persuaded her to go to Penzance for a week or
+ two, and I go with her to look after her. Mr. Trelyon, would
+ you be kind enough to keep Rock for me until we come back? I am
+ afraid of the servants neglecting him."</p>
+
+ <p>"You needn't be afraid of that: he's not one of the
+ ill-favored&mdash;every one will attend to him," said Trelyon;
+ and then he added, after a minute or two of silence, "The fact
+ is, I think I shall be at Penzance also while you are there. My
+ cousin Juliott is coming here in about a fortnight to celebrate
+ the important event of my coming of age, and I promised to go
+ for her. I might as well go now."</p>
+
+ <p>She said nothing.</p>
+
+ <p>"I might as well go any time," he said rather impatiently.
+ "I haven't got anything to do. Do you know, before you came
+ along just now, I was thinking what a very useful person you
+ were in the world, and what a very useless person I
+ was&mdash;about as useless as this little cur. I think somebody
+ should take me up and heave me into a river. And I was
+ wondering, too"&mdash;here he became a little more embarrassed
+ and slow of speech&mdash;"I was wondering what you would say
+ if I spoke to you, and gave you a hint that
+ sometimes&mdash;that sometimes one might wish to cut this lazy
+ life if one only knew how, and whether so very busy a person as
+ yourself mightn't&mdash;don't you see?&mdash;give one some
+ notion&mdash;some sort of hint, in fact&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, but then, Mr. Trelyon," she said quite cheerfully, "you
+ would think it very <span class="pagenum"><a name="page108"
+ id="page108"></a>[pg 108]</span> strange if I asked you to
+ take any interest in the things that keep me busy. That is
+ not a man's work. I wouldn't accept you as a pupil."</p>
+
+ <p>He burst out laughing. "Why," said he, "do you think I
+ offered to mend stockings and set sums on slates and coddle
+ babies?"</p>
+
+ <p>"As for setting sums on slates," she remarked with a quiet
+ impertinence, "the working of them out might be of use to
+ you."</p>
+
+ <p>"Yes, and a serious trouble too," he said candidly. "No,
+ no&mdash;that cottage business ain't in my line. I like to have
+ a joke with the old folks or a romp with the kids, but I can't
+ go in for cutting out pinafores. I shall leave my mother to do
+ my share of that for me; and hasn't she come out strong lately,
+ eh? It's quite a new amusement for her, and it's driven a deal
+ of that organ-grinding and stuff out of her head; and I've a
+ notion some o' those parsons&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>He stopped short, remembering who his companion was; and at
+ this moment they came to a gate which opened out on the
+ highway, through which the small cur was passed to find his way
+ home.</p>
+
+ <p>"Now, Miss Wenna," said the young man&mdash;"By the way, you
+ see how I remember to address you respectfully ever since you
+ got sulky with me about it the other day?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I am sure I did not get sulky with you, and especially
+ about that," she remarked with much composure. "I suppose you
+ are not aware that you have dropped the 'Miss' several times
+ this morning already?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Did I, really? Well, then, I'm awfully sorry; but then you
+ are so good-natured you tempt one to forget; and my mother she
+ always calls you Wenna Rosewarne now in speaking to me, as if
+ you were a little school-girl, instead of being the chief
+ support and pillar of all the public affairs of Eglosilyan. And
+ now, Miss Wenna, I sha'n't go down the road with you, because
+ my damp boots and garments would gather the dust; but perhaps
+ you wouldn't mind stopping two seconds here, and I'm going to
+ go a cracker and ask you a question: What should a fellow in my
+ position try to do? You see, I haven't had the least training
+ for any one of the professions, even if I had any sort of
+ capacity&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"But why should you wish to have a profession?" she said
+ simply. "You have more money than is good for you already."</p>
+
+ <p>"Then you don't think it ignominious," he said, with his
+ face lighting up considerably, "to fish in summer and shoot in
+ autumn and hunt in winter, and make that the only business of
+ one's life?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I should if it were the only business, but it needn't be,
+ and you don't make it so. My father speaks very highly of the
+ way you look after your property; and he knows what attending
+ to an estate is. And then you have so many opportunities of
+ being kind and useful to the people about you that you might do
+ more good that way than by working night and day at a
+ profession. Then you owe much to yourself, because if every one
+ began with himself, and educated himself, and became satisfied
+ and happy with doing his best, there would be no bad conduct
+ and wretchedness to call for interference. I don't see why you
+ should be ashamed of shooting and hunting and all that, and
+ doing them as well as anybody else, or far better, as I hear
+ people say. I don't think a man is bound to have ambition and
+ try to become famous: you might be of much greater use in the
+ world, even in such a little place as Eglosilyan, than if you
+ were in Parliament. I did say to Mrs. Trelyon that I should
+ like to see you in Parliament, because one has a natural pride
+ in any person one admires and likes very much, and one
+ wishes&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>He saw the quick look of fear that sprang to her
+ eyes&mdash;not a sudden appearance of shy embarrassment, but of
+ absolute fear&mdash;and he was almost as startled by her
+ blunder as she herself was. He hastily came to her rescue. He
+ thanked her in a few rapid and formal words for her patience
+ and advice; and, as he saw she was trying to turn away and hide
+ the mortification visible on her face, he shook hands with her
+ and let her go.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page109"
+ id="page109"></a>[pg 109]</span>
+
+ <p>Then he turned. He had been startled, it is true, and
+ grieved to see the pain her chance words had caused her. But
+ now a great glow of delight rose up within him, and he could
+ have called aloud to the blue skies and the silent woods
+ because of the joy that filled his heart. They were but chance
+ words, of course. They were uttered with no deliberate
+ intention: on the contrary, her quick look of pain showed how
+ bitterly she regretted the blunder. Moreover, he congratulated
+ himself on his rapid piece of acting, and assured himself that
+ she would believe that he had not noticed that admission of
+ hers. They were idle words: she would forget them. The
+ incident, so far as she was concerned, was gone.</p>
+
+ <p>But not so far as he was concerned. For now he knew that the
+ person whom, above all other persons in the world, he was most
+ desirous to please, whose respect and esteem he was most
+ anxious to obtain, had not only condoned much of his idleness
+ out of the abundant charity of her heart, but had further, and
+ by chance, revealed to him that she gave him some little share
+ of that affection which she seemed to shed generously and
+ indiscriminately on so many folks and things around her. He,
+ too, was now in the charmed circle. He walked with a new pride
+ through the warm, green meadows, his rod over his shoulder: he
+ whistled as he went, or he sang snatches of "The Rose of
+ Allandale." He met two small boys out bird's-nesting: he gave
+ them a shilling apiece, and then inconsistently informed them
+ that if he caught them then or at any other time with a bird's
+ nest in their hands he would cuff their ears. Then he walked
+ hastily home, put by his fishing-rod, and shut himself up in
+ his study with half a dozen of those learned volumes which he
+ had brought back unsoiled from school.</p>
+
+ <h3>CHAPTER XXII.</h3>
+
+ <h3>ON WINGS OF HOPE.</h3>
+
+ <p>When Trelyon arrived late one evening at Penzance he was
+ surprised to find his uncle's coachman awaiting him at the
+ station: "What's the matter, Tobias? Is the old gentleman going
+ to die? You don't mean to say you are here for me?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Ya&auml;s, zor, I be," said the little old man with no
+ great courtesy.</p>
+
+ <p>"Then he is going to die if he sends out his horse at this
+ time o' night. Look here, Tobias: I'll put my portmanteau
+ inside and come on the box to have a talk with you&mdash;you're
+ such a jolly old card, you know&mdash;and you'll tell me all
+ that's happened since I last enjoyed my uncle's bountiful
+ hospitality."</p>
+
+ <p>This the young man did: and then the brown-faced, wiry and
+ surly little person, having started his horse, proceeded to
+ tell his story in a series of grumbling and disconnected
+ sentences. He was not nearly so taciturn as he looked: "The
+ ma&auml;ster he went s&uuml;n to bed to-night: 'twere Miss
+ Juliott sent me to the station, without tellin' en. He's
+ gettin' worse and worse, that's sure: if y&uuml; be for giving
+ me half a crown, like, or any one that comes to the house, he
+ finds it out and stops it out o' my wages: yes, he does, zor,
+ the old fule!"</p>
+
+ <p>"Tobias, be a little more respectful to my uncle, if you
+ please."</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, zor, y&uuml; knaw en well enough," said the man in the
+ same surly fashion. "And I'll tell y&uuml; this, Ma&auml;ster
+ Harry, if y&uuml; be after dinner with en, and he has a bottle
+ o' poort wine that he puts on the mantelpiece, and he says to
+ y&uuml; to let that alo&auml;n, vor 'tis a medicine-zart o'
+ wine, don't y&uuml; heed en, but have that wine. 'Tis the real
+ old poort wine, zor, that y&uuml;r vather gied en&mdash;the
+ dahmned old pagan!"</p>
+
+ <p>The young man burst out laughing, instead of reprimanding
+ Tobias, who maintained his sulky impassiveness of face.</p>
+
+ <p>"Why, zor, I be gardener now, too: ya&auml;s I be, to save
+ the wages. And he's gone clean mazed about that
+ garden&mdash;ya&auml;s, I think. Would y&uuml; believe this,
+ Ma&auml;ster Harry, that he killed every one o' the blessed
+ strawberries last year with a lot o' wrack from the bache,
+ because he said it w&uuml;d be as good for them as for the
+ 'sparagus?"</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page110"
+ id="page110"></a>[pg 110]</span>
+
+ <p>"Well, but the old chap finds amusement in pottering about
+ the garden&mdash;" said Master Harry.</p>
+
+ <p>"The old fule!" repeated Tobias, in an under tone.</p>
+
+ <p>"And the theory is sound about the seaweed and the
+ strawberries; just as his old notion of getting a green rose by
+ pouring sulphate of copper in at the roots."</p>
+
+ <p>"Ya&auml;s, that were another pretty thing, Ma&auml;ster
+ Harry, and he had the tin labels all printed out in French, and
+ he waited and waited, and there bain't a fairly g&uuml;de rose
+ left in the garden. And his violet glass for the cucumbers: he
+ burned en up to once, although 'twere fine to hear'n talk about
+ the sunlight and the rays and such nonsenses. He be a strange
+ mahn, zor, and a dahmned close'n with his penny-pieces,
+ Christian and all as he calls his-sen. There's Miss Juliott,
+ zor, she's go-in' to get married, I suppose; and when she goes
+ no one 'll dare spake to 'n. Be y&uuml; going to stop long this
+ time, Ma&auml;ster Harry?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Not at the Hollies, Tobias. I shall go down to the Queen's
+ to-morrow: I've got rooms there."</p>
+
+ <p>"So much the better&mdash;so much the better," said the
+ frank but inhospitable retainer; and presently the jogtrot old
+ animal between the shafts was pulled up in front of a certain
+ square old-fashioned building of gray stone which was prettily
+ surrounded with trees. They had arrived at the Rev. Mr.
+ Penaluna's house, and there was a young lady standing in the
+ light of the hall, she having opened the door very softly as
+ she heard the carriage drive up.</p>
+
+ <p>"So here you are, Harry; and you'll stay with us the whole
+ fortnight, won't you? Come in to the dining-room&mdash;I have
+ some supper ready for you. Papa's gone to bed, and he desired
+ me to give you his excuses, and he hopes you'll make yourself
+ quite at home, as you always do, Harry."</p>
+
+ <p>He did make himself quite at home, for, having kissed his
+ cousin and flung his topcoat down in the hall, he went into the
+ dining-room and took possession of an easy-chair.</p>
+
+ <p>"Sha'n't have any supper, Jue, thank you. You won't mind my
+ lighting a cigar&mdash;somebody's been smoking here already.
+ And what's the least poisonous claret you've got?"</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, I declare!" she said, but she got him the wine all
+ the same, and watched him light his cigar: then she took the
+ easy-chair opposite.</p>
+
+ <p>"Tell us about your young man, Jue," he said. "Girls always
+ like to talk about that."</p>
+
+ <p>"Do they?" she said. "Not to boys."</p>
+
+ <p>"I shall be twenty-one in a fortnight. I am thinking of
+ getting married."</p>
+
+ <p>"So I hear," she remarked quietly.</p>
+
+ <p>Now he had been talking nonsense at random, mostly intent on
+ getting his cigar well lit, but this little observation rather
+ startled him. "What have you heard?" he said abruptly.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, nothing&mdash;the ordinary stupid gossip," she said,
+ though she was watching him rather closely. "Are you going to
+ stay with us for the next fortnight?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No, I have got rooms at the Queen's."</p>
+
+ <p>"I thought so. One might have expected you, however, to stay
+ with your relations when you came to Penzance."</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh, that's all gammon, Jue," he said: "you know very well
+ your father doesn't care to have any one stay with
+ you&mdash;it's too much bother. You'll have quite enough of me
+ while I am in Penzance."</p>
+
+ <p>"Shall we have anything of you?" she said with apparent
+ indifference. "I understood that Miss Rosewarne and her mamma
+ had already come here."</p>
+
+ <p>"And what if they have?" he said with unnecessary
+ fierceness.</p>
+
+ <p>"Well, Harry," she said, "you needn't get unto a temper
+ about it, but people will talk, you know; and they say that
+ your attentions to that young lady are rather marked,
+ considering that she is engaged to be married; and you have
+ induced your mother to make a pet of her. Shall I go on?"</p>
+
+ <p>"No, you needn't," he said with a strong effort to overcome
+ his anger. "You're quite right&mdash;people do talk, but they
+ wouldn't talk so much if other people didn't carry tales. Why,
+ it isn't like you, Jue! I thought you were another
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page111"
+ id="page111"></a>[pg 111]</span> sort. And about this girl,
+ of all girls in the world!"</p>
+
+ <p>He got up and began walking about the room, and talking with
+ considerable vehemence, but no more in anger. He would tell her
+ what cause there was for this silly gossip. He would tell her
+ who this girl was who had been lightly mentioned. And in his
+ blunt, frank, matter-of-fact way, which did not quite conceal
+ his emotion, he revealed to his cousin all that he thought of
+ Wenna Rosewarne, and what he hoped for her in the future, and
+ what their present relations were, and then plainly asked her
+ if she could condemn him.</p>
+
+ <p>Miss Juliott was touched: "Sit down, Harry: I have wanted to
+ talk to you, and I don't mean to heed any gossip. Sit down,
+ please&mdash;you frighten me by walking up and down like that.
