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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Kentuckian in New-York, Volume I (of 2),
+by William Alexander Caruthers
+
+
+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: The Kentuckian in New-York, Volume I (of 2)
+ or, The Adventures of Three Southerns
+
+
+Author: William Alexander Caruthers
+
+
+
+Release Date: July 4, 2011 [eBook #36613]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE KENTUCKIAN IN NEW-YORK, VOLUME
+I (OF 2)***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Roberta Staehlin, Pat McCoy, and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made
+available by Internet Archive/American Libraries
+(http://www.archive.org/details/americana)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustration.
+ See 36613-h.htm or 36613-h.zip:
+ (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/36613/36613-h/36613-h.htm)
+ or
+ (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/36613/36613-h.zip)
+
+
+ Images of the original pages are available through
+ Internet Archive/American Libraries. See
+ http://www.archive.org/details/kentuckianinnewy01carurich
+
+
+
+
+
+THE KENTUCKIAN IN NEW-YORK.
+
+Or, The Adventures of Three Southerns.
+
+BY A VIRGINIAN.
+
+
+"Perhaps it may turn out a sang,
+Perhaps turn out a sermon."--_Burns._
+
+
+In Two Volumes.
+
+VOL. I.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+New-York:
+Published by Harper & Brothers,
+No. 82 Cliff-Street.
+1834.
+
+Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1834,
+By Harper & Brothers,
+In the Clerk's Office of the Southern District of New-York.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NEARLY READY.
+
+
+ HELEN. A new Tale. By MARIA EDGEWORTH--forming the _tenth_ volume
+ of Harper's Uniform Edition of her Works. Containing two
+ beautiful Engravings on steel.
+
+ TALES AND SKETCHES,--such as they are. By W. L. STONE, Esq. In 2
+ vols. 12mo.
+
+ THE FROLICS OF PUCK. In 2 vols. 12mo.
+
+ THE KENTUCKIAN IN NEW-YORK. By A VIRGINIAN. In 2 vols. 12mo.
+
+ GUY RIVERS. A Novel. By the Author of "Martin Faber." In 2 vols.
+ 12mo.
+
+ MRS. SHERWOOD'S WORKS. Uniform Edition. With Engravings on steel.
+ 12mo.
+
+ PAULDING'S WORKS. Uniform Edition. Revised and corrected by the
+ Author. 12mo.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE
+
+KENTUCKIAN IN NEW-YORK.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+Towards the latter part of the summer of 18--, on one of those cool,
+delightful, and invigorating mornings which are frequent in the southern
+regions of the United States, there issued from the principal hotel on
+the valley-side of Harper's Ferry two travellers, attended by a
+venerable and stately southern slave. The experienced eye of the old
+ferryman, as he stood in his flat-bottomed boat awaiting the arrival of
+this party, discovered at once that our travellers were from the far
+South.
+
+The first of these, Victor Chevillere, entered the "flat," leading by
+the bridle a mettlesome southern horse; when he had stationed this fine
+animal to his satisfaction, he stood directly fronting the prescriptive
+Charon of the region. This young gentleman, who appeared to be the
+principal character of the party just entering the boat, was handsomely
+formed, moderately tall, and fashionably dressed. His face was bold,
+dignified, and resolute, and not remarkable for any very peculiar
+fashion of the hair or beard which shaded it. He appeared to be about
+twenty-three years of age, and though so young, much and early
+experience of the world had already o'ershadowed his face with a
+becoming serenity, if not sadness. Not that silly, affected melancholy,
+however, which is so often worn in these days by young and romantic idle
+gentlemen, to catch the errant sympathies of some untravelled country
+beauty.
+
+The next personage of the party (who likewise entered the boat leading a
+fine southern animal), was a fashionable young gentleman, about the
+middle size; his face was pale and wan, as if he had but just recovered
+from an attack of illness. Nevertheless there was a brilliant fire in
+his eye, and a lurking, but too evident, disposition to fun and humour,
+which illness had not been entirely able to subdue. Augustus Lamar, for
+such was his name, was the confidential and long-tried friend of the
+first-named gentleman: their mutual regard had existed undiminished from
+the time of their early school days in South Carolina, through their
+whole college career in Virginia up to the moment of which we speak.
+
+The third and more humble personage of the party bore the time-honoured
+appellation of Cato. He was a tall old negro, with a face so black as to
+form a perfect contrast to his white hair and brilliant teeth. He was
+well dressed and cleanly in his person, and rather solemn and pompous
+in his manners. Cato had served the father of his present highly
+honoured young master, and was deeply imbued with that strong feudal
+attachment to the family, which is a distinguishing characteristic of
+the southern negroes who serve immediately near the persons of the great
+landholders.
+
+Our travellers were now smoothly gliding over that most magnificent
+"meeting of the waters" of the Shenandoah and Potomack, which is usually
+known by the unpretending name of "Harper's Ferry." It was early
+morning; the moon was still visible above the horizon, and the sun had
+not yet risen above those stupendous fragments whose chaotic and
+irregular position gives token of the violence with which the mass of
+waters rent for themselves a passage through the mountains, when rushing
+on to meet that other congregation of rivers, with whose waters they
+unite to form the Bay of the Chesapeake. The black bituminous smoke from
+the hundred smithies of the United States' armory, had just begun to
+rise above the towering crags that seemed, at this early period, to
+battle with the vapours which are here sent up in thick volumes from the
+contest of rocks and rivers beneath.
+
+Old Cato had by this time assumed his post at the heads of the three
+horses, while our southerns stood with folded arms, each impressed with
+the scene according to his individual impulses. As they approached
+nearer to the northern shore, Chevillere, addressing Lamar, observed:
+"An unhappy young lady she must be who arrived at our hotel last
+evening. I could hear her weeping bitterly as she paced the floor, until
+a late hour of the night, when finally she seemed to throw herself upon
+the bed, and fall asleep from mere exhaustion;" and then, turning to the
+weather-beaten steersman, continued: "I suppose we are the first
+passengers in the 'flat' this morning?"
+
+"No, sir, you are not; a carriage from the same tavern went over half an
+hour ago. There was an old gray-headed man, and two young women in it,
+besides the driver, and the driver told me that they were all the way
+from York State,--the mail stage, too, went over."
+
+"The same party," said Chevillere, abstractedly; "Did you learn where
+they were to breakfast, boatman?"
+
+"About ten miles from this, I think I heard say."
+
+They were soon landed and mounted, and cantering away through the fog
+and vapours of the early morning. Nor were they long in overtaking a
+handsome travelling-carriage, which was moving at a brisk rate, in
+accordance with the exertions of two fine, evidently northern, horses.
+The carriage contained an elderly, grave, formal, and magisterial
+gentleman; his locks quite gray, and hanging loose upon the collar of
+his coat; his countenance harsh, austere, and forbidding in the extreme.
+By his side sat a youthful lady, so enveloped in a large black mantle,
+and travelling hat and veil, that but little of her form or features
+could be seen, except a pair of brilliant blue eyes.
+
+It is not to be denied, that these sudden apparitions of young and
+beautiful females, almost completely shrouded in mantles, drapery, or
+veils, are the very circumstances fully to arouse the slumbering
+energies of a lately emancipated college Quixotte. A lovely pair of
+eyes, brimful of tears,--a "Cinderella" foot and ankle,--a white and
+beautifully turned hand and tapered fingers, with perhaps a mourning
+ring or two,--or a bonnet suddenly blown off, so as to dishevel a
+magnificent head of hair, its pretty mistress meanwhile all confusion,
+and her snowy neck and temples suffused with blushes,--these are the
+little incidents on which the real romances of human life are founded.
+How many persons can look back to such a commencement of their youthful
+loves! nay, perhaps, refer to it all the little enjoyment with which
+they have been blessed through life! We venture to say, that those who
+were so unfortunate as never to bring their first youthful romance to a
+fortunate denouement, can likewise look back upon such occurrences with
+many pleasing emotions. A bachelor or a widower, indeed, may not always
+recur with pleasure to these first passages in the book of life,--but
+the feelings even of these are not altogether of the melancholy kind.
+The fairy queens of their spring-tide will sometimes arise in the
+present tense, until they almost imagine themselves in the possession
+again of youth and all its raptures,--its brilliant dreams, airy
+castles, "hair-breadth 'scapes," and miraculous deliverances,--cruel
+fathers, and perverse guardians, and stolen interviews, and lovers' vows
+and tokens,--winding up finally with a runaway match--all of the
+imagination.
+
+After the equipage before alluded to had been for some time left behind,
+our travellers began to descry, at the distance of several miles, the
+long white portico of the country inn at which they proposed to
+breakfast. The United States mail-coach for Baltimore was standing at
+the door, evidently waiting till the passengers should have performed
+the same needful operation. Servants were running hither and thither,
+some to the roost, others to the stable, as if a large number of the
+most distinguished dignitaries of the land had just arrived.
+
+But, behold, when our travellers drew up, they found that all this stir
+among the servants of the inn was called into being by the real or
+affected wants of a number of very young gentlemen. We say affected,
+because we are sorry to acknowledge that it is not uncommon to see very
+young and inexperienced gentlemen, on such occasions, assume airs and
+graces which are merely put on as a travelling dress, and which would be
+thrown aside at the first appearance of an old acquaintance. At such
+times it is by no means rare to see all the servants of the inn,
+together with the host and hostess, entirely engrossed by one of these
+overgrown boys or ill-bred men, while their elders and superiors are
+compelled either to want or wait upon themselves. At the time we notice,
+some young bloods of the cities were exercising themselves in their new
+suit of stage-coach manners.
+
+"Here waiter! waiter!" with an affectedly delicate and foreign voice,
+cried one of these youths, enveloped in a brown "Petersham box" coat,
+and with his hands stuck into his pockets over his hips. Under the arm
+of this person was a black riding-switch, with a golden head, and a
+small chain of the same precious metal, fastened about six inches
+therefrom, after the fashion of some old rapier guards. He wore a
+rakish-looking fur cap, round and tight on the top of his head as a
+bladder of snuff; this was cocked on one side after a most piratical
+fashion, so as to show off, in the best possible manner, a great
+profusion of coarse, shining black hair, which was evidently indebted to
+art rather than nature for the curls that frizzled out over his ears,
+while the back part of his head was left as bare and defenceless as if
+he had already been under the hands of a deputy turnkey. He practised
+what may be called American puppyism, as technically distinguished from
+the London species of the same genus. "Here waiter! waiter!" said he,
+"bring me a gin sling,--and half-a-dozen Bagdad segars,--and a lighted
+taper,--and a fresh egg,--and a bowl of water, and a clean towel,--and
+polish my boots,--and dust my coat,--and then send me the barber, do you
+hear?"
+
+"O, sir! we has no barber, nor Bagdab segars neither; but we has plenty
+of the real Baltimores,--real good ones, too,--as I knows very well, for
+I smokes the old sodgers what the gentlemen throws on the bar-room
+floor."
+
+"It is one of the most amusing scenes imaginable," said Victor
+Chevillere to Augustus Lamar, as they sat witnessing this scene, "when
+the waiter and the master pro tempore are both fools. The fawning,
+bowing, cringing waiter, with his big lips upon the _qui vive_, his head
+and shoulders constantly in motion, and rubbing his hands one over the
+other after the most approved fashion of the men of business. In such a
+case as that which we have just witnessed, where puppyism comes in
+contact with the kindred monkey-tricks of the waiter, I can enjoy it.
+But when it happens, as I have more than once seen, that the waiter is a
+manly, sensible, and dignified old negro of the loftier sort, such as
+old Cato,--then you can soon detect the curl of contempt upon his
+lip,--and he is not long thereafter in selecting the real gentlemen of
+the party,--always choosing to wait most upon those who least demand
+it."
+
+"I would bet my horse Talleyrand against an old field scrub, that that
+fellow is a Yankee," answered Lamar.
+
+"He may be a Yankee," continued Victor Chevillere, "but you have
+travelled too much and reflected too long upon the nature of man, to
+ascribe every thing disgusting to a Yankee origin. For my part, I make
+the character of every man I meet in some measure my study during my
+travels, and as we have agreed to exchange opinions upon men and things,
+I will tell you freely what I think of that fellow who has just
+retreated from our laughter. I have found it not at all uncommon, to see
+the most undisguised hatred arise between two such persons as he of the
+stage-coach,--the one from the north, and the other from the
+south,--when in truth, the actuating impulse was precisely the same in
+both, but had taken a different direction, and was differently developed
+by different exciting causes.
+
+"The puppyism of Charleston and that of Boston are only different shades
+of the same character, yet these kindred spirits can in nowise tolerate
+each other. As is universally the case, those are most intolerant to
+others who have most need of forgiveness themselves. The mutual jealousy
+of the north and south is a decided evidence of littleness in both
+regions, and ample cause for shame to the educated gentlemen of all
+parties of this happy country. If pecuniary interest had not been mixed
+up with this provincial rivalry, the feeling could easily have been so
+held up to the broad light of intelligence, as to be a fertile source of
+amusement, and furnish many a subject for comedy and farce in
+after-times."
+
+This specimen was by no means the only one among the arrivals by the
+stage-coach. Every waiter in the house was pressed into the service of
+these coxcombs,--some smoked,--some swaggered through the private
+rooms,--others adjusted their frizzled locks at the mirrors with brushes
+carried for the purpose,--and all together created a vast commotion in
+the quiet country inn.
+
+As our two young southerns sat in the long piazza, eying these
+stage-coach travellers and waiting for breakfast, the same equipage
+which they had passed on the road, and containing our northern party,
+drew up to the door.
+
+Not many minutes had elapsed before a black servant stood in the entry
+between the double suite of apartments, and briskly swung a small bell
+to and fro, which seemed to announce breakfast, from the precipitate
+haste with which the gentlemen of the stage-coach found their way into
+the long breakfasting-hall of the establishment. Our southerns followed
+their example, but more quietly, and by the invitation of the host. At
+the upper end of the table stood the hostess, who, like most of her kind
+in America, was the wife of a wealthy landholder and farmer, as well as
+tavern-keeper. She was a genteel and modest-looking woman, and did the
+honours of the table like a lady at her own hospitable board, and among
+selected guests. It is owing to a mistake in the character of the host
+and hostess, that so many foreigners give and take offence at these
+establishments. They often contumaciously demand as a right, what would
+have been offered to them in all courtesy after the established usages
+of the country.
+
+On the right of the hostess sat the youthful lady who had spent such an
+unhappy night at the ferry,--in the hearing of Victor Chevillere,--and
+whom they had passed on the road. She was still so enveloped in her
+travelling dress and veil as to be but partially seen. On the same side,
+unfortunately, as he no doubt thought, sat Chevillere with Lamar. The
+grave-looking old gentleman, the companion of the youthful lady
+mentioned, sat immediately opposite to her. The gentlemen of extreme ton
+(as they wished to be thought), were ranged along the table, already
+mangling the dishes, cracking and replacing the eggs, and apparently
+much dissatisfied with the number of seconds they had remained in heated
+water. Nor were they long in striking up a conversation, as loud and
+full of slang as their previous displays had been. During this unseemly
+and boisterous conduct, some more tender chord seemed to be touched
+within the bosom of the lovely young female, than would have been
+supposed from the character of the assailants. Victor Chevillere turned
+his head in that direction, and saw that her face had become more deadly
+pale; at the same moment he heard her say, in an under-tone, to the old
+gentleman her companion, "My dear sir, assist me from this room,--my
+head grows dizzy, and I feel a deathlike sickness."
+
+Chevillere was upon his feet in an instant, and assisted the lady to
+rise; by this time, the old gentleman having taken her other arm, they
+carried rather than led her into one of the adjoining apartments,
+where, after depositing their beautiful burden upon a sofa, Chevillere
+left her to the care of the hostess, who had followed, and returned to
+the breakfast-table.
+
+Let us describe a country breakfast for the uninitiated. At the head of
+the table was a large salver, or japanned waiter, upon which was spread
+out various utensils of China-ware,--the only articles of plate being a
+sugar-dish and cream-pot. On the right of this salver stood a coffee and
+tea-urn, of some composition metal, resembling silver in appearance. At
+the other end of the table, under the skilful hands of the host, was a
+large steak, cut and sawed entirely through the sirloin of the beef.
+Half-way up the table, on either side, were dishes of broiled game, the
+intermediate spaces being filled up with various kinds of hot bread,
+biscuit and pancakes (as they are called in some parts of the north).
+This custom of eating hot bread at the morning and evening meal, is
+almost universal at the south. Immediately in the centre stood a pyramid
+of fresh-churned butter, with a silver butter-knife sticking into the
+various ornaments of vine-leaves and grapes with which it was stamped.
+
+To this fare Chevillere found his friend Lamar doing the most ample
+justice, nor was his own keen appetite entirely destroyed by the
+temporary indisposition of the lady who had so much excited his
+curiosity and his sympathy. He could have congratulated himself on the
+little occurrence which had given him some claims to a farther
+acquaintance, and doubtless could have indulged in delightful reveries
+as to the fair and youthful stranger,--had not all his gay dreams been
+put to flight by the boisterous laughter and meager attempts at wit of
+the other travellers. As he returned towards the table, the one whom we
+have more particularly described elevated a glass, with a golden handle,
+to his large, full, and impudent eye. Chevillere returned the gaze until
+his look almost amounted to a deliberate stare. The "bloods" looked
+fierce, and exchanged pugnacious looks, but all chance of a collision
+was prevented by the return of the hostess. Notwithstanding the
+disagreeable qualities of most of the guests at the table, Chevillere
+found time to turn the little incident of the sudden indisposition and
+its probable cause several times in his own mind; and, as may be well
+imagined, his mental soliloquy resulted in no injurious imputation upon
+the youthful lady,--there was evidently no trait of affectation.
+
+At length the meal was brought to a close,--not however, before the
+driver of the mail-coach had wound sundry impatient blasts upon his
+bugle,--general joy seemed to pervade every remaining countenance after
+the departure of the coxcombs. Both the northern and southern
+travellers, who were journeying northward, and who had breakfasted at
+the inn, were soon likewise plodding along at the usual rate of weary
+travellers by a private conveyance.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+The misery of the young and the beautiful is at all times infectious.
+Few young persons can withhold sympathy in such a case,--especially if
+the person thus afflicted be unmarried--of the other sex--and near one's
+own age.
+
+Victor Chevillere could not expel from his imagination the image of the
+fair stranger. Again and again did he essay to join Lamar in his light
+and sprightly conversation, as they, on the day after the one recorded
+in the last chapter, pursued their journey along the noble turnpike
+between Fredericktown and Baltimore. The same profound revery would
+steal upon him, and abide until broken by the merry peals of Lamar's
+peculiarly loud and joyous laughter, at the new mood which seemed to
+have visited the former. When a young person first begins to experience
+these abstracted moods, there is nothing, perhaps, that sounds more
+harsh and startling to his senses, than the mirthful voice of his best
+friend. He looks up as one would naturally look at any unseemly or
+boisterous conduct at a funeral. He seems to gaze and wonder, for the
+first time, that all things and all men are jogging on at their usual
+gait. Thus were things moving upon the Fredericktown turnpike: Lamar
+riding forty or fifty paces in front, singing away the blue devils;
+Chevillere in the centre, moody and silent; and old Cato, stately as a
+statue on horseback, bringing up the rear.
+
+From hearing sundry merry peals of laughter from Lamar's quarter,
+Chevillere was induced at length to forego his own society for a moment,
+to see what new subject his Quixotic friend had found for such unusual
+merriment; and a subject he had indeed found in the shape of a tall
+Kentuckian. The name of the stranger, it seems, was Montgomery Damon. He
+was six feet high, with broad shoulders, full, projecting chest, light
+hair and complexion, and a countenance that was upon the first blush an
+index to a mind full of quaint, rude, and wild humour. His dress was any
+thing but fashionable; he wore a large, two-story hat, with a bandana
+handkerchief hanging out in front, partly over his forehead, as if to
+protect it from the great weight of his castor. His coat and pantaloons
+were of home-made cotton and woollen jeans, and he carried in his hand a
+warlike riding-whip, loaded with lead, and mounted with silver, with
+which, now and then, he gave emphasis to his words, by an unexpected and
+sonorous crack.
+
+Our Kentuckian was no quiet man; but, like most of his race, bold,
+talkative, and exceedingly democratic in all his notions; feeling as
+much pride in his occupation of drover, as if he had been a senator in
+Congress from his own "Kentuck," as he emphatically called it. He was a
+politician, too, inasmuch as he despised _tories_, as he called the
+federalists, approved of the late war, and had a most venomous hatred
+against Indians, of whatever tribe or nation. We shall break into their
+dialogue at the point at which Victor became a listener.
+
+"How did it happen," said Lamar, "that you did not join the army either
+of the north or south, when your heart seems to have been so entirely
+with them?"
+
+"O! as to _jine_en the army to the north," said Damon, "I was afraid the
+blasted tories would sell me to the British, me and my messmates, like
+old Hull, the infernal old traitor, sold his men for so much a head,
+_jist_ as I sell my hogs. As to t'other business, down yonder, under Old
+Hickory, I reckon I _did_ take a hand or so aginst the bloody Injins."
+
+"You prefer a fight with Indians, then, to one with white men."
+
+"To be sure I do; I think no more of taking my jack-knife, and
+unbuttonin the collar of a Creek Injin, than I would of takin the jacket
+off a good fat bell-wether, or mout-be a yerlin calf. Old Hickory's the
+boy to _sculp_ the bloody creters; he's the boy to walk into their
+bread-baskets; and Dick Johnston ain't far behind him, I can tell you,
+stranger; he's the chap what plumped a bullet right into old Tecumseh's
+bagpipes. Let him alone for stoppin their war-whoops."
+
+"You were a rifleman, I suppose," said Lamar.
+
+"Right agin, stranger. Give me a rifle for ever; they never spiles meat,
+though, as one may say, Injin's meat ain't as good as blue-lick buck's;
+but for all that, it's a pity to make bunglin work of a neat job;
+besides, your smooth bores waste a deal of powder and lead upon the
+outlandish creters."
+
+"Were you ever wounded?" asked Lamar.
+
+"Yes! don't you see this here hare-lip to my right eye? Well! that was
+jist the corner of an Injin's hatchet. Bob Wiley jist knocked up his arm
+in time to save me for another whet at the varmints; if so mout be that
+we ever has another brush with 'em, and Bob goes out agin, maybe I may
+do him a good turn yet; he's what I call a tear down sneezer (crack went
+the whip). He's got no more fear among the Injins than a wild cat in a
+weasel's nest; O! it would have done your heart good to see him jist lie
+down behind an old log, and watch for one of the varmint's heads bobbin
+up and down like a muskovy drake in a barn yard, and as sure as you saw
+the fire at the muzzle of his gun, so sure he knocked the creter's hind
+sights out. You see he always took 'em on the bob, jist as you would
+shoot a divin bird, and that's what I always called taking the bread out
+of the creter's mouth, for he was watchin for the same chance."
+
+"Did you scalp the slain?" said Lamar.
+
+"No!" replied Damon, "we had plenty of friendly Injins to do that, and
+it used to make me laugh to see the yallow raskals sculpin their kin;
+that's what I call dog eat dog."
+
+"Do you think an Indian has a soul?" said Lamar.
+
+"Ha! ha! ha!" roared the Kentuckian, giving a crack of unusual emphasis,
+"that's what I call a stumper; but as you're no missionary, I 'spose
+I'll tell you. I knows some dumb brutes--here's this Pete Ironsides that
+I'm ridin on, has more of a Christian soul in him than any leather-skin
+between Missouri and Red River. Why! stranger! what's an Injin good for,
+more nor a wild cat? You can't tame ne'er a one of 'em."
+
+"But those missionaries you spoke of, don't you think they will
+civilize, if not Christianize them?"
+
+"Ha! ha! ha!" shouted Damon, with another loud crack, and rolling a huge
+quid of tobacco to the opposite side of his mouth, "they might as well
+mount the trees and preach to the 'coons and tree-frogs; one of your
+real psalm-singers mout tree a coon at it, but hang me if he can ever
+put the pluck of a white man under a yellow jacket. Catch a weasel
+asleep or a fox at a foot race. I rather suspicion, stranger, that I've
+seen more Injins than your missionaries, and I'll tell you the way to
+tame 'em;--slit their windpipes and hamstring 'em."
+
+"Perhaps you are an enemy to religion, or prejudiced against the
+missionaries?"
+
+"No! no! stranger, no! I likes religion well enough of a Sunday; but
+hang me if I should not die of laughin to see 'em layin it down to the
+redskins. I'd as soon think of going into my horse stable and preachin
+to the dumb brutes. Old Pete here knows more now than many an Injin, and
+he's got more soul than some Yankees that mout be named; but come,
+stranger, here's a public house, let's go in and cut the phlegm."
+
+"Agreed," said Lamar, "but it must be at my expense."
+
+"Well," said Damon, "we'll not quarrel about that;" and turning to
+Victor, "Stranger, won't you join us in a glass of tight?"
+
+"No! I thank you," said Chevillere, "but I will look on while you and my
+friend drink to the better acquaintance of us all."
+
+After the parties had refreshed themselves and their horses, and
+remounted, the conversation was resumed. "Well now," said the
+Kentuckian, addressing Victor, "I wish I may be contwisted if you ain't
+one of the queerest men, to come from the Carolinas, I have clapped eyes
+on this many a day. You don't chaw tobacco, and you don't drink nothin;
+smash my apple-cart if I can see into it."