+ Now, I'm going to talk common sense to you, for I should like
+ to be your friend; and your mother is so easily led away by any
+ sort of sentiment that she isn't likely to have seen with my
+ eyes. Suppose that this Miss Rosewarne&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"No, hold hard a bit, Jue," he said imperatively. "You may
+ talk till the millennium, but just keep off her, I warn
+ you."</p>
+
+ <p>"Will you hear me out, you silly boy? Suppose that Miss
+ Rosewarne is everything that you believe her to be. I'm going
+ to grant that, because I'm going to ask you a question. You
+ can't have such an opinion of any girl, and be constantly in
+ her society, and go following her about like this, without
+ falling in love with her. Now, in that case would you propose
+ to marry her?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I marry her!" he said, his face becoming suddenly pale for
+ a moment. "Jue, you are mad! I am not fit to marry a girl like
+ that. You don't know her. Why&mdash;"</p>
+
+ <p>"Let all that alone, Harry: when a man is in love with a
+ woman he always thinks he's good enough for her; and whether he
+ does or not he tries to get her for a wife. Don't let us
+ discuss your comparative merits: one might even put in a word
+ for you. But suppose you drifted into being in love with
+ her&mdash;and I consider that quite probable&mdash;and suppose
+ you forgot, as I know you would forget, the difference in your
+ social position, how would you like to go and ask her to break
+ her promise to the gentleman to whom she is engaged?"</p>
+
+ <p>Master Harry laughed aloud in a somewhat nervous fashion:
+ "Him? Look here, Jue: leave me out of it&mdash;I haven't the
+ cheek to talk of myself in that connection&mdash;but if there
+ was a decent sort of fellow whom that girl really took a liking
+ to, do you think he would let that elderly and elegant swell
+ out in Jamaica stand in his way? He would be no such fool, I
+ can tell you. He would consider the girl first of all. He would
+ say to himself, 'I mean to make this girl happy; if any one
+ interferes, let him look out!' Why, Jue, you don't suppose any
+ man would be frightened by that sort of thing?"</p>
+
+ <p>Miss Juliott did not seem quite convinced by this burst of
+ scornful oratory. She continued quietly, "You forget something,
+ Harry. Your heroic young man might find it easy to do something
+ wild&mdash;to fight with that gentleman in the West Indies, or
+ murder him, or anything like that, just as you see in a
+ story&mdash;but perhaps Miss Rosewarne might have something to
+ say."</p>
+
+ <p>"I meant if she cared for him," Trelyon said, looking
+ down.</p>
+
+ <p>"Granting that also, do you think it likely your hot-headed
+ gentleman would be able to get a young lady to disgrace herself
+ by breaking her plighted word and deceiving a man who went away
+ trusting in her? You say she has a very tender
+ conscience&mdash;that she is so anxious to consult every one's
+ happiness before her own, and all that. Probably it is true. I
+ say nothing against her. But to bring the matter back to
+ yourself&mdash;for I believe you're hot-headed enough to do
+ anything&mdash;what would you think of her if you or anybody
+ else persuaded her to do such a treacherous thing?"</p>
+
+ <p>"She is not capable of treachery," he said somewhat stiffly.
+ "If you've got no more cheerful things to talk about, you'd
+ better go to bed, Jue. I shall finish my cigar by
+ myself."</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page112"
+ id="page112"></a>[pg 112]</span>
+
+ <p>"Very well, then, Harry. You know your room. Will you put
+ out the lamp when you have lit your candle?"</p>
+
+ <p>So she went, and the young man was left alone in no very
+ enviable frame of mind. He sat and smoked while the clock on
+ the mantelpiece swung its gilded boy and struck the hours and
+ half hours with unheeded regularity. He lit a second cigar, and
+ a third; he forgot the wine. It seemed to him that he was
+ looking on all the roads of life that lay before him, and they
+ were lit up by as strange and new a light as that which was
+ beginning to shine over the world outside. New fancies seemed
+ to awake with the new dawn. For himself to ask Wenna Rosewarne
+ to be his wife! Could he but win the tender and shy regard of
+ her eyes he would fall at her feet and bathe them with his
+ tears. And if this wonderful thing were possible&mdash;if she
+ could put her hand in his and trust to him for safety in all
+ the coming years they might live together&mdash;what man of
+ woman born would dare to interfere? There was a blue light
+ coming in through the shutters. He went to the window: the
+ topmost leaves of the trees were quivering in the cold air far
+ up there in the clearing skies, where the stars were fading out
+ one by one, and he could hear the sound of the sea on the
+ distant beach, and he knew that across the gray plain of waters
+ the dawn was breaking, and that over the sleeping world another
+ day was rising that seemed to him the first day of a new and
+ tremulous life, full of joy and courage and hope.</p>
+
+ <p>[TO BE CONTINUED.]</p>
+
+ <h2>ON THE VIA SAN BASILIO.</h2>
+
+ <p>In Rome, 1851; a cold, dreary day in December&mdash;one of
+ those days in which a man's ambition seems to desert him
+ entirely, leaving only its grinning skeleton to mock him.
+ Depressing as was the weather to a man who had cheerfulness as
+ a companion by which to repel its blustering attacks, and raise
+ his mind above the despondency it was calculated to produce,
+ how much more so to one whose hope had gone out as a flickering
+ lamp in a sudden gust of wind, and the sharp steel of whose
+ ambition had turned to pierce his own heart!</p>
+
+ <p>Such a man, on the day mentioned, was walking along the Via
+ San Basilio. He was small in stature, poorly clad, and so thin,
+ and even cadaverous, that the casual observer might have been
+ under apprehension lest a gust of wind a little stronger than
+ the average might blow him entirely away; yet his air and
+ manner were proud and haughty, and what little evidences of
+ feeling peered through the signs of dissipation too apparent on
+ his naturally attractive face were those of genuine refinement.
+ He was accompanied by a cicerone, or servant, as
+ villainous-looking a fellow as one often meets, even in Italy,
+ where an evil expression is so often seen stamped on handsome
+ features.</p>
+
+ <p>Along the Via San Basilio the two men walked until they
+ stood opposite the door of No. 51. Sacred ground this, and
+ historical as well. Art had her votaries here, as the tourist
+ of to-day will find she still has, at whose shrines pilgrims
+ from afar and from near worshiped, and grew better and stronger
+ for their ministrations. Crawford, then at the acme of his
+ fame, had his constantly-thronged studio in the immediate
+ vicinity, while those at No. 51 embraced, among others, that of
+ Tenerani, the famous Italian sculptor, whose work is always in
+ such fine dramatic taste, although he never sacrifices his love
+ and deep feeling of reverence for Nature, combining that with
+ the most delightful charms of Greek art. Among this
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page113"
+ id="page113"></a>[pg 113]</span> artist's most noted works
+ will be remembered his "Descent from the Cross," which
+ tourists visiting the Torlonia chapel in the Lateran never
+ gaze upon without a thrill. The house was owned and also
+ occupied by Bienaim&eacute;, a French sculptor who afterward
+ became famous.</p>
+
+ <p>In the immediate vicinity stands the famous Palazzo
+ Barberini, begun by Urban VIII. (Maffeo Barberini), who sat in
+ the pontifical chair from 1623 to 1644, and finished by Bernini
+ in 1640. This palace contains many paintings of historical
+ interest by Raphael, Titian, Guido, Claude and others. The one
+ by the first-mentioned artist is a Fornarina, and bears the
+ autograph of the painter on the armlet. But the picture that
+ attracts the most attention here is one of world-wide
+ reputation, copies, engravings and photographs of which are
+ everywhere to be met with&mdash;Guido's Beatrice Cenci. A great
+ divergence of opinion, as is well known, exists in regard to
+ the portrait. It bears the pillar and crown of the Colonnas, to
+ which family it probably belonged. According to the family
+ tradition, it was taken on the night before her execution.
+ Other accounts state that it was painted by Guido from memory
+ after he had seen her on the scaffold. Judging from the
+ position in which the poor girl's head is represented, one
+ would more readily give credence to the latter story, and think
+ the artist's memory had preserved her look and position as she
+ turned her head for a last look at the brutal, bellowing crowd
+ behind.</p>
+
+ <p>In the piazza of the palace is a very beautiful fountain,
+ utilized by one of the oldest Roman statues, representing a
+ faun blowing water from a conch-shell.</p>
+
+ <p>But we must return to the Via San Basilio, and the two
+ wayfarers we left standing in front of No. 51. After gazing a
+ moment at the number to assure themselves that they were right,
+ they entered, and knocked at the first door, which was opened
+ by the occupant of the apartment. He was an artist and a man of
+ very marked characteristics. Seven years later Hawthorne wrote
+ as follows of him: "He is a plain, homely Yankee, quite
+ unpolished by his many years' residence in Italy. He talks
+ ungrammatically; walks with a strange, awkward gait and
+ stooping shoulders; is altogether unpicturesque, but wins one's
+ confidence by his very lack of grace. It is not often that we
+ see an artist so entirely free from affectation in his aspect
+ and deportment. His pictures were views of Swiss and Italian
+ scenery, and were most beautiful and true. One of them, a
+ moonlight picture, was really magical&mdash;the moon shining so
+ brightly that it seemed to throw a light even beyond the limits
+ of the picture; and yet his sunrises and sunsets, and noontides
+ too, were nowise inferior to this, although their excellence
+ required somewhat longer study to be fully appreciated."</p>
+
+ <p>After this introduction by our sweet and quaint romancer,
+ the reader will hardly need be told that the two strangers
+ stood in the presence of America's now illustrious artist,
+ George L. Brown. But one seeing him then, as he stood almost
+ scowling at the two strangers, would hardly have idealized him
+ into the artist whose pencil has done so much of late years to
+ give American art a distinctive name through his poetical
+ delineations of the rare, sun-tinted atmosphere that hovers
+ over Italian landscapes. However, our apology for him must be
+ that the day was raw and blustering, and that he had no sooner
+ caught sight of the men through his window, as they
+ hesitatingly entered the door, than his suspicions were
+ aroused.</p>
+
+ <p>The Italian acted as spokesman, and inquired if there were
+ any rooms to let in the building. Brown, thinking this the
+ easiest way of ridding himself of the visitors, went in search
+ of the landlord, who came, and after a moment's conversation
+ the whole party entered the studio, much to its owner's
+ displeasure.</p>
+
+ <p>The cicerone did most of the talking, though now and then
+ the other made a remark or two in broken Italian. But this was
+ only for the first few moments. He soon became oblivious of all
+ save art, of which one could see at a glance he was
+ passionately fond. One of Mr. Brown's pictures&mdash;a large
+ one he was then engaged on&mdash;particularly attracted
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page114"
+ id="page114"></a>[pg 114]</span> his attention. He drew
+ closer and closer to the canvas, examining it with a
+ minuteness that showed the connoisseur, and finally
+ remarked: "It is very fine in color, sir, and the atmosphere
+ is delicious. Why have I not heard of you before?" examining
+ the corner of the canvas for the artist's name, but speaking
+ in a tone and with an air that gave Brown the impression he
+ was indulging in the random flattery so current in studios.
+ So, ignoring the question, he asked with a slight shrug of
+ the shoulders, "Are you an artist?"</p>
+
+ <p>"I paint a little," was the reply, with an air of modesty
+ which Brown mistook for the bashful half-assertion of some
+ daubing amateur.</p>
+
+ <p>Just then the cicerone came forward and announced that the
+ bargain was completed and the room ready for occupancy.</p>
+
+ <p>"I shall be happy&mdash;no, <i>happy</i> is not a good word
+ for me&mdash;I shall be glad to see you in my studio when I
+ have moved in, and perhaps you may see some things to please
+ you."</p>
+
+ <p>So saying, the stranger departed, leaving Brown not a whit
+ better impressed with him than at first.</p>
+
+ <p>The next morning the two called again, when the gentleman
+ made an examination of the room selected the day before, having
+ met Mr. Brown in the hall-way and invited him in. On entering,
+ the new occupant took from his pocket a piece of chalk and a
+ compass and made a number of circles and figures on the floor
+ to determine when the sun would shine in the room. Brown
+ watched him with a certain degree of curiosity and amusement,
+ and finally, concluding he was half crazy, returned to his own
+ studio.</p>
+
+ <p>The next day the cicerone called alone to see about some
+ repairs, when Brown hailed him: "<i>Buono giorno. Che &egrave;
+ questo</i>?" ("Good-day. Who is that?")</p>
+
+ <p>"<i>Non sapete</i>?" ("Don't you know?"), was the Italian's
+ response. "Why, that is the celebrated Brullof."</p>
+
+ <p>Brown started as though shot. First there flashed through
+ his brain the remembrance of how cavalierly he had treated the
+ distinguished artist, and then a quick panorama of his recent
+ history, which had been the gossip of studios and art-circles
+ for some time back. "I must go to him," he said, "and apologize
+ for not treating him with more deference."</p>
+
+ <p>"<i>Non, signore</i>," was the cicerone's response. "Never
+ mind: let it rest. He is a man of the world, and pays little
+ heed to such things. Besides, he is so overwhelmed with his
+ private griefs that he has probably noticed no slight."</p>
+
+ <p>However, when the great Russian artist took possession of
+ his studio his American brother of the pencil made his apology,
+ and received this response; "Don't waste words on so trivial a
+ matter. Do I not court the contempt of a world that I despise
+ to my heart's core? Say no more about it. Run in and see me
+ when agreeable; and if you have no better callers than such a
+ plaything of fate as I, maybe you will not refuse me occasional
+ admittance."</p>
+
+ <p>The Russian artist now shunned notoriety as he had formerly
+ courted it. Little is known of his history beyond mere rumor,
+ and that only in artistic circles. He was born at St.
+ Petersburg in 1799 or 1800, and gave himself to the study of
+ art at an early age, becoming an especial proficient in color
+ and composition. One of his most widely-known works is "The
+ Last Days of Pompeii," which created great enthusiasm a quarter
+ of a century ago. This, however, was painted during his career
+ of dissipation, and its vivid coloring seemed to have been
+ drawn from a soul morbid with secret woes and craving a
+ nepenthe which never came.</p>
+
+ <p>The young artist was petted and idolized by the wealth and
+ nobility of St. Petersburg, where he married a beautiful woman,
+ and became court-painter to the czar Nicholas about the year
+ 1830. For some years no couple lived more happily, and no
+ artist swayed a greater multitude of fashion and wealth than
+ he; but scandal began to whisper that the czar was as fond of
+ the handsome, brilliant wife of the young court-painter as the
+ cultivated people of St. Petersburg were of the husband's
+ marvelously colored works; and when at last the fact became
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page115"
+ id="page115"></a>[pg 115]</span> known to Brullof that the
+ monarch who had honored him through an intelligent
+ appreciation of art had dishonored him through a guilty
+ passion for his wife, he left St. Petersburg, swore never
+ again to set foot on Russian soil or be recognized as a
+ Russian subject, and, plunging headlong into a wild career
+ of dissipation, was thenceforth a wanderer up and down the
+ continent of Europe.</p>
+
+ <p>It was when this career had borne its inevitable fruit, and
+ he was but a mere wreck of the polished gentleman of a few
+ years previous, that Brullof came to the Via San Basilio,
+ where, as soon as the fact became known, visitors began to
+ call. Among the first were the Russian ambassador and suite,
+ who were driven up in a splendid carriage, with liveried
+ attendants; but after the burly Italian had announced to his
+ master who was in waiting, the door was closed, and with no
+ message in return the representatives of the mightiest empire
+ on the globe were left to withdraw with the best grace they
+ could muster for the occasion. Similar scenes were repeated
+ often during the entire Roman season. He saw but few of his
+ callers&mdash;Russians, never.</p>
+
+ <p>The Russian and the American artists became quite intimate
+ during the few months they were thrown together, and Mr. Brown
+ has acknowledged that he owes much of the success of his later
+ efforts to hints received from the self-exiled, dying
+ Russian.</p>
+
+ <p>"Mr. Brown," he said on one occasion, while examining the
+ picture on the artist's easel, "no one since Claude has painted
+ atmosphere as you do. But you must follow Calam&eacute;'s
+ example, and make drawing more of a study. Draw from Nature,
+ and do it faithfully, and with your atmosphere I will back you
+ against the world. That is bad," pointing to the huge limb of a
+ tree in the foreground: "it bulges both ways, you see. Now,
+ Nature is never so. Look at my arm," speaking with increased
+ animation, and suddenly throwing off his coat and rolling up
+ his shirt-sleeve. "When you see a convexity, you will see
+ concavity opposite. Just so in Nature, especially in the trunks
+ and limbs of trees."</p>
+
+ <p>This criticism made such an impression on Brown that it
+ decided him to go into more laborious work, and was the
+ foundation of his habit of getting up at daybreak and going out
+ to sketch rocks, trees and cattle, until he stands where he now
+ does as a draughtsman.</p>
+
+ <p>The painting which Brullof had first admired, and which had
+ induced him to compare Brown to Claude in atmospheric effects,
+ was a view of the Pontine Marshes, painted for Crawford the
+ sculptor, and now in possession, of his widow, Mrs. Terry, at
+ Rome.</p>
+
+ <p>During this entire season the penuriousness exhibited by
+ Brullof is one of the hardest phases of his character to
+ explain. Though he was worth at least half a million of
+ dollars, his meals were generally of the scantiest kind,
+ purchased by the Italian cicerone, and cooked and eaten in his
+ room. Yet a kindness would touch the hidden springs of his
+ generosity as the staff of Moses did the rock of Horeb.</p>
+
+ <p>Toward the close of the Roman season, Brullof, growing more
+ and more moody, and becoming still more of a recluse, painted
+ his last picture, which showed how diseased and morbid his mind
+ had become. He called it "The End of All Things," and made it
+ sensational to the verge of that flexible characteristic. It
+ represented popes and emperors tumbling headlong into a
+ terrible abyss, while the world's benefactors were ascending in
+ a sort of theatrical transformation-scene. A representation of
+ Christ holding a cross aloft was given, and winged angels were
+ hovering here and there, much in the same manner as
+ <i>coryph&eacute;es</i> and lesser auxiliaries of the ballet. A
+ capital portrait of George Washington was painted in the mass
+ of rubbish, perhaps as a compliment to Brown. In
+ contradistinction to the portrait of Washington were seen
+ prominently those of the czar Nicholas and the emperor
+ Napoleon; the former put in on account of the artist's own
+ private wrong, and the latter because at that time, just after
+ the <i>coup d'&egrave;tat</i>, he was the execration of the
+ liberty-loving world.</p>
+
+ <p>In the spring the Russian artist gave up
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page116"
+ id="page116"></a>[pg 116]</span> his studio, and went down
+ to some baths possessing a local reputation situated on the
+ road to Florence, where he died very suddenly. Much mystery
+ overhangs his last days, and absolutely no knowledge exists
+ as to what became of his vast property. His cicerone robbed
+ him of his gold watch and all his personal effects and
+ disappeared. His remains lie buried in the Protestant
+ burying-ground outside the walls of Rome, near the Porto di
+ Sebastiano. His tomb is near that of Shelley and Keats, and
+ the monument erected to his memory is very simple, his head
+ being sculptured upon it in <i>alto relievo</i>, and on the
+ opposite side an artist's palette and brushes.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">EARL MARBLE.</p>
+
+ <h2>A CHRISTMAS HYMN.</h2>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>The air was still o'er Bethlehem's plain,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">As if the great Night held its
+ breath,</p>
+
+ <p>When Life Eternal came to reign</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Over a world of Death.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>The pagan at his midnight board</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Let fall his brimming cup of gold:</p>
+
+ <p>He felt the presence of his Lord</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Before His birth was told.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>The temples trembled to their base,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The idols shuddered as in pain:</p>
+
+ <p>A priesthood in its power of place</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Knelt to its gods in vain.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>All Nature felt a thrill divine</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">When burst that meteor on the night,</p>
+
+ <p>Which, pointing to the Saviour's shrine,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Proclaimed the new-born light&mdash;</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Light to the shepherds! and the star</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Gilded their silent midnight
+ fold&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>Light to the Wise Men from afar,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Bearing their gifts of gold&mdash;</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Light to a realm of Sin and Grief&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Light to a world in all its
+ needs&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>The Light of life&mdash;a new belief</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Rising o'er fallen creeds&mdash;</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Light on a tangled path of thorns,</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Though leading to a martyr's
+ throne&mdash;</p>
+
+ <p>Light to guide till Christ returns</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">In glory to His own.</p>
+ </div>
+
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>There still it shines, while far abroad</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">The Christmas choir sings now, as
+ then,</p>
+
+ <p>"Glory, glory unto God!</p>
+
+ <p class="i2">Peace and good-will to men!"</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p>ROME, Christmas, 1871.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">T. BUCHANAN
+ READ.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page117"
+ id="page117"></a>[pg 117]</span>
+
+ <h2>THE PARSEES.</h2>
+
+ <p>Hanging in my study is a noteworthy portrait, generally the
+ first object observed by those who enter. It is an exquisite
+ painting on glass, the work of L&agrave;ng Qu&agrave;, the best
+ artist China has produced in our day, and it delineates the
+ form and features of a singularly handsome young man. But it is
+ the quaint Parsee garb that first attracts attention; and the
+ weird romance that attaches to the history of the
+ Fire-worshipers gives this work of art its real value, rather
+ than its lines of beauty or the celebrity of the painter's
+ name. This delicately-featured portrait <i>may</i> depict the
+ countenance of Musaljee Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy, the first-born son
+ and heir of the late Sir Jamsetjee Jejeebhoy, baronet, of
+ Bombay, India. That he really sat for this portrait I cannot,
+ however, positively assert, since I obtained the painting from
+ an English officer, who bought it of the artist, but had
+ "forgotten the strange, outlandish name of the Indian nabob,"
+ as he said. It is certainly the portrait of a
+ <i>Parsee</i>&mdash;true to the life in features and garb, and
+ it bears a striking resemblance to the young Musaljee when
+ about eighteen years of age. He was not then a personage of any
+ great celebrity, though the worthy son of a most remarkable
+ sire, the latter long known and honored in Europe for his
+ liberal and enlightened charities, and especially for his
+ munificent donations, that saved the lives of thousands of
+ British subjects, during the terrible famines that occurred in
+ India between the years 1840 and 1846. It was in grateful
+ recognition of this noble philanthropy that Queen Victoria
+ conferred upon him the honor of a baronetcy, sending out a
+ nobleman to act as her proxy in the presentation of a sword
+ which had been handled by more than one British monarch. Sir
+ Jamsetjee was the first East Indian who ever received a title
+ from a European sovereign. During the terrible famines alluded
+ to he not only distributed daily from his own palace a
+ plentiful supply of food to all who came, but he made also
+ large donations of provisions to the English governor of Bombay
+ for the supply of his starving troops. When, subsequently,
+ pestilence followed in the footsteps of famine, this
+ true-hearted philanthropist, overstepping all prejudices of
+ creed and clan, built and endowed at his own expense a free
+ hospital for the sick of all nations and religions. Temporary
+ bamboo cottages at first received the sick till there was time
+ for the erection of the present elegant structure, which is
+ built in the Gothic style, and is capable of accommodating some
+ six or eight hundred patients, besides nurses and attendants.
+ The physicians have been from the beginning of the enterprise
+ all English, as are many of the nurses, and the supplies in
+ every department are the very best the country can furnish.
+ Since the death of the noble founder, the son, who inherits his
+ name and title, has continued to foster with loving devotion
+ the institution which stands as a lasting monument of the fame
+ and virtues of his illustrious sire. The conception of such a
+ charity tells not only of a generous heart, but of far-reaching
+ intelligence, while the energy and perseverance of both father
+ and son in carrying on, year after year, so vast a system of
+ benefactions, challenge our warmest admiration.</p>
+
+ <p>The name of the late Sir Jamsetjee stood for more than a
+ score of years at the very head of the list of merchant-princes
+ and ship-owners in Bombay, where he was born, and where his
+ ancestors for many generations resided. He came of an old and
+ wealthy family, who trace their genealogy back to the Parsee
+ exodus of the eighth century; and it is said that the "sacred
+ fire" has never once during all that time burned out upon their
+ altar. Sir Jamsetjee himself, though probably faithful in the
+ observance of the actual requirements of his
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page118"
+ id="page118"></a>[pg 118]</span> creed, was assuredly less
+ strict than the majority, and being a man of large
+ intellect, cultivated mind and great independence of
+ character, he did not hesitate to borrow from other nations
+ any customs, institutions or inventions that might tend to
+ the improvement of his own people. His stately mansion was
+ built and furnished in European style; his children, even
+ his daughters, were carefully educated in foreign as well as
+ native lore; and his own associations were with refined and
+ cultivated people, without any regard to their nation or
+ creed. It was while visiting at his house, in familiar
+ intercourse with his family, and with other Parsees of
+ similar position, that I gleaned many items of interest
+ concerning the history and practices of the Fire-worshipers.
+ Other facts were added from time to time during several
+ years of frequent association with these singular people, in
+ whose glorious though unsuccessful struggles for home and
+ liberty it is impossible not to feel an interest.</p>
+
+ <p>As a race, the Parsees are intelligent, active and
+ energetic. With business capacities far above the average, they
+ are usually successful in amassing wealth, while they are
+ extremely benevolent in dispensing their gains for both public
+ and private charities. For private benefactions they have,
+ however, little call among themselves, since a Parsee pauper
+ would be an unheard-of anomaly. Their style of living is
+ princely but peculiar. In the reception-rooms of the
+ wealthy&mdash;and most of the Parsees in the city of Bombay are
+ wealthy&mdash;one finds a rather quaint mingling of Oriental
+ luxury and European elegance&mdash;brightly-tinted Persian
+ carpets placed in Eastern fashion over divans strewn with
+ embroidered cushions and jewel-studded pillows, among which
+ recline, with genuine Oriental indolence, some of the members
+ of the family; while in another part of the same room half a
+ dozen more may be grouped about a table of marble and rosewood,
+ occupying velvet chairs that have traveled unmistakably from
+ London or Paris. French mirrors and Italian statuettes may have
+ for their <i>vis-&agrave;-vis</i> the exquisite mosaics, the
+ massive gold vases and the costly bijouterie of the Orient,
+ strewn so profusely around as to startle unaccustomed eyes; and
+ a genuine Meissonier will be just as likely to be placed side
+ by side with a Persian houri as anywhere else. The Parsees
+ drive the finest Arab steeds, but on their equipages there is a
+ more lavish display of ornament than we should deem quite in
+ accordance with good taste. The same is true in regard to
+ personal decoration. They wear immense quantities of costly
+ jewelry, and nearly all their garments are of silk, generally
+ richly embroidered in gold, and often with the addition of
+ precious stones. Even little children wear only silk, infants
+ from the very first being wrapped in long, loose robes of plain
+ white silk that are gradually displaced by others more
+ elaborate and costly; while the toilette of a Parsee lady in
+ full evening-dress is often of the value of a hundred thousand
+ rupees (or forty-five thousand dollars). The female costume
+ consists of silk or cotton skirts gathered full round the
+ waist, and long, loose robes of silk, lace or muslin, all more
+ or less decorated according to the wealth of the wearer. The
+ dress of the men is composed of trousers and shirts of white or
+ colored silk and long caftans of muslin, with the addition of a
+ fanciful little scarf fringed at the ends, and worn jauntily
+ across one shoulder and under the other arm. Their caps are
+ made of pasteboard covered with gay-colored silk, embroidered
+ and studded with precious stones or pearls. The form of a
+ Parsee's shirt is a matter of vital importance, both in regard
+ to respectability and religion. It must have five seams,
+ neither more nor less, and be made to lap on the breast exactly
+ in a certain way. Both sexes wear around the body a double
+ string, which they loosen when at prayer, and which a Parsee is
+ never, under any circumstances, permitted to dispense with. No
+ engagement or business transaction is legally binding if by any
+ chance this talismanic cord was left off by either party when
+ the contract was made. The cord is first placed on children
+ when they have completed their
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page119"
+ id="page119"></a>[pg 119]</span> ninth year, and this serves
+ to mark the most important epoch of their lives. Before the
+ investiture the eating of food with Christians or heathen
+ does not defile the juvenile Parsee, and girls may even go
+ about in public with their fathers; but after the bestowal
+ of the sacred cord the girls must be kept in seclusion and
+ the boys eat only with their own people.</p>
+
+ <p>Only the most liberal Parsees will permit those of other
+ creeds to eat under the same roof with themselves, and even
+ these never eat at the table with their guests. The table is
+ first covered for the visitors, and they are waited on with the
+ utmost assiduity, often by the members of the family in
+ addition to the servants. When the guests leave the board not
+ only is the cloth changed, but the table itself is washed
+ before being recovered: salts, castors and other similar
+ articles are all emptied and washed, and the table newly laid
+ in every particular. Small flat cakes are distributed round the
+ board to do service as plates, and the various dishes arranged
+ in the centre within reach of all. The family then wash hands
+ and faces and the father says a short prayer, after which all
+ take their seats and the meal begins. Neither knives nor forks
+ are used, but the meat is torn from the bones with the fingers
+ only, and with the left hand each one dips, from time to time,
+ bread, meat or vegetables into the broth or gravy as he wishes,
+ and then tosses it into his mouth, without allowing his fingers
+ to touch his lips. This requires some dexterity, and children
+ are not permitted at the family board till they have learned
+ thus to acquit themselves. If, however, the fingers of any one,
+ child or adult, should chance to come in contact with the lips,
+ though ever so slightly, he is required to leave the table
+ instantly and perform his ablutions over again, or else to take
+ the dish from which he was eating to himself, and touch no
+ other during the meal. In drinking they exercise the same
+ caution, adroitly throwing the liquid into the mouth or throat
+ without touching the lips with the cup or glass. The left hand
+ is the one with which food is always taken; and the reason
+ assigned is, that the right, having of necessity to perform
+ most labor, is more frequently brought in contact with things
+ unclean.</p>
+
+ <p>I once made a voyage with an American lady and gentleman in
+ a Bombay ship that was owned and commanded by a wealthy Parsee
+ merchant, though the real sailing-master and mate were
+ Englishmen. Our party ate at one table, and the Parsee nabob
+ had his own in solitary state. I was then quite a youthful
+ wife, and, as my husband was not of the party, the Parsee
+ supposed me unmarried, and overwhelmed me with the most gallant
+ attentions, among which were frequent invitations to our party
+ to dine in his cabin. But, though he would stand at my side all
+ the time I was eating, fill my cup or glass with his own hands,
+ and urge me to partake of certain dishes that were favorites of
+ his own, nothing could induce him to eat or drink in our
+ presence, even after we had left the table. And I learned
+ afterward that the costly service of rare china, silver and
+ glass from which we had eaten and drunk at his table, though
+ carefully laid aside, was never again used by the owner. One
+ evening, as we sat on the upper deck inhaling the balmy air, he
+ invited me to smoke. Of course I declined, and when he insisted
+ I told him that it was contrary to the customs of good society
+ in our country for ladies to use tobacco in any form. He
+ laughed heartily, and said, "Did you suppose I would ask a lady
+ to pollute her fragrant breath and dewy lips with so foul a
+ thing as vile tobacco? Taste and see." He brought his splendid
+ hookah, which I found filled with the "fragrant spices of
+ Araby" perfumed with attar of roses, while a long slender tube
+ rested in a vessel of rose-water at my feet; and the fumes were
+ certainly as agreeable as harmless. But this, my first
+ experiment in smoking, cost my Parsee friend three hundred
+ dollars, the estimated value of his gold-mounted hookah, with
+ its complicated array of tubes and vessels of the same precious
+ metal, none of which he durst ever use
+ again.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page120"
+ id="page120"></a>[pg 120]</span>
+
+ <p>As we sat chatting together in the bright moonlight our ears
+ were suddenly greeted by the sound of sweet music&mdash;wild,
+ unearthly melody that seemed to rise from the very depths of
+ the ocean just below our feet. At first it was only a soft
+ trill or a subdued hum, as of a single voice: then followed
+ what seemed a full chorus of voices of enchanting sweetness.