+
+"I am one of those that don't believe in the happy effects of either
+brandy or tobacco," replied Chevillere.
+
+"Then you are off the trail for once in your life, stranger, for I take
+tobacco to be one of God's mercies to the poor. Whether it came by a
+rigular dispensation of providence (as our parson used to say), or in a
+natural way, I can't tell; but hang me, if when I gets a quid of the
+real Kentuck twist or Maryland kite-foot into my mouth, if I ain't as
+proud a man as the grand Turk himself. It drives away the solemncholies,
+and makes a fellow feel so good-natured, and so comfortable; it turns
+the shillings in his pocket into dollars, and his wrath into fun and
+deviltry. Let them talk about tobacco as they choose among the fine
+gals, and at their theatres, and balls, and cotillions, and all them
+sort of things; but let one of 'em git twenty miles deep into a Kentuck
+forest, and then see if a chew of the stuff ain't good for company and
+comfort."
+
+"But you did not tell me," resumed Lamar, "whether you had ever shot at
+a white man?"
+
+"No! no! I never did; and I don't know that I ever will. I think I
+should feel a leetle particlar, at standin up and shooting at a real
+Christian man, with flesh and blood like you and me. You see, when we
+boys of the long guns shoot, we don't turn our heads away and pull
+trigger in a world of smoke, so that nobody can tell where the lead
+goes; we look right into the white of a fellow's eye, and can most
+always tell which side of his nose the ball went, and you see that would
+be but a slayin and skinnen business among white people; but as to
+shootin and sculpin Injins, that's a thing there is no bones made about,
+because out on the frontiers at the west, if a man should stand addlin
+his brains about the right and the wrong of the thing, the red devils
+would just knock them out to settle the matter, and sculp him for his
+pains into the bargain. Shooting real Christian men's quite another
+thing. It's what I ha'nt tried yet; but when we Kentuck boys gits at it,
+it won't all end like a log-rollin, with one or two broken shins and a
+black eye. But I'm told the Yankees always sings a psalm before they go
+to battle. Now, according to my notion, a chap would make a blue fist of
+takin a dead aim through double sights, with the butt end of a psalm in
+his guzzle."
+
+"Some person must have told you that as a joke," said Lamar.
+
+"No, no, I believe it, because we had just such a fellow once in our
+neighbourhood--a Yankee schoolmaster--and we took him out a deer-driving
+two or three times, and he was always singing a psalm at his stand. He
+spoilt the fun, confound him! Hang me if I didn't always think the
+fellow was afraid to stand in the woods by himself without it. I went to
+his singin school of Saturday nights, too; but I never had a turn that
+way. All the master could do, he could'nt keep me on the trail,--I was
+for ever slipping into Yankee Doodle; you see, every once in a while,
+the tune would take a quick turn, like one I knowed afore, so I used to
+blaze away at it with the best of 'em, but the same old Yankee Doodle
+always turned up at the end. But the worst of it was, the infernal
+Yankee spoiled all the music I ever had in me; when I come out of the
+school, I thought the gals at home would have killed themselves laughin'
+at me. They said I ground up Yankee Doodle and Old Hundred together,
+all in a hodge-podge, so I never sings to no one now but the dumb brutes
+in the stable, when they gits melancholy of a rainy day. Old Pete here
+raises his ears, and begins to snort the minute I raises a tune."
+
+"Your singing-master was, like his scholar, an original."
+
+"An original! When he come to them parts, he drove what we call a Yankee
+cart, half wagon and half carriage, full of all sorts of odds and ends;
+when he had sold them out, he sold his horse and cart too, and then
+turned in to keepin a little old-field school; and over and above this,
+he opened a Saturday night singin-school,--and I reckon we had rare
+times with the gals there. At last, when the feller had got considerable
+ahead, the word came out that he was studyin to be a doctor; and sure
+enough, in a few months, he sold out the school for so much a head, just
+like we sell our hogs; then off the Yankee starts to git made a doctor
+of; and hang me if ever I could see into that business. How they can
+turn a pedlar into a doctor in four months, is a leetle jist over my
+head. It's true enough they works a mighty change in the chaps in that
+time. Our Yankee went off, as well-behaved and as down-faced a chap as
+you would wish to see in a hundred, and wore home-made clothes like
+mine; but when he had staid his four months out, and 'most everybody had
+forgot him, one day as I was leanen up against one of the poplar trees
+in the little town, I saw a sign goin up on the side of a house, with
+DOCTOR GUN in large letters. I'll take my Bible oath, when I saw the
+thing, I thought I should have broke a blood-vessel. Howsomever, I
+strained 'em down, till an old woman would have sworn I had the
+high-strikes, with a knot o' wind in my guzzle. But I quieted the devil
+in me, and then I slipped slyly over the street, behind where the doctor
+was standing with his new suit of black; one hand stuck in his side, and
+the other holding an ivory-headed stick up to his mouth in the most
+knowing fashion, I tell you. I stole up behind him, and bawled out in
+his ear, as loud as I could yell, '_faw--sol--law--me_.' Oh! my
+grandmother! what a smashin rage he flew into; he shook his cane--he
+walked backwards and forwards--and didn't he make the tobacco juice fly?
+I rather reckon, if I hadn't had so many inches, he'd have been into my
+meat; but the fun of it all was, the feller had foreswore his mother
+tongue; dash me if he could talk a word of common lingo, much less sing
+psalms and hymns by note; he rattled off words as long as my arm, and as
+fast as a windmill. Some of the old knowing ones says they've got some
+kind of a mill, like these little hand-organs, and that chops it out to
+the chaps eny night and morning, pretty much as I chop straw to my
+horses; but I'm going in to see that doctor-factory, when I git to
+Philadelphia, if they don't charge a feller more nor half a dollar a
+head."
+
+"I hope we shall travel together to Philadelphia," said Lamar; "and if
+so, I will introduce you into the establishment, free of expense."
+
+"Thank you, sir, thank you," said the Kentuckian; "but I'm rather
+inclined to think that we will hardly meet again after to-day; 'cause,
+you see, I'm 'bliged to do a might of business in Baltimore afore I can
+go on. After that, then I can go on as I please; as I'm only goin to see
+the world abit, afore I settle down for life."
+
+"But," said Lamar, "if you will call at Barnum's, and leave word what
+day you will set out, I will see that we travel together, for I will
+suit my time to yours; and I would advise you to send your horse a short
+distance into the country, both for the sake of convenience and
+economy."
+
+"What! part with old Pete here! Bless my soul, stranger! he would go
+into a gallopin consumption! or die of the solemncholies, if a rainy
+spell should come on, and he and I couldn't have a dish of chat
+together; and then I shouldn't know no more what to do in one of your
+coaches nor a cow with a side-pocket."
+
+"My word for it," replied Victor, "you would soon enjoy yourself inside
+of a stage-coach. Come, let us make a bargain. I will engage to have
+your horse well taken care of in the country, and provide him with a
+groom that will soon learn his ways, and be able to cheer him up when he
+gets low-spirited."
+
+"Yes, do!" said Lamar, jocosely; "we are anxious to have your company
+during our visit to the cities. We are from Carolina, and you are from
+Kentuck; and after you get through with your business, we shall all be
+on the same errand--pleasure and improvement."
+
+"And a wild-goose chase it's like to be, I'm afraid; especially if I'm
+to be of your mess. But suppose you should meet with some fine lady
+acquaintances, what, in the name of old Sam, would you do with me? I
+should be like a fifth wheel to a wagon."
+
+"Were you never in the company of fine ladies?" asked Chevillere.
+
+"Yes! and flummuck me if ever I want to be so fixed again; for there I
+sat with my feet drawn straight under my knees, heads up, and hands laid
+close along my legs, like a new recruit on drill, or a horse in the
+stocks; and, twist me, if I didn't feel as if I was about to be nicked.
+The whole company stared at me as if I had come without an invite; and I
+swear I thought my arms had grown a foot longer, for I couldn't get my
+hands in no sort of a comfortable fix--first I tried them on my lap;
+there they looked like goin to prayers, or as if I was tied in that way;
+then I slung 'em down by my side, and they looked like two weights to a
+clock; and then I wanted to cross my legs, and I tried that, but my leg
+stuck out like a pump handle; then my head stuck up through a glazed
+shirt-collar, like a pig in a yoke; then I wanted to spit, but the floor
+looked so fine, that I would as soon have thought of spittin on the
+window; and then to fix me out and out, they asked us all to sit down
+to dinner! Well, things went on smooth enough for a while, till we had
+got through one whet at it. Then a blasted imp of a nigger come to me
+first with a waiter of little bowls full of something, and a parcel of
+towels slung over his arm; so I clapped one of the bowls to my head, and
+drank it down at a swallow. Now, stranger, what do you think was in it?"
+
+"Punch, I suppose," said Lamar, laughing; "or perhaps apple toddy."
+
+"So I thought, and so would anybody, as dry as I was, and that wanted
+something to wash down the fainty stuffs I had been layin in; but no! it
+was warm water! Yes! you may laugh! but it was clean warm water. The
+others dipped their fingers into the bowls, and wiped them on the towels
+as well as they could for gigglin; but it was all the fault of that
+pampered nigger, in bringin it to me first. As soon as I catched his
+eye, I gin him a wink, as much as to let him know that if ever I caught
+him on my trail, I would wipe him down with a hickory towel."
+
+"But I suppose you enjoyed yourself highly before it was all over?" said
+Chevillere.
+
+"When it was all over, I was glad enough; I jumped and capered like a
+school-boy at the first of the holydays."
+
+"Have you never been invited out since?" asked Lamar.
+
+"O yes, often," said Damon; "but you don't catch a weasel asleep again.
+I like to give a joke, and take a joke; but then the joke was all on one
+side. If I can take a hand in the laugh, I don't care whether a person
+laughs _at_ me, or _with_ me."
+
+"But what say you?" said Chevillere; "shall we send your horse to the
+country with ours?"
+
+"Why! as you gentlemen seem to speak me so fair, and to know the world
+so well, I don't care if I do send old Pete out to board awhile. I
+shouldn't be surprised though if he should give me up for lost, and fret
+himself to death. But I must see the man that goes to the country with
+them; 'cause Pete couldn't bear shabby talk; he's what I call a leetle
+particular in his company for a dumb brute."
+
+"The man rides behind us," said Chevillere, "who will perform that duty.
+Cato! this gentleman wishes to speak to you."
+
+"Did you call, your honour?"
+
+"Yes. Cato! Mr. Damon wishes to give you some charges about his horse,
+which you are to take into the country with ours."
+
+"Cato," said Damon, "tell the farmer who takes the horses, that old Pete
+Ironsides here has been used to good company, and that he has been
+treated more like a Christian nor a horse, and that I wish him indulged
+in his old ways."
+
+During this harangue, Cato cast sundry glances from his master to the
+speaker, as if to ascertain whether he was in earnest, or only playing
+off one of those freaks in which the young men had so often indulged in
+his presence. Being accustomed, however, to treat with respect those
+whom his master respected, and seeing his eye calm and serious, he bowed
+with grave deference, saying, "It shall be done as you direct, your
+honour;" and then fell back.
+
+"Now," said Damon, "that's what I call a well-bred nigger. I would
+venture that old Scip would'nt have puzzled me with the warm water;
+'cause he knows that I'm not one of them there sort of chaps what knows
+all their new-fangled kick-shaws. He knows in a case of real
+needcessity, or life and death, as I may say, either to man, woman, or
+horse, I'm more to be depended on than a dozen such chaps as went along
+here in the stage this morning."
+
+"You saw the dandies in the stage, then?" asked Victor.
+
+"Yes, and one of 'em popped his head out of the window, and says to me
+as they went by, 'Country,' says he, 'there's something on your horse's
+tail.'--'Yes,' says I, 'and there's something in his head that you
+hav'nt got, if his ears ain't so long.'"
+
+Thus were our acquaintances and their new companion jogging along when
+the distant rumbling of wheels upon the pavements and the dense clouds
+of black smoke which seemed to be hanging in the heavens but a short
+distance ahead, announced that they were soon to enter the monumental
+city.
+
+There is not, perhaps, a feeling of more truly unmixed melancholy,
+incident to the heart of an inexperienced and modest student, than that
+which steals over him upon his first entrance into a strange city; a
+feeling of incomparable loneliness, even deeper than if the same
+individual were standing alone upon the highest blue peak of the far
+stretching Alleghany. The vanishing rays of twilight were extending
+their lengthening shadows; the husbandman and his cattle were seen
+wending their way to their accustomed abodes for the night; and the
+feathered tribes had already sought the resting-places which nature so
+plentifully provides for them in our well-wooded land. The sad, and it
+may be pleasing reflections which such sights produced, were
+occasionally interrupted by the clattering of a horse's hoofs upon the
+turnpike, as some belated countryman sought to redeem the time he had
+spent at the alehouse; or as the solitary marketman, with more staid and
+quiet demeanour, sped upon a like errand. Occasionally the scene was
+marred by some besotted and staggering wretch, seeking his lowly and
+miserable hut in the suburbs. At intervals too, the barking of dogs and
+the lowing of cattle contributed their share to remind our friends that
+they were about to take leave of these quiet and pastoral scenes, for an
+indefinite period, and to mix in the bustle and gay assemblage of city
+life. Often, at such junctures, there is a presentiment of the evil
+which awaits the unhappy exchange. Warning clouds of the mind are
+believed to exist by many of the clearest heads and soundest hearts: we
+do not say that our heroes were thus sadly affected, nor that the
+Kentuckian had a fore-taste of evil; but certain it is, that all were
+silent until they arrived at the place of separation. All things having
+been previously settled, they exchanged salutations, and departed upon
+their separate routes. They passed a variety of streets in that most
+gloomy period of the day when lamp-lighters are to be seen, with their
+torches and ladders, starting their glimmering lights first in one
+direction and then in another, as they hurry from post to post. Draymen
+were driving home with reckless and Jehu-like speed; and the brilliant
+lights which began to appear at long intervals, gave evidence that the
+trading community carried their operations also into that portion of
+time which nature has allotted for rest and repose to nearly all living
+things. Our travellers now alighted at Barnum's; but as their adventures
+were of an interesting character, we shall defer them till a new
+chapter.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+After a substantial meal had been despatched, our travellers repaired to
+the livery-stable, to inspect in person the condition of their horses.
+The establishment was lighted with a single lamp, swung in the centre of
+the building. The approach of the two young gentlemen was not therefore
+immediately noticed by old Cato and another groom (who proved to be the
+coachman of the equipage they had left on the road), as they were busily
+engaged in rubbing down their horses, the dialogue between them was not
+brought to a close at once.
+
+"Who did you say the gentleman was?" said old Cato.
+
+"His name is Brumley," replied coachee.
+
+"And the young lady is his daughter, I suppose?" continued Cato.
+
+"Oh! as to that, I cannot say," continued coachee, "but I believe she is
+only his step-daughter; they calls her Miss Fanny St. Clair, and
+sometimes of late the old gentleman calls her Mrs. Frances; but between
+you and me and the horse-stall, there is some strange things about this
+family; I rather guess that Sukey, the maid up yonder, could tell us
+something that would make us open our eyes, if she was not so confounded
+close; all that I know about it is, that the harsh old gentleman
+sometimes gives her a talk in the carriage that throws her a'most into a
+faintin' spell. But I could never see into it, not I; I don't somehow
+believe in all these little hurrahs the women kicks up just for
+pastime."
+
+Our travellers did not think proper to listen further to the gossip of
+the grooms, and having executed their business at the livery, they
+retraced their steps to the splendid establishment at which they had put
+up. Notwithstanding the doubtful source from which Chevillere had gained
+his latest information concerning the singularly interesting young lady
+whom they had seen at the inn, it made its impression. Corrupt indeed
+must be that channel of information relative to a beautiful and
+attractive female, apparently in distress, which will not find an
+auditor in the person of a sensitive young man just emancipated from
+college. On such occasions, and with such persons, the credibility of
+all witnesses is the same, and the most improbable tale is taken at
+once, and made the foundation of a whole train of reveries, dreams, and
+plans.
+
+It is not to be denied that Victor Chevillere had worked his imagination
+up to a very romantic height, and had allowed his curiosity concerning
+the youthful lady to reach such a pitch that little else gave occupation
+to his fancies.
+
+He was in this state of mind, leisurely marking time with lazy steps,
+and in an abstracted mood, as he ascended the grand staircase of the
+establishment, when his attention was again riveted by the sound of the
+lady's voice in earnest entreaty with the old gentleman.
+
+"Consider, my dear Frances," said the latter, "that your health is now
+nearly re-established, and that these are subjects that you must dwell
+upon; why not, therefore, become accustomed to it at once?"
+
+"For heaven's sake! for my dear mother's! never, sir, mention that
+fearful marriage, and more fearful death to me again! Why should I
+recall hideous and frightful dreams!"
+
+Chevillere was compelled to move on, but it must be confessed that
+his steps were slower than before; and it may be readily imagined,
+that his fancy and his curiosity were not much allayed by the shreds
+of conversation which he had involuntarily overheard. When he had
+ascended to his own apartment, and could indulge freely in that
+bachelor recreation of pacing to and fro, the two words still
+involuntarily quickened his movements whenever they flashed through his
+mind---"marriage" and "death" were words of opposite import certainly,
+viewed in the abstract, and we doubt whether he had ever connected them
+together before;---"Fearful marriage! and more fearful death!" what
+could it mean? to whom could they refer? Only one of them could refer to
+her, that was certain; who then was married and died so fearfully? Ah!
+thought he, I have it! her mother has married this old man, and died
+suddenly; and he has got the fortune of both in his hands! Suspicious
+circumstance! If fortune puts it in my power, I will watch him narrowly!
+I disliked his countenance from the first!--must be cool, however, and
+deliberate--must watch--and wait! pshaw, what am I at! Thus ended Victor
+Chevillere's solution of the enigma, when Lamar stepped into the room
+and disturbed his revery.
+
+"What! still musing, Chevillere. By my troth, she must be a witch; but
+it will be glorious news to write to our friend Beverly Randolph, of old
+Virginia. What say you? Shall I sit down and indite an epistle? Let me
+see--how do such narratives generally begin? Cupid, and darts, and
+arrows--blind of an eye--shot right through the vitals of a poor
+innocent youth that never did him any harm--never was struck
+before--covered with a panoply, and shield, and armour, and all that;
+and then worship prostrate before the shrine; and vows, and tears, and
+tokens; and then the dart is taken out--and the wound heals up--and
+then--'Richard's himself again!' What say you to that, or rather what
+would Randolph say to that, think you?"
+
+"He would say that Augustus Lamar was still the same mirth-loving
+fellow, without regard to time or place."
+
+"Then it is a serious affair, and too true to make a joke of! Well, then
+I have done! She's a beautiful young creature, it is true; but then from
+what I had seen of your cold philosophy, I did not think you were the
+man to be slain at first sight, and surrender at discretion before a
+single charge."
+
+"I will acknowledge to you, Lamar, that my curiosity is most painfully
+excited with regard to that unhappy young lady, but nothing more, I
+assure you. Some facts have, without my seeking, come to my knowledge,
+with which you are entirely unacquainted, and which have tended greatly
+to increase that curiosity. I cannot at this time explain; as soon as my
+own mind is satisfied on the subject, my confidence shall not be
+withheld from you."
+
+"Lovers are truly a singular set of mortals---here is a young lady (and
+a Yankee too, perhaps) of some dozen hours' acquaintance, and with whom
+you have never exchanged a dozen words; and yet you are already
+entrusted with profound secrets, which excite you in the most painful
+manner!"
+
+"Come, come, Lamar, I see you are determined to misunderstand me. Let us
+drop the subject. What do you think of the Kentuckian?"
+
+"I think he is an admirable fellow; and I intend to patronise him; and
+induct him into fashionable life; but do you think his singularities are
+the natural products of the life, manners, and climate of Kentucky?"
+
+"I cannot decide whether there is much in him that is peculiar to
+Kentucky. Some of the most elegant and accomplished gentleman I have
+seen were natives of that state."
+
+"He takes a laugh at his expense admirably."
+
+"He does, but you must be careful not to exceed the limits he has laid
+down for himself and us, in that respect. For my own part, I entertain a
+serious respect for Damon and his unsophisticated honesty, degenerating,
+as it sometimes does, into prejudices and ludicrous fancies."
+
+"Good night, and pleasant dreams to you. I will call early to interpret
+them for you."
+
+As Lamar closed the door, Chevillere drew from his pocket a little
+basket segar-case, from which he extracted a genuine Havana, and
+lighting a taper at the candle, and throwing himself into one of those
+easy attitudes familiar to smokers, with his head back, and his eyes
+closed, gave himself up to those absorbing reveries, generally
+delightful in proportion to the goodness of the segar, which a southern
+knows so well how to enjoy. To be fully relished, segars should be
+resorted to only in the evening, and then in moderation. The sensibility
+is blunted by excess, and in that case, tobacco, like the intoxicating
+drinks, will sometimes conjure up frightful images upon the wall of a
+dimly-lighted chamber, or among the embers of a dying fire. Victor,
+however, had not converted his capacity for enjoyment into fruitful
+sources of mental and physical suffering---he sat for a long time gently
+throwing the fragrant results of his efforts into various columns,
+wreaths, and pyramids. Not that his mind dwelt upon these things for a
+moment; he was far distant in spirit; his imagination was calling up
+delightful dreams of love and friendship, with thoughts of a beloved
+cousin, of his friend and room-mate Beverley Randolph--his mother, his
+home, and the scenes of his childhood, and finally, of the lady of the
+black mantle. He beheld airy castles,--romantic adventures,--bridal
+scenes--and flowers,--assemblies,--parties,--and the high hills of the
+Santee.
+
+Aladdin's lamp never wrought more rich and highly-coloured scenes of
+enchantment than did this same Havana; but the most pleasant dream must
+come to an end, as well as the richest flavoured segar--and so did
+Chevillere's. Tossing the little hot remnant from him with a passionate
+jerk, as if in anger at the insensible cause of his interruption, he
+bounced into the centre of the floor and began to pace to and fro, in
+his accustomed mood, clenching his fists now and then, and by his whole
+appearance showing a perfect contrast to the calm and delightful revery
+attendant upon the first stage of tobacco intoxication.
+
+In this mood we shall leave him to seek his rest, while we recount in
+the next chapter what farther befel our late collegians on the following
+morning.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+A brilliant morning found our collegians refreshed in health and elastic
+in spirits. The more gloomy fancies of the previous night, which had
+beset Chevillere both in his waking and sleeping hours--like the mists
+of the morning, had been dispelled by the bright sunshine, and the
+refreshing breezes of the bay. After the usual meal had been some time
+despatched; and while Chevillere was leisurely turning over the papers
+of the day (Lamar having departed in pursuit of the Kentuckian) he was
+surprised by the entrance of Mr. Brumley (the austere gentleman), who
+saluted him with the most friendly greetings of the hour and season, and
+concluded by inviting him into their private parlour. It may be readily
+imagined that this invitation was not tardily complied with, for he now
+imagined that the whole history of the lady would be unravelled by a
+single word--so sanguine is youthful hope, and so apt are we, at that
+interesting period, to jump to those conclusions which are desirable,
+without ever considering the previous steps, and painful delays, and
+necessary forms, and conventional usages which inevitably intervene
+between our highest hopes and their fruition. How often would the ardent
+wishes and the bold hands of youth seize upon futurity, despoiling it
+of the thin veil which separates us from what we wish to know,
+especially when this could be learned by dispensing with the accustomed
+formalities and wholesome restraints of refined society. A train of
+kindred thoughts was passing through the mind of Chevillere as he was
+ushered into a small but elegant saloon, connected with the back
+chambers by folding-doors, which were now closed. On the left of the
+door, and between the windows opening upon a great thoroughfare, sat the
+lady who occupied his thoughts. She was sitting, or rather reclining
+upon one end of a sofa, her head resting upon her hand in a thoughtful
+mood. As is true of most daughters of this favoured land, nature had
+evidently in nowise been thwarted, either in her mental or physical
+education. She appeared to possess that naiveté which is so apt to be
+the result of a mixed town, and country education; with just enough of
+self-possession to show that native modesty had been properly regulated
+by much good society, but not too much to forbid an occasional
+crimsoning of the neck and face. Her eyes were blue, shaded by long dark
+lashes, and so sparkling and joyous in their expression, that the
+evident present sorrow which hung over her spirits, could not efface the
+impression to a beholder, that they were naturally much more inclined to
+beam with mirth and gayety, than to weeping; her features were
+regular--arch in their expression, and finely formed--her complexion of
+the finest shade--with a rich profusion of light brown hair, braided
+and parted on the forehead without a single curl; her figure was just
+tall enough to be elegant and graceful, and exhibited the graces of that
+interesting period, when the school-girl is merging into the reserved
+woman.
+
+As Chevillere was ushered into the presence of this youthful lady, the
+old gentleman presented him as Mr. Chevillere, of South Carolina, and
+the lady by the name of (his step-daughter) Frances St. Clair; she
+assumed the erect position barely long enough to return the salutation
+of the gentleman, then reclined again and lapsed apparently into her sad
+mood; for a moment she pressed her handkerchief to her face as if she
+would drive away some horrible image, and then waited a moment as if she
+expected her father to speak upon some previously settled subject.