+ Presently the melody died away in the distance, only, however,
+ to burst forth anew after a brief interval. All the time we
+ were being regaled with the music we could see nothing to
+ enlighten us as to its source, and were inclined to pronounce
+ it a trick played by our fun-loving sailing-master. He,
+ however, denied all agency in the matter, but counseled us to
+ "keep a close look-out on the lee bow" if we wanted to see a
+ mermaid. We had noticed a sort of thrilling motion on the lower
+ deck, not unlike the sensation produced by the charge of an
+ electro-galvanic battery; and this, the Parsee captain gravely
+ assured us, was the mermaids' dance, and their efforts to drag
+ down our ship. "But I'll catch one of them yet&mdash;see if I
+ don't," he said energetically as he caught up something from
+ the deck and ran forward, and was presently, with two of the
+ Lascars, leaning over the bow. Half an hour afterward he
+ returned, and with a merry laugh laid in my lap two little
+ brown fish, informing me that they were singing-fish, and that
+ the music we had heard had been produced by shoals of these
+ tiny vocalists then clinging to the bottom of our ship. Our
+ Parsee friend told me that the Arabs and Persians always speak
+ of the singing-fish as "tiny women of the sea;" but he had
+ never heard our version of their long hair, and their twining
+ it about hapless sailors to drag them down to their coral
+ caverns beneath the ocean's wave. He showed me how to preserve
+ the fish by drying in the sun after repeated anointings with an
+ aromatic oil, which he gave me for the purpose; and I have
+ still in my cabinet these two specimens as a reminder of the
+ incident.</p>
+
+ <p>The manner in which the Parsees dispose of their dead seems
+ to us too shocking to be tolerated by a people so gentle and
+ refined. But they have grown familiar with a custom that,
+ generation after generation, has been observed by their race
+ till it has ceased to be repugnant. They call it "consigning
+ the dead to the element of air." For this purpose they have
+ roofless enclosures, the walls of which are twenty-five or
+ thirty feet high, and within are three biers&mdash;one each for
+ men, women and children. Upon these the bodies of the dead are
+ laid, and fastened down with chains or iron bands. Presently
+ birds of prey, so numerous within the tropics and always
+ waiting to devour, pounce upon the corpse and quickly tear the
+ flesh from the bones, while the skeleton remains intact. This
+ is afterward deposited in a pit dug within the same enclosure,
+ and which remains open till completely filled up with bones;
+ after which another is dug, and when the enclosure can
+ conveniently contain no more pits a new one is selected and
+ prepared. None but priests and bearers of the dead may enter,
+ or even look into, these walled cemeteries. The priests, by
+ virtue of their holy office, are preserved from defilement, but
+ the bearers are men set apart for this express purpose, and
+ they are considered so unclean that they may not enter under
+ the roof of any other Parsee or salute him on the street. If in
+ passing a bearer do but touch one's clothes accidentally, he is
+ subject to a heavy fine, while he who has been thus
+ contaminated must bathe his entire person and burn every
+ article of raiment he wore at the time of his defilement.</p>
+
+ <p>I was anxious to visit one of their temples, but this, Sir
+ Jamsetjee assured me, was impossible, as none but the initiated
+ are allowed even to approach the entrance, still less to get a
+ glimpse of what is passing within. He, however, volunteered the
+ information that, so far as the sanctuary itself was concerned,
+ there was little to be seen, only naked walls, bare floors, and
+ an altar upon which burns the sacred fire brought with the
+ Parsees from Persia, and which, he said, had never been
+ extinguished since it was kindled by Zoroaster from the sun
+ four thousand years ago. Of the form of service I could
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page121"
+ id="page121"></a>[pg 121]</span> not induce the baronet to
+ speak, but I learned afterward from my ship-friend that the
+ altar is enclosed by gratings, within which none but the
+ priest may enter. He goes in every day to tend "the eternal
+ fire," when he must remain for the space of an hour,
+ repeating certain invocations, with a bundle of rods in his
+ hand to repel any unclean spirits that should venture to
+ approach the sacred fire. Meanwhile, the assembled
+ multitudes prostrate themselves without and offer up their
+ silent adoration. "Yet, after all," musingly said the
+ Parsee, "the universe is the throne of the invisible God, of
+ whom fire is but the emblem, and we worship Him most
+ acceptably with our eyes fixed on the east when the sun
+ rides forth at morning in his celestial chariot of fire."
+ This form of worship those curious in such matters may see
+ on any bright morning at Bombay, where whole crowds of
+ Parsee men, women and children rush out at sunrise to greet
+ the king of day and offer up their morning oblations. I was
+ not surprised at the avowed preference of my Parsee friends
+ for out-door worship, since it is well known that the
+ ancient Persians not only permitted few temples to be
+ erected to their gods, and held in abhorrence all painted
+ and graven images, but they laid it to the charge of the
+ Greeks, as a daring impiety, that "they shut up their gods
+ in shrines and temples, like puppets in a cabinet, when all
+ created things were open to them and the wide world was
+ their dwelling-place." It was probably religious zeal, even
+ more than revenge against the Greeks, that induced the
+ burning of the temple at Athens by Xerxes, led on, as he may
+ have been, by the fanatical zeal of the Magi who accompanied
+ him.</p>
+
+ <p>Plutarch speaks of the Persians, in common with the
+ Chaldeans and Egyptians, as worshipers of the sun under the
+ name of Mithra, whom they regarded as standing between Ormuzd,
+ "the author of good," and Ahriman, "the author of evil,"
+ occupied alternately in aiding the former and subduing the
+ latter. So do the Parsees of our own day regard him; and their
+ only hope for the ultimate triumph of Ormuzd is in constant
+ sacrifices and prayers and propitiatory offerings to the sun as
+ the fire that is to burn out and utterly consume all evil from
+ our earth. Fire is to the Parsees now, as it has ever been, the
+ holiest of all holy things, carried about by princes and great
+ men for safety; by warriors, as that which is to give them the
+ victory over their foes; and by all, as their sole and
+ ever-present deity. Sir Jamsetjee assured me that the
+ <i>intelligent</i> Parsees regard the sun and fire as only the
+ symbols that are to remind them of the God they worship. But
+ there can be no doubt that the mass of the Parsees literally
+ worship the sun and the "sacred fire;" and hence arise the
+ utter repugnance many of them have to celebrating their
+ religious rites within closed walls, and the decided preference
+ ever shown for out-door worship. I have often heard them say
+ that the Fire-god shows his aversion to confinement by drooping
+ when he is shut up, and growing vigorous just in proportion as
+ free scope is given him. The sun appears everywhere on the
+ shields and armor of the ancient Persians, as on some of the
+ old-time monuments that have come down to us; while
+ occasionally Mithra is depicted as a youthful hero, with high
+ Persian cap, his knee on a prostrate bull, into whose heart he
+ seems plunging a dagger&mdash;symbolically, "the power of evil"
+ in complete subjection to the victorious sun, and about to be
+ for ever annihilated.</p>
+
+ <p>Zoroaster (called by the Persians <i>Zerduscht</i>) was not,
+ the Parsees say, the <i>founder</i> of their sect, but only the
+ reviser and perfecter of the system as it now exists among
+ them. Living in the reign of Darius Hystaspes, he was the
+ contemporary, probably an associate, of the prophet Daniel.
+ Before the advent of this reformer the Magi acknowledged two
+ great First Causes&mdash;i.e., the light and the darkness, the
+ former the author of all good, the latter of every evil, moral
+ and physical&mdash;and these they believed were at perpetual
+ war with each other. Zoroaster taught, as he may have learned
+ from Daniel, that there was One
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page122"
+ id="page122"></a>[pg 122]</span> greater still, who created
+ both the light and the darkness, making both to subserve His
+ own will. He also inculcated the duty of building temples
+ for the preservation of the sacred fire from storm and
+ tempest, when "by sudden extinction of the light the powers
+ of darkness do gain often a signal victory." The Parsees
+ hold in supreme veneration the name of Zoroaster as the most
+ noted of all their Magi for wisdom and virtue. They believe
+ that the sacred fire was lighted by him miraculously from
+ the sun&mdash;that it has burned steadily ever since, and
+ can never go out till it has consumed all evil from the
+ earth and the good has become universally triumphant. They
+ claim also that from the reforms wrought by Zoroaster there
+ was never the slightest change in any of their observances
+ until about twelve centuries ago, when Persia was overrun
+ and conquered by the Mohammedan Arabs. But not the fiercest
+ persecution could induce the Fire-worshipers to change their
+ religion for that of the Koran. Preferring liberty and their
+ altars in a foreign land to the alternative of apostasy or
+ persecution at home, the aboriginal Persian inhabitants fled
+ to other lands, settling immense colonies in Surat and
+ Bombay, where their descendants form in our day a large and
+ valuable element of the population. Their integrity,
+ industry and enterprise are proverbial all over the East;
+ and while they live strictly apart from all other races, the
+ Parsees are never wanting in sympathy and help for those who
+ need them. Dwelling amid nations who are almost universally
+ destitute of veracity, the Parsees are eminently truthful;
+ surrounded by polygamists and sensualists, they maintain
+ habits of purity and virtue; and accustomed to every-day
+ association with those who make a boast of cheating, my
+ memory fails to recall the case of a single Fire-worshiper
+ who was not strictly upright and honorable in his
+ dealings.</p>
+
+ <p>Commencing with the worship of the sun, and of fire as his
+ emblem, the Parsee grew into a sort of reverence for the
+ elements of air, earth and water. The air must not be
+ contaminated by foul odors, and of necessity no filth could be
+ tolerated anywhere in house, street or suburb; and to this
+ reverence for the purity of the atmosphere may be traced the
+ absolute cleanliness for which Fire-worshipers are everywhere
+ noted. As the earth must receive no defilement, the Parsees
+ would deem it sacrilege to deposit therein their dead for
+ corruption and decay; and hence have doubtless originated their
+ strange rites of sepulture, as they believe that the body is
+ thus more readily and rapidly reduced to its original elements.