+Perceiving, however, that she waited in vain, she with some difficulty
+forced herself to say, "Mr. Chevillere, I requested my father to invite
+you to our apartments to"--here she seemed overpowered and stopped.
+Chevillere seeing her distress, replied, "Madam, you do me too much
+honour; but I see you are distressed--let me say then, without any
+farther formality, that if there is any way in the world by which I can
+lighten that distress, command me."
+
+"It is about these very emotions that I would speak," she answered; "I
+was afraid you might think the scene at the breakfast-table two days
+since was got up in some silly girlish affectation, in pretended disgust
+at the rudeness of the young men present; but believe me when I say,
+their conduct would at many times in my life have furnished me with an
+ample fund for laughter; it was not in their manners, it was in the
+subject of one of their discourses that I felt so much affected--I tried
+to subdue my feelings, but the more I tried the more they overcame me;
+the truth is, some painful recollections were awakened"--Here again she
+covered her face with her handkerchief, and seemed to be for a moment
+almost suffocated. The lady resumed; "Nor should I have thought it
+proper to offer this explanation to one who is apparently a perfect
+stranger; but, sir, I have known you for some time by reputation."
+
+"Indeed, madam, I must be indebted to some most flattering mistake for
+my present good fortune; I am but just emancipated from college walls
+and rules, and have, of course, even a reputation to make for myself."
+
+"No! no!" said the youthful lady (a beautiful smile passing swiftly over
+her sad countenance), "there can be no mistake about it," and drawing
+from her work-bag a small bit of paper, rolled up in the shape of a
+letter, she presented it to him; adding, "Do you know that
+hand-writing?"
+
+He gazed upon the signature for an instant, and then exclaimed, "My
+honoured mother's! by all that's fortunate! then indeed we are old
+acquaintances--with your permission; and I am perfectly content with the
+reputation which you spoke of, when I know that it originated in such a
+source."
+
+"Your mother was indeed a prudent and a modest, but still a devoted
+herald of your good qualities."
+
+"Believe me, dear lady, that I shall be more proud than ever to appear
+in your eyes to deserve some small share of her maternal praise; it was
+always inexpressibly dear to me for its own sake, but now I shall
+endeavour doubly to deserve it. You saw her, I suppose, at the White
+Sulphur Springs?"
+
+"We did, sir; and a most fortunate circumstance it was for me; for being
+an invalid, she did every thing for me that my own mother could have
+done. Oh! how I regretted that my mother did not come, merely to have
+made her acquaintance."
+
+"Your mother! is your mother alive, madam?"
+
+"I hope and trust she is--and well; she was both when we last heard from
+her, and that was but a few days since; but your agitation alarms me!
+you know no bad news of my mother?" laying her hand upon his arm.
+
+"None, madam! none. I don't know what put the foolish idea into my head,
+but I thought that both your own parents were dead."
+
+"You alarmed me," said she. "I conjured up every dreadful image--I
+imagined that you had been commissioned by some of our friends here, to
+break the painful intelligence to me--but you are sure she is well?"
+
+Chevillere smiled, as he answered "You forget that I am a total stranger
+to her, and she to me."
+
+"True! true! But tell me how you left your charming young cousin
+Virginia Bell, of whom I heard your mother speak so often. She told me,
+I think, that she was at some celebrated school in North Carolina?"
+
+"At Salem. She is well, I thank you, or was well when I came through the
+town: my mother intends to take her home with her on her return."
+
+"So she told me," said the lady.
+
+"She did not tell you, I suppose, for I believe she does not know, that
+I have promised the hand of the dear girl in marriage, though she is
+scarcely sixteen yet. You must know that I had in college two dear and
+beloved friends--the one, Mr. Lamar, you have seen; the other is Mr.
+Beverley Randolph, of Virginia--we were both class and room-mates.
+Randolph has gone on a journey through the Southern States, as he
+pretends; but, I believe, in truth, to take a sly peep at his affianced
+bride. If he likes her looks, it is a bargain; and if not, he will pass
+it all off for a college joke." Here he was interrupted by the lady
+gasping; and on looking in her face, he found she was as pale as marble,
+and terribly agitated. She asked her father for water, which he handed
+to her instantly, while Chevillere rang violently at the bell.
+
+"It will all be over in a minute," said she; "it is only a return of the
+suffering to which I am subject."
+
+Many strange ideas flitted through Chevillere's mind during this
+interruption of the conversation. He now recollected that one of the
+subjects of discourse between the vulgar fops, at the breakfast-table
+the previous morning, had been some runaway marriage--and "the fearful
+marriage and more fearful death" still sounded in his ears, and now the
+same subject again introduced by himself produced like consequences,--he
+thought it strange and incomprehensible; he cheered himself, however,
+with the reflection, that his mother was not likely to form an intimacy
+with persons against whom there was any charge of crime; nay, more, he
+felt assured that they must have been well sustained by public opinion,
+or introduced to her acquaintance by some judicious friend.
+
+"If I have unaptly said any thing offensive, I hope Miss St. Clair will
+believe me, when I say that such a design was the farthest from my
+thoughts."
+
+"Rest easy on that score," said she; "I am now well again: you said
+nothing that it was not proper for you to say, and me to hear, had I not
+been a poor silly-headed girl."
+
+"Well, Miss Frances, I am anxious to hear your opinion of Western
+Virginia."
+
+"My opinion is not worth having; but such as it is, you are welcome to
+it, or rather to such observations as a lady might make. First, then, I
+was delighted with the wild mountain scenery, and the beautiful valleys
+between the mountains; such are those, you will recollect, perhaps, in
+which all of those springs are situated. I doubt very much, whether
+Switzerland, or Spain, could present as many rich and beautiful
+mountain-scenes, as we have passed between Lexington and the White
+Sulphur and Salt Sulphur springs. We have similar scenes along and among
+the highlands of the Hudson, it is true; perhaps they are more grand and
+majestic than these; but then, there is such a stir of busy life, such
+an atmosphere of steam, and clouds of canvass, that one is perpetually
+called back in spirit to the stir and bustle of a city life. But here,
+among the rugged blue mountains of 'old Virginia,' as these people love
+to call it, there are the silence and the solitude of nature, which more
+befit such contemplations as the scenes induce. We can seat ourselves in
+one of the green forests of the mountains we have just left, and imagine
+ours to be the first human footsteps, which have ever been imprinted
+upon the soil; and we can repose amid the shades and the profound and
+solemn silence of those scenes, with a calmness and a serenity, and a
+soothing, delightful, melancholy feeling, which no other objects can
+produce. The very atmosphere seems teeming with these delightful
+impressions; primitive nature seems to have returned upon us with all
+its balmy delights,--quiet and peacefulness. The profound solitude would
+become tiresome, perhaps, to those who have no resources in unison with
+such scenes, or to those who admire and feign to revel in them, because
+it is fashionable just now to do so. But to an educated mind, a natural
+and feeling, and I may say devout heart, they furnish inexhaustible
+food for contemplation, and ever-renewing sources of delight and
+improvement."
+
+"They are such scenes," replied Chevillere, "as I love to dwell upon,
+even in imagination. But come, Miss Frances, I see by the hat and mantle
+upon the table, that I have interrupted some intended promenade; shall I
+have the honour to be of your party?"
+
+"Unquestionably, young gentleman--you may take the whole journey off my
+hands; Frances was only going out among the shops," said Mr. Brumley.
+
+The plain, but tasteful apparel was soon adjusted, and the youthful pair
+sallied forth upon the promised expedition.
+
+The tide of human life seems to be ever rolling and tossing, and ever
+renewing, and then rolling on again. Pestilence, and death, and famine
+may do their worst, but the tide is still renewed, and still moves on to
+the great sea of eternity.
+
+Who that walks through the busy and thronged streets of a populous city,
+and sees the gay plumage, the fantastic finery, the smiling faces, and
+the splendid equipages, could ever form an adequate idea of the real
+suffering and wo, which constitute the sum of one day's pains in a city
+life? If all the miserable--the lame, the blind, the poor, the dumb, the
+aged, and the diseased, could be poured out along one side of the gay
+promenades, while fashionables were parading along the other, a much
+truer picture of life in a city would be seen. Such were the ideas of
+Victor Chevillere, as he escorted his timid and youthful companion
+through the gay throng from shop to shop.
+
+As they emerged into a part of the city less thronged, interchange of
+opinions became more practicable.
+
+"I am impatient to hear your opinion of the Southerns," said Chevillere;
+"you had the finest opportunity imaginable to see our southern
+aristocrats at the springs."
+
+"Oh! I was delighted with the little society in which I moved there,"
+replied she; "and, but for one unhappy, and most untoward circumstance
+for me, my enjoyments would have far surpassed any thing which I had
+ever laid out for myself again in this world."
+
+"You excite my curiosity most strangely," said he; "and, if it would not
+appear impertinent or intrusive, I should like to know two things:
+first, what untoward circumstance you speak of? and next, what great bar
+has been placed between you and happiness, that you should have laid off
+so small a share for yourself in all time to come?"
+
+"Oh! sir, your questions are painful to me, even to think of; how much
+worse then must have been the reality of those circumstances, which
+could poison the small share of happiness which is allotted to us under
+the most favourable circumstances. I would gratify your curiosity if I
+could, but indeed, indeed, sir, I cannot now relate to you the whole
+history of my life; and nothing less could explain to you the cruel
+train of circumstances by which I am surrounded, and from which there is
+no escape."
+
+"One question you can, and I am sure you will, answer me.
+
+"Could a devoted friend, with a cool head and a resolute hand, effect
+nothing in freeing you from this persecution?"
+
+"I will answer you, sir, most plainly. You misunderstand my allusions,
+in the first place; for I am not persecuted now, nor can I say that I
+have been. It may seem enigmatical to you, but it is all that I can in
+prudence say. There is no person on this side of the grave who can
+relieve me from the cause of those emotions which you have unhappily
+witnessed; nay, more! if those persons were to rise from the dead, who
+were, unfortunately for themselves and for me, the cause of my painful
+situation, my condition would be incomparably worse than it is now."
+
+"Painful, indeed, must those circumstances be, and incomprehensible to
+me, which seem to have been produced by the death of some one; and yet,
+if that person should rise from the dead, you would be more miserable
+than ever," said Chevillere.
+
+During the latter part of this speech, the lady, as was often her
+custom, pressed her handkerchief to her face, as if she would by
+mechanical pressure drive off disagreeable images from the mind; and
+then said, "Now, sir, let us drop this subject."
+
+"One more question, and then I have done; and believe me, it is not idly
+asked. Were the circumstances you spoke of developed so recently as your
+visit to the Virginia springs?"
+
+"Oh! by no means, sir; the untoward circumstance there that I spoke of,
+was the frequent and unexpected presence of one who forcibly reminded me
+of all the painful particulars; and what made it so much worse was, that
+wherever I moved, he moved; he followed the same route round the
+watering-places, and seemed purposely to throw himself in my way; and
+even now I dread every moment to encounter him; and the more so, as I
+have heard lately that his mind is unsettled. Poor gentleman, I pity
+him."
+
+By this time they had arrived in a part of the city from which
+Washington's monument could be seen, elevating its majestic column above
+a magnificent grove of trees.
+
+"Suppose we extend our walk," said the gentleman, "to yonder beautiful
+grove."
+
+To this the lady readily assented. They found rude seats, constructed
+perhaps by some romantic swain; or by some country-bred youths, who came
+there, after the toils of the day, to refresh themselves with the pure
+and invigorating breezes which sweep the green, fresh from their dear
+and longed-for homes. Here they seated themselves, to enjoy this
+delightful mixture of town and country.
+
+"This is a noble monument to the great and good father of our Republic;
+and worthy of the high-minded and public-spirited people of Baltimore,"
+said Chevillere. "Give me such evidence as this of their veneration for
+his memory, and none of your new-fangled nonsense about enshrining him
+in the hearts of his countrymen. Let him be enshrined in the hearts of
+his countrymen as individuals; but let cities, communities, and states
+enshrine him in marble. These speak to the eyes; and hundreds, and
+thousands will stand here, amid these beautiful shades, and think of him
+with profound veneration, who would never otherwise look into any other
+kind of history. The effect of such works as these is admirable; not
+only in showing veneration for the great dead, but also upon the living,
+in purifying the heart and ennobling its impulses."
+
+"Baltimore, indeed, has set a noble example," said the lady.
+
+"And richly will she be rewarded. A few years hence, the far West will
+be brought to her doors; and she will grow up to be a mighty city.
+Standing on the middle ground, between the angry sectionists of the
+North and the South, she will present a haven in which the rivals may
+meet, and learn to estimate each other's good qualities, and bury or
+forget those errors which are inseparable from humanity. But see! Miss
+St. Clair," said he, "what a singular looking man is just emerging from
+within the column!"
+
+"Heavens!" said the lady, in extreme terror, "that is the person! Do
+take me from this place! I would not encounter him for the world!"
+
+She was too late; for already had the object of her apprehension caught
+a glimpse of her person; and no sooner had he done so, than with rapid
+strides he advanced directly towards them. The lady shook with terror
+and agitation. When he had approached almost in a direct line to within
+some forty or fifty feet, he riveted a long and steady gaze upon the
+lady, and another of shorter duration upon her companion, still walking
+onward. Victor stood and gazed after him until he was entirely without
+the enclosure.
+
+He was a well-dressed man, apparently about fifty-five years of age,
+tall, and straight in his carriage as an Indian; his hair was slightly
+silvered; his countenance expressed wildness, but was steady and
+consistent in the expression of present purpose; his eye was dark and
+deep, and, when you looked upon it steadily for a short time, appeared
+as if you were gazing at two black holes in his head; his complexion was
+sallow; its characteristics--energy and deep determination.
+
+"And that is the maniac?" said Chevillere, in a half-abstracted mood.
+
+"I said not so," replied the lady; "but he is, indeed, that most
+unfortunate man, whose whole business seems to be to haunt me in my
+travels; otherwise our meeting has been most strangely accidental and
+untoward."
+
+"If he is in ill health," said Victor, "he may have gone to the Springs
+without intending to meet you; and now, when the season is nearly over,
+and he is likewise on his return, there is nothing more natural than his
+visiting this monument--every stranger does so,--do not, therefore,
+aggravate your distress by supposing these meetings to have been sought
+on his part. I will endeavour to find him, and demand of him whether he
+seeks to annoy an unhappy invalid by pursuing her from place to place,
+and what are his motives."
+
+"Oh! sir, for Heaven's sake, do not think of such a thing. He is a
+powerful and a fearful man, when in his right mind; and even in his
+derangement, might do you some harm, especially if you went as
+commissioned by me. Besides, sir, if he was undoubtedly sane and
+respectful, he might demand, as a right, to see me, and converse with me
+too. Nay, he might possibly have some claim to control my actions; but
+you see he does not. Let him alone, therefore, and do not involve
+yourself in any of my troubles. I am inextricably entangled, and
+pinioned down to a certain routine of suffering, perhaps unexampled, and
+that too by no crime of my own."
+
+"Dear lady," said Chevillere, taking her hand, as he saw her blue eye
+filling with tears, and just ready to run over; "you cannot imagine how
+much I feel interested for you; and what I am about to say, as it will
+risk your displeasure, is the very best evidence that I can give of my
+deep interest in your future peace and contentment. Believe me, dear
+lady, that though I am young, and may be inexperienced,--I am not an
+indifferent observer of the secret machinery of men's actions. I have
+been a steady observer and a thinker for myself, without regard to the
+opinion of individuals or the world, when I was conscious that I was
+right, and that they were wrong. Listen to me, then, with patience,
+while I give you my opinion, with regard to the difficulties which seem
+to be accumulating around you. Of course, this opinion must be a general
+one; as the circumstances upon which it is founded are only such as are
+of a general character. Nor do I seek for more confidence on your part
+towards me; I cannot expect that you should unfold the intimate
+relations of your family and your friends to a comparative stranger.
+This, then, is my (of course vague) opinion--I have generally observed,
+in my intercourse with mankind, that the most trying situations and the
+deepset distress are often brought about by a small mistake--
+misfortune--or crime in the beginning. The latter of these I would defy
+the most malignant misanthrope to look upon your countenance and charge
+you with; one of the two former, then, is the point upon which all your
+distress, and ill health, and melancholy hangs. My advice then is, upon
+this general view of the case, that you go back to that point, and
+rectify it as speedily as possible; and do it boldly and fearlessly, as
+I am sure you can. Burst asunder these chains that fetter you, whatever
+they may be."
+
+"I see," said the lady (tears fast stealing down her cheeks), "that I am
+always destined to make the same unhappy impression on every
+acquaintance, male or female, valued or unvalued. Before I have grown
+many degrees in their good opinion, some of these unlucky things are
+seen to develop themselves, and then I am subject to the greatest
+misfortune to which an honourable and a sensitive mind can be exposed;
+that is, to be supposed weak or wicked, though at the same time
+conscious of pure and upright motives. To be plain with you, sir, I must
+tell you again, that in order for me to be relieved of that which
+trammels me in some shape or other at every step, _the grave must give
+up its own; and the law must give up its own; and the avaricious must
+annul their decrees; and the dead of half a century must undo their
+work; and the wisdom of the sage must be instilled into the mind of a
+child; and the slanders, and the wild and wicked fancies of the lunatic
+must be convinced by reason or actual demonstration of the foregoing
+things_--before the point you speak of can be seized upon, and turned to
+my advantage."
+
+"Then, indeed, is it a hard case, and I will not distress you further on
+the subject; I will not add my persecution to that of others--I will not
+say enemies; for one so young and so artless, so innocent and so
+unfortunate, can have no enemies."
+
+"And therein consists part of my distress," replied she. "Is it not
+strange that I have not an enemy living, to my knowledge, who has ever
+wilfully injured me in word or deed? unless, indeed, it be yon wretched
+old man, whose mind is now, and whose heart, I fear, has always been
+wrong. Now, sir, let me beg of you, in future, whenever any of these
+little occurrences embarrass me during my stay here, to take no notice
+of them whatever; let me move along as quietly and as unobtrusively as
+possible. I love the retirement of the country, and to the country and
+retirement I will go. My mother loves me, and knows all my actions, and
+their motives too; and even my father loves me in his own way. They will
+be my companions for the remainder of a short and weary life."
+
+The colloquy was cut short by their return to the hotel.
+
+Lamar, as has been already announced, was a humorous gentleman, and
+would not lose an opportunity of enjoying the remarks of one so new to
+the busy world and its ways as Damon. He was not long in finding out the
+retired quarters of the gentleman of the west. At the bar-room he
+inquired if there was such a lodger in the house.
+
+"No," said the barkeeper (so are these functionaries called), "but he is
+expected every minute."
+
+Lamar seated himself near the files of morning papers which lay strewed
+along a reading-desk, and awaited the arrival of his singular new
+acquaintance. In a few minutes Damon stalked in. A new black hat and
+blue frock-coat had so much altered his appearance, that Lamar did not
+recognise him until he took off his hat, wiped his dripping brows with
+the handkerchief which he still carried in it, and then, seeing Lamar
+for the first time, waved it over his head.
+
+"Hurrah! for old Kentuck!" was his characteristic exclamation.
+
+"Why, Damon, you have been under the tailor's hands," said Lamar.
+
+"I believe I was in Old Sam's hands last night; but come up-stairs, and
+I will tell you all about it."
+
+They proceeded to the third story into a small apartment, dimly lighted
+through a single window. Damon, after seating Lamar, threw aside his
+coat, and drawing from under the head of his bed the one in which Lamar
+had first seen him, he quickly inserted his arms through what remained
+of the garment,--the lappels were torn off on each side down to the
+waist, so that all the front of the coat was gone, leaving nothing but
+the long straight back, collar, and sleeves. What remained was smeared
+with mud, and torn in many places. He next proceeded to pull out of his
+pocket a collar, and parts of two sleeves of a shirt, spreading them on
+the bed, as a milliner would do her finery; and holding out both his
+hands with the palms upward in the manner of an orator,----
+
+"There!" said he, "that's what I call a pretty tolerable neat job, to
+shirt a stranger the first night he comes to town."
+
+Lamar, who by this time began to see a little into the affair, asked,
+"But, Damon, how did all this happen? you seem to have been
+discomfited."
+
+"Now I'll be smashed if you ain't off the trail, stranger, for you see
+I've only showed you half yet."
+
+Upon which he drew from his other pocket a pair of spectacles, bent,
+bloody, and broken,--then a wig,--and, lastly, the remains of a little
+black rattan with a gold head and chain broken into inches. He displayed
+these on the bed as he had done the others; only drawing his
+handkerchief as a line between them. Upon this he fell, rather than sat,
+back into a chair just behind him, and burst out into a loud, long, and
+hearty laugh, seemingly excited afresh at the sight of his spoils.
+
+"Well, now," said he, "I wish I may be horn swoggled, if ever I thought
+to live to see the day when I should '_sculp_' a Christian man; but
+there it is, you see; I left his head as clean as a peeled onion."
+
+"But how? and when? and who was your antagonist in this frolic?"
+
+"Frolic!" exclaimed Damon; "well, now, it's what I would call a regular
+row; I never saw a prettier knock down and drag out in all the days of
+my life, even in old Kentuck."
+
+"But do tell me," said Lamar, "was anybody seriously hurt?"
+
+"There was several chaps in the circus last night with their heels
+uppermost, besides them suple chaps on the horses; I can tell you that."
+
+"Oh! you were in the circus, were you?"
+
+"Yes; and there was a rip-roaring sight of slight o'hand and tumblin
+work there, besides their ground and lofty tumblin they had in the
+handbills."
+
+"You did some of the ground tumbling yourself then?" asked Lamar.
+
+"No, I did the slight o'hand work, as you may see by the skin that's
+gone off these four marrow-bones."
+
+"And who did the ground tumbling?" asked Lamar.
+
+"There was a good deal done there last night; the chaps in the ring and
+the chaps in the pit all did a little at it; flummuck me if I didn't
+think the heels of the whole house would be uppermost before they were
+done; what an everlastin pity 'tis, these critters elbows ain't as suple
+as their heels."
+
+"Then you think all the people of Baltimore a little limber in the
+heels."
+
+"I can't say as to that; but I wish I may be hackled, if there was not
+so much flyin up of the heels there last night, that I was fidlin and
+tumblin all night in my sleep, jumpin through hoops, and tanglin my legs
+in their long red garters, which the circus riders jumped over; and then
+I thought they had my poor old horse, Pete Ironsides, jumpin over bars,
+and leapin through fiery balloons, until at last they smashed his head
+right into a tar barrel, and then maybe I didn't fly into a tear down
+snortin rage! I was crammed full of fight then, and so I got to slingin
+my arms about in my sleep, till I knocked out that head-board
+there,--then I woke up, and I wish I may be hanged if I didn't think it
+was all a dream; till I found that the forepart of my coat had run away
+from the tail, and that I had got an odd collar among my linen. And then
+on t'other hand I began to think it was all true, and rung the bell, and
+sent the nigger down to the stable to see if Pete had his head in a tar
+barrel sure enough; presently the nigger came back, grinen and giglin,
+and said Pete had gone to the country two hours ago; so I run the little
+nigger down stairs, and sent my old boots after him to get blacked; and
+as I was dodgin through that long entry there, I saw the bottles, and
+tumblers, and lemon-skins; so ho! said I, there's the mad dog that bit
+me last night."
+
+"Then you _began_ in a frolic at least," said Lamar.
+
+"Only a small breeze or so; a few tumblers of punch, made of that
+doubled and twisted Irish whiskey; it was none of your Kentuck low
+wines, run off at a singlin, for I have made many a barrel. It was as
+strong as _pison_, and it raised the Irish in me pretty quick, or rather
+old Kentuck, for I jumped up and kicked the table over, and broke
+things, afore I would have been cleverly primed with the low wines."
+
+"Were you drinking all alone?"
+
+"No; there was half-a-dozen milksops set down; I believe they board
+here; but no sooner had I kicked the table over, and begun to smash
+things a little, than they all sneaked out one by one, until they were
+all gone but one, and I rather suspicion that he's a blackleg, for he
+stuck pretty close to me till the row at the circus was over, and then
+when I had got clear, he come up here with me, and sent for the chap who
+furnished me with my new hat and coat; but it wasn't all for nothin, as
+he thought, for he presently proposed that we should go down street a
+piece, and see some fine fellers, he said, who were friends of his, and
+who were going to have a night of it. Well, said I, 'a little hair of
+the dog is good for the bite,' and down we went to a large room up four
+pair of stairs in a dark alley. And there, sure enough, there was a
+merry-looking set of fellers; but you see they overdid the job, for I
+soon smelt a rat; they most all of 'em pretended to be too etarnal
+drunk. I said nothin though, but 'possumed too a little; only sipped a
+little wine, and that made me straight instead of crooked. But at last
+they proposed a game of cards. Well, said I, I'm not much of a dabster
+at it, but if the stake ain't high, I don't care if I do take a fling or
+two; so down we set to it, and they pulled out their cards for loo.
+Stop! stop! said I, we must have _new cards_; I never play with other
+men's cards. They began to suspicion, maybe, that they had got the wrong
+sow by the ear, but they sent and got some new packs, and then we took
+a smash or two at the game, and I'm a Cherokee if I didn't give 'em a
+touch or two of old Kentuck. I won all the money they had, but it wasn't
+much, and they made me pay most of that for the refreshments, as they
+said the winners always paid for them things."