+ Streams of water, even the tiniest rivulets, are deemed too
+ holy to be desecrated by washing or spitting in them, and still
+ less would they make the water the receptacle of offal of any
+ sort. To each of these elements, as well as to the fire, the
+ Parsees still make oblations on their high-days. It is true
+ that their ceremonies now are less imposing than those
+ described by Xenophon, when a thousand head of cattle were
+ immolated at a single festival, four beautiful bulls presented
+ to Jupiter, or the sky, and a magnificent chariot, drawn by
+ white horses crowned with flowers and wearing a golden yoke,
+ was offered to the sun; while the king in his chariot was
+ escorted by princes and great nobles, two thousand spearmen
+ marching on either side, and three hundred sceptre-bearers,
+ armed with javelins and mounted on splendidly-caparisoned
+ horses, bringing up the rear. But those jubilant days have
+ passed: the Fire-worshipers are in exile, and have no king to
+ lead them, either in battle against their foes or in triumphal
+ processions in honor of their gods. Yet is Parseeism not dead,
+ nor even on the decrease. Sacrifices, numerous and costly, are
+ still piled upon their altars, the finest cattle are dedicated
+ to their gods, the flesh being cut up and roasted for the
+ people, while the Magi cast the caul and a portion of the fat
+ into the fire as emblematic of the souls of the victims being
+ imbibed by the gods, while the grosser portions are
+ rejected.</p>
+
+ <p>The sacrifices and those who offer them are always crowned
+ with flowers, but the pontifical robes of the Magi, though of
+ pure white silk, are severely
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page123"
+ id="page123"></a>[pg 123]</span> plain in style and utterly
+ devoid of ornament. In their lives the Magi claim to
+ practice a rigid asceticism, making the earth their bed and
+ subsisting wholly on fruit, vegetables and bread, besides
+ submitting to frequent painful penances from fasting,
+ scourging and the endurance of fatiguing exercises. "Wine,
+ women and flesh" they are commanded to eschew as "special
+ abominations to those who aspire to minister before the
+ gods." The most remarkable feast of the ancient Parsees was
+ one called by them the "sack-feast." On the appointed day a
+ condemned malefactor was clothed in royal robes, seated on a
+ kingly throne and the sceptre of regal power placed in his
+ hand. Princes and people bowed the knee in mock homage
+ before this king of a day, and he was suffered to glut his
+ appetite with all manner of sensual delights till the sun
+ went down, and then he was cruelly beaten with rods, and
+ forthwith executed. (Were the crown and sceptre, the purple
+ robe and mock reverence, that were the antecedents of the
+ Redeemer's crucifixion, a reproduction of this barbarous
+ custom?) The modern Parsees, though recognizing this feast
+ as a legitimate part of their worship, say that they have
+ not observed it since their flight from Persia in the eighth
+ century, because since then, being under a foreign yoke,
+ they have had no jurisdiction over human life, and durst not
+ sacrifice even those who chanced to be in their power. This
+ may be one reason for the renunciation of this barbarous
+ practice of the olden time, but there has been wonderful
+ progress in civilization during the last twelve hundred
+ years; and certain it is that scenes of cruelty that suited
+ the ferocious tastes of the eighth century could not
+ possibly be repeated in the nineteenth.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">FANNIE ROPER FEUDGE.</p>
+
+ <h2>OUR MONTHLY GOSSIP.</h2>
+
+ <h3>A SWEDISH PROVINCIAL THEATRE.</h3>
+
+ <p>It is not so magnificent as the Scala and San Carlo, and
+ still, after seeing both those famous theatres, I must confess
+ I preferred that of Carlstad to either. It is small and
+ different in form from the generality: it reminded me, in fact,
+ of a hall in a certain New England town where I used to go to
+ the panorama as a child. There was a gallery like that in which
+ the men and boys sat who tramped the loudest and kissed their
+ hands, to the confusion of their neighbors, when the lights
+ were turned down to enhance the effect of the burning of
+ Moscow; only, at my panorama the gallery was unfashionable on
+ account of the noisy male element, whereas at Carlstad it was
+ the dress-circle. We&mdash;a party of Americans, the only
+ foreigners in the house that night&mdash;occupied
+ orchestra-stalls, as I presume the two or three front benches
+ in the parquet may be called. There was a white cape in our
+ vicinity, as well as one in the balcony; so our seats were
+ probably as fashionable as those in the first and only circle;
+ but behind us, stretching out to the doors and in under the
+ gallery, was a dense mass unrelieved by opera-cloaks of any
+ description; and that was the region of the
+ unpretending&mdash;-of those who came simply to enjoy, to see
+ and not to be seen.</p>
+
+ <p>As we spent a good part of a day at Carlstad, I should,
+ perhaps, relate something more of the place than merely how we
+ went to the theatre there; but that delightful evening effaced
+ all other impressions, and after the interval that has since
+ elapsed <i>Fleur de Th&eacute;</i> and our commissioner are the
+ only things that have retained somewhat of their original
+ savor.</p>
+
+ <p>The railway from Stockholm to Christiania ceased at Carlstad
+ on Lake <span class="pagenum"><a name="page124"
+ id="page124"></a>[pg 124]</span> Wener, which gave us a
+ day's drive to Arvika to strike the track again; and while
+ we stood consulting where we were to get carriages, and
+ whether we should go directly on, there came up a
+ flourishing specimen of the genus <i>valet de place</i>, who
+ took possession of us and laid out a plan that he had
+ apparently prepared over night for our especial benefit. It
+ is a way those persons have, and one that gives them a
+ tremendous advantage over travelers weakened by a long
+ journey, that they act as if they were there by appointment
+ to meet you, or as if you had telegraphed precisely what you
+ wished to do, and they were merely carrying out your
+ intentions. "You want to go to the Black Eagle Hotel: I take
+ you there. You would like to dine: you can have dinner at
+ the hotel, or I shall show you a nice restaurant." We had
+ not expected to find a member of the great European
+ brotherhood just there in a little town in the heart of
+ Sweden, and, taken unawares, fell an easy prey. However,
+ they do not invariably succeed in that way: sometimes, if
+ their officiousness is excessive, their English very
+ exasperating and the traveler a little fractious as well as
+ tired, they get the tables turned on them. A lady just
+ arrived at Genoa, when halfway to the hotel with one of
+ these persuasive personages snatched her bag out of his hand
+ and walked into the rival albergo because he said with an
+ aggravating accent, "I sall get you a ticket for de
+ steam-er." "No you sha'n't, either: I have got it myself,"
+ she said; and so they parted company, to his infinite
+ amazement. My friend&mdash;it was a friend of
+ mine&mdash;turned back, on second thoughts, to offer the man
+ something for having carried her belongings, but he put on
+ offended dignity and declared that he didn't want her money.
+ She was rather sorry afterward that he didn't do violence to
+ his feelings and take it; and so, no doubt, was he.</p>
+
+ <p>Our Carlstad commissioner beguiled the length of the way to
+ the inn, at which we were a little inclined to grumble, by
+ pointing out everything of note in our walk through the town.
+ We had been reading up in the train, and knew that Carlstad was
+ the capital of a district, had five thousand inhabitants, and
+ was nearly destroyed by fire in 1865; but he, a son of the
+ place, and seeing in his mind's eye its rising glory when the
+ railroad should be completed, did not let us off with that. We
+ had to look and admire just where he told us. "Wide streets,"
+ he would say in his finely-chopped English. "Houses all very
+ high&mdash;new since the fire. See here! there's the
+ telegraph-office."</p>
+
+ <p>At which, to answer in the style he understood best, we must
+ have responded, "Oh, I say! Well. Very good! All right!"</p>
+
+ <p>"You shall go to the theatre if you want to," he remarked at
+ last, in that sweet, protecting way peculiar to his class from
+ the habitual confounding of <i>can, shall</i> and <i>will</i>,
+ and that put us into good humor directly. To go to the theatre
+ would be just the thing.</p>
+
+ <p>"Oh yes, everybody goes," he said. It was a Danish
+ company&mdash;very good actors&mdash;very pretty piece; but we
+ rather expected to care more for the <i>everybody</i> than
+ either the piece or the actors; and so it proved.</p>
+
+ <p>We went early, and established ourselves in the
+ orchestra-stalls, as already stated, while our guardian
+ accepted an unpretending seat for himself, where he remained in
+ readiness to tow us home after the performance. And then the
+ spectators began to come in, and positively some of the very
+ people who used to be at the panorama. I know there was a lady
+ in front of me, in Mechanic Hall, who wore her hair in just
+ such a little knot&mdash;<i>pug</i> is, I think, the classic
+ name for that coiffure&mdash;and her dress cut as low in the
+ throat and adorned with precisely such a self-embroidered
+ collar as the lady rejoiced in who occupied the seat before me
+ at the theatre. That she was one of the fashionables of
+ Carlstad could be seen in the lofty pose of that pug, and in
+ the curious structure of ribbon and lace that sat astride of it
+ and hung down at each side. Her husband, a small, rather
+ dried-up gentleman, had the look of a town oracle who was
+ oppressed at home, and her daughter
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page125"
+ id="page125"></a>[pg 125]</span> was one of the prettiest
+ girls in the house. The overgrown boy, the son and heir, was
+ not pretty: he sat beside his sister and kept nudging her. I
+ could not exactly understand what he said in Swedish, but I
+ know it must have been of this nature: "There's Jim Davis
+ over there. Look, sister, look!"</p>
+
+ <p>Sister only glanced at him with a reproving air of "Don't
+ push me so," and then gazed steadfastly in the other direction;
+ but she was not left long in peace. Tom's elbow began again in
+ a minute: "He's looking right at you, all the time. You'd
+ better turn round and bow to him." And the color would creep up
+ in her cheeks, do all she could to prevent it, so that she had
+ to lean across mamma and say something to her father, just so
+ as not to bow to Mr. Davis, which would have been such a simple
+ thing to do, after all.</p>
+
+ <p>Everybody who came in nodded and spoke to everybody else,
+ and then shook hands across the seats; and we felt quite out of
+ our element under the inquiring but superior glances that fell
+ to our lot. It was all very well for us to make our little
+ observations and smile at each other on the sly: we had the
+ consciousness all the while of not belonging to the first
+ society in Carlstad, and of being viewed as intruders in that
+ select circle.</p>
+
+ <p>We had been studying one family party after another as the
+ seats filled around us, for the audience collected by families,
+ when, with a little rustle and stir attending her progress, and
+ a whispering behind her as she advanced, the Bride appeared,
+ for she had arrived from Stockholm by our train. It was the
+ first time any one had seen her since she started on the
+ wedding-tour, and the bows and smiles she dealt out on every
+ side were not to be numbered. Our pretty girl got
+ one&mdash;they were school-friends&mdash;and the horrid boy
+ another, which he barely answered with a solemn nod of his
+ head, being as shy of her, apparently, in her blue silk and
+ white cape, as his sister was of Mr. Davis. It was really a
+ very pretty dress of the Bride's, and one that made our
+ traveling costumes look uncommonly shabby: it was taken up
+ behind in the approved style, and only needed a bustle to have
+ been truly effective. Doubtless she had seen plenty of those
+ articles in Stockholm, only her husband said, "I hope, dear,
+ you will never put on one of those horrid things;" and she told
+ him certainly not if he did not like them; but I think she
+ found afterward she needed one for that blue dress, and sent
+ for it at the first opportunity. The young husband was not got
+ up for show, knowing very well that no one would mind him, but
+ he looked beamingly happy; and if he was not in a dress-coat
+ with a flower in his buttonhole, like the
+ <i>habitu&eacute;s</i> of the Com&eacute;die Fran&ccedil;aise
+ or the Italiens, he understood how they use an opera-glass
+ there. The glass was a new acquisition that he had brought home
+ with him, and after practicing with it at the Royal Theatre in
+ the capital, he was fully prepared to stand up between the
+ acts, with his arm behind him in a negligently graceful
+ attitude, and study the balcony. His acquaintances there must
+ have found it rather embarrassing, for it was not a usual thing
+ in Carlstad to look at one's friends through an opera-glass: he
+ was the only person who did it, and they probably all talked
+ about it when they went home.</p>
+
+ <p>We were so occupied with our surroundings that we hardly
+ thought of the piece, though it was given with considerable
+ spirit, if I remember rightly. The sailors were fine, jolly
+ tars, and the Chinese ladies and gentlemen toddled about in
+ flowered dressing-gowns and talked with their thumbs, as it
+ would appear the inhabitants of the Celestial Empire usually
+ do; but the house did not allow itself to be betrayed into
+ unseemly enthusiasm. There was an involuntary laugh now and
+ then, and once somebody said <i>bravo</i>, but as a general
+ thing a discreet reticence prevailed, and the actors might have
+ gone through the piece on their heads in an extravagant desire
+ to elicit signs of approval: they would only have received a
+ cool little round of applause when the curtain fell.</p>
+
+ <p>We, at all events, had no hesitation in telling the
+ commissioner that we had enjoyed ourselves immensely; and so,
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page126"
+ id="page126"></a>[pg 126]</span> it appeared, had he. He was
+ even bold enough to call it a very fine company, and as we
+ walked back to the hotel at half-past nine in broad
+ daylight, he told us what they were going to play the next
+ evening, possibly in the hope that we should stay for it and
+ he should get another seat. That was out of the question,
+ however, sorry as we were to disappoint him. He had to tuck
+ us into the carriage the following day, and let us drive
+ away and leave him bereft of his charges. "You shall have a
+ good ride," were his parting words, kind and fatherly as he
+ was to the last; and so we had. But we found no one again to
+ care for us so tenderly as our old friend, nor did any one
+ take us to the theatre throughout the remainder of the
+ journey. G.H.</p>
+
+ <h3>VENETIAN CAFF&Egrave;S.</h3>
+
+ <p>It is years since so lovely an autumn as that of 1874 has
+ been seen in Europe: people say not since the last great comet
+ year, and they credit the erratic visitor of last summer with
+ the exceptional beauty of the weather. As in the case of other
+ marked comet years, the vintages of which still bring
+ extraordinary prices, Italy has had exceptionally fine harvests
+ of all kinds this year. The grain has been abundant, the
+ vintage has been superb, the olives have escaped the danger of
+ unseasonable frosts, and the still more important crop of
+ foreigners seems to be pretty well assured. The charming
+ weather in October and November made the interesting blossoms
+ sprout plentifully; and boat-loads and train-loads came in with
+ an abundance promising an unusually fine winter for <i>la bella
+ Italia</i>. Venice, indeed, may be said to have pretty well
+ housed her crop in this kind already. It has been a magnificent
+ one, and the Queen of the Adriatic admits that due homage has
+ been done to her. The <i>forestieri</i> season sets in earlier
+ in her case than in her sister cities. The real "Carnival de
+ Venice" is in August, September and October now-a-days, let the
+ calendar say what it may. Some flaunting of gaudy-colored
+ calico, some dancing on the Piazza of St. Mark, there may be on
+ the eve of Lent in obedience to old usages, but the dancing
+ that really glads the Italian heart is the dancing for which
+ the <i>forestiere</i> pays the piper, and the true Lenten time
+ is that when his beneficent presence is wanting.</p>
+
+ <p>Venice, then, has already brought her Carnival to a
+ conclusion; and it has been a splendid one. English, Americans,
+ Germans, all came in shoals&mdash;all thronged the galleries,
+ the churches and the palaces in the morning, sauntered or
+ bathed on the outer shore of the Lido in the afternoon, and met
+ at Florian's in the evening. "What is Florian's?" will be asked
+ by those who have never been at Venice&mdash;by some such, at
+ least. For probably the fame of the celebrated
+ <i>caff&egrave;</i> may have traveled across the Atlantic, just
+ as many who have never crossed it westward are no strangers to
+ the name of Delmonico. Florian's, however, in any case,
+ deserves a word of recognition. It is the principal, largest
+ and most fashionable caff&egrave; on the Piazza di San Marco.
+ But the singular and curious specialty of the place is that it
+ has never been closed&mdash;no, not for five minutes&mdash;day
+ or night, for a period of more than a hundred and thirty years!