+
+"But you have not yet told me how you got into the row," said Lamar; "I
+wish to know the whole story--come, let us have it?"
+
+"Well, it's soon told. As I was telling you, the black-leg chap and I
+went to the circus, and we had'nt set long in the pit before there was a
+young gal come in, and set on one end of the same bench. She was'nt so
+ugly neither, but I took pity on her because she looked like a country
+gal, and there was no women settin near her. After a while, three chaps
+come down from the boxes above, and set right down by the gal, and began
+to push one another over against her; at last the one next her, and he
+was the same chap you saw in the stage yesterday morning, only he had on
+them green specks--well, he put his arm round her, and called her his
+dear, and all that; well, you see, I had heard tell of these city gals,
+and I thought if she was pleased it was none of my business; but
+presently I heard her sobbing and crying, with her apron up to her eyes,
+and she told them they were no gentlemen, or they would not treat a poor
+girl so away from home. So the Irish whiskey, or old Kentuck, I don't
+know which, began to rise in my throat. I jumped up and raised the
+war-whoop. 'Old Kentuck for ever!' said I; and with that, I took the
+back of my hand and knocked the chap's hat off, and his 'sculp' went
+with it. Call your soul your own, said I; he jumped up and gin me a wipe
+with that little black switch across the nose; it had hardly cleverly
+touched me, afore I took him a sneezer, between the two eyes, glasses
+and all; he dropped over like a rabbit when you knock 'em behind the
+head; I rather suspicion he thought a two year old colt's heels had got
+a taste of his cocoanut.
+
+"Then the other two took it up, and both on 'em seized me, and swore
+they would carry me to the police office; but I took 'em at cross
+purposes, for while one of them held the collar of the old home-made, I
+fetched the other a kick that sent him over the benches a rip roaring, I
+tell you. The other little chap was hangin on to me like a leech to a
+horse's leg; I jist picked him up and throwed him into the ring upon the
+sand, for I did'nt want to hurt him: but then the real officers come up
+and clamped me. I wished myself back in old Kentuck bad enough then; but
+while they held me there, like a dog that had been killen sheep, the
+little gal came up to me, and said she would go and bring her father, to
+try and get me off; and then she asked me where I lived,--I told her in
+old Kentuck; then she asked me where I put up, and I put my mouth to her
+ear and told her; and I could hardly get it away again without givin her
+a smack, for she would pass for a pretty gal even in old Kentuck; well,
+this morning, her and her father were here by times to thank me, and the
+old man invited me to stop at his house as I go home; it's on the same
+road we came down yesterday."
+
+"Did the girl go to the circus by herself?" asked Lamar.
+
+"No; the old man stopped at the door to buy a ticket, and she went on,
+and lost him."
+
+"But you have not told me how you came by this scalp," said Lamar,
+taking up the large black scratch with curled locks.
+
+"Oh! you see, I grabbled that in the scuffle, and slipped it into my
+pocket."
+
+"How did you get away from the officers?"
+
+"Oh! that's the way I lost the old 'home-made;' you see they began to
+pull me over the benches, and I told 'em I would walk myself if they
+would let me, and so they did, but they held on to my coat. I kept
+pretty cool until they got outside of the house, and then a crowd
+gathered round, and they began cologueing together, until I saw my way
+out a little, and then I jist slipped my foot behind one of 'em and
+pushed him down, and tumbled the other feller over him, and then I
+showed them a clean pair of heels. They raised the whoop--and I raised
+my tail like a blue-lick buck, for you see I had'nt much coat to keep it
+down;--dash me if it was'nt tail all the way to the collar, and stood
+out straight behind like it was afraid of my pantaloons. I made a few
+turns to throw 'em off the trail, and then with a curly whoop, and a
+hurrah! for old Kentuck, I got to my own door, where I found the
+black-leg chap. Now you know the whole business, and I suppose you can
+tell me whether there is any danger of their finding me out in that
+little excuse for a coat that blasted tailor, who was so stingy with his
+cloth, made me."
+
+"I should suppose there was none in the world. Have no fear on that
+head; there is not a magistrate in town who would not honour you in his
+heart for what you did."
+
+"I should think so too, if they had any gals of their own. The fact is,
+if there was a little knockin down and draggin out once in a while among
+them dandy chaps, they would take better care how they sleeved decent
+men's daughters."
+
+"Well, good day, Damon," said Lamar; "send for me or Chevillere if you
+get into trouble."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+It will readily be perceived, by the reader, that Beverley Randolph, the
+person to whom the following letter was written, is one of the three
+southerns.
+
+
+ VICTOR CHEVILLERE TO B. RANDOLPH.
+
+ Baltimore, 18--.
+
+ "DEAR RANDOLPH,
+
+ "Five long years have we lived under the same roof, pursued the
+ same studies, or rather the same studies pursued us;--engaged in
+ the same dissipation, drank of the same sour wine, shed the same
+ vinous tears, discussed the same dinners and suppers, enjoyed the
+ same dances,--stag dances, I mean,--played the same music,
+ belonged to the same society, and, I was going to say, fallen in
+ love with the same nymphs; but that brings me to the subject of
+ this letter. I am in for it! Yes, you may well look surprised! It
+ is a fact! Who is the lady? you ask. I will tell you,--that is,
+ if I can; her name is St. Clair. O! she is the most lovely,
+ modest, weeping, melancholy, blue-eyed, fair-haired, and
+ mysterious little creature you ever beheld. If you could only see
+ her bend that white neck, and rest her head upon that small hand,
+ her eye lost in profound thought, until the lower lid just
+ overflows, and a tear steals gently down that most lovely cheek;
+ and then see her start up stealthily to join again in the
+ conversation, with the most innocent consciousness of guilt
+ imaginable;--but what is it that brings these tears to sadden the
+ heart of one so youthful and so innocent? 'There's the rub,' as
+ Hamlet says. Yourself, Lamar, and I were unanimous, as you
+ perhaps remember, that men generally suffer in proportion to
+ their crimes, even in this world. I here renounce that opinion,
+ with all others founded upon college logic. A half-taught college
+ boy, in the pride of his little learning and stubborn opinions,
+ is little better than an innocent. But, you ought to see this
+ fair sufferer in order fully to appreciate the foregoing opinion.
+ You would see child-like innocence--intelligence--benevolence; in
+ short, all that is good, in her sad but lovely countenance.
+
+ "But to return to college logic; what is it? Conclusions without
+ premises, ends without means; and opinions adopted without any of
+ the previous and inevitable pains and penalties attendant upon
+ the acquirement of human knowledge, or, in other words, without
+ _experience_! I would take one of our old break-of-day club to
+ tell the flavour of a ham, or the difference between a bottle of
+ Bordeaux and Seignette brandy, as soon as any one; but what else
+ did they know? or rather what else did we know? Nothing! not
+ literally nothing, but truly nothing. If I now wanted a judicious
+ opinion upon any subject, I would go to an experienced man! one
+ that had suffered in order to learn; an original thinker for
+ practical ends.
+
+ "You ask me concerning my cousin, Virginia Bell; her with whose
+ miniature, infantile as it was, you fell so desperately in love,
+ and whom, yet unseen, I promised to yourself. She flourishes,
+ Randolph, and is as beautiful as you could desire; she is yet
+ unengaged in heart or hand, so far as I know; but _you_ know,
+ that the little sly, dear, delightful creatures will complete a
+ whole life-time of love affairs, while fathers, and brothers, and
+ guardians, and affianced lords _unloved_, may be looking on none
+ the wiser. And they will look as innocent, and as demure, and as
+ child-like, as my dear beautiful little enigma of the Black
+ Mantle.
+
+ "You say you 'hate Yankees;'--my dear fellow, you forget that you
+ and I would be considered Yankees in London or Paris. The
+ national denomination we have abroad, is 'the nation of Yankees,'
+ or the 'universal Yankee nation.' 'Tis galling to our southern
+ pride, I grant you, that we should be a mere appendage, in the
+ eyes of a foreigner, to a people who are totally dissimilar to
+ us. We must brook it until we can outdo them, in literature at
+ least. They are (say many) retailers of wooden nutmegs--unfair
+ dealers, and a canting, snivelling, hypocritical set; tell me
+ where the country is, where the population is growing
+ dense--where means of living are scarce--land high--trades
+ overstocked--professions run down--and manufactures injured by
+ foreign competition, in which the little arts of trade, and
+ 'tricks upon travellers' do not also flourish. Let the population
+ of your 'old dominion' be once multiplied by wholesome
+ legislation, or rather let the yearly emigrants be induced to
+ stay in the land of their sires, and the same cunning usages will
+ prevail. As to the 'canting and snivelling,' you must allow
+ something for the descendants of the Pilgrims. Besides, tell me,
+ liberal sir, if you have not, in the very bosom of your great
+ valley, as genuine Presbyterians and Roundheads as ever graced
+ the Rump Parliament, or sung a psalm on horseback. And to give
+ the devil his due, these same Presbyterians are no bad citizens
+ of a popular government. But there is the lady of the Black
+ Mantle. Observe that she was born north of the Potomac, yet I
+ would wager any thing that you could not look steadily upon her
+ face for one minute, and curse the Yankees as I have heard you
+ do. I know you will say, therein lies the cause of my sudden
+ conversion to Yankeeism. By no means! I had begun to find out
+ that the Yankees had souls like other people, before I had ever
+ seen her.
+
+ "I approve of your determination to travel, and that even to the
+ south, rather than not to travel at all; but is there not some
+ danger lest a Virginian should become more bigoted, by travelling
+ among a people still more bigoted than himself. I know your
+ disposition; it is to hug up your dear southern prejudices within
+ your own bosom. Lamar and I are becoming liberal, and then we
+ will cast out devils for you. Do not forget that I shall have a
+ mother and cousin there by the time you arrive at the high hills
+ of the Santee. Lamar has taken desperately to a six foot
+ Kentuckian, as fine a specimen as you could wish to see; he is
+ what may be called an American yeoman of the west.
+
+ "Yours truly,
+
+ "VICTOR CHEVILLERE."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ B. RANDOLPH TO V. CHEVILLERE.
+
+ "Salem, North Carolina, 18--.
+
+ "DEAR CHEVILLERE,
+
+ "Thus far I have flown before the wind--sand, I should have said.
+ At any rate, here I am, in this town of German religionists. Here
+ dwells the first unanimous people I have ever seen. They are
+ Moravians; and every thing is managed by this little community
+ for the common benefit. They have one tavern, one store, one
+ doctor, one tanner, one potter, and so on in every trade or
+ occupation. Besides these, they have a church and a flourishing
+ female seminary. The latter is conducted upon the utilitarian
+ plan--each lady, in turn, has to perform the offices of cook,
+ laundress, and gardener; and, I need hardly say, that it is
+ admirably conducted. After I had visited all these
+ establishments--for every respectable looking stranger is waited
+ upon by some one appointed for that purpose to conduct him
+ thither,--I returned to the large, cool, and comfortable inn, and
+ had scarcely seated myself to enjoy the comforts of nicotiana,
+ when a small billet was handed to me by a handsomely dressed and
+ polite black servant with a glazed hat, which not a little
+ astonished me, you may be sure. I had not a living acquaintance
+ in the whole state that I knew of; except, indeed, old Father
+ Bagby, the master of ceremonies to the little community. It could
+ not be a challenge from some Hans Von Puffenburg of these quiet
+ burghers: so I concluded it must be a billet-doux from some of
+ the beautiful creatures at the seminary on the hill. You can
+ easily imagine, therefore, that I was no long time in tearing it
+ open; when, behold! it was, in good truth, from a lady. Can you
+ guess who? No. Then take the note itself entire.
+
+ "'DEAR SIR,
+
+ "'If, as I believe, you are the same Mr. Randolph who was a
+ room and class-mate of my son Victor Chevillere, in college,
+ I will be very glad to see you. The servant will show you to
+ our little parlour.
+
+ "'M. J. CHEVILLERE.'
+
+ "'I am the luckiest dog alive,' said I, jumping nearly over the
+ negro's head, 'Is your young mistress here also.'
+
+ "'Yes, masta, she is just leaving school for home, so please you.'
+
+ "'Please me!' said I; 'to be sure it does please me; I never was
+ more pleased in all my life. For I was just about to forswear
+ these eternal pine-barrens and sand-hills, and face to the
+ right-about. So lead the way to your two mistresses.' Whereupon he
+ led the way, hat in hand, to a room in the inn; and there,
+ Chevillere, sat your honoured mother. Commend me to our southern
+ matrons in high-life. Not that I know any thing against your
+ northern ladies, old or young; but there is in our mothers a mild
+ dignity, hospitality, and politeness, which makes every one at
+ home. But I need not describe to you your own. But I will not
+ promise you as much of the little blushing southern brunette, who
+ gracefully arose on your mother's saying, 'Mr. Randolph, my
+ adopted daughter Virginia Bell Chevillere.' I saw in an instant
+ that you had told her of our college bargain, and my falling in
+ love with her miniature. By-the-by, you ought to break that
+ slanderous miniature, or the head of the dauber who perpetrated
+ it. Her beauty never could be delineated on ivory or canvass. Can
+ any one paint the living, breathing soul of a very young and
+ beautiful female? No! and I'll tell you why. If a man had the
+ genius to do so, the very enthusiasm which always attends it would
+ throw him into very unpainter-like raptures at the sight of such a
+ one; and that's the true reason why artists so seldom succeed in
+ delineating young females. A precious piece of logic for you. But
+ to return to the original of the picture; there was a blushing
+ consciousness about the little Bell, as everybody calls her, which
+ was truly charming. Her jet black hair and eyes shone like ebony;
+ her brilliant white teeth and brunette complexion were radiant
+ with blushing smiles at this first reception of her long-promised
+ husband. There was no girlish pouting, or childish affectation, as
+ is too often the case when the parties have been laid off for each
+ other; she was at the same time modest and self-possessed; her
+ fairy figure glided about, as if her little fairy foot scarcely
+ touched the carpet. I tell you these things, because you asked me
+ to do so in all plainness of speech. Your cousin is all that a
+ cousin of my dearest friend should be--lovely, intelligent, and
+ interesting.
+
+ "Your mother intended to wait here for some male friend, who has
+ diverged a day's ride from their route home from the Springs; but
+ she has now determined to leave this place to-morrow. I shall
+ escort them as far as the Chevilleres' proud family seat,
+ Belville. You will, therefore, hear no more complaints of the
+ dreariness of the eternal pine-barrens, or the fever-and-ague
+ appearance of the poor; except, that I will say now, once for all,
+ that the poor of a slave-country are the most miserable and the
+ most wretched of all the human family. The grades of society in
+ this state are even farther apart than in Virginia. Here, there is
+ one immense chasm from the rich to the abject poor. In the valley
+ of Virginia, or in the country where you are, there are regular
+ gradations. The very happiest, most useful, and most industrious
+ class of a well-regulated community, is here wanting. Their place
+ is filled up by negroes; in consequence of which, your
+ aristocrats are more aristocratic, and your poor still poorer. The
+ slaves create an immeasurable distance between these two classes,
+ which can never be brought together until this separating cause be
+ removed. You know I am no _abolitionist_, in the incendiary
+ meaning of the term; yet I cannot deny from you and myself, that
+ they are an incubus upon our prosperity. This we would boldly
+ deny, if a Yankee uttered it in our hearing; but to ourselves, we
+ must e'en confess it. If I am, therefore, an abolitionist, it is
+ not for conscience-sake, but from policy and patriotism.
+
+ "We can never rival those northern people, until we assume the
+ modern tactics in this provincial warfare; that is, throw aside
+ all useless baggage, and concentrate our energies upon a single
+ point at a time. I have done with this theme for the present, and
+ will repair to your friends.
+
+ "Your mother knows nothing of our college-treaty, therefore she
+ little thinks what a masked enemy she has let into the camp.
+ Little Bell smiles, and enjoys our mutual understanding highly.
+ But there lies the mischief; she smiles too innocently, and too
+ calmly, and too openly, and has lost too much of that blushing
+ mood in which she first received me; and I have thought several
+ times that the little arch gipsy was laughing at me. If she had
+ not been your cousin, and my affianced bride for the last five
+ years, I should have taken leave. _You_ know I never could stand
+ to be exhibited; and would prefer being shot, at any time, to
+ being laughed at. I shall watch the little fairy, and see if she
+ is making me her butt; if so, I will see them safe to Belville,
+ and then--you shall hear from me again.
+
+ "You requested me to point out to you any thing in which I should
+ observe that the Carolinas differed from Virginia. I must say
+ then, with the judges, when they are pronouncing sentence,
+ 'however painful may be the duty imposed upon me,' that your
+ country appears more miserable the more deeply I penetrate it. Not
+ that you lack splendid mansions, and magnificent cotton-fields
+ varied with flowers, rich and tropical gardens, the orange and the
+ 'pride of India,' your wild and fragrant swamp-flowers, princely
+ hospitality, accomplished men and women,--not that you lack any of
+ these. But the seeds of decay are sown at the very point where
+ energy--enterprise--national
+ pride--industry--economy--amusements--gayety--and above all,
+ intelligence, should grow, namely, with your yeomanry!
+
+ "I would not, if I could, have your young men and women
+ transformed to spinning-jennies. Heaven forefend! I would have
+ your lowest class of whites elevated to the dignity of intelligent
+ and independent yeomen. How would I effect it? you ask. Apply the
+ grand lever by which all human movement is brought about--hope!
+ Has a poor North Carolinian hope? See him, on some cloudless
+ morning, when the glorious rays of the sun are gladdening the
+ hearts even of the unintelligent creation, standing within the
+ door of his pine-log cabin, his hands in his pockets, his head
+ leaning against the door in melancholy mood. Some half-dozen pale
+ and swollen-faced children are sitting on a bench against the side
+ of the hut, endeavouring to warm away the ague in the sunbeams.
+ The wife lies sick in bed. The little fields are barely marked out
+ with a rotten and broken-down pole-fence, and overgrown with
+ broom, or Bermuda-grass, and blackberry-bushes. A miserable horse
+ stands beyond the fence, doubtful whether there is better grazing
+ within or without. A little short-cotton and sweet-potato patch,
+ flanked by an acre of scrubby Indian corn; and, added to these,
+ five poor sheep, two goats, and a lean cow, complete the inventory
+ of his goods and chattels. You have all his cause for _hope_! You
+ have, too, his causes for fear. He has in his pocket a summons for
+ debt, contracted for sugar and tea, and other needful comforts,
+ for his sick wife and children.
+
+ "Had he any cause for hope? God knows he had none in this world.
+ But you will say the picture is exaggerated. As I am a true man
+ and a southern, it is not.
+
+ "I was benighted, and sought lodgings in the very house I have
+ described. 'Who lives here,' said I, on riding to the door. 'One
+ Fifer,' said a white-headed, half-grown girl, so weak that she
+ could scarcely stand. I sat up nearly all night with the sick
+ woman and children. On relieving the poor man's embarrassments in
+ the morning, I received the heart-felt thanks of the wretched
+ family; and almost rode my horse to exhaustion, to get away from
+ the wretched image imprinted on my memory.
+
+ "Is this man a sample of the yeomanry of your country? I say, in
+ deep and profound sorrow, I believe that he is. Where, then, does
+ the evil lie? This is a question which every southern must soon
+ ask himself, and one which Nullification cannot answer.
+
+ "_Here_, then, is a triumphant answer--an answer in deeds, instead
+ of words--in the happiness, the prosperity, and the substantial
+ wealth of these simple and primitive Moravians. Here, where I am
+ writing, is an industrious, intelligent, and healthy community, in
+ the very heart of all the misery I before described. Let us then
+ improve by the lesson, seek out the sources of their prosperity,
+ find the point where their plans diverge from ours, and, my word
+ for it (if there be no reason in the case), we become a great, a
+ flourishing, and a happy people.
+
+ "But I must take one small exception to the Moravian political
+ economy. They require all the young gentlemen to be enrolled on
+ one list, and all the willing young ladies on another; and the
+ first gentleman on the list must marry the first lady; so that
+ they are drafted for marriage, as our Virginia militia are drafted
+ for duty. I do not know that this is certainly true; but if it be
+ true, that a youth must marry the first that comes up, _nolens
+ volens_, I would put in a plump negative. This excepted, they are
+ worthy of all imitation, even to the drinking of home-brewed in
+ their pewter mugs, and smoking long pipes around their
+ council-table, when their little legislature meets.
+
+ "There are no slaves in this little nation, and labour is no
+ disgrace. In the extensive grounds, belonging to the female
+ seminary, I saw many pretty little arms bared to work; not
+ Moravian young ladies only, but elegant and aristocratic young
+ ladies from all parts of the southern states, without distinction,
+ and of every sect and denomination; and I never saw more beautiful
+ complexions. The little gipsies would come in from their work in
+ the morning, blooming as roses. Here is a complete refutation of
+ the assertion, that the whites cannot work in a southern climate;
+ here are as fine lands, and as fine husbandry and horticulture, as
+ can be found in any country; here are the first paved streets
+ south of Petersburg; here the first town, in which water is
+ conveyed by pipes, as in Philadelphia; here the first stone-fences
+ and grass-plots.
+
+ "Your mother and little Bell are cheerful and happy. Indeed, the
+ latter looks as if she had never suffered for a moment. How happy
+ a life is that of a girl at a boarding-school, exempt from all the
+ pains and penalties of collegians--the 'hair-breadth 'scapes'--the
+ formal trials for riding other people's horses,--ringing church
+ bells,--building fences across the road,--hanging cake and beer
+ signs at magistrates' and elders' doors,--burnings in effigy,
+ fights at country weddings and dances,--exploring expeditions in
+ the mountains and caverns, professedly for geological, but really
+ for depredating purposes,--shooting house-dogs,--expeditions upon
+ the water, and skating upon the ice,--swimming, duelling,
+ fighting, biting, scratching,--firing crackers and cannons in
+ college entries,--heavy meat suppers, with oceans of strong
+ waters,--and then headache, thirst, soda and congress-water in the
+ morning, and perhaps a visit from the doctor or the
+ president,--presentments by the grand jury for playing at cards
+ and overturning apple-carts,--personating ghosts with
+ winding-sheets, and getting knocked on the head for their
+ pains,--serenading sweethearts, and taking linchpins out of
+ wagons,--making sober people drunk and drunken people
+ sober,--battling with watchmen, constables, and sheriffs,--running
+ away from the tailors and tavern-keepers,--kissing country girls,
+ and battling with their beaux,--tricks upon the tutors, and
+ shaving the tails of the president's horses,--stealing away the
+ lion or the elephant at an animal show, and pelting strolling
+ players,--putting hencoops upon churches, painting out signs, and
+ carrying off platforms,--throwing hot rolls under the table, and
+ biscuit at the steward's head,--playing musical seals at prayers,
+ and saying prayers at rows,--gambling in study hours, and filching
+ at recitation,--having one face for the president and another for
+ the fellows,--and, finally, being sent home with a letter to your
+ father, informing him that you are corrupting the morals of your
+ _teachers_ in these pranks. These are a few of the classical
+ studies into which the dear little innocents are never initiated,
+ while they form no small part of collegiate education in America,
+ as we can testify from experience.
+
+ "Many a fine fellow makes the first trial of a stump speech, with
+ an extract from an Irish sermon at a drunken row; his head perhaps
+ stuck three feet through the window of the little bar in a tavern,
+ and his audience sitting round on the beer-tables, armed with
+ sticks, stones, and staves. One, who with drunken gravity keeps
+ his head and stick moving all the while, says, that he concurs
+ fully in opinion with the speaker; though, if asked what the
+ subject is, he swears it is the Greek question. The question and
+ the laugh go round. One avers stoutly that it is Catholic
+ emancipation; a third vociferates that it is a complete
+ justification of Brutus for killing Cæsar; a fourth thinks it a
+ part of the recitation of the day, while the most drunken man of
+ the company jumps down from his seat on the table, and swears that
+ he can see through the fellow clearly, 'it's nothing but sleight
+ of hand;' with which he exclaims, as he rubs his eyes and looks
+ round, 'Bless my soul, boys, how drunk you all are; come, I'll
+ help you to your room before matters get worse,' leading off the
+ soberest man in the room. The party then breaks up in a regular
+ row; I think I see the _old_ fellows now, marching off two and two
+ with the true would-be sober and drunken gravity, every man
+ thinking that he is completely cheating his neighbour, by his
+ picked steps and exactly poised head and shoulders, like a drunken
+ soldier on drill. One gets into a carriage rut; another climbs
+ into a pig-sty, and thinks he is getting over the college fence. A
+ third falls over a cow, while a fourth takes off his hat to a
+ blind horse, mistaking him in the dark for the president. At
+ length they are lodged in bed, with boots, hats, and clubs, like
+ soldiers expecting a surprise. Some murder a song or two in a
+ drunken twang, while the rest snore in chorus.
+
+ "But next comes the awful reward of transgression in the morning;
+ dry throats, aching limbs, torn coats, sick stomachs, haggard
+ countenances, swelled heads. The trembling and moody toilet is
+ made; the bell rings for prayers; and a more repentant set of
+ sinners never assembled under its sound. All wonder what has
+ become of the joyous feelings of the previous night, and think
+ with shame of such actions and speeches as they can recollect.
+ Hereupon follows a gloomy and melancholy day. They are home-sick.
+ Relations, friends, and the scenes of childhood, with all their
+ quiet, innocent, and heartfelt pleasures, glide before the
+ imagination. The head becomes dizzy; the heart palpitates; the
+ hands tremble, and the sight grows double. Then comes the fear of
+ illness, and death in a strange land. Associates of the 'row' are
+ avoided; several chapters in the Bible are read; repentance is
+ promised; sleep settles the nervous system; and next morning they
+ arise gay and happy. This continues until the scene is repeated,
+ and so on, until one half forswear brandy and the other half
+ become confirmed sots.
+
+ "Here is a coherent epistle for you. But if you dislike it, send
+ it back, and I will divide it into--first--secondly--thirdly, et
+ cetera, as the old president did his sermons.
+
+ "B. RANDOLPH."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+After the visit to the monument, Chevillere daily inquired concerning
+the health of the interesting invalid; and as regularly was
+indisposition pleaded for her non-appearance. Late in the evening of the
+third day, he was slowly pacing the pavement in front of the hotel; now
+and then throwing a wistful glance at the lighted window of the lady,
+when all at once he suddenly wheeled round, and grasping in the dark,
+was surprised to find that a person whom he had supposed to be
+impertinently dogging his steps, had eluded his grasp. He grimly smiled
+at his own exasperation for an imaginary cause, hastily adjusted his
+cloak, and turned down the street leading most directly to the bay.
+
+When he arrived at the quiet and deserted wharf, and the rapid flow of
+his impetuous blood was retarded by the cool invigorating breeze which
+swept over the face of the water, he saw an old yawl lying on the dock,
+with its broad bottom turned to the bay. Negligently leaning his person
+at full length against its weather-beaten bottom, and drawing down his
+hat close over his brows, he surrendered himself to one of those
+habitual reveries which the southern well knows how to enjoy. Had his
+mind and feelings been attuned to such things at the time, the scene
+itself would have furnished no uninteresting subject, with its hundred
+little lights, gleaming in the intense fog and darkness, and the
+numberless vessels that lay upon the bosom of the waters, with their
+dark outlines dimly visible, like slumbering monsters of their own
+element. He heeded them not; yet were his feelings insensibly impressed
+with the surrounding objects, and deeply tinctured with the profound
+gloom of the time and scene. The direct current of his thoughts pointed,
+however, in the direction of the invalid. Her extreme youth, beauty, and
+apparent innocence,--her deep distress and profound melancholy,
+naturally produced a corresponding depression in his own otherwise
+elastic spirits. He was perfectly unconscious of the time he had spent
+in this way, when accidentally turning his head to one side, he was
+struck with the appearance of something intercepting the line of vision
+in that direction. He was just about to approach the cause of his
+surprise, when a deep voice, issuing from the very spot, added not a
+little to his superstitious mood, by the exact manner in which it chimed
+in with the present subject of his meditations.
+
+"A beautiful young woman in affliction is a very dangerous subject of
+meditation, under some circumstances."
+
+"An honest heart fears no danger from any earthly source," was the
+reply.
+
+"Honesty is no guard against external danger in this world, whether
+moral or physical," said the figure.
+
+"Discernment may lend a hand to honesty in such a case."
+
+"Ha! ha! ha!" hideously retorted the intruder; "Discernment, said you?
+Man's discernment is a mighty thing; by it he reads the past, the
+present, and the future; what can withstand his mighty vision? He can
+descry danger at a distance, and bring happiness within his grasp; he
+can tell the objects of his own creation, and his Creator's first
+beginning; he can read the starry alphabet in yonder heavens, and fathom
+the great deep; he can laugh at the instinct of grovelling creation, and
+thunder the dogmas of reason in the teeth of revelation itself!
+Discernment, indeed! ha! ha! ha! why, man is not half so well off as the
+brutes. What is their instinct but God's ever present and supporting
+hand; but man--he has neither perfect reason nor instinct! He has the
+conscience of an angel, and the impulses of a devil; and reason sits
+between them, for an umpire, with a fool's cap upon her head! Impulse
+bribes reason, and reason laughs at conscience. Impulse leads downward,
+like the power of gravity; and conscience struggles upward like the
+nightmare: but reason and discernment will traffic and bargain with
+impulse for one moment, and blind or cheat conscience the next! Turn
+mankind loose with all their reason without providence, and they will
+butt each other's foolish brains out! Bribed conscience makes
+hypocrites,--frightened conscience makes fanatics,--but reason-drilled
+conscience makes incarnate devils!"
+
+"But," said Chevillere, involuntarily interested by this wild rhapsody,
+"a tender, conscience-instructed reason, and christianized impulses,
+make an honest and a discerning man, too."
+
+"Instructed reason! who teaches man's reason, but the inward devils of
+his impulses? A few good parents may point upward, periodically, but the
+impulses pull down! down! down! for ever! no intermission. If they would
+let go, I myself could plunge into the sea; but the deeper we plunge,
+the harder they pull! The farther we sink, the heavier they become. Oh!
+man! of what a cursed race art thou! Think you the inhabitants of the
+moon are likewise under the ban of God's displeasure?"
+
+"I indulge in no such impracticable dreams," said Chevillere.
+
+"No! no! _you_ dream of paradise; but remember what I now tell you, your
+paradise will not be without its Eve, and its serpent too!"
+
+"To whom do you allude?"
+
+"To the lady of whom you were thinking but now."
+
+"You know not what you say," said Chevillere.
+
+"Do I not? Perhaps you would have me speak more plainly! Perhaps you
+could screw up your resolution to the point, that I might amputate your
+hopes one by one, as a poor fellow sees the surgeon carrying off his
+bloody limbs; nay, I could do it!"
+
+"Why, sir, you never saw me till within the hour."
+
+"Have I not? perhaps not; I would to heaven I could say as much about
+the lady."
+
+"To what lady do you so often allude?"
+
+"To the lady with the _black mantle_."
+
+"Hold, she is all innocence and purity."
+
+"Innocence and purity! Eve was innocent and pure too! yea, and
+surpassingly beautiful! but she fell! Alas! her daughters are like her."
+
+"Come, sir," said Chevillere, with some exasperation, "let us put a stop
+to this discourse; it is not pleasing to me, and I feel sure it is not
+useful to you."
+
+"Be it so," said the intruder, drawing up his long goat's-hair cloak,
+and pulling a flat cloth cap closely over his gray locks, as they for a
+moment became visible by the reflection of the long horizontal rays of a
+lamp from the deck of a neighbouring vessel; "be it so, sir; there is no
+convincing a child that a _beautiful_ candle will burn until it scorches
+its fingers."
+
+"In God's name, then, out with it, sir! what is it that seems to burn so
+upon your tongue? come, out with it!" said Chevillere, sharply.
+
+"For what do you take me, young man? a gossip or a stripling! I am
+neither one nor the other; I am old enough to be your father; as well
+born and as well educated as he ever was; and (notwithstanding your
+southern blood and aristocratic notions) it may be as proud; farewell,
+sir, and the next time I offer to pull you from the edge of a precipice,
+perhaps you will listen with more respect to one of double your age, who
+can have no interest in deceiving you. Farewell, sir!"
+
+"Stay! stay! a moment,--one word more. Did you not visit Washington's
+monument three days ago, and see me there for the first time?"
+
+"I could answer either yes or no to that question. How do you know, sir,
+that we have not met before, centuries ago? Do you not sometimes foresee
+a whole scene, just as it afterward takes place? Do you not sometimes
+look upon a strange face with a shudder? Does not a feature--a smile--or
+an expression of them combined--sometimes awake the slumbering memory of
+ages? Is it not so? have you never communed with the dead?"
+
+"Never, sir."
+
+"I have, often! often!--and many times have I been warned of approaching
+evils, by these dreamy conversations; I never dream of seeing my father
+smile upon me, that something good does not speedily follow; nor of
+snakes and serpents, unattended by bad news or bad fortune. Of these
+things I usually dream the night before meeting the lady yonder, after a
+long absence."
+
+"I supposed as much," said Chevillere.
+
+"How, sir."
+
+"I supposed that you had _dreamed_ something against that pure and
+unfortunate young lady."
+
+"Would to Heaven it were all a dream! Sunshine would again break into
+the dark regions of my thoughts."
+
+"Suppose I should undertake and pledge my life to convince you that it
+is so."
+
+"You might convince me of your sincerity, but not of your power. Can you
+raise the dead?"
+
+"No, but what has raising the dead to do with the lady?"
+
+"More than you imagine, perhaps."
+
+"Ah, I see it is useless to attempt what I proposed and hoped to effect
+for the sake of the lady's peace. Have you no friends with you in this
+city?"
+
+"Yes, I have a dog! there sits the best friend I ever had, save one!"
+
+"My dear sir! permit me to say I think you far from being well."
+
+"I never felt better in health than I do at this moment."
+
+"But we are not judges of our own ailments: Physicians do not often
+prescribe for themselves."
+
+"I tell you, sir, I am well!"
+
+"Have it so, sir! but if you are the person whom I met a few days since
+at the monument, I would mildly and respectfully recommend to you to
+think no more of the lady you saw there with me. You certainly labour
+under some grievous error, with regard to her, at least."
+
+"You will find, when it is too late, perhaps, that others instead of me
+are labouring under _fatal_ errors concerning that young lady!
+Farewell, sir, farewell. When next we meet, you will listen with a more
+attentive ear to what I have to say; you will have observed many strange
+things yourself, and you will naturally seek, rather than repel a
+solution of the mystery." Then with a signal to his dog, he hastily went
+from the wharf, leaving Chevillere in no enviable state of mind.
+
+Youthful thoughts will not long voluntarily dwell upon the gloomy aspect
+even of the circumstances surrounding themselves; it was very natural,
+therefore, that Chevillere should reflect with much complacency upon the
+tendency of his friend Lamar's laughing philosophy; nor was he long in
+threading his way to the lodgings of the Kentuckian. He had calculated
+with great certainty upon finding his friend there, and on ascending the
+three flights of stairs, he heard the voices of both in full chorus of
+laughter, that of Lamar indicating his most joyful mood. He rapped at
+the door once or twice before he was heard. "Come in!" shouted the
+backwoodsman, "what the devil's the use of knocking with every mug of
+punch." Lamar sprang to his feet at the sight of his friend, with
+volumes of smoke rolling over his head, and laying one hand on
+Chevillere's back and another on his breast, cried in the true mock
+heroic;--"'Be thy intents wicked or charitable, thou com'st in such a
+questionable shape, that I will speak to thee.' 'Revisit'st thou thus
+the glimpses of the moon, making night hideous, and us fools of'
+liquor--'so horribly to shake our dispositions, with thoughts beyond the
+reaches of our souls; say, why is this?' But, by old Shakspeare's beard,
+you look like a ghost indeed! why, whence com'st thou, man? see his
+cloak, too! it is covered with sawdust!"
+
+"Hurrah for old Kentuck!" said Damon, "he's been to the circus! I say,
+stranger, was there any knockin down and draggin out there. O! black
+eyes and bruises! what a rascally appetite I've got now for a knock
+down; I swear I think my hands will git as tender as a woman's, if I
+don't git a little now and then jist to keep 'em in."
+
+"I may be soiled from leaning against a boat at the dock," said
+Chevillere.
+
+"You certainly have the air of one who had tried a few perils by land
+and sea," said Lamar.
+
+"The fact is, I do not feel well, nor in high spirits, and I came here
+on purpose to see if Damon could not brighten me up a little."
+
+"To be sure I can," said he; "but why didn't you come sooner, and then
+we could all have gone to the circus together; that's the place for my
+money; you see you want something to make your blood circulate: a small
+taste or two would soon bring you round."
+
+"A taste of what?" asked Chevillere.
+
+"A small bit of a regular row, to be sure; all in good-nature, you know;
+a man needn't git in a passion, in takin a little exercise after bein
+cooped up here all day, in one of these cocklofts--why, if I sit here an
+hour, and go down in the street, by hokies, but I want to snort
+directly; I feel like old Pete when he's been stabled up for a week or
+two, and jist turned loose to graze a little; and I'll tell you what it
+is, stranger, I'm for making a straight coat-tail out of this place, and
+that in a hurry, for I've got through all my business now, and I'm keen
+to be among the Yorkers; for I've heard tell there's smashin work there
+every night."
+
+"Have you any acquaintances there?" asked Lamar.
+
+"No; but I expect to find some of our Kentuck boys there, who come round
+by the lakes; and if I do, I rather reckon we'll weed a wide row."
+
+"Take care you do not run against old Hays in your mad pranks," said
+Chevillere.
+
+"They say he's a little touched with the snappin-turtle, but I'm thinkin
+he'd hardly try old Kentuck at a fight or a foot-race."
+
+"He has had a good many fights and foot-races in his day," said
+Chevillere.
+
+"Yes," said Damon, "but always with rogues; he'd find it rather a
+different business at an honest ground-scuffle, where every man had to
+take care of his own ears."
+
+"You think, then, he could not be so successful in Kentucky as he is in
+New-York, at his occupation," said Lamar.
+
+"He'd be off the scent there, and I rather think he'd soon look like the
+babes in the woods; you see he has the rogues in the city like a coon
+when he's treed; an old dog's better than a young one in such a fix."
+
+"But come, Damon, go on with your adventures of the day which
+Chevillere's entrance interrupted."
+
+"Not till we have wet our whistles; come, stranger (to Chevillere), you
+have'nt drank nothin since you came into the room, nor into the city
+either, for what I know."
+
+"You know," said Chevillere, "that I am a cold water man, upon taste and
+principle both."
+
+"And that's what I call ra'al hard drink; well, here's to the little gal
+of the circus, and the little gal down yonder at the hotel; cold water's
+but a sorry drink to pledge such warm-hearted creters--but I see talking
+of them makes you look solemncholy again, and so here goes for my day's
+work; let me see--where did I leave off?"
+
+"At the commission house where you carried the letter," said Lamar.
+
+"Ah, by the hokies! so it was. Well, you see, I marched into the great
+store, as they had told me it was, with my nose uppermost, like a pig in
+the wind, I had an order on them for some of the eel-skins--but I soon
+brought my snout down agin; ho! ho! thought I, here's a pretty spot of
+work! I'm a Turk if I aint tetotally dished."
+
+"What was the matter?" said Chevillere.
+
+"Why, instead of all the fine things loomin out in the wind as I
+expected for such great marchants, I found nothing but a long empty
+store, and no shelves even, and there sat two or three starched lookin
+dogs, on so many old rum bar'ls; I swear I thought in a minute about our
+old still-house, and the school-master, and the miller, and the
+blacksmith, and the stiller, talkin politics over the bar'ls, and takin
+a swig every now and then out of the old proof-vial."
+
+"Well! you presented your draft," said Lamar, "and what then?"
+
+"No I did'nt--I got a straddle of a bar'l too; I thought I would take a
+dish of chat, for that was about the most I expected to get. Rat me! but
+I began to feel a little particular about the gizzard in thoughts of
+sellin old Pete to get home on; I put on a long face. It's everlastin
+dull times for business, said I. 'O sir, you are quite mistaken,
+business is taking a look up--it's getting very brisk indeed.' And he
+rubbed his hands, and looked as glad as if he had had a drink of that
+hot punch. So, thought I, I'm off the trail; but I thought I would tree
+him next time. 'The best horses, said I, will stumble sometimes.' 'Sir?'
+said he, I said 'the honestest men sometimes make bad speculations.'
+'Oh!' said he, 'I understand you! but I hope business is brisk and money
+plenty this season in the west.' Now, thought I, he's got the boot on
+the wrong leg this time; 'yes, said I, we can't complain, but I must say
+I thought it looked a little dull hereabouts.' 'O, you western men are
+such driving fellows, that you can't put up with our slow way of makin
+money.' He's feedin me on soft corn, thought I. 'We do a little now and
+then, but getting the money afterward is all our trouble,' said I. 'Why,
+sir, you have hit the nail upon the head; that's the difficulty
+everywhere,' said he. I thought I would run him into a stand 'fore long;
+but he hoisted his tail and flung me clean off the trail agin. 'Can't I
+sell you half a dozen bar'ls of cognac brandy to-day,' said he. I
+snapped my fingers and jumped up, and by the long Harry I was near
+raisin the whoop; for I thought old Pete and the money was all safe, and
+so it was. 'O! the hunters of Kentucky! old Kentucky;' and he began to
+sing and caper round the table.
+
+"Did he pay the money?" asked Chevillere.
+
+"Not exactly; these city chaps keep their money buried, I believe, for
+you never see none of it; I reckon they're 'fraid it'll spile;
+howsomever, he gave me an order on the bank for the eel-skins."
+
+"Then you took your leave," said Lamar.
+
+"No; he asked me if I had ever seen an auction of a ship's cargo; I said
+no, I had never seen more nor a Kentuck vendue: he asked me to go along;
+I'm your man, said I, for I expected there would be smashin work if a
+whole ship-load was to be sold, for I have seen some very clever little
+skrimmages at a vendue; well, when we got there, there was boxes and
+bags all laying in rows, and little troughs laying under them, like them
+we catch sugar-water in. Some had little long spoons made on purpose to
+suck sugar with, and some had little augers for boring holes; presently
+the crier began. '_Seven, seven, seven--eight, eight, eight cents a
+pound, going, going_,' and smash went the little mallet; 'how many do
+you take, sir? twenty, or the hundred boxes?' said he. 'Take the
+hundred,' said a man, that looked like he wasn't worth the powder that
+would blow him up."
+
+"Could you always tell who bid?"
+
+"No; they mostly did it by winkin, I believe; sometimes one fellow would
+grunt this side and another that side; I kept my head bobbin after them
+first one side and then the other; but whenever I looked in their faces
+their eyes looked as sleepy as a dog in fly-time, just waitin to snap a
+fellow that was buzzin about his ears."
+
+"Did you find out at last who were the bidders?"
+
+"No; they shut up their faces like steel-traps. Once or twice, maybe, I
+saw a dyin-away wrinkle round a feller's mouth, like the rings in the
+water when you throw a stone in; but they soon faded away, and they
+looked as smooth and deceitful as a pool of deep water itself agin."
+
+"They tasted and tried the articles, of course, before they bought?"
+
+"Yes; some of them had their mouths daubed, like children suckin 'lasses
+candy; and some of their big noses was stuck full of Bohea tea, outside
+and in, like old Pete when he's had a good feed of chopped rye and cut
+straw."
+
+"And what sort of a man was the auctioneer?"
+
+"Why, his mouth went so fast when he got to '_going, going, going_,'
+that you couldn't say _stop_, if you had had your mouth fixed; but his
+face I didn't like at all."
+
+"What was there in his face objectionable?"
+
+"O! I can't tell exactly, it looked out of all sort of nature; a good
+deal I don't know howish. One thing I'll be sworn to, you would never
+see such a one in old Kentuck; there every man wears his Sunday face on
+week days."
+
+"I suppose you mean that the man was disfigured with affectation," said
+Chevillere.
+
+"You've hit it, stranger, you've hit it; that's the very word I wanted
+to be at, but I couldn't get it out. Well, from the vendue I took a
+stroll round town, to see the lads and lasses; how they carried their
+heads in these parts, and maybe to see how they carried on their
+_sparkin_ in a big town like this; for, to tell you the truth, that's
+one of the things I never could see how they carried on here."
+
+"How did you manage such things in the west? Is there any thing peculiar
+in your method?"
+
+"I can't say we're different from other folks in the country, but you
+see we have abundance of chances to court the gals a little; for there's
+our weddings."
+
+"There are weddings here, too, I hope," said Lamar.
+
+"Yes, and a pretty business they make of 'em; I blundered into a church
+the other day, and what should be goin on there but a weddin; and smash
+my apple-cart, if there wasn't more cryin and snifflin than I've seen at
+many an honest man's funeral, and all in broad daylight, too; and when
+the parson had got through his flummery, with his long white mornin
+gown, they all jumped into carriages, and off they went away into the
+country somewhere, to hide themselves. I rather suspect they had stole a
+march on the old folks, else they wouldn't have run so as if the devil
+was at their heels."
+
+"How do you conduct such things in the west?" asked Lamar.
+
+"Oh! there we have quiltings, skutchings, and sewin frolics, and makin
+apple butter, and all such like; and they always wind up at the little
+end with a rip-sneezin dance, and that's where we do the sparkin; well,
+presently a weddin grows out of it, and maybe then there isn't a little
+fun agoing, dance all night, and play all sort of games, at least all
+them sort that wind up in kissin the gals, and that they manage to bring
+about by sellin pawns, and one thing or other. For my part, I never
+could see into any but the kissin part, and that you know was the cream
+of the joke."
+
+"They do not often go to church to get married then," said Chevillere.
+
+"No; I never saw anybody married at church before t'other day, and I
+hope it'll be a long time before their new-fangled ways travels out to
+old Kentuck; there our gals and boys stands up before the parson a few
+minutes, and he rolls his tobacco two or three times over his teeth,
+and _chaws_ a few words, and it's all over before you could say 'God
+save the commonwealth' three times; and what's the use in makin three
+bites of a cherry?"
+
+"But you have wandered from your point," said Lamar; "you started out on
+an expedition to see how the lads and lasses carried themselves here."
+
+"O! ay, sure enough; well, one of the first things I come across was a
+parcel of gals and boys on horseback, and I'm flummucked if it wouldn't
+have been a pretty tolerable show in the land of hogs and homminy. The
+gals rode well enough, considering how they were hampered with clothes
+and trumpery; but the men! O smashy! how they rode! bobbin up and down
+on the saddle, with three motions to the horse's one. I'm an Injin if
+old Pete Ironsides wouldn't have kicked up his heels and squealed at the
+very first motion of the rider goin ahead of him; and then the saddles
+were stuck on the shoulders of the animals, like a hump on a man's back,
+or a pair of _haims_ to hitch traces to. One of them chaps would ride a
+saddle about twice as hard as a horse. I was lookin evry minute for one
+of 'em to light behind his saddle."
+
+"Did all the gentlemen and ladies you met carry themselves so
+unnaturally?" said Lamar.
+
+"No; I met one young lady dressed in black that I thought I had seen
+before somewhere, and her spark too; but they were too busy to see me.
+_She_ looked more coy and shamefaced, like our country gals, than any of
+them."
+
+"How did the gentleman bear himself? was he polite and respectful in his
+carriage?" said Lamar, smiling, and looking at Chevillere.
+
+"Oh, yes! he bowed his head close down to the bonnet of the pretty
+little lady, and walked that way all through the street, as if he was
+afraid to lose so much as a word; sometimes she seemed to be just ready
+to cry, and looked pale and frightened. I rather suppose her old dad's a
+little sour or cross, maybe; but for all I couldn't help thinkin what a
+clever nice young couple they would make to stand up before the parson."
+
+Chevillere attempted reserve of manner, but blushed and smiled in spite
+of himself, as he asked Damon, "Not your chaw-tobacco parson, I hope?"
+
+"And why not? what if he _would_ roll his chaw-tobacco into one cheek at
+you, while he coupled you up with the other? I'll be bound you'd look at
+somebody else's pretty cheeks more nor you would at the parson's
+chaw-tobacco; besides, what harm is there in a parson's chawin? I know
+an old one who would no more git up into his pulpit of a Sunday without
+a good smart plug in his mouth, than I would strike my own brother when
+he's down. I've seen him afore now, when his wind held out longer than
+his tobacco, run his finger first into one jacket-pocket, and then into
+the other, and at last he'd draw a little piece of pigtail, just up to
+the top of the water (as you may say), and then he'd let it go again."
+
+"Some virtuous shame, in view of the congregation, I suppose," said
+Chevillere.
+
+"Yes, that was it; but I never heard any of the sarmont after the old
+boy's ammunition run out."
+
+"Why, what had his tobacco to do with your listening?"
+
+"A great deal; no sooner would the old feller begin to fumble in his
+pockets, than my hand always run into mine, of its own accord, and
+lugged out a chunk of a twist just ready to hand to the old man, and
+then when I'd find it couldn't be, I naturally took a plug myself, and
+chawed for the old boss till his wind _flagg'd_."
+
+"Or, in other words, his desire for the weed made you desire it, to cure
+which you chewed for yourself, and flattered your conscience all the
+while that you were rendering him a service," said Chevillere.
+
+"Very like! very like! for I know it makes a feller husky dry to see
+another famishin for a little of the cretur."
+
+"Not so much so, perhaps, as if a dry person, as you call him, should
+see another drinking, and could get none himself."
+
+"Oh! but that's a case out of all nature, as one may say, in these
+parts, anyhow, where liquor runs down the streets, after a manner."
+
+Chevillere and Lamar, both rising, exchanged the usual salutations, and
+the _good night! good night!_ went the rounds of all present.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+"Were you not delighted with the wild and mountainous scenery of the
+country around the Virginia Springs?" said Victor Chevillere to Miss St.
+Clair, on the morning after the scene related in the last chapter, as
+the lady reclined, in a pensive mood, in the room before described.