+ Probably it is the only human habitation of any sort on the
+ face of the globe of which that could be said.</p>
+
+ <p>But the caff&egrave; in itself is in many respects a
+ specialty of Venetian life, and has been so since the days of
+ Goldoni. The readers of his comedies, so abundantly rich in
+ local coloring, will not have failed to observe that the
+ caff&egrave; plays a larger part in the life of Venice than is
+ the case in any other city. Probably no Venetian passes a
+ single day without visiting once at least, if not oftener, his
+ accustomed caff&egrave;. Men of business write their letters
+ and arrange their meetings there. Men of pleasure know that
+ they shall find their peers there. Mere loafers take their
+ seats there, and gaze at the stream of life, as it flows past
+ them, for hours together. And, most marked specialty of all,
+ Venice is the only city in Italy where the native female
+ aristocracy frequents the caff&egrave;. Indeed, I know no place
+ in all the Peninsula where so large an amount of Italian beauty
+ may be seen <span class="pagenum"><a name="page127"
+ id="page127"></a>[pg 127]</span> as among the fashionable
+ crowd at Florian's on a brilliant midsummer moonlight
+ night.</p>
+
+ <p>Venice is of all the cities in the world the one which those
+ who have never seen it know best. The peculiarities of it are
+ so marked and so unlike anything else in the world, and the
+ graphic representations of every part of the city are so
+ numerous and so admirably accurate, that every traveler finds
+ it to be exactly what he was prepared to see, and can hardly
+ fancy that he sees the Queen of the Adriatic for the first
+ time. I may therefore assume, perhaps, that my readers are
+ acquainted with the appearance of that most matchless of city
+ spaces, the Piazza di San Marco. They will readily call to mind
+ the long series of arcades that form the two long sides of the
+ parallellogram which has the gorgeous front of St. Mark's
+ church occupying the entirety of one of the shorter sides.
+ Well, about halfway up the length of the piazza six of the
+ arches on the right hand of one facing St. Mark's church are
+ occupied by the celebrated caff&egrave;. The six never-closed
+ rooms, corresponding each with one of the arches of the arcade,
+ are very small, and would not suffice to accommodate a
+ twentieth part of the throng which finds itself at Florian's
+ quite as a matter of course every fine summer's night. But
+ nobody thinks of entering these smartly-furnished little
+ cabinets save for breakfast or during the hours of the day.
+ Some take their evening ice or coffee on the seats under the
+ arcade, either immediately in front of the cabinets or around
+ the pillars which support the arches, and thus have an
+ opportunity of observing the never-ceasing and ever-varying
+ stream of life that flows by them under the arcade. But the
+ vast majority of the crowd place themselves on chairs arranged
+ around little tables set out on the flags of the piazza. A
+ hundred or so of these little tables are placed in long rows
+ extending far out into the piazza, and far on either side
+ beyond the extent of the six arches which are occupied by the
+ caff&egrave; itself. A London or New York policeman would have
+ his very soul revolted, and conclude that there must be
+ something very rotten indeed in the state of a city in which
+ the public way could be thus encumbered and no cry of "move on"
+ ever heard. Assuredly, it is public ground which Florian, in
+ the person of his nineteenth-century representative, thus
+ occupies with his tables and chairs. Probably, if a Venetian
+ were asked by what right he does so, the question would seem to
+ him much as if one asked by what right the tide covers the
+ shallows of the lagoon. It always has been so. It is in the
+ natural order of things. And how could Venice live without
+ Florian's?</p>
+
+ <p>But it is not Florian's alone which is thus a trespasser on
+ the domain of the public. The other less celebrated
+ caff&egrave;s do the same thing. One immediately opposite to
+ Florian's, on the other side of the
+ piazza&mdash;Quadri's&mdash;has almost as large a spread of
+ chairs and tables as Florian himself. But it is a curious
+ instance of the permanence of habits at Venice, that though at
+ Quadri's the articles supplied are quite as good, and the
+ prices exactly the same, the fashionable world never deserts
+ Florian's. The only difference between the two establishments,
+ except this one of their customers, that is perceptible to the
+ naked eye, is that at Quadri's beer is served, while Florian
+ ignores the existence of that plebeian beverage, which
+ assuredly was never heard of in Venice in the days when he
+ began his career and formed his habitudes.</p>
+
+ <p>I am tempted to endeavor to give the reader some picture of
+ the scene on the piazza on a night when (as is the case almost
+ every other evening) a military band is playing in the middle
+ of the open space, and the cosmopolitan crowd is assembled in
+ force&mdash;to describe the wonderful surroundings of the
+ scene, the charm of the quietude broken by no sound of hoof or
+ of wheel, the soft and tempered light, the gay clatter, athwart
+ which comes every fifteen minutes the solemn mellow tone of the
+ great clock of St. Mark with importunate warning that another
+ pleasant quarter of an hour has drifted away down the stream of
+ time. It is a scene that tempts the pen. But the well-dressed
+ portion of mankind <span class="pagenum"><a name="page128"
+ id="page128"></a>[pg 128]</span> is very similar in all
+ countries and under all circumstances, and perhaps my
+ readers may be more interested in a few traits of the
+ popular life of Venice, which the magnificent Piazza of St.
+ Mark is not the best place for studying, for some of the
+ most characteristic phases of it are absolutely banished
+ thence. The strolling musician or singer, who may be heard
+ every night in other parts of the city, never plies his
+ trade on the piazza. Mendicancy, which is more rife at
+ Venice, I am sorry to say, than in any other Italian city,
+ except perhaps Naples, is not tolerated on the piazza.</p>
+
+ <p>But if we wish for a good specimen of the truly popular life
+ of Venice, it will not be necessary to wander far from the
+ great centre of the piazza. Coming down the Piazzetta, or
+ Little Piazza, which opens out of the great square at one end,
+ and abuts on the open lagoon opposite the island of St. George
+ at the other, and turning round the corner of the ducal palace,
+ we cross the bridge over the canal, which above our heads is
+ bridged by the "Bridge of Sighs," with its "palace and a prison
+ on each hand," as Byron sings, and find ourselves on the "Riva
+ dei Schiavoni"&mdash;the quay at which the Slavonic vessels
+ arrived, and arrive still. The quay is a very broad one, by far
+ the broadest in Venice, paved with flagstones, and teeming with
+ every characteristic form of Venetian life from early morning
+ till late into the night. There are two or three hotels
+ frequented by foreigners on the Riva, for the situation facing
+ the open lagoon is an exceptionally good one; and there are
+ three or four caff&egrave;s at which the cosmopolitan and not
+ too aristocratic visitor may get an excellent cup of coffee
+ (for the Venetians, thanks to their long connection with the
+ East, know what coffee is, and will not take chiccory or other
+ such detestable substitutes in lieu of it) for the modest
+ charge of thirteen centimes&mdash;just over two cents&mdash;and
+ study as he drinks it the moving and ever-amusing scenes
+ enacted before his eyes. His neighbor perhaps will be an old
+ gentleman, the very type of the old "pantaloon" whose mask was
+ in the old comedy supposed to be the impersonation of Venice.
+ There are the long, slender and rather delicately-cut features
+ terminating in a long, narrow and somewhat protruding chin; the
+ high cheek-bones, the lank and sombre cheeks, the high nose,
+ the dark bright eye under its bushy brow. He is very thin, very
+ seedy, and evidently <i>very</i> poor. But he salutes you, as
+ you take your seat beside him, with the air of an ex-member of
+ "The Ten;" his ancient hat and napless coat are carefully
+ brushed; his outrageously high shirt-collar and voluminous
+ unstarched neckcloth, after the fashion of a former generation,
+ though as yellow as saffron, are clean; and his poor old boots
+ as irreproachable as blacking&mdash;which can do much, but,
+ alas! not all things&mdash;can make them. His expenditure of a
+ penny will entitle him not only to a cup of coffee, as
+ aforesaid, but also to a glass of fresh water, which has been
+ turned to an opaline color by the shaking into it of a few
+ drops of something which the waiter drops from a bottle with
+ some contrivance at its mouth, the effect of which is to cause
+ only a drop or two of the liquor, whatever it may be, to come
+ out at each shake. Our old friend is also entitled, in virtue
+ of his expenditure, to occupy the chair he sits on for as many
+ hours as he shall see fit to remain in it. And after the
+ coffee, which must be drunk while hot, has been despatched, the
+ sippings of the opaline mixture aforesaid may be protracted
+ indefinitely while he enjoys the cool evening-breezes from the
+ lagoon, the perfection of <i>dolce far niente</i>, and the
+ amusement the life of the Riva never fails to afford him. An
+ itinerant vender of little models of gondolas and bracelets and
+ toys made out of shells comes by, seeking a customer among the
+ folk assembled at the caff&egrave;. He does not address
+ Pantaloon, for of course he knows that there is nothing to be
+ done in that line with him. But spying with a hawk's glance a
+ <i>forestiere</i> among the crowd, he strolls up to him,
+ holding up one of his gimcrack bracelets daintily&mdash;and he
+ thinks temptingly, poor fellow!&mdash;between his finger and
+ thumb. "Un franco! Un sol franco! &egrave; una beleza per una
+ contesa!" ("One franc! <span class="pagenum"><a name="page129"
+ id="page129"></a>[pg 129]</span> only one franc! It would be
+ beautiful on the arm of a countess!") he murmurs in his soft
+ lisping Venetian, which abolishes all double consonants, and
+ supplies their place by prolonging the soft liquid sound of
+ the preceding vowel. One franc! It is wonderful how the
+ thing, worthless as it is, can be made even by the most
+ starving fingers for such a price. Yet after dangling his
+ toy for a minute, and gazing, oh, so wistfully! the while
+ out of his big haggard eyes, he says, "Seventy-five
+ centimes! half a franc!" and still lingers ere he turns away
+ with a sigh, a weary movement of his emaciated figure and a
+ longing look on his poor hollow face that make one feel that
+ the drama we are witnessing is not all comedy. But it is all
+ supremely interesting to our neighbor, Si'or Pantaleone. He
+ has been keenly watching the attempted deal, and no doubt
+ wished that his countryman might succeed. But there was no
+ element of tragedy in the matter for him, a condition of
+ semi-starvation is too much an ordinary, every-day and
+ normal spectacle. He looked on more as a retired merchant
+ might look on at the progress of a bargain for the delivery
+ of a shipload of grain. Presently, a middle-aged woman and a
+ girl of some fourteen years station themselves in front of
+ the audience seated outside the caff&egrave;. The elder
+ woman has a guitar, and the girl a violin and some sheets of
+ music in her hand. The woman has her wonderful wealth of
+ black hair grandly dressed and as shining as oil can make
+ it. She has large gilt earrings in her ears, a heavy coral
+ necklace, and a gaudy-colored shawl in good condition.
+ Whatever might be beneath and below this is in dark
+ shadow&mdash;"et sic melius situm." She is not starved,
+ however, for, as she prepares to finger her guitar, she
+ shows a well-nourished and not ill-formed arm. The young
+ girl has one of those pale, delicate, oval faces so common
+ in Venice: she also has a good shawl&mdash;an amber-colored
+ one&mdash;which so sets off the olive-colored complexion of
+ her face as to make her a perfect picture. This couple do
+ not in any degree assume an attitude of appealing <i>ad
+ misericordiam</i>. They pose themselves <i>en artistes</i>.
+ The girl sets about arranging her music in a business-like
+ way, and then they play the well-known air of "La Stella
+ Confidente," the little violinist really playing remarkably
+ well. Then the elder woman comes round with a little tin
+ saucer for our contributions. No slightest word or look of
+ disappointment or displeasure follows the refusal of those
+ who give nothing. The saucer is presented to each in turn. I
+ supposed that the application to Si'or Pantaleone was an
+ empty form. But no. That retired gentleman could still find
+ wherewithal to patronize the fine arts, and dropped a
+ centime&mdash;the fifth part of a cent&mdash;into the dish
+ with the air of a prince bestowing the grand cross of the
+ Golden Fleece. Then comes a dealer in ready-made trousers,
+ which Pantaloon examines curiously and cheapens. Then a body
+ of men singing part-songs, not badly, but to some
+ disadvantage, as they utterly ignore the braying of half a
+ dozen trumpets which are coming along the Riva in advance of
+ a body of soldiers returning to some neighboring barracks.
+ Then there are fruit-sellers and fish-sellers and
+ hot-chestnut dealers, and, most vociferous of all, the
+ cryers of "Acqua! acqua! acqua fresca!" There, making its
+ way among the numerous small vessels from Dalmatia, Greece,
+ etc. moored to the quay of the Schiavoni, comes a boat from
+ the Peninsular and Oriental steamer, which arrived this
+ morning from Alexandria, with four or five Orientals on
+ board. They come on shore, and proceed to saunter along the
+ Riva toward the Grand Piazza, while their dark faces and
+ brightly-colored garments add an element to the motley scene
+ which is perfectly in keeping with old Venetian
+ reminiscences.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">T.A.T.</p>
+
+ <h3>A NEW MEXICAN CHRISTMAS EVE.</h3>
+
+ <p>It is Christmas Eve in Albuquerque. Blazing fagots of
+ mesquite-roots placed on the surrounding adobe walls illuminate
+ the old church on the plaza. There is a grand <i>baile</i> at
+ the fonda, to which we and our "family are most respectfully
+ invited." The sounds of music
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page130"
+ id="page130"></a>[pg 130]</span> already invite us to the
+ ball-room. We enter. The floor is full; a hundred couples
+ are gliding through the graceful "Spanish dance," or "slow
+ waltz," as it is termed here. Not a few blue-and-gold United
+ States uniforms are to be seen in the throng. A
+ full-uniformed major-general of volunteers adds the
+ &eacute;clat of his epaulettes to the occasion. The ranchos
+ have poured in their se&ntilde;oras and se&ntilde;oritas,
+ and three rows of the dark-eyed creatures sit ranged around
+ the room.</p>
+
+ <p>The Mexican women look their best in a ball-room. Their
+ black eyes, black hair and white teeth glisten in the light;
+ they are dressed in the gayest of gay colors; ponderous
+ ornaments of gold, strongly relieved by their dusk complexions,
+ shed around them a rich barbaric lustre. Not that they eschew
+ adventitious means to blanch their sun-shadowed tints. For days
+ some of the se&ntilde;oras and se&ntilde;oritas have worn a
+ mask of a white clayey mixture to give them an ephemeral
+ whiteness for this occasion. Those who could procure nothing
+ else have worn a pasty vizard kneaded of common clay, to effect
+ in some degree a like result by protecting their faces from the
+ sun and wind. Should you visit New Mexico, and as you ride
+ along slowly in the heat of midday meet a se&ntilde;orita who
+ gazes at you with a pair of jet black eyes through a hideous,
+ ghastly mask of mud or mortar, do not be frightened from your
+ accustomed propriety. The se&ntilde;orita is preparing her
+ <i>toilette de bal</i>.</p>
+
+ <p>The New Mexican women cannot be considered pretty, generally
+ speaking. In artistic symmetry of feature, in purity of
+ complexion, they are not to be compared with our countrywomen.
+ These can bear the searching light of day, when delicacy of
+ detail can be distinguished and appreciated. Those look their
+ best in the artificial light of the ball-room. There the
+ blue-black hair, the brilliant black eyes, the well-traced
+ eyebrows, the magnificently white and regular teeth, the
+ richly-developed forms, produce a general effect before which
+ our blond and delicate beauties seem pale and <i>fades</i>. But
+ the Mexican's coarser skin&mdash;her <i>teint
+ basan&eacute;</i>&mdash;is too plainly visible in the light of
+ the sun: you should see her only by the lamps. It is doubtless
+ rather from an instinct of coquetry than from any other feeling
+ that in the day-time the Mexican women shroud their dusky
+ traits in the folds of their <i>rebosas</i>, leaving only one
+ pilot eye to look upon the outer world.</p>
+
+ <p>No introductions are necessary at the public bailes. Saunter
+ around the room, inspect the show of expectant partners, and
+ when you see one who suits your fancy ask her to dance, without
+ more ado. If she be not engaged she will at once accept your
+ proffered arm. She will not say anything. Ten to one she will
+ not breathe a syllable during your evolutions. Conversation is
+ not the forte of the se&ntilde;oritas. But she will smile and
+ smile, and you will have no reason to complain of her waltzing.
+ The Mexican <i>caballero</i>, when he seeks a partner, will not
+ put himself out so far as to have any words about it. He merely
+ beckons the chosen one, as the sultan might throw the
+ handkerchief, and she comes to him at once.</p>
+
+ <p>Each dance concluded, you lead your partner to a sort of bar
+ where refreshments are furnished, and ask her whether she will
+ take <i>vino</i> or <i>dulces</i>&mdash;wine or candies? She
+ will take <i>dulces</i>&mdash;"Gracias, se&ntilde;or!" This is
+ <i>de rigueur</i>. You pay for them of course, and conduct her
+ to her seat. She pours the <i>dulces</i> into the awaiting
+ pocket-handkerchiefs of the old people, her <i>comadres</i>,
+ and of her younger brothers and sisters.</p>
+
+ <p>In a little room adjoining the ball-room, with door
+ invitingly open, is the shrine of <i>monte</i>. The revelry of
+ the ball-room is unheeded by the preoccupied votaries of the
+ changeful deity as they sit around the green table watching the
+ dealer as he turns the cards, and nervously fingering their
+ little piles of red or white "chips." We have no business and
+ no pleasure here. Let us merely look in and pass on.</p>
+
+ <p>Waltzes, "round" and "slow," are the <i>pi&egrave;ces de
+ r&eacute;sistance</i> of a Mexican baile: quadrilles are not
+ relished by the <span class="pagenum"><a name="page131"
+ id="page131"></a>[pg 131]</span> dusky danseuses. There are
+ some New Mexican dances which do not lack prettiness. Of
+ these, the Cuna is the most popular. It commences with a
+ see-saw movement suggestive of its name&mdash;cuna- or
+ cradle-dance. For the rest, the waltz enters much into its
+ composition.</p>
+
+ <p>The orchestra generally consists of one or more violins and
+ a guitar or two. The New Mexican guitar is strung conversely:
+ the base-string is where we put the treble, and <i>vice
+ vers&acirc;</i>. The strings are generally struck with the
+ thumb-nail or with a piece of horn or wood like the ancient
+ <i>plectrum</i>. This produces a harsh metallic sound, without
+ any rotundity. Few New Mexican fiddlers or guitar-players are
+ capable of playing in any time except dancing time, and the
+ character of the baile, funeral and sacred music is the same.
+ The only distinction is the addition of a continuous
+ <i>tremolo</i> to the latter two, which produces the same
+ unpleasant effect on the nerves as a comic song chanted by the
+ shaky, cracked, piping and quavering voice of senility. As the
+ fiddles invariably play their parts in funerals as well as on
+ festive processions, it requires some familiarity with the
+ customs of the country to distinguish one from the other. The
+ music to-night is much better than the ordinary baile music. A
+ native harpist adds the music of his many strings; and not bad
+ music either, though he does not know a quaver from a
+ semibreve, and his harp is of his own manufacture. The
+ sameness, however, caused by playing always and everything in
+ the same key is perceptible. But dancing critics are not
+ disposed to be very severe.</p>
+
+ <p>The enjoyment of the evening is at high pressure. The
+ dancers are swinging, surging, spinning through the Spanish
+ dance. Everybody who can find a partner and a place on the
+ floor&mdash;there are many who cannot find the latter&mdash;is
+ dancing. It is a gay, a brilliant scene. All is going as
+ merrily as a whole chime of marriage-bells when a deep and
+ solemn peal from the church close by breaks in over the music,
+ the laughter and the dancing. It is midnight! It is the
+ <i>Noche Buena</i>, and the bell summons the faithful to the
+ midnight mass. The effect is electric. The last twirl of the
+ waltz is suspended, half executed. The dancers stop as suddenly
+ as if they were puppets moved and stilled by the cunning of
+ some wire-pulling hand. A general rush is made for the church:
+ in a moment the ball-room is empty. The church is filled as
+ instantaneously, and the wildly gay dancers of a moment ago are
+ now kneeling, hushed and down-bent, in devotional
+ attitudes.</p>
+
+ <p>The scene is impressive: the bright ball-toilettes
+ contrasted in a "dim religious light," the sudden change of
+ place and mood, from gay to grave, from ball-room to sanctuary,
+ strikes a stranger's eye with thrilling effect. At the
+ conclusion of the service the dancers return to the ball-room,
+ to change from grave to gay, and dance <i>ad libitum</i> till
+ daylight.</p>
+
+ <p class="author">J.T.</p>
+
+ <h3>ENGLISH BIBLE TRANSLATIONS.</h3>
+
+ <p>The first complete translation of the Bible into our
+ language was made about the year 1380 by John de Wycliffe, or
+ Wickliffe. There are several manuscript copies of it in the
+ Bodleian and other European libraries. This great work unlocked
+ the Scriptures to the multitude, or, as one of his antagonists,
+ bewailing such an enterprise, worded it, "the gospel pearl was
+ cast abroad and trodden under foot." Long before the appearance
+ of this translation various versions of portions of the Bible
+ had appeared, specimens of which, of every century from the
+ reign of Alfred to Chaucer's time, are preserved in the British
+ Museum and elsewhere. Sir Thomas More says: "The Holy Byble was
+ longe before Wycliffis daies by virtuose and well-learned men
+ translated into the English tongue, and by good and godly
+ people with devotion and soberness well and reverently read."
+ This statement is further corroborated by Foxe, the
+ martyrologist, who remarks: "If histories be well examined, we
+ shall find both before and after the Conquest, as well before
+ John Wickliffe was borne as since, the whole body of the
+ Scriptures by sundry men translated into this our country
+ tongue." Wycliffe's Bible was first printed at
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page132"
+ id="page132"></a>[pg 132]</span> Oxford in 1850, previous to
+ which the New Testament appeared in 1721 and was reprinted
+ in 1810.</p>
+
+ <p>In 1526, William Tyndale completed and published in English
+ his translation of the New Testament. He also translated and
+ printed the Pentateuch and the book of Jonah, and was preparing
+ them for publication when he was put to death in Flanders,
+ being strangled and burnt for heresy. Tyndale's translation,
+ with his latest revisions (1534), was republished in the
+ English Hexapla in 1841. A copy of his translation of the
+ Pentateuch which had belonged to Bishop Heber was sold in 1854
+ for $795. Four years later another copy sold for within twenty
+ dollars of that amount.</p>
+
+ <p>The first English translation of the entire Bible was made
+ by Miles Coverdale, who afterward became bishop of Exeter, and
+ was printed in folio in the year 1535. In 1538 a second edition
+ of Coverdale's Bible was printed at Paris, but the Inquisition
+ interfered and committed the whole edition of twenty-five
+ hundred copies to the flames. No perfect copy of Coverdale's
+ version is known to exist, but one lacking the original
+ title-page and first leaf was sold in 1854 for $1725. Another,
+ at the Perkins' sale, in June, 1873, brought $2000.</p>
+
+ <p>Two years after the appearance of the first edition of
+ Coverdale's Bible, John Rogers, the first martyr in Queen
+ Mary's reign, published his version of the Scriptures. He made
+ some emendations, but the text is chiefly that of Tyndale and
+ Coverdale. It was printed by Grafton and Whitchurch in 1537,
+ and the title runs: "The Byble, which is all the holy
+ Scripture: in which are contayned the Olde and Newe Testament
+ truely and purely translated into Englysh by Thomas Matthew."
+ For safety, Rogers assumed the name of Matthew, whence it is
+ known as Matthew's Bible. Seven hundred and fifty dollars have
+ been paid for a copy.</p>
+
+ <p>The third version of the Bible, known as Taverner's, was
+ published in 1539. Richard Taverner was a learned man who
+ published many translations during the sixteenth century. Horne
+ says of his translation, "This is neither a bare revisal of
+ Cranmer's Bible nor a new version, but a kind of intermediate
+ work, being a correction of what is called 'Matthew's
+ Bible.'"</p>
+
+ <p>The first edition of Cranmer's Bible, the printing of which
+ was begun in Paris in 1538 and completed in London in
+ 1540&mdash;the Inquisition having interposed by imprisoning the
+ printers and burning the greater part of the
+ impression&mdash;is excessively rare. Cranmer's Bible&mdash;or
+ the Great Bible, as it was called&mdash;is Tyndale's,
+ Coverdale's and Rogers's translations most carefully revised
+ throughout. This was the first sound and authorized English
+ version; and as soon as it was perfected a proclamation was
+ issued ordering it to be provided for every parish church,
+ under a penalty of forty shillings a month. A second edition of
+ Cranmer's Bible appeared in 1560, a copy of which brought, at a
+ recent sale in England, the sum of $610.</p>
+
+ <p>The Genevan version of the Bible was made by several English
+ exiles at Geneva in Queen Mary's reign&mdash;viz., Cole,
+ Coverdale, Gilby, Knox, Sampson, Whittingham and
+ Woodman&mdash;and was first printed in 1560. It went through
+ fifty editions in the course of thirty years. This translation
+ was very popular with the Puritan party. In this version the
+ first division into verses was made. It is commonly known as
+ the "Breeches Bible," from the peculiar rendering of Genesis
+ iii. 7&mdash;" breeches of fig-leaves." To the Geneva Bible we
+ owe the beautiful phraseology of the admired passage in
+ Jeremiah viii. 22. Coverdale, Matthew and Taverner render it,
+ "For there is no more treacle at Gilead?" Cranmer, "Is there no
+ treason at Gilead?" The Genevan first gave the poetic
+ rendering, "Is there no balm in Gilead?"</p>
+
+ <p>In the year 1568 another translation appeared, which is
+ indiscriminately known as "Matthew Parker's Bible," the
+ "Bishops' Bible" and the "Great English Bible." This version
+ was undertaken and carried on under the inspection of Matthew
+ Parker, second Protestant archbishop of Canterbury. Of the
+ fifteen <span class="pagenum"><a name="page133"
+ id="page133"></a>[pg 133]</span> translators, six were
+ bishops, hence this edition is often called the Bishops'
+ Bible, though it is sometimes designated the Great English
+ Bible, from its being a huge folio volume. In 1569 it was
+ published in octavo form. There is a well-preserved copy of
+ the first edition of Matthew Parker's Bible in the
+ possession of a gentleman residing in New York City. This
+ was the authorized version of the Scriptures for forty
+ years, when it was superseded by our present English
+ Bible.</p>
+
+ <p>The English Roman Catholic College at Rheims issued in the
+ year 1582 a translation of the New Testament, known as the
+ "Rhemish New Testament." It was condemned by the queen of
+ England, and copies imported into that country were seized and
+ destroyed. In 1609 the first volume of the Old Testament, and
+ in the following year the second volume, were published at
+ Douay, hence ever since known as the Douay Bible. Some years
+ since Cardinal Wiseman remarked that the names Rhemish and
+ Douay, as applied to the current editions, are absolute
+ misnomers. The publishers of the edition chiefly used in this
+ country state that it is translated from the Latin Vulgate,
+ "being the edition published by the English College at Rheims
+ A.D. 1582, and at Douay in 1609, as revised and corrected in
+ 1750, according to the Clementine edition of the Scriptures, by
+ the Rt. Rev. Richard Challoner, bishop of Debra, with his
+ annotations for clearing up the principal difficulties of Holy
+ Writ."</p>
+
+ <p>Theodore Beza translated the New Testament out of the Greek
+ into the Latin. This was first published in England in 1574,
+ and afterward frequently. In 1576 it was "Engelished" by
+ Leonard Tomson, under-secretary to Sir Francis Walsingham, and
+ was afterward frequently annexed to the Genevan Old Testament.
+ The following is a copy of the title-page of the New Testament,
+ <i>verbatim et literatim</i>: "The New Testament of our Lord
+ Jesus Christ, translated out of Greeke by Theod Beza: with
+ brief summaries and expositions upon the hard places by the
+ said authour, <i>Ioach Amer and P Loseler Vallerius</i>.