+
+"Oh, sir, you forget that I was too feeble in mind and body to enjoy the
+scenery around me then, or to partake of the enthusiasm of my friends on
+the subject. The rich and romantic scenery of the White Sulphur was
+highly attractive to me, when I became somewhat convalescent; yet I
+shall carry with me through life a sad remembrance of scenes, which to
+many others of my age and sex will ever be associated with the gay
+dance, the enlivening gallopade, the stirring music, and with
+adventurous equestrian excursions among the mountains."
+
+"I believe," said Chevillere, "that the most melancholy reflections may
+be and are much softened and mellowed in after-life, by being associated
+in the mind with the profoundly poetical feelings excited by the
+constant view of quiet mountain scenery; such as the well-remembered,
+long, long line of blue peaks, stretching far away until they reach the
+clouds and the horizon."
+
+"It is indeed true," said she, "that kind and beautiful nature, in the
+season of green leaves and flowers, will sometimes almost tempt us to
+believe that misery is not the inevitable lot of the human family; but
+when the consciousness of the one and the beauty of the other are
+together present to us, it depends entirely upon the degree, whether the
+beauty softens the suffering or not."
+
+"In other words," said he, "whether the evil be so irremediable that
+_hope_ cannot enter the heart; that the ravishing beauty of nature
+cannot excite benevolence, devotion, and love."
+
+"That was not entirely my case," said she, "for I am grateful for having
+felt some pleasing excitement at the time, and for being able now to
+call up many pleasurable remembrances, clouded as they are for the most
+part with sadness."
+
+"If I have been rightly informed, you did not visit all the other
+springs around the White Sulphur."
+
+"My health would not permit of our making the entire fashionable round."
+
+"Oh, then you have missed much pleasure," said he. "There are the Sweet
+Springs, rising out of the earth like a boiling caldron, with brilliant
+little balloons of gas ever ascending to the top of the water, and
+bursting in the sunbeams. There is not perhaps in the world such another
+natural fountain of soda-water. And there is the Salt Sulphur, with its
+high romantic hills covered with herds, and its beautiful meadows, and
+its long village of neat white cottages, and its splendid
+assembly-rooms, and its sumptuous banquets of wild game and artificial
+luxuries. But, above all, there is the Warm Spring, with its clear blue
+crystal baths, large enough for a troop of horse to swim in; there,
+likewise, is an extensive green lawn, flanked on the one side by the
+same kind of neat white cottages, and on the other by the line of blue
+mountains, rising abruptly from the plain within gun-shot of the baths.
+On a clear moonlight night, one may see the invalids sitting out on the
+green in front of their doors, enjoying the placid scenery of the
+valley, and the profound and solemn monotony of the overhanging
+mountains,--sometimes, indeed, interrupted by the bustle of a new
+arrival, the neighing of horses, the crash of the wheels, the hoarse
+voices of the coachmen as they exchange advice upon the descent into the
+valley, or by the meeting of old friends and fellow-invalids, perhaps
+acquaintances of a former season, and fellow-sufferers with the gout,
+bantering each other upon their speed."
+
+"From what little I saw of them, I think they perfectly justify the
+southern enthusiasm which we found everywhere on the subject; and I
+should think that there is no finer opportunity of seeing southern
+fashionable society."
+
+"True; our wealthiest and most fashionable people resort thither every
+season. Yet I cannot say in truth, from what I have observed myself,
+that our aristocracy are seen there to the best advantage. They are too
+much in their holyday suit of manners,--too artificial,--too unnatural.
+I have seen people who were agreeable at home, become affected and
+disagreeable at watering-places. I have also seen some who were reserved
+at home, become quite affable there. The latter effect, however, was by
+no means so common as the former."
+
+"I did not see much affectation, or many unnatural people at the White
+Sulphur," said the lady.
+
+"I cannot say that it is one of the besetting sins of the southern
+fashionables; all I meant to say was, that they show more of it there
+than at home."
+
+"For my own part, I was delighted with the generous, free, and
+open-hearted manner in which I was treated by the few female
+acquaintances I made; and I am almost ashamed to acknowledge that they
+were far more intelligent and accomplished than my prejudices had taught
+me to expect."
+
+"You acknowledge, then, that you had some provincial prejudices. Let me
+see! _then_ I must take you regularly to account, and catechise you."
+
+"Well," said the lady, as lightly as her habitual sadness ever
+permitted, "I will answer truly."
+
+"I know you will speak truly whatever you do answer; but will you speak
+the whole truth in answer to whatever I shall ask?"
+
+A sad and afflicted expression appeared upon her countenance as she
+replied, "I need hardly say to Mr. Chevillere, that those questions
+which are proper for him to ask and for me to hear shall be fully
+answered."
+
+"You do me but justice in supposing that I would not discredit my new
+dignity, by propounding questions which would lessen me in the eyes of a
+fair witness; but, to tell you the truth, I seriously meditated putting
+a few in addition to such as were local, and perhaps in a more serious
+mood than these might demand."
+
+"Proceed, sir, proceed," said the lady, somewhat perturbed; "I must
+reserve the right to answer or not. No trifling impediment, however,
+shall prevent me from gratifying your curiosity."
+
+"Would you consider it a great misfortune to reside in the southern
+states?"
+
+"Places and countries are to me nearly alike."
+
+"How so? You surely prefer your native land to all others?"
+
+"Unhappiness soon makes us indifferent to mere locality; situated as I
+am, many would prefer new scenes."
+
+"Does not affliction enlarge the heart, and extend the affections?"
+
+"I believe that slight sufferings make us captious--great ones, humane
+and benevolent."
+
+"Is it a natural consequence, that, when benevolence becomes universal,
+personal affections and partialities wither in proportion?"
+
+"Certainly not, as a consequence; but it is questionable whether
+blighted hopes do not generally precede the enlarged philanthropy spoken
+of."
+
+"May not much travelling and experience of the world produce the same
+effect?"
+
+"I cannot speak experimentally on that point; but I think it is very
+probable they do upon a masculine mind."
+
+As Chevillere was about to continue his half-serious, half-jesting
+questions, Mr. Brumley abruptly entered, and announced to his
+daughter-in-law his determination to proceed northward early on the
+following morning; and almost at the same moment, old Cato, with his
+stately step, profound bow, and cap in hand, presented a letter to his
+master, which he instantly knew by the superscription to be from
+Randolph. Presenting his regards to them both, he retired to peruse the
+epistle, which will be found in the next chapter.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+ B. RANDOLPH TO V. CHEVILLERE.
+
+ "Belville, High Hills of the Santee, S. Carolina.
+
+ "DEAR CHUM,
+
+ "The deserts of Africa are not to be compared, for loneliness, to
+ a South Carolinian swamp. Oh! the comforts and blessings of a
+ corduroy turnpike! These, you know, are made of poles laid down
+ in the bottom of the swamps for a road, in humble imitation of
+ that same most durable web. But the swamps gone through, and
+ myself safely landed here--this Belville of yours is a most
+ desirable place. Your father must have been a man of taste,
+ friend Victor. The grove of Pride of India trees, in front of the
+ villa, stands exactly as you left it; the vines run up and around
+ Bell's window as beautiful as ever; the pigeons wheel over the
+ garden and cotton-fields as gayly as of old. The flowers which
+ perfume this delightful and balmy air, send up their sweets from
+ the garden and the lawn as they have done these forty years; at
+ least so testifies old Tombo the gardener. Your favourite horse
+ thrives, and is none the worse for a trial of his speed and
+ bottom which I made the other day in a race with my own impetuous
+ thoughts. Your mother seems happier than I have ever seen her;
+ and little Virginia Bell is the fairest flower on the Chevillere
+ estate. Will you believe it! she introduced me to the housekeeper
+ on my arrival as having been her affianced bridegroom ever since
+ she was three months old, and then enjoyed a school-girl laugh.
+ By St. Benedict, that laugh cut nearer to my heart than a funeral
+ sermon.
+
+ "Why have you not written to her and extolled some of my good
+ qualities? She will never find them out! and as to my becoming a
+ serious, sighing suitor, I am ten times farther from it than I
+ was the first day I blundered into such dangerous company. If I
+ were to elongate my phiz by way of preparative for a sigh, she
+ would split her little sides with laughing at me. The fact is, I
+ begin to think myself pretty considerably of an ass among the
+ ladies, as your Yankees would express it. What shall I do? shall
+ I run for it? or shall I stand here and die of the cold plague?
+ If I laugh, she laughs with me; if I look serious, she laughs at
+ me; if we visit, I am laughed at; if we are visited, I am stared
+ at; and thus it is, day after day, and week after week. To your
+ mother, I no doubt appear like a more rational creature, but
+ before Miss Bell I am utterly at a loss and dumbfoundered.
+
+ "How can I show your charming cousin that I am not the fool she
+ takes me for? must I shoot somebody? That would be too
+ bloody-minded. Must I write a book? Sicken and become
+ interesting? Ah! I have it! I'll get the fever and ague (no hard
+ matter you know here); but then a man looks so unromantic with
+ his teeth, and his hands, and his feet all in motion like a negro
+ dancing 'Juba.' A lady would as soon think of falling in love
+ with a culprit on the gibbet. I shall certainly try what absence
+ will do; but then suppose that I am a bore, and no one entreats
+ me to stay! Your mother might deem it indelicate, under the
+ circumstances, for she certainly sees that I am a lost sinner;
+ then I should be blown, indeed, with all my sins upon my head!
+ without one redeeming quality for the little Bell to dwell upon
+ in my absence. If I had rescued somebody from a watery
+ grave--stopped a pair of runaway horses--saved somebody's
+ life--shot a robber--been wounded myself--should turn out to be
+ some lord's heir in England--had jumped down the Passaic or the
+ Niagara--distinguished myself against the Indians or the
+ Algerines--or even killed a mad dog--it would not be so desperate
+ a case for the hero of a love affair.
+
+ "But here I am--a poor forlorn somebody, without a single trait
+ of heroism in my composition, or a solitary past deed of the kind
+ to boast of; unless it may be bursting little brass bombs under
+ the tutor's windows in College, or shaving a horse's tail, or one
+ side of a drunken man's whiskers, or laying two drunken fellows
+ at each other's door. Suppose I should get old Tombo, the
+ gardener, into the river by stratagem, merely that I might pull
+ him out again; as he seems to be a universal favourite here. But
+ then suppose I should drown him in these mock heroics? Ah, I see
+ I shall have to remain plain Beverly Randolph all my days! Alas!
+ the days of chivalry are gone! If I could splinter a lance with
+ some of these Sir Hotheads, or Sir Blunderbys, the case might not
+ be so desperate.
+
+ "Thank Heaven, however, that the age of poetry is not gone too;
+ for poetry, you know, is but the shadow or reflection of
+ chivalry--heroism--and action! First an age of deeds, and then an
+ age of song--so here goes for the doggerel. But let me see; are
+ there not more than two ages? what succeeds to an age of poetry?
+ One of philosophy! What succeeds philosophy? Cynicism or
+ infidelity--next a utilitarian age, and lastly we have a mongrel
+ compound of all--then we have revolutions, bloodshed, sentiment,
+ religion, and spinning-jennies. Now you see I have hit it! we
+ live in the mongrel age; a hero of this era should
+ fight--write--pray--and spin cotton! Let's see how all these
+ could be united into a picture suitable for a frontispiece to a
+ work of the current age. First there must be a spinning-jenny to
+ go by steam, to the wheel of which there must be a hand-organ.
+ The steam must be scattered against an enemy; a long nosed fellow
+ with the real nasal twang must be seen upon his knees attending
+ the jenny, and singing doggerel to the music of the
+ hand-organ--there's a pretty coat of arms for you, and suitable
+ for the present age.
+
+ "But seriously, my dear Chevillere, what am I to do? I cannot get
+ on without your assistance, and yet I am ashamed to ask it;
+ however, I shall leave all these things to time--fate--and a
+ better acquaintance between the charming Miss Bell and your
+ humble servant.
+
+ "I find you have more negroes here than we have in Virginia, in
+ proportion to the whites; and existing under totally different
+ circumstances, so far as regards the distance between them and
+ their masters.
+
+ "With us slavery is tolerable, and has something soothing about
+ it to the heart of the philanthropist; the slaves are more in the
+ condition of tenants to their landlords--they are viewed more as
+ rational creatures, and with more kindly feelings; each planter
+ owning a smaller number than the planters generally do here, of
+ course the direct knowledge of, and intercourse between each
+ other is greater. Every slave in Virginia knows, even if he does
+ not love, his master; and his master knows him, and generally
+ respects him according to his deserts. _Here_ slavery is
+ intolerable; a single individual owning a hundred or more, and
+ often not knowing them when he sees them. If they sicken and die,
+ he knows it not except through the report of those wretched
+ mercenaries, the overseers. The slaves here are plantation
+ live-stock; not domestic and attached family servants, who have
+ served around the person of the master from the childhood of
+ both.
+
+ "I have known masters in Virginia to exhibit the most intense
+ sorrow and affliction at the death of an old venerable household
+ servant, who was quite valueless in a pecuniary point of view.
+
+ "Here, besides your white overseers, you have your black
+ _drivers_;--an odious animal, almost peculiar to the far south.
+ It is horrible to see one slave following another at his work,
+ with a cow-skin dangling at his arm, and occasionally tying him
+ up and flogging him when he does not get through his two tasks a
+ day. These tasks I believe are two acres of land, which they are
+ required to hoe without much discrimination, or regard to age,
+ sex, health, or condition; now I have seen stout active fellows
+ get through their two tasks by one o'clock, while another poor,
+ stunted, bilious creature toiled the whole day at the same
+ portion of labour. Another abomination here, and even known in
+ some parts of Virginia, is that the females are required to work
+ in the field, and generally to do as much as the males. This
+ system is unworthy even of refined slave-holders. But the hardest
+ part is to tell yet; they receive their provisions but once a
+ week, and then, each has for seven days, either one peck of
+ Indian corn, or three pecks of sweet potatoes, without meat, or
+ any thing else to season this dry fare.
+
+ "I will confess to you that, at first, I thought this allowance
+ much more niggardly than I now consider it. In order to see how
+ they lived, I went into the thickest of the quarter, on purpose
+ to share a part of their food myself, and observe a little of
+ their economy; I found two or three stout fellows standing at a
+ large table, or frame, into which were fixed two grindstones, or
+ rather one was fixed and the other revolved upon it, like two
+ little mill-stones; the upper stone was turned by a crank, at
+ which the two slaves seemed to work by turns. The arrangements
+ for this labour they made among themselves. I then went into the
+ best looking hut of the quarter, just as they had all drawn round
+ a large kettle of small homminy, in the centre of which I was
+ pleased to see a piece of salt fat pork about the size of a large
+ apple. The family consisted of six persons. They had all clubbed
+ their portions of food into a common stock.
+
+ "'How often do you draw meat?' said I; they informed me that they
+ had none except at Christmas, and that none were able to buy meat
+ except those who finished their two tasks early in the day, and
+ then cultivated their own little 'patches,' as they are called. I
+ then went round the huts to see how many had meat, and was much
+ rejoiced to find that more than three-fourths lived substantially
+ well.
+
+ "I was exceedingly amused at one thing in these singular little
+ communities, which was, that matches of convenience are almost as
+ common among them as among their more fashionable masters. I
+ suspect it would puzzle some of your fashionable belles to guess
+ how these have their origin, and what is the fortune upon which
+ they are founded. I will tell you, if you have never observed it
+ yourself. The most active and sober hands, who are able to finish
+ their tasks early, and of course live well, are always in great
+ demand for husbands; and a well-favoured girl is almost sure to
+ select one of these for her _helpmate_ in the true sense of the
+ word. Nor is this excellence confined to the males; many of the
+ women are in as much demand among the lazy fellows for their
+ prowess in the field, as the active men are among the women.
+
+ "While the mothers are at work in the field, their helpless
+ offspring are all left under the care of the superannuated women,
+ in a large hut, or several large huts provided for that purpose;
+ and a more unearthly set of wrinkled and arid witches you never
+ saw, unless you have more curiosity than most of your
+ Carolinians. These scenes, especially if visited by moonlight,
+ transport a man into the centre of Africa at once; there is the
+ dark, sluggish stream, the dismal-looking pine-barrens, and the
+ palmetto, the oriental-looking cabbage-tree, aided by the foreign
+ gibberish, and the unsteady light of the pine logs before the
+ door, now and then casting a fitful gleam of light upon some of
+ these natives of the shores of the Niger, with their tattooed
+ visages, ivory teeth, flat noses, and yellow and blood-shot
+ eyeballs.
+
+ "I do not observe much difference between the North and South
+ Carolinians, except in the case of those who inhabit the most
+ southern portions of the latter state. There your rich are more
+ princely and aristocratic, and your poor more wretched and
+ degraded; but to tell you the plain truth, many of your little
+ slaveholders are miserably poor and ignorant; and what must be
+ the condition of that negro who is a slave to one of these
+ miserable wretches? They are uniformly hard and cruel masters,
+ and the more fortune or fate frowns upon them, the more cruel
+ they become to their slaves. This is a singular development of
+ human character, and not easily accounted for, unless we suppose
+ them to be revenging themselves of fate.
+
+ "Most of the accomplished ladies whom I have seen, were educated
+ either at Salem or at the north, and sometimes at both,--the
+ preference being given to New-York and Philadelphia. Therein
+ Virginia has the advantage; for scarcely a town of two thousand
+ inhabitants is without its seminary for girls. I have myself
+ visited those at Richmond, Petersburg, Fredericksburg,
+ Charlottesville, Staunton, Lexington, Fincastle, &c. &c. This,
+ you will acknowledge, shows deep-seated wisdom and foresight in
+ the people; for if our wives and mothers are intelligent, their
+ offspring will be so too.
+
+ "Virginia Bell has just stolen into the parlour in the south
+ wing, where I am now writing, so there is an end of slavery, and
+ education, and all that sort of thing; unless, indeed, your
+ humble servant may be said to have surrendered his freedom, and
+ to be now undergoing a new sort of schooling. Her look is arch
+ and knowing, as if she had read every word I have written; I
+ will finish my letter when she goes out.
+
+ "There now, I breathe more easily,--she is gone! 'Mr. Randolph,'
+ said she, 'I have a very great curiosity to see the letter of a
+ young gentleman; I never saw one in my life.' 'Indeed!' said I,
+ 'then I will write you one before I leave my seat.'
+
+ "'No, no, no!' said she, blushing just perceptibly, 'you
+ understand me very well; I mean such letters as you write to my
+ cousin; there would be something worth reading in them; as for
+ your letters to young ladies, I have seen some of them. O!
+ deliver me from the side-ache, and weeping till my eyes are red
+ with irrepressible laughter; if they would write naturally and
+ simply, it would not be so bad. There would then be only the
+ natural awkwardness of the subject; but to get upon stilts,
+ merely because the letter is to a lady, is too bad. But you have
+ not answered my question; do you intend to show me that letter?'
+
+ "'I will show you a better one.'
+
+ "'No, no! I want to see none of your set speeches upon paper, all
+ so prim and formal; if you care any thing for my good opinion,
+ you will show me one of your careless ones,' said she.
+
+ "'Care any thing for your good opinion!' said I, rising, and
+ trying to seize her hand, which she held behind her; 'I value
+ your opinion more than that of the whole sex besides.' She raised
+ her eyes in mock astonishment, and puckering up her beautiful
+ little lips, whistled as if in amazement, and then deliberately
+ marched out of the room, saying, as she stood at the entrance,
+ 'Finish your copy like a good boy, and be sure not to blot it,
+ and you shall have some nuts and a sweet cake;' and I crushed the
+ unfortunate epistle with chagrin. She certainly takes me for a
+ fool, and truly I begin to think she is not very far wrong.
+
+ "B. RANDOLPH."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+ V. CHEVILLERE TO B. RANDOLPH.
+
+ "Baltimore, 18--.
+
+ "You will have learned by the previous letters[A] of Lamar and
+ myself, every interesting circumstance which has occurred to us,
+ together with our _sage_ observations upon men and things as they
+ were presented.
+
+ [A] These letters are omitted, of course, as the same
+ information has been already given to the reader.
+
+ "Lamar spends more than half his time with the Kentuckian,--he
+ declares that he will never rest satisfied until he persuades him
+ to remove to the high hills of the Santee, where he can have him
+ for a neighbour. He has found a new source of amusement to-day, in
+ the supposed discovery that Damon is in love with the pretty
+ country girl, on whose account, you will recollect, he got into
+ the affray at the circus. Her father invited him to pay them a
+ visit, and Lamar has been trying to persuade him to take advantage
+ of it immediately, and has even offered to accompany him. I have
+ no doubt he would succeed, had not the Kentuckian's idol, Pete
+ Ironsides, been sent into the country 'to board,' as he calls it.
+ As it is, he has determined upon accepting the invitation as he
+ returns.
+
+ "My own affairs are assuming too sombre a hue for me to enjoy
+ Lamar's foolery as I used to do, when we three lived together, and
+ when you and I were made joint partakers of his animal spirits;
+ _I_ in fact lived upon his stock in trade in that respect, while
+ you added no little to the joint concern; I was always, I fear,
+ but a sullen companion for such merry fellows. But have you never
+ observed that the most lasting and ardent friendships are formed
+ of such materials? Even in married life, you will, in nine cases
+ out of ten, see the most opposite qualities form the most durable
+ and happy connexions. This is running, I know, right in the teeth
+ of the romantic twaddle of the day, about congenial sentiments,
+ and the like; but is it not true? Look around you, and see in
+ every instance if the lively woman has not chosen a serious
+ husband; the man of genius, a dull drone; the bigot and fanatic, a
+ romp; the pious lady, a libertine. These observations, however,
+ like most others of the college stamp, may be destined to give
+ place to others of a very different character. When I look back
+ upon all the various revolutions of opinion which the mind
+ undergoes, before it arrives even at our present state of
+ maturity, I am dismayed, and almost afraid to look forward.
+
+ "Nor is it in matters of abstract opinion alone, I fear, that we
+ are destined to undergo changes. Our hopes _must_ be in some
+ measure paralyzed, our hearts made colder, and our youthful
+ friendships broken asunder! Look what sad havoc a single year has
+ already made in our own catalogue. Where now is that noble band of
+ young and generous spirits, who but a single twelvemonth ago were
+ all the world to each other? Two of them have surrendered the
+ bright hopes of young life upon its very threshold, and the others
+ are scattered abroad over land and sea. But I have wandered from
+ the subject of our adventures, which we have promised faithfully
+ to record.
+
+ "Is it not strange how fate seems to play with us, when once we
+ are fairly embarked upon life's great current? I am now completely
+ wound up in perplexities and embarrassments, which, a week ago, I
+ never once thought of. The actors in this new drama in which I am
+ confessedly entangled, were then perfect strangers to me; and how
+ handsomely has providence, or fate, or whatever you may choose to
+ call it, paved the way for my more complete introduction into
+ these new mysteries? The lady becomes intimate with my mother,
+ though coming from opposite ends of the Union. She travels home
+ again and is taken ill on the road, at the very time when Lamar
+ and I strike into the same road. It seemed, too, as if I was
+ placed at the table where our acquaintance commenced, in the very
+ position where I could not avoid making a tender of my services;
+ and now that I have become almost a part of their little family
+ here, I find that they have been afflicted in some way beyond
+ measure. They seem to be surrounded with mysteries and strange
+ connexions; more than once have I gone specially to break the
+ spell, and clear away the trammels which render this most strange
+ and interesting young lady miserable. Various methods have I
+ devised to acquire the secret, but they have always ended in
+ awkwardness and embarrassment. It is no easy matter to initiate
+ one's self into the midst of family secrets, when one is
+ comparatively a stranger; yet it must be done, and that shortly. I
+ feel that it is necessary to my own peace; indeed it is necessary
+ in order that I may see my own way clearly, to have these cruel
+ doubts solved. Every hour but adds to my entanglement, and if
+ there is a shadow of foundation for the phantasies of the lunatic,
+ the sooner I make the plunge the better. Yet how simple I become;
+ if I had now the decision of character for which I once had credit
+ in college, I should not long suffer the dreams of a maniac to
+ disturb my good opinion of this most lovely and interesting girl.
+ You may talk of your embarrassments and difficulties with Bell's
+ untamable humour; they are all child's play,--mere romping,--but
+ the case is not so easy of adjustment here; the old gentleman has
+ just announced, that he shall resume his journey early to-morrow
+ morning; so that something must be effected this afternoon or
+ evening. If there is no other way, I will formally seek an
+ interview with the lady, and, however painful it may be to her, I
+ will ask her to explain her strange fear of the lunatic; of
+ course I must avow the reason; you shall hear the result.
+
+ "P.S. _12 o'clock at night_--I have broken the ice, my dear
+ fellow, and no doubt you will think I have got a cold bath for my
+ pains.
+
+ "Soon after dark I knocked at the door, and waited some little
+ time with throbbing pulses, to hear that gentle and silvery voice
+ bid me '_come in!_' for I had seen the old gentleman go off in a
+ carriage, to the theatre, as I hoped. No summons came--I repeated
+ my knock with the same result. I do not know what prompted me to
+ an act so rude, but I mechanically pushed open the door before I
+ had reflected a moment. I was in the presence of the little fairy.