+ Engelished by L Tomson. Together with the Annotations of <i>Fr
+ Junius</i> upon the Revelation of S. John. Imprinted at London
+ by the Deputies of Christopher Barker, Printer to the Queene's
+ Most Excellent Majestie&mdash;1599." The volume opens with a
+ primitive version of the Psalms in verse, then follow the Old
+ Testament, the Apocrypha and the New Testament, as in Bibles of
+ the present day.</p>
+
+ <p>The version of the Scriptures now in use among Protestants
+ was translated by the authority of King James I., and published
+ in 1611. Fifty-four learned men were appointed to accomplish
+ the work of revision, but from death or other causes seven of
+ the number failed to enter upon it. The remaining forty-seven
+ were ranged under six divisions, different portions of the
+ Bible being assigned to each division. They entered upon their
+ task in 1607, and after three years of diligent labor the work
+ was completed. This version was generally adopted, and the
+ former translations soon fell into disuse. The authors of King
+ James's version of the Bible included the most learned divines
+ of the day; one of whom was master of Latin, Greek, Hebrew,
+ Chaldee, Syriac and fifteen modern languages.</p>
+
+ <p>Among other rare and highly-coveted editions of the Bible is
+ one printed in England in the seventeenth century, in which the
+ important word <i>not</i> was omitted in the seventh
+ commandment, from which circumstance it has ever since been
+ known as "The Adulterer's Bible." Another edition, known as the
+ Pearl Bible, appeared about the same time, filled with errata,
+ a single specimen of which will suffice: "Know ye not the
+ ungodly <i>shall inherit</i> the kingdom of God?" Bibles were
+ once printed which affirmed that "all Scripture was profitable
+ for <i>de</i>struction;" while still another edition of the
+ sacred volume is known as the "Vinegar Bible," from the erratum
+ in the title to the twentieth chapter of St. Luke, in which
+ "Parable of the Vineyard" is printed "Parable of the
+ Vinegar."</p>
+
+ <p class="author">
+ J.G.W.</p><span class="pagenum"><a name="page134"
+ id="page134"></a>[pg 134]</span>
+
+ <h3>LITERATURE OF THE DAY.</h3>
+
+ <p>Life and Labours of Mr. Brassey, 1805-1870. By Sir Arthur
+ Helps, K.C.B. Boston: Roberts Brothers.</p>
+
+ <p>The "captains of industry," who constitute in our day so
+ distinct and notable a class of worthies, are doubtless as well
+ entitled to have their achievements recorded and their fame
+ sounded throughout the lands as were the doughty men of war who
+ of old were deemed the only fitting heroes of chronicle and
+ epic. Few of them, however, can hope to have their deeds
+ commemorated by a "veray parfit, gentle knight"&mdash;of the
+ quill, not of the sword, albeit the letters which he writes
+ after his name would once have indicated the possession of
+ military rank and distinction. Sir Arthur Helps is not a man of
+ few words or of a very stern or passionate temperament. It is
+ the graces of chivalry, not its fiery ardor, that he cultivates
+ and reflects, and though "arms and the man" have often been his
+ theme, the soft and delicate strain was ever more suggestive of
+ the pastoral pipe than of the bardic lyre. Essayist, historian,
+ biographer, novelist, he is always intent to smooth away the
+ asperities of his subject, and, like some stately grandame
+ enthroned in high-backed chair, he remembers that his simple
+ auditors are to be not merely entertained by the matter of his
+ discourse, but impressed by the suave tones and high-bred
+ prolixity of the speaker. With a dignified courtesy unknown in
+ these latter times&mdash;when biographers and historians do not
+ scruple to take liberties with their heroes to the extent even
+ of designating them by nicknames&mdash;the subject of the
+ present memoir is introduced to us as <i>Mr</i>. Brassey, a
+ form not only adopted on the title-page, but preserved in the
+ body of the work, where we read that "Mr. Brassey was born
+ November 7, 1805," that "Mr. Brassey, at twelve years of age,
+ went to a school at Chester," and that, being afterward
+ articled to a surveyor, "Mr. Brassey was permitted by his
+ master" to assist in making certain surveys. It is only from a
+ side whisper to the American public, which is honored with a
+ preface all to itself, that we are permitted to learn that the
+ great contractor owned to the Christian name of Thomas. Besides
+ the two prefaces there is a dedication to the queen, an
+ introduction telling how Sir Arthur Helps made the acquaintance
+ of Mr. Brassey and what impressions he received from the
+ interview, and a preliminary chapter containing a brief outline
+ of Mr. Brassey's character as "a man of business;" so that we
+ get at the substance of the book by a process like that which
+ in a well-conducted household precedes the carving and
+ distribution of a Christmas cake, any eagerness we might feel
+ to "put in a thumb and pull out a plum" being kept in check by
+ a proper amount of ceremony and tissue-paper.</p>
+
+ <p>Plums, however, there are, though not perhaps in full
+ proportion to the frosted coating, or of just the kind that are
+ best agglutinated by the biographical dough. Of anecdote or
+ gossip, glimpses of "life and manners" or personal details,
+ there is nothing. Nor can we justly take exception to this. On
+ the contrary, it gives a unity to the subject by excluding
+ whatever had no relation to the enterprises with which Mr.
+ Brassey's name is connected, and which absorbed his time and
+ thoughts to a degree that can have left him but little
+ opportunity for intercourse with mankind except in a business
+ capacity. It is these enterprises&mdash;not in their entirety
+ or with reference to the objects with which they were designed,
+ but as evidences and illustrations of the working force, mental
+ and physical, demanded for their execution&mdash;that form the
+ real subject of the book, the matter of which has been chiefly
+ furnished by the various agents entrusted with the immediate
+ supervision of the labor and outlay of the capital employed.
+ The details thus brought together afford perhaps a more vivid
+ idea of the industrial energy and activity of the nineteenth
+ century, and of the resources they have called into play, than
+ could have been obtained from a survey of any other field in
+ which the like qualities have been displayed. It was chiefly
+ with railway enterprises, and this almost from their inception,
+ and to an extent far beyond the rivalry of any other
+ constructor, that Mr. Brassey was engaged; and the railway
+ system, not only by its own immense demands on capital, labor
+ and inventive skill, but still more by the stimulus and aid it
+ has given to industrial enterprises of every kind, must be
+ regarded <span class="pagenum"><a name="page135"
+ id="page135"></a>[pg 135]</span> as the main lever of a
+ material progress that has outstripped the conceptions and
+ possibilities of all previous ages. With the development of
+ a system so different in its nature from the great
+ undertakings of any former period came the need of the
+ contractor, entrusted with the direction and laden with the
+ full responsibility of works which no government "boards" or
+ similar machinery would have been competent to carry through
+ under the conditions imposed by the novel circumstances of
+ the movement and the exacting spirit by which it was
+ impelled. To attain the foremost place in the new career
+ thus created demanded, obviously, no ordinary
+ powers&mdash;special knowledge of various kinds, equal
+ facility in mastering details and grasping a general plan,
+ tact in the choice and management of subordinates, courage
+ and promptness in encountering unforeseen obstacles and
+ disasters, and skill and clearheadedness in the general
+ control of enormous and intricate financial interests. To
+ these qualities must be added in the present case what is
+ not so invariably associated with the names of succesful
+ contractors&mdash;a faithfulness and integrity which merited
+ and received the fullest confidence. Whether working at a
+ gain or at a loss, Mr. Brassey was ever resolute to execute
+ his engagements to the letter, and he declined to make
+ demands for extra compensation when his contracts proved
+ unprofitable, though it was customary with him to make good
+ the losses of his sub-contractors. He amassed a colossal
+ fortune, not through excessive gains, but by a small
+ profit&mdash;"as nearly as possible three per
+ cent."&mdash;which accrued to him from all his enterprises
+ taken as a whole, and the accumulations consequent on an
+ inexpensive mode of life.</p>
+
+ <p>The railways constructed by Mr. Brassey, generally in
+ partnership with some other contractor, between the years 1834
+ and 1870, comprised between six and seven thousand miles in all
+ parts of the globe, including Australia and in almost every
+ civilized country except Russia and the United States. "There
+ were periods in his career during which he and his partners
+ were giving employment to 80,000 persons, upon works requiring
+ &pound; 17,000,000 of capital for their completion." Yet a
+ large part of his time and of the time of his agents was spent
+ in the investigation of schemes which he either decided not to
+ undertake or for which he tendered unsuccessfully. It was
+ necessary at times to transport materials, a large staff of
+ employ&eacute;s and an army of laborers from one country to
+ another. In some cases works were prosecuted in regions
+ occupied or threatened by hostile armies, in others under all
+ the embarrassments and gloom of a great financial revulsion. In
+ countries where commercial transactions were usually very
+ limited the great difficulty was to obtain coin for the payment
+ of wages, while in others there was the danger of the supply of
+ labor failing through the enticements of superabundant capital
+ or the more dazzling temptations of gold-digging. It is
+ needless to mention the usual accidents and impediments to
+ which all such undertakings are liable, and which the skill and
+ ingenuity of the modern engineer never fail to overcome; but it
+ is certainly not a little remarkable, when the multiplicity of
+ Mr. Brassey's contracts is remembered, as well as the early
+ period from which they date, to find that they were invariably
+ completed within the specified time.</p>
+
+ <p>Personal Reminiscences of Barham, Harness and Hodder.
+ (Bric-&agrave;-Brac Series, edited by Richard Henry Stoddard.)
+ New York: Scribner, Armstrong &amp; Co.</p>
+
+ <p>Why we should love so dearly a fresh anecdote of a literary
+ celebrity, a new quip by Talleyrand, a new stutter of Lamb's, a
+ new impertinence of Sheridan's, may be not hard to understand,
+ but it is rather hard to defend, any regard being paid to our
+ dignity. The best stories about that particular line of authors
+ who have possessed <i>bonhomie</i> and become classic for it
+ are long since told. What remains is the dregs. Yet the other
+ day we found ourselves smiling with real delight over a new
+ "bit" of Cowper. It was merely that his barber, being late with
+ the poet's wig, said, "Twill soon be here, it is upon the
+ road;" and that Cowper had smiled, with a "Very well, William,"
+ or a "Very fair, Thomas." The <i>mot</i>, like most of the
+ stories that crop up now, was not good; it did not exhibit the
+ author of "John Gilpin" in a brilliant light; it was not even
+ uttered by the poet&mdash;he had merely smiled at it; yet it
+ had the effect of rekindling the vapid embers about the dear
+ old hearthstone of Olney, and the shy, gentle creatures that
+ used to disport there among the hares when nobody was looking
+ became for a moment more real from the citation. Now, the
+ question is, What is the superiority of a new piece of gossip
+ like this, which involves
+ <span class="pagenum"><a name="page136"
+ id="page136"></a>[pg 136]</span> no witticism and confers no
+ wisdom, over the next bit of history that will be exchanged
+ between the heroines of the alley-gate? When Mrs. Jones
+ tells Mrs. Baker that Mrs. Briggs has delivered a daughter,
+ and that Mr. Briggs said he had rather she had given him a
+ wooden leg, the epigram is quite as good as a
+ <i>Bric-&agrave;-Brac</i> anecdote, the people are quite as
+ worthy as Cowper's barber, and the effect upon the history
+ of letters quite as close and important. With this demurrer,
+ we will apply ourselves for a moment to Mr. Stoddard's last
+ collection, which of course we relish as much as anybody. We
+ could wish that, after discharging his very well-executed
+ duty of writing the preface, he could find some further time
+ for elucidating the text. The present book being about three
+ people, whose memoirs are taken from three volumes, it is
+ confusing to the reader to find on a page headed "Rogers" or
+ "Scott" a foot-note about what "my father" said or what "my
+ friend" remembered, without anything to point out that the
+ authority is other than Mr. Stoddard's father or friend.
+ Other peculiarities, too, suggest that the pretty little
+ volume is clipped instead of edited: on page 134 we find
+ that "William, who had lived many years with Hook, grew rich
+ and saucy. The latter used to assert of him that for the
+ first three years he was as good a servant as ever came into
+ a house; for the next two a kind and considerate friend; and
+ afterward an abominably bad master." And on page 240, that
+ when <i>Rogers</i> was condoled with about the death of an
+ old servant, he exclaimed, "Well, I don't know that I feel
+ his loss so much, after all. For the first <i>seven</i>
+ years he was an obliging servant; for the second
+ <i>seven</i> years an agreeable companion; but for the last
+ seven years he was a tyrannical master." This duality of
+ epigrams seems to show a discrepancy somewhere; or are we to
+ believe that the wits of the Regency used to drive their
+ jokes as hired hacks, like the livery carriages employed by
+ faded dowagers in Hampton Court? The rest of the little book
+ is perhaps free from duplicates. It is a good one to turn
+ over for an hour in the cars, which is perhaps all it claims
+ to be. The anecdotes are good old familiar anecdotes, but it
+ is pleasant to have them strung on a thread. We are reminded
+ that the original Bride of Lammermoor was a Miss Dalrymple;
+ that the "laughing Tom" of Thackeray's "Ballad of
+ Bouillabaise" was Thomas Frazer, Paris correspondent of the
+ <i>Morning Chronicle</i>; that the dramatist of <i>Nicholas
+ Nickleby</i>, so savagely assaulted by Dickens in the course
+ of the work, was a Mr. Moncrief, who would never have
+ prepared the story for the stage if Dickens had intimated
+ his objection.</p>
+
+ <h4><i>Books Received.</i></h4>
+
+ <p>The American Educational Annual: A Reference Book for all
+ matters pertaining to Education. Vol. I., 1875. New York: J.W.
+ Schermerhorn &amp; Co.</p>
+
+ <p>The Song-Fountain: A Vocal Music-book. By Wm. Tillinghast
+ &amp; D.P. Horton. New York: J.W. Schermerhorn &amp; Co.</p>
+
+ <p>My. Sister Jennie: A Novel. By George Sand. Translated by
+ T.S. Crocker. Boston: Roberts Brothers.</p>
+
+ <p>Democracy and Monarchy in France. By Charles Kendall Adams.
+ New York: Henry Holt &amp; Co.</p>
+
+ <p>Egypt and Iceland in the year 1874. By Bayard Taylor. New
+ York: G.P. Putnam's Sons.</p>
+
+ <p>Elements of Geometry. By W.H.H. Phillips, Ph. D. New York:
+ J.W. Schermerhorn &amp; Co.</p>
+
+ <p>The Old Woman who Lived in a Shoe. By Amanda M. Duglas.
+ Boston: William F. Gill &amp; Co.</p>
+
+ <p>The Lily and the Cross: A Tale of Acadia. By Prof. James De
+ Mille. Boston: Lee &amp; Shepard.</p>
+
+ <p>Alleged Discrepancies of the Bible. By John W. Haley, M.A.
+ Andover: Warren F. Draper.</p>
+
+ <p>History of the United States. By George Bancroft. Vol. X.
+ Boston: Little, Brown &amp; Co.</p>
+
+ <p>Roddy's Romance. By Helen Kendrick Johnson. New York: G.P.
+ Putnam's Sons.</p>
+
+ <p>My Life on the Plains. By Gen. G.A. Custer, U.S.A. New York:
+ Sheldon &amp; Co.</p>
+
+ <p>American Wild-Fowl Shooting. By Joseph W. Long. New York:
+ J.B. Ford &amp; Co.</p>
+
+ <p>Hazel-Blossoms. By John Greenleaf Whittier. Boston: James R.
+ Osgood &amp; Co.</p>
+
+ <p>Losing to Win: A Novel. By Theodore Davies. New York:
+ Sheldon &amp; Co.</p>
+
+ <p>Linley Rochford: A Novel. By Justin McCarthy. New York:
+ Sheldon &amp; Co.</p>
+
+ <p>A First Book in German. By Dr. Emil Otto. New York: Henry
+ Holt &amp; Co.</p>
+
+ <p>What of the Churches and Clergy? Springfield, Mass: D.E.
+ Fisk &amp; Co.</p>
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote1"
+ name="footnote1"></a><b>Footnote 1:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag1">(return)</a>
+
+ <p><i>The Pilgrimage of the Tiber</i>, by Wm. Davies.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+
+ <blockquote class="footnote">
+ <a id="footnote2"
+ name="footnote2"></a><b>Footnote 2:</b>
+ <a href="#footnotetag2">(return)</a>
+
+ <div class="poem">
+ <div class="stanza">
+ <p>Com' io fui dentro, in un bogliente vetro</p>
+
+ <p>Gittato mi sarei per rinfrescarmi,</p>
+
+ <p>Tant' era ivi lo'ncendio senza metro.</p>
+ </div>
+ </div>
+
+ <p><i>Del Purgatorio</i>, xxvii. 49.</p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <hr class="full" />
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Lippincott's Magazine of Popular
+Literature and Science Vol. XV., No. 85. January, 1875., by Various
+
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+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
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