+ She held in her hand an open letter, which was wet with tears; her
+ head was leaning far back against the wall; her comb, carrying
+ with it the large rolls of her fair brown hair, was partly lying
+ on the window, and partly stuck into its place; the pearl of her
+ cheeks was still wet with recent tears. I did not know which was
+ now worst, to retreat or go forward. At first I thought she had
+ fainted, and would have sprung to the bell; but I soon saw that
+ she slumbered gently and peacefully. Randolph, there is something
+ heavenly in the slumbers of a young, innocent, and beautiful
+ female; but I will leave my reflections for another time. I was
+ about to retreat, and had so far closed the door as to hide my
+ person, when she suddenly awoke and said, 'Come in, dear father,
+ come in!' the lights had not yet been brought, but I could see the
+ crimson mantling her neck and cheeks as she discovered who the
+ visiter was, and replaced her hair at the same time.
+
+ "I felt confused and ashamed, and stammered some vague attempt at
+ an apology. She made light of my intrusion; but one thing
+ attracted my attention particularly. Just as the maid set the
+ lights upon the table in the centre of the room, I thought that I
+ recognised my mother's handwriting in the letter which she now
+ hastily folded up and thrust into her reticule. As I mentioned,
+ she had been weeping over it. This set my imagination to work; I
+ could not divine on what theme my mother could write to her; still
+ less what subject for grief they could have between them. I
+ inquired if she was well; she said 'yes, as well as usual, but
+ exhausted for want of sleep the previous night.' I instantly
+ connected her want of sleep and restlessness with my mother's
+ letter; and before I had sufficiently reflected upon the import of
+ the question, I asked her whether her first acquaintance with my
+ mother had not been formed during her late visit to the springs.
+ She answered in the affirmative. 'But why do you ask?' said she,
+ searchingly. 'For no particular reason, but the question occurred
+ to me, from seeing the handwriting of the letter you have just
+ folded up. I thought it strange that you should receive a letter
+ from my mother, when I have received none,' 'This letter,' said
+ she, 'was not received at this place; I was merely refreshing my
+ memory with its contents.' 'It is not often,' said I, 'that my
+ mother writes so as to bring tears into the eyes of her friends,
+ and if you would not consider the expression of the wish too
+ impertinent, and that too when I have little expectation of its
+ being granted, I would say that I never before had so much
+ curiosity to see one of her letters.'
+
+ "'Your curiosity,' said she, 'should be gratified immediately, but
+ this letter alludes to circumstances which would perhaps be
+ uninteresting to you; but even were they otherwise, it would
+ excite your curiosity still more to read the letter, when I am
+ unable to give such explanations _now_ as it requires.'
+
+ "'You labour under a most grievous error,' said I, 'if you suppose
+ there are any circumstances connected in any way with the present
+ distress of Miss Frances St. Clair, which would be uninteresting
+ to me. The express object of my visit to-night was to ask that
+ very explanation. It may seem strange and impertinent that I
+ should seek that which you evidently avoid; but my excuse is, and
+ it is the only one that I can plead, that this is your last
+ evening in the city; will Miss St. Clair be offended, if I
+ acknowledge that upon this explanation turns my happiness? I am
+ fearful of giving offence by acknowledging that any previous
+ history is necessary of one who carries in her countenance a
+ refutation of all calumnies.'
+
+ "I had ventured to seize her unresisting hand, but as I concluded
+ the sentence, she withdrew it, and covered her face with her
+ handkerchief, pressing it hard, and breathing short. At the same
+ time I noticed some confusion with her distress, though without
+ anger. This imboldened me to proceed.
+
+ "'It may appear like double presumption in me to ask an
+ explanation before I can proffer a suit, which may be instantly
+ and indignantly rejected, either with or without your history.'
+
+ "'I will not prudishly affect to misunderstand you, in either of
+ the prominent points of your remarks,' said she, her head sinking
+ in modest guise, 'but before I reply to them, will you tell me
+ whence you have ever heard any thing against me.'
+
+ "The question went straight to my suspicious heart, and rankled
+ there; insomuch that I coughed and hemmed at it several times
+ ineffectually; her eyes being riveted on me all the while, like a
+ judge's upon a detected thief--I felt that her pure and searching
+ gaze was far more honest than my own, and I should speedily have
+ begun an explanation if her father had not at that instant entered
+ the room. I thought he saw and disrelished the matter in hand, for
+ he seated himself in a chair, in a certain manner, by which one
+ understands a person to say, 'I'll stay all night, if you have no
+ objections.' I will be up by daylight in the morning, lest the old
+ gentleman steal a march upon me.
+
+ "Yours truly,
+
+ "V. CHEVILLERE."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+
+ B. RANDOLPH TO V. CHEVILLERE.
+
+ "Savannah, 18--.
+
+ "DEAR FRIEND,
+
+ "After despatching my last letter, not knowing exactly what else
+ to do with myself in the present state of affairs, I set out on
+ horseback, telling the family that I wished to see a little more
+ of Carolina, but inwardly resolved to follow the horse's nose
+ wherever he might lead, and continue thus to ride and thus to be
+ led until I might gather up my scattered thoughts and determine
+ what course to pursue.
+
+ "I will not deny, that on the second day in the afternoon, about
+ three o'clock (truth is always precise, you know), I discovered in
+ one corner of the storehouse of my thoughts a secret design to try
+ 'Bell' by a leave-taking, absence, and reappearance. If you had
+ been upon the ground to charge me with the intention, I should no
+ doubt have sworn upon a stack of Testaments that it was not so;
+ and I could have done so honestly. You have looked inwards too
+ often not to know, that in wandering through the dreary passages
+ of one's own mind, we blunder by accident upon many obscure
+ motives, which, if boldly charged with them before we set out on
+ such a pilgrimage, we should stoutly deny.
+
+ "When the horses were brought up on the gravelled road, and all
+ things in readiness for my departure, I cast a furtive glance at
+ that too-knowing and too-beautiful little brunette, who calls you
+ cousin, to see how she was about to feel on the solemn occasion.
+ Her looks were perfectly inexplicable. I have thought of them ever
+ since, but for my life I cannot say in what feelings they had
+ their origin. There was neither sorrow, joy, love, hatred,
+ revenge, hope, despair, nor any other definable emotion. There was
+ a scarcely perceptible smile, a slight shutting of the corner of
+ one eye, and a mock solemnity of the other unruly features, as if
+ one was winking to the other rebels as much as to say, 'wait till
+ he's out of hearing, and we will have a rare laugh at his
+ expense.' It was just such a look as would make a man say, 'Zounds
+ and fury, madam, you'll never see me again; farewell, for ever;'
+ and then be laughed at for his pains.
+
+ "But what sort of a look was it? It was a very knowing look, I am
+ sure of that. She looked as if she read all the inward workings of
+ my moral machinery. It was a serio-comic look; produced, no doubt,
+ by the idea that she was scanning me thoroughly, while I imagined
+ that I could see just as clearly through her. In other words, as I
+ have somewhere else beautifully expressed it, she thought me
+ 'pretty considerable much of an ass,' and I am pretty considerable
+ much of her opinion, at least before ladies. It is somewhat
+ singular that this tendency to display my weak side should have
+ developed itself at the very time when I most desired to appear to
+ advantage.
+
+ "At last the parting moment came. I had bidden your mother
+ farewell in the breakfast-room, and then proceeded to the front
+ door, where stood Virginia Bell.
+
+ "'I think it very doubtful,' said I, 'whether I shall be enabled
+ to take your aunt's house in my route home.'
+
+ "'You are not going to run away with cousin's favourite horse, are
+ you?' said she.
+
+ "By the Great Mogul! in my earnestness to invent a pathetic lie, I
+ forgot to arrange the consistency of the plot.
+
+ "'True, true!' said I, stammering; 'then I must indeed run my head
+ into danger again!' saying which I sprang upon your horse, and
+ rode like a country doctor who has no practice. By-the-by, that
+ was nearer to an avowal than I have ever come yet; your joyous,
+ fun-loving creatures are the most difficult to address in the
+ world.
+
+ "Oh! if I only had such a one in love with me, what a race I would
+ lead her! I would punish the whole class of unapproachable little
+ mischievous misses! I would make her ogle me at church; hang on my
+ arm to the theatre; sigh by the fire-side, and weep when she went
+ to bed; I would almost break her heart before I would take the
+ least pity upon her.
+
+ "I am curious to know what sort of wives these same little romps
+ make. Do they romp it through life, or do they settle down into
+ your miserable, sad, melancholy drones, who greet their husbands
+ when they come home with a sigh, or inexpressible look, that
+ drives more men to the bottle than all the good wine and good
+ company in the world?
+
+ "You ask me, at least I know you would ask me, what I saw, or what
+ occurred on the road to the place from which this letter is dated.
+ I will tell you what I have not seen since I entered this land of
+ nullification. I have not seen a clear limpid river that could be
+ forded on horseback. Your water-courses are dark, deep, still, and
+ gloomy. The foliage on their banks is superlatively rich and
+ abundant, but it is occasionally interspersed with a species of
+ natural beauties which I don't admire, namely, little alligators;
+ by-the-by, I never see alligators, lizards, or tadpoles, that I do
+ not think of those weary days when we read together Ovid's
+ Metamorphoses.
+
+ "Of a southern swamp I had no proper conception. I thought they
+ were black, dismal holes, covered with old black logs, and black
+ snakes, and frogs, and vapours; instead of which, they bear a
+ nearer resemblance, in the summer, to a princely (or _Prince's_)
+ botanical garden. The very perfume upon the olfactories is far
+ more delightful than the greatest assemblage of artificial
+ odours. Then there are the rich and variegated flowers of all
+ hues, sizes, and colours, set amid the deep green of the rich
+ shrubbery. The soil of which these swamps are composed is as black
+ as tar, and pretty much of the same consistence.
+
+ "I observe, as I travel farther south, that bread is seldom seen
+ upon the table. What is called here _small homminy_ is used in its
+ place, at breakfast, dinner, and supper.
+
+ "I saw no ploughs in your fields. Horses seemed to be used only
+ for carriages, racing, and for the private use of gentlemen and
+ ladies. I saw no brick houses; your mother's and that of Col. S.
+ being the only two I saw in the whole state. I saw many private
+ mansions very tastefully built and ornamented; some of them were
+ splendid, but mostly built of wood and painted white.
+
+ "After three days pretty constant riding after my horse's nose, he
+ brought me to the banks of the Savannah, at a little
+ miserable-looking town, or village, called Purysburg. Here I found
+ a steamboat just about to depart for Savannah. I immediately
+ engaged passage for myself, servant, and two horses (one of which
+ is yours; confound him, I say, for betraying me). I amused myself
+ by shooting at the alligators, as we glided along the water, and
+ had kept up the sport some time, when a mellow distant sound came
+ along the surface of the water, like an exquisitely played Kent
+ bugle. It was decidedly the most enchanting music I ever heard,
+ and seemed nearer and nearer until it appeared to rise from under
+ the very bow of the boat. You will be surprised when I tell you
+ that it was made through a straight wooden tube, about five feet
+ long. The musician was a tall, ebony-coloured old African, who
+ stood up in one of your singular-looking batteaux, amid
+ half-a-dozen other negroes, who seemed to be at their luncheon. It
+ looked much like a boat on the Niger; indeed, I found my
+ imagination carrying me into such distant regions, that I
+ instinctively bit my lip to see whether I was awake or dreaming.
+
+ "The city of Savannah became distinctly visible at a distance of
+ about seven miles. A brilliant city indeed it is. You cannot
+ imagine any thing finer than the view from the river. It is
+ situated on a high bluff, and commands an extensive view up and
+ down the stream. In the latter direction, on a clear day, you can
+ see, without glasses, the lighthouse on the island of Tybee.
+
+ "By-the-by, I have been down among those islands; they are all
+ inhabited, and by a class of men as much like our real
+ old-fashioned Virginia gentlemen as can well be imagined. This
+ city is nobly built, and is laid out on a magnificent scale,
+ having a public square, containing a grove of pride of India
+ trees, in the centre of every four squares, and a row of the same
+ along each side of every street.
+
+ "Talk of Philadelphia, and New-York, and Boston, and Richmond, and
+ New-Haven--Savannah outstrips them all, both in artificial and
+ natural beauty. It seems the residence of the prince of the world
+ and his nobility.
+
+ "Yours, most truly,
+
+ "B. RANDOLPH."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+
+ V. CHEVILLERE TO B. RANDOLPH.
+
+ "Baltimore, 18--.
+
+ "DEAR FRIEND,
+
+ "Though I had but two hours' sleep, I was up betimes to catch a
+ parting glimpse of an interesting person who need not be named.
+ When I descended into the great vestibule of this extensive
+ establishment, I found the door of their parlour open, and the
+ entry nearly blocked up by bandboxes, trunks, and all the little
+ paraphernalia of which you and I are as yet quite ignorant. A
+ carriage stood at the door; the lady and the old gentleman sat
+ side by side upon the sofa, the former in her travelling habit,
+ while the latter held in his hand a cup of coffee, which he
+ sipped, giving directions from time to time to the servants. I
+ paid them the compliments of the morning, not in the most bland
+ and courtly style, for to tell you the truth I felt a little
+ inclined to poaching, and the old gentleman looked _to me_ not
+ unlike a vigilant and surly gamekeeper; however, he received me
+ with a welcome, perhaps it was a northern one; but of that I will
+ tell you more when we get fully into the enemy's country, as your
+ namesake of Roanoke would say. My presence seemed to hurry the
+ old gentleman's coffee down his throat, hot as it was, and in ten
+ minutes, before I had exchanged ten words with the lady, all was
+ pronounced in readiness.
+
+ "The old gentleman did not leave her for a moment. I of course
+ handed her to the carriage, and took, as I supposed, a last look.
+ I suppose I must have appeared dolorous enough. The parting moment
+ came, the last pressure of the hand was given, the door closed,
+ whip cracked, and the carriage had gone some time, before I found
+ myself standing in the middle of the street, my head turned to one
+ side just far enough to catch a glimpse of Lamar in his nightgown,
+ half-way out of a three-story window, laughing with that
+ complacent self-satisfaction which is peculiar to him. 'Half-past
+ four and a dark stormy morning,' cried he, in true watchman style.
+ I pulled my hat down over my face, and walked away from the hotel
+ as fast as my impetuous blood would drive me; indeed, I felt
+ provoked at the time. I had not walked far, before I recollected
+ having felt something in my hand, as if it had found its way there
+ by accident, while I was exchanging adieus with my enslaver. I had
+ mechanically, while abstracted in the street, thrust it into my
+ waistcoat pocket. I now drew it forth,--it was a small roll of
+ paper, which you might have put into a thimble,--I opened it very
+ carefully, in hope that there might be some even
+ carelessly-scribbled line, which I could preserve as a memento.
+ By heavens, Randolph, there was a memento upon it! and evidently
+ intended for my eye alone.
+
+ "The writing was in pencil, and scarcely legible; with some
+ difficulty I could make out these words.
+
+ "'The explanation sought by Mr. Chevillere has not been
+ surreptitiously avoided by me, nor will it ever be; but if he is
+ wise, he will forget one who has already extended the influence of
+ her unhappiness too far.'
+
+ "I read these lines over again and again. I walked round Baltimore
+ as if it had been a hamlet. It seemed to me that every person whom
+ I met could read in my countenance something strange and hurried.
+ At length, however, I found my way to the breakfast table. Lamar,
+ as my bad luck would have it, sat almost opposite to me. I do not
+ think I ever saw him perfectly disagreeable before; all his
+ remarks seemed to me _mal-apropos_, and he is not usually so
+ unfortunate, you know. I made a hasty breakfast, and hurried out
+ on purpose to avoid him, but in vain! he was with me in an
+ instant. 'All settled, I suppose, Chevillere,' said he. 'Yes, all
+ is settled for our journey to New-York,' said I, 'except our
+ bills, and that you may attend to as soon as you please.' I
+ ordered old Cato to see the luggage on board the steamboat for
+ Philadelphia: Lamar did the same. 'But, Chevillere,' said he, 'you
+ are not going to leave the Kentuckian,' upon which he set off to
+ summon our new companion.
+
+ "Our next epistle will in all probability be from Philadelphia or
+ New-York; we shall only stay a short time in the former place, as
+ we conceive the other to be the true point from which to make
+ observations.
+
+ "Yours truly,
+
+ "V. CHEVILLERE."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+
+ B. RANDOLPH TO V. CHEVILLERE.
+
+ "High Hills of the Santee, 18--.
+
+ "DEAR FRIEND,
+
+ "From the city of Savannah, I paid my first visit to our old
+ heathen dad, Neptune, and if first impressions of the sea were not
+ as common and as numerous as doggerel verses in a modern lady's
+ album, I might be tempted to become sublime for your edification.
+ I was rowed down from the city, in a beautiful boat made of a
+ single cypress, by the hands of the gentleman who was so polite as
+ to give me this gentle passage. By this you may know that they
+ take as much pride in their boats as the Venetians themselves. It
+ was beautifully painted, and rowed by eight well-formed negroes.
+ Inside of the seat at one end was a marooning chest, as they
+ called it, full of all kinds of liquors and cold meat, with the
+ necessary utensils for their use. The gentleman was an islander;
+ and during the few hours in which we were gliding over the
+ seventeen miles between the city and the ocean, he entertained me
+ with an account of his marooning expeditions. These are their
+ excursions upon the Sea Islands, for purposes of fishing and
+ hunting. These islanders are a peculiar, but delightful people;
+ however, I must not keep you too long in the sea-breeze; at some
+ other time, perhaps, I may indite you a history of these
+ hospitable and isolated gentlemen.
+
+ "When I left Savannah, I determined to pursue a different route
+ from the one by which I came. I therefore crossed the Savannah
+ river fifteen or sixteen miles above the city; I then crossed the
+ country in as straight a line as I could draw upon the map,
+ between the ferry and the high hills of Santee; and in a short
+ time found myself in as complete solitude as ever Crusoe
+ experienced upon his desolate island. Nothing was to be seen but
+ the tall and gloomy-looking pines, stretching away into the bosom
+ of the atmosphere, and the interminable sands which lay before me
+ as far as the eye could reach. Twilight presently came on, and
+ those horrible musicians, the tree-frogs, began to chirp and sing.
+ The dolorous note of the whippoorwill was heard, with a horn
+ accompaniment from the throat of a screech-owl. Here was a pretty
+ serenade for a man with his heart attuned for melody, and his
+ stomach attuned for a slash at a cold ham, for I had had no
+ dinner. I struck up an accompaniment from my own pipes, but I soon
+ found that the vacuum was too profound for a due modulation in
+ concert pitch with this sylvan band. I wished them all at the
+ d----l, with their shrill pipes and full crops, and set my horse,
+ or rather _your_ horse, at full gallop, in a vain effort to escape
+ from the intended honour; but the harder I rode, the more
+ enthusiastic they became. I soon made another comfortable
+ discovery; I found that I had been riding for the last two hours
+ in a perfect wilderness, in utter contempt of what two pioneer
+ wheels had made for a highway; nor could I tell the north from the
+ south, nor the east from the west, having foolishly enough turned
+ the horse round and round in order to gaze at the stars. 'Like
+ master like man,' my servant did the same, as if he could read in
+ the pine tops more than I could in the heavens. All my astronomy
+ had gone with my dinner; I could see nothing in the starry regions
+ but what is sometimes called the _Frying-pan_. Oh! the shades of
+ Thales of Miletus, who first imported astronomy into Greece! to
+ think that a bachelor of such heavenly arts could not look into
+ the face of the Frying-pan without thinking of grilled chickens
+ and rashers of bacon, and the crackling of fire, and the
+ sputtering of fat. I dismounted, and ordered Sam to do likewise,
+ and try to find me a piece of flint by which to strike a light; he
+ declared that he had not seen a stone or a rock since he came into
+ the Carolinas. 'So much for geology and astronomy,' said I. 'I
+ rader tink they all bad fur empty stumuck, masta,' said Sam,
+ considering himself privileged by the exigencies of the case.
+ 'True enough, Sam,' said I, 'it would be an apt scholar that could
+ produce bread or a stone either by his learning, in our
+ circumstances.'
+
+ "As I mounted, Sam mounted, not a word more having been uttered;
+ he seemed to be aware of the fact, that language generally fails
+ with the food; a man's ideas in such a case run fast enough, but
+ they are all in humble life; below stairs, diving among pots, and
+ pans, and pantries, and receptacles for cold victuals. As the
+ ideas ran, so ran the horses, until the water began to splash our
+ legs from a thick bushy swamp, into which we found that we had
+ initiated ourselves. 'Now Sam,' said I, 'we are swamped.' Sam said
+ nothing aloud, but was evidently muttering something to himself,
+ being engaged, as I supposed, at his secret devotions, for you
+ must know that he would be a Puritan. Like most of his race,
+ however, he has more faith in the effect of singing hymns, than
+ devotions of any other kind. I saw that he was itching for a trial
+ at his usual relief in all his troubles. I therefore told him not
+ to suppress it on my account, but to give it free utterance; the
+ idea of it naturally excited ludicrous recollections of old Noll
+ and the veteran Rumpers, but Sam saw the new vein I had so
+ inappropriately fallen into, and therefore resisted his inward
+ strivings. I must say, _en passant_, that I think him honest and
+ sincere in his faith, I therefore do not ridicule him.
+
+ "We waded through the black regions of this little pandemonium for
+ some three-quarters of a mile, before the dry sand again greeted
+ our hearing. The Frying-pan still stared me in the face, and the
+ sylvan band still plied their pipes. We had not proceeded far by
+ land before we came directly against a fence. I was truly glad to
+ see it, for I was sure it must lead to some inhabited place, and
+ accordingly ordered Sam to let us into the field, which we found
+ to be an immense plain covered with cotton,--the most beautiful of
+ all crops. We rode between the rows, for many a weary foot, until
+ at length the glimmering of many lights greeted our longing eyes.
+ We made directly for them, and soon stood in the midst of an
+ immense negro quarter. On inquiring whether their master's house
+ was near at hand, we found that it was many miles distant. The
+ overseer's house, they told us, was not more than half a mile off;
+ but to these animals I have always had an utter aversion. I
+ therefore bought some fodder for the horses, and two fowls for
+ ourselves, from the _driver_, who had the privilege of raising
+ them, and employed his wife to pick and grill them upon the coals,
+ and a delightful and savoury prelude they soon sent up to my
+ famished senses; a heartier or a sweeter meal was never made than
+ I thus took; a fowl seasoned with salt, and a large pot of small
+ homminy, served direct to my mouth from a large wooden spoon,
+ without the cumbrous intervention of plates, knives, and forks.
+ Our meal being finished,--for you must know Sam and I dined at the
+ same time and from the same table, which was none other than the
+ ground floor, covered with the head of a barrel,--hunger is a
+ wonderful leveller of distinctions,--as I was saying, our meal
+ being finished, a goodly number of the more aged, respectable,
+ and intelligent blacks of the quarter assembled to entertain us,
+ or be entertained themselves, I scarcely know which. Many of these
+ negroes, I found, were born in Africa, and one poor tattooed
+ fellow claimed to be of royal blood. He told me that his father,
+ the king, had a hundred children. I asked if any of those present
+ could write; they replied that there was one man in the quarter
+ who could write in his own language, and several of them went out
+ and brought in a tall, bald-headed old fellow, who seemed to come
+ with great reluctance. After being told what was desired, he
+ acknowledged to me that he could write when he last tried, which
+ was many years previous. I took out my pocket-book, tore out a
+ blank leaf, and handing him a pen from my pocket inkstand,
+ requested him to give me a specimen. He took the head of the
+ barrel on his lap, and began, if I recollect right, on the right
+ side of the page; the following is a fac simile of his
+ performance:
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ "The following is a liberal translation into English:--
+
+ "'In the name of God the merciful! the compassionate! God bless
+ our Lord Mohammed his prophet, and his descendants, and his
+ followers, and prosper them exceedingly. Praise be to God the
+ Lord of all creatures! the merciful, the compassionate king of
+ the day of judgment! Thee we adore, and of thee we implore
+ assistance! Guide us in the right way, the way of those with whom
+ thou art well pleased, and not of those with whom thou art angry,
+ nor of those who are in error. Amen!'
+
+ "The original is written in Arabic. The old fellow's name is
+ Charno, which it seems he has retained, after being enslaved,
+ contrary to their general custom in that respect. I became quite
+ affected and melancholy in talking to this venerable old man, and
+ you may judge from that rare circumstance that he is no common
+ character.
+
+ "I now fixed my saddle under my head in a cotton shed to rest for
+ the night; but, weary as I was, I could not directly get to sleep
+ for thinking of sandy deserts, old Charno, chicken suppers, negro
+ quarters, and Virginia Bell! You see she is still the heroine, let
+ my wanderings lay the scenes where they will.
+
+ "I have no doubt but you will say, on the reception of this
+ letter, 'Well! I thought Randolph would run his nose into all the
+ out-of-the-way places in Carolina,' I plead guilty! I have a sort
+ of natural instinct for unbeaten paths, and the one by which I
+ arrived at Belville shall be given in my next; until then, fare
+ thee well.
+
+ "B. RANDOLPH."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+
+ VICTOR CHEVILLERE TO B. RANDOLPH.
+
+ "New-York, 18--.
+
+ "DEAR FRIEND,
+
+ "At length we have arrived in this flourishing city, not, however,
+ without having experienced many vicissitudes of weather, humour,
+ and adventure, the two latter especially; how could we help it,
+ when the Kentuckian formed so large a part of our little crew, by
+ steamboat and stage? His animal spirits are worth a million.
+
+ "You cannot conceive any thing more agreeable to an emancipated
+ and sombre student, than to get a comfortable high backed leather
+ seat in one of these fine northern coaches, his cloak collar put
+ up like a mask, and the rim of his cap drawn down to meet it, just
+ leaving a peeping-hole sufficient to see and enjoy every thing
+ worth enjoying, at the same time defying the gaze of intruding
+ eyes.
+
+ "If there should fortunately happen to be such a reckless, yet
+ generous spirit as Damon among the company, the student's
+ happiness is complete, for you cannot imagine what a protector he
+ is against intruders. In our American stage-coaches (and perhaps
+ in all others) there are sometimes men, full of brandy eloquence,
+ which is kept so constantly on the stretch by repeated libations;
+ or boisterous politicians, with their mouths so full of the last
+ importation of news from Washington, or of the contents of the
+ morning papers, that a complaisant young man is almost compelled
+ to make himself ridiculous, by getting into a political
+ controversy.
+
+ "Damon took all that sort of work off our hands, in the most
+ generous and chivalrous spirit imaginable. His eye was ever bright
+ and ready; there was no sinking into dull student-like lethargy
+ one moment, and flashing out into erratic folly the next; he was
+ ready with lance in rest, to take a tilt against anybody's
+ windmill; at home upon all subjects, being exactly in such a state
+ of refinement as not to be ashamed to show his ignorance, and
+ always eager to acquire information. Nor is his mind dull or
+ unapt; he will rebut or ridicule an adversary with astonishing
+ shrewdness. One of his peculiarities amused me much; he was
+ evidently more excited in the stage-coaches than in the boats. He
+ was never satisfied until he had let down the front glasses, so
+ that he could see the horses; then he would talk fluently to his
+ near neighbour, and keep his neck stretched all the while, so as
+ to have all the horses in view, throwing out occasional digressive
+ remarks as to their various powers, as thus, 'that's my little
+ hearty, make a straight back to it;' and then turning to his
+ antagonist he would continue his remarks, as if nothing had drawn
+ off his attention.
+
+ "But I must not take up all your time with our comic adventures.
+ When I get into that vein more completely, you shall have his
+ exploits in the city. By-the-by, I suggested to Lamar that he
+ should take that part of the correspondence off my hands, but he
+ said, 'Randolph knows I'm not one of the writing sort, therefore
+ you must write for us both; action,' said he, with a mock heroic
+ flourish, 'is my forte.'
+
+ "We are comfortably situated at the City Hotel in Broadway. After
+ we had selected our rooms, I sallied out into that gay and
+ brilliant promenade, which intersects the city from north-east to
+ south-west. You may there see, on a fine sunshiny afternoon, all
+ the fashion and beauty of this great city; the neat, tasteful,
+ Parisian costume, in close contrast with the more sober guise of
+ London. There you may hear intermingled the language of the Gaul,
+ the German, and the modern Roman. To the right and left you see
+ the spires of various Christian temples; and smiling faces, and
+ happy hearts, will greet you at every step.
+
+ "To a secluded college novice like myself, there is something new
+ and moving in all this life and bustle; it irresistibly brings to
+ my mind ideas of gay feats, tilts, tournaments, and brilliant
+ fairs. Within the finished bow-windows are wealth and splendour,
+ and brilliancy, which we poor southerns have not seen in our own
+ native land; marble buildings, stores with granite columns, and
+ the streets crowded with immense omnibuses (these are stages to
+ transport persons from one part of the city to another); splendid
+ private equipages, _republican_ liveries, and carts loaded with
+ merchandise.
+
+ "Seeing some trees and a comfortable green plat a little farther
+ up the street, I worked through the crowd of persons, and carts,
+ and stages, and found myself in the midst of the far famed Park,
+ and immediately in front of that proud edifice the City Hall. I
+ ascended the marble platform, and surveyed the gay throng, as they
+ moved on in one continued and dense current, with merry faces,
+ miserable hearts, and empty heads and pockets; but to talk of
+ these stale things, you know, in the present age, is all stuff and
+ sheer nonsense. I therefore put my reflections in my portfolio to
+ carry home with me, and proceeded to the house-keeper's room, as I
+ had been directed, to obtain the good lady's pilotage, or that of
+ some deputy, to the governor's room, which I readily found. There
+ is nothing remarkable in the two rooms which contain the
+ paintings, except that they command from the windows a fine view
+ of the park and the surrounding streets. Yes, there are two
+ venerable old stuffed chairs. The one in the north wing was used
+ by Washington at his inauguration as first President of the United
+ States, and the one in the east room by the elder Adams. There are
+ portraits of George Washington, George Clinton, Alexander
+ Hamilton, Commodore Bainbridge, Monroe, Jackson, Duane, Varick,
+ Livingston, Clinton, Willet, Radcliff, Captain Hull, Governor
+ Lewis, Macomb, Yates, Van Buren, Brown, Perry, La Fayette,
+ Decatur, Tompkins, Colden, Allen, Paulding, Hone, Stuyvesant,
+ Bolivar, Columbus, Monkton, Williams: some of these last are only
+ half-length. Over the portrait of Washington is a blue flag rolled
+ up, with the following inscription in golden letters:--'This
+ standard was displayed at the inauguration of George Washington,
+ first President of the United States, on the 30th day of April,
+ 1789. And was presented to the Corporation of New-York by the
+ Second Regt. of N. Y. State Artillery, Nov. 25th, 1821.'
+
+ "While I was standing at one of the front windows again looking
+ over the moving masses of Broadway, I saw a lady approach on the
+ eastern footway of the Park, with a hurried step, until she came
+ nearly opposite to the Hall. Crossing Chatham, she turned abruptly
+ down one of the narrow streets running at right angles to the
+ eastern line of the Park. There was something in the figure and
+ carriage of this lady which, unknown at first to my consciousness,
+ quickened my pulsations; but when she approached to the nearest
+ point in her course, I felt morally certain that it was none other
+ than that mysterious charmer, who by her father's connivance, or
+ rather management, slipped through my fingers at Baltimore, and
+ that, too, without my even having asked her address in this city.
+ The recollection of this latter circumstance prompted me instantly
+ to seize my hat and hurry after her. Throwing the accustomed fee
+ to my obliging pilotess, I walked with all possible haste to the
+ corner of the street which I supposed she had taken. I found that
+ a little crowd of ragged urchins had collected upon some occasion
+ of their own, and asked the most intelligent-looking among them if
+ he had seen a lady in black go down that street,--pointing down
+ the hill from Tammany Hall; and, by way of reply, one of the most
+ disgusting, discordant, and ill-timed peals of laughter that I
+ ever heard burst upon my senses.
+
+ "'Lady in black!' said the most forward fellow, 'you will find
+ plenty of black ladies down that street, with black eyes to boot.'
+ I retreated in perfect disgust with these precocious vagabonds,
+ not, however, before I was saluted with another peal of laughter,
+ accompanied by the epithets--'greenhorn,' 'young 'un,' 'bumpkin,'
+ &c. &c.
+
+ "You cannot conceive of any more thoroughly disgusting feeling
+ than that produced upon the mind of a young man bred up in the
+ country, upon this first exhibition of the detestable forms which
+ vice and dissipation assume in every large city,--young females
+ with bloated countenances,--boys with _black_ eyes and bruised
+ faces, with their disgusting slang and familiar nicknames, of Sal,
+ Bet, Kate, Tom, Josh, Jack, or Jim, and their unmeaning oaths,
+ Billingsgate wit, and filthy and ragged garments. There are
+ certain districts of the city in which these are always to be
+ seen, I am informed,--but of these more anon. I turned down the
+ street, and pursued the course which I supposed the lady had
+ taken, until I got to the bottom of what had once been a deep glen
+ in its rural days. I could see nothing but entrances to tanyards,
+ and warehouses full of leather and morocco. The houses, too,
+ looked at least a century and a half behind those on the hill, in
+ architectural taste. Turning to a woman who was sweeping the
+ little narrow pavement in front of one of the houses, I asked her
+ what part of the city I was in.
+
+ "'This is called the _swamp_, sir,' was the reply.
+
+ "'This,' thought I to myself, 'is a very different affair from our
+ swamps.' Just at that moment, casting my eye along one of the
+ narrow streets, I caught a glimpse of the same figure, attended
+ only by her maid, entering a low, Dutch, dingy-looking house, with
+ the gable end to the street. I walked as rapidly as I could in the
+ same direction, and was within some twenty yards of the house,
+ when two young men issued from the door, with the air and dress of
+ gentlemen. I did not immediately observe their faces, because my
+ mind was intently occupied with the lady, and the probable cause
+ of her visit to such a strange part of the city. These reflections
+ were suddenly interrupted by some one slapping me on the back, and
+ exclaiming in my ear, 'Ha! my Chevillere! you here! how do you do?
+ what brought you here?' but I am resolved to put your curiosity to
+ a serious test; names in my next. Yours, truly,
+
+ "V. CHEVILLERE."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+
+ V. CHEVILLERE TO B. RANDOLPH.
+
+ (In continuation.)
+
+ "New-York, 18--.
+
+ "Who do you think it was who met me at such an unlucky moment,
+ just, perhaps, as I was about to stumble upon some clew to unravel
+ the mysteries of this fair little breathing ignis fatuus? It was
+ no other than young Arthur, our old schoolfellow, from Kentucky.
+ He has come hither to attend a course of medical lectures, though
+ they have medical lectures in his own State. Arthur was not of our
+ class, nor yet one of the glorious three, but he was an old and
+ respected friend and schoolmate, and therefore his acquaintance
+ could not be cut quite so unceremoniously at the very moment of
+ its renewal; and even if I had made some silly excuse to avoid him
+ for the moment, he would undoubtedly have seen me kicking my heels
+ in the street, 'like a strange dog in a crowd,' as Damon has it;
+ so I reluctantly wheeled about with him. His companion was also a
+ student of medicine, and a native of this city; he was introduced
+ to me by the name of Hazlehurst. I am aware you are anxious to
+ know what they could be seeking in the identical house in which I
+ had just blockaded my fair fugitive. I wish, as heartily as you
+ can do, that I could explain that matter to our mutual
+ satisfaction. I pumped our inchoate doctors in vain; they
+ explained their own visit to the house very satisfactorily, upon
+ the grounds of professional business, in the name and on behalf of
+ their preceptor, for it seems Arthur has been here all the summer;
+ but they neither saw nor heard of any lady in the premises, and
+ all further inquiries were of course ended by the interpretation
+ which Arthur chose to put upon my inquiries concerning a fair
+ fugitive, so soon after my arrival. He was not a little pleased to
+ hear that Lamar was in the city, in close league with a countryman
+ of his own.
+
+ "By-the-way, Arthur is a noble fellow and an accomplished
+ gentleman. He has all the prerequisites of natural capacity and
+ elementary acquirements, for the study of his arduous profession.
+ I know no young gentleman who has chosen a profession in every way
+ better suited to his peculiarities of mind and temperament. You
+ will doubtless recollect that he always had a fondness for the
+ natural sciences, and this, after all, is the true 'condition
+ precedent' for making a profound and philosophic physician. How
+ lamentable it is that such minds are always thrown in the
+ background in our colleges! This results from that everlasting
+ _dingdong_ hammering at languages, before the pupil has discovered
+ their uses, and without any regard to his peculiarities of mind.
+ Those students who, like Arthur, exhibit an apt capacity for the
+ study of things, and their properties and relations, are almost
+ always dull at the study of their representatives, or, in other
+ words, languages; why, then, do the instructers in these
+ institutions destroy the energies and the vigour of such a mind,
+ by making him fail at those things for which nature has
+ disqualified him, or, rather, for which nature has too nobly
+ endowed him? I am no enemy to the study of the vehicles by which
+ we communicate with our fellow-men, but I am an enemy to the
+ uniform, monotonous drilling, which all collegians in this country
+ receive alike, because I have observed in this process, that
+ third-rate minds invariably rank first. There are, in every
+ college, numbers of young gentlemen who have parrot-like
+ capacities, and memories that retain little words; but who, if
+ required to originate ideas of their own, would soon show the
+ native barrenness of their understandings.
+
+ "Look around you now in the world, and see what has become of
+ these _distinguished_ linguists! One out of a hundred, perhaps,
+ has received a professorship in some new institution, and the
+ others are all falsifying the promises of their precocious youth;
+ while of the thoughtful and abstract dunces, as they were
+ considered in college, many are building up lasting reputations,
+ upon the deep and solid foundations which our hackneyed systems of
+ education could not develop. Necessity and the world develop them;
+ and these, we soon find, are very different from college life.
+ Now, college discipline should imitate the world in this respect;
+ it should develope every man's peculiar genius. Neglect of this is
+ the true reason why so many men distinguish themselves in the
+ world, who were considered asses in college, and why so many who
+ were considered amazingly clever in college, are found to be
+ little better than asses in the world.
+
+ "Now that I have somewhat recovered from the chagrin of Arthur's
+ mal-apropos appearance, I am really glad that he is here. I must
+ surely see the lady again. Indeed, I am resolved to do so, if I
+ have to stay here twelve months; and then Arthur's presence will
+ much facilitate our design of surveying the under-currents of the
+ busy world. You know that I am not prone to trust the surface of
+ things. I shall therefore follow him into many places besides his
+ fashionable resorts. He tells me that a malignant epidemic is said
+ to be prevailing here, and that their visit to the sick person
+ before mentioned was with a view to ascertain whether the patient
+ really had malignant symptoms. They think she had not. I was not
+ so much interested in the affairs of their patient during the
+ discussion on the subject, as I was in their possible consequences
+ upon others,--but of that more in my next. Young Doctor Hazlehurst
+ seems to be a very fashionable personage, but gentlemanly in his
+ manners, and unaffected in his deportment.
+
+ "They walked with me to our hotel, in order to see Lamar, but
+ unfortunately he was out. However, Arthur left college greetings
+ for him, and young Hazlehurst left his address, and invitations
+ for us both to call at his father's house, who, it seems, lives in
+ the city; so you see we have made the first step towards seeing
+ both the upper and under-currents during our sojourn. Whatever
+ they bring forth shall be as faithfully chronicled as your own
+ adventures. Truly,
+
+ "V. CHEVILLERE."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+
+ V. CHEVILLERE TO B. RANDOLPH.
+
+ (In continuation.)
+
+ "New-York, 18--.
+
+ "The little coincidences of real life are of much more frequent
+ occurrence than is generally allowed by our prim historians.
+ Arthur and his companion had not long departed, when Lamar and
+ Damon came in. I mentioned their visit to the former, when,
+ picking up the card and examining it with evident surprise, he
+ placed his finger upon the number of the street, and held it
+ across the table for Damon to see it, who immediately exclaimed,
+ 'Well! I'm flambergasted now! if that ain't what I call a _leetle_
+ particular.'
+
+ "'Why, what is the matter?' said I, astonished in my turn at their
+ astonishment.
+
+ "'Oh, nothing more,' said Lamar, 'than that Damon and myself have
+ but just come from the very door upon which that name and number
+ are placed.'
+
+ "'Are you acquainted with the family?' said I.
+
+ "'No,' replied he; 'I was standing opposite to the door in
+ question, when a young lady alighted from her carriage and entered
+ the house; not, however, before she suddenly stopped and took a
+ searching look at your humble servant.'
+
+ "'Had you ever seen her before?'
+
+ "'If I am not mistaken she is the same young lady whom I saw two
+ years ago at the Virginia springs, when I obtained leave from
+ college to go there on account of my health; she was then quite
+ young; just entering her teens, I should suppose.'
+
+ "'Ah! ha! have I caught you at last?' said I, as Lamar began to
+ redden under a searching glance; 'then there was some foundation
+ for the stories which followed you upon that occasion.'
+
+ "'Bah!' said he, 'they were all nonsense; but come, Damon, tell
+ Chevillere what fine stump speeches you heard this morning at a
+ New-York election.'
+
+ "I saw his drift in amusing me with Damon, and I was indeed quite
+ willing to be so amused.
+
+ "'Smash me if I heard any speeches,' said Damon, 'nor saw any
+ candidates either; they manage them things here quite after a
+ different fashion.'
+
+ "'Why, how do they manage them, if they have no candidates and no
+ speeches?' said I.
+
+ "'By the art of hocus pocus, I believe,' continued Damon; 'I had
+ whetted my appetite for a New-York speech till I was completely on
+ a wire edge, by the time we got to the polls; then they had a
+ parcel of chaps standing behind a little counter, with gold headed
+ poles, like freemasons in a cake-shop, playing at long-pole with
+ the boys. Why! where's the election,' said I, to a chap outside
+ the counter, with one black eye too many. 'Right under your nose,'
+ said he; 'clap down your tickets and kiss the calf-skin, as I did
+ just now;' and then he cramm'd my hands full of little bits of
+ paper, 'H----l in the West,' said I, 'are we going to have no
+ speeches, no drink, no fighten?' 'O!' said he, 'there's plenty of
+ drink in the bar-room next door, and you can get your stomach full
+ of fight, if you will walk down to the _Five Points_.'
+
+ "'And how do the people know whom they vote for?' said I to Lamar.
+
+ "His answer satisfied me that Damon's account of the business was
+ nearly correct as to matters of fact; and that the New-Yorkers
+ never have what we call 'stump speeches,' and never personally
+ know, or even see their representatives. These city mobocracies,
+ composed as they are, principally of wild Irish, are terrible
+ things; but I must adhere to our bargain, to have nothing to do
+ with politics.
+
+ "Lamar has evidently ripped up an old wound this morning, and I am
+ truly rejoiced thereat; we shall take an early day to pay the
+ visit spoken of, at which time I shall observe the gentleman's
+ movements, and see if I cannot treasure up a little ammunition for
+ future use, wherewithal to pay off old scores against him.
+
+ "You recollect, perhaps, the old woman's comfort in a time of
+ great famine; 'she thanked God her neighbours were as bad off as
+ herself.' I find very little comfort in this truly philanthropic
+ doctrine, save from occasionally amusing myself with anticipations
+ of Lamar's more fashionable dilemma.
+
+ "The Kentuckian's pulsations seem to be regulated by a gigantic
+ and equipoised animal impulse. There is very little sinking of the
+ heart in gloomy anticipation, with him; he enjoys the present,
+ uninterrupted by the past or future. After all, are not these
+ hardy and free sons of the west the happiest of all created
+ beings? They enjoy nearly every thing that we do, perhaps not
+ exactly in the same degree, but certainly with as much of the
+ heart, if not so much of the head; I really envy Damon his hearty
+ and joyous laughs, such as I could once indulge in myself, and I
+ have often asked what is it that has made the change? Can you
+ answer the question, Randolph?
+
+ "I once thought that you and Lamar would laugh it on through life,
+ but it seems that you have scarcely started, each in his distinct
+ career, before you begin sowing the seeds of your future sorrows,
+ don't be frightened; it is the appointed race we must all run,
+ sooner or later; we cannot be joyous and jovial college-lads all
+ our days; but we may, and I hope will, be calm and tranquil old
+ _country gentlemen_.
+
+ "But pshaw! I grow old before my time; 'sufficient for the day is
+ the evil thereof;' lay that flattering unction to your soul, and
+ all will soon be well, that is now ill with you.
+
+ "The more I see of these northern states, the more I am convinced
+ that some great revolution awaits our own cherished communities.
+ Revolutions, whether sudden or gradual, are fearful things; we
+ learn to feel attachments to those things which they tear up, as a
+ poor cripple feels attached to the mortified limb, that must be
+ amputated to save his life. A line of demarkation in such a case
+ is distinctly drawn between the diseased and the healthy flesh.
+ Such a line is now drawing between the slave and free states, I
+ fear. God send that the disease may be cured without amputation,
+ and before mortification takes place. I know that this latter is
+ your own belief. What think you now, since you have seen the
+ greater extent of the disease? Truly,
+
+ "V. CHEVILLERE."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+
+ B. RANDOLPH TO V. CHEVILLERE.
+
+ "Belville, High Hills of the Santee.
+
+ "DEAR FRIEND,
+
+ "I have heard of weeping willows, but I never saw weeping pines
+ and black Jacks (scrub oaks) before I came into South Carolina;
+ these are made so by the moss which here grows from the trees in
+ long pendulous masses, which makes them look like gigantic weeping
+ willows.
+
+ "On the day of my arrival here, I was again benighted within a few
+ miles of Belville, and again found my way into Christendom by a
+ delightful custom which prevails among your city refugees. You
+ know that they have a little village erected here among your
+ sandhills, which is entirely owned by wealthy residents of
+ Charleston; to these they retire during the sickly season, and of
+ course they are now full of fashionables. Before each door is a
+ large wooden pillar, with a hearth on the top of it, a kind of
+ rude imitation of our urn. On these they kindle pine-knot fires to
+ keep the mosquitoes away from the premises, and the effect is
+ doubtless at all times brilliant; but it is doubly so when they
+ are the means of restoring a poor benighted traveller to the
+ region of hope and comfort; such was the case with your humble
+ servant. I had but just begun to look out for the usual concert,
+ and the Frying-pan, and the swamp, when I discovered these fires
+ away to my right; I was not more than a mile out of my road.
+
+ "This little mushroom village was entirely deserted when I passed
+ through it before; I was therefore surprised to find carriages
+ standing by each cabin, and fine ladies promenading along the
+ sandy roads with their attendant beaux.
+
+ "Sounds of infantile laughter, sweet music, and the still sweeter
+ notes of frying-pans (very different affairs from my assortment),
+ saluted my delighted ears as I cantered through the encamped
+ throng. I did not stop, because the distance was but short to your
+ own house, at which I soon arrived, and, for once in my life, not
+ before I was wanted.
+
+ "As I briskly rode up the long sandy avenue, I heard a strange
+ confusion of noises and sounds from the direction of the quarter,
+ which you have here dangerously near, but from benevolent views I
+ suppose; I next discovered Bell walking to and fro along the
+ little esplanade which surmounts the front portico, wringing her
+ hands, weeping, and calling upon your mother's name most
+ piteously. I dismounted, and ran towards the nearest entrance with
+ all my speed, and there I met the dear girl, just in time to catch
+ her in my arms for fear of a worse resting-place. As soon as she
+ had recovered a little from her exhaustion, the effect of her
+ previous excitement, she exclaimed, 'Oh! Mr. Randolph, how glad I
+ am to see you!'
+
+ "'Not more so than I am to see you, my dear Bell; but tell me the
+ cause of all this noise at the quarter, and of your alarm.'
+
+ "She told me, as well as she could for her short and convulsive
+ breathing, that the driver had undertaken, in the absence of the
+ overseer, to whip a young negro who is a great favourite among his
+ fellows; and it seems that he had beaten him unmercifully. Some
+ time after, a party had assailed his house where he had shut
+ himself in; as I came up, they had just succeeded in breaking down
+ the door; but the bird had been some time flown, out of a back
+ window. Your mother had gone to drink tea with one of the
+ refugees, a city acquaintance of hers, at the little encampment
+ before mentioned. Under these circumstances, I seized a cudgel and
+ departed to the scene of action, not, however, with Bell's
+ consent. She declared that they would murder me, and clung to my
+ garments until I gently disengaged myself and committed her to her
+ maid. It is not to be denied that I almost blessed the rebellion,
+ for its showing me that I was a person to be preserved in the eyes
+ of your cousin.
+
+ "When I arrived upon the ground, it was some minutes before I
+ could make the principal actors conscious of the presence of any
+ one not in the number of their confederates; however, by dint of
+ lungs and violent gesticulations, I at length gained an audience,
+ and no sooner had I done so, than the victory was gained. I merely
+ promised to have the matter investigated, and the offender
+ punished himself, if he should prove, upon investigation, to have
+ whipped the favourite either without cause, or unmercifully, with
+ cause. This desirable conclusion to the affair could not have been
+ brought about in every quarter in this neighbourhood, or at any
+ one where they had been less accustomed to have their mutual
+ wrongs redressed.
+
+ "When I returned to the house, the news of the result had preceded
+ me, and Bell had retired to her room; she soon, however, again
+ made her appearance, more beautiful, if possible, than when I left
+ her; she found it exceedingly difficult to amalgamate her present
+ evident gratitude with her former comico-quizzico treatment of
+ me,--and though the latter decidedly had the advantage, the
+ struggles between the little devil of mischief within, and a
+ proper behaviour to me on the present occasion, kept me quite
+ amused, considering our late excitement, until your mother, who
+ had been sent for, arrived with a number of gentlemen from the
+ sandhills. With these we formed quite a party; your mother was
+ less moved than I expected, owing, I suppose, to her having so
+ long been in the habit of putting her energies to the test. She
+ was undisguisedly pleased to see me.
+
+ "Among the gentlemen who returned with her, my green eyes soon
+ discovered a suitor of Bell's; whether one formerly discarded, or
+ at present encouraged, I could not tell; but I rather suspect the
+ latter, as your mother's visit was to his sister, and Bell had
+ excused herself from going upon some grounds, for which he was now
+ taking her to task.
+
+ "I was not so much surprised as I have been, at her easy control
+ of _my_ poor generalship, when I saw with what admirable
+ discipline she managed her troops, both raw militia and regulars;
+ of course I class myself with the latter.
+
+ "I was not too much delighted to hear many parties and excursions
+ talked of and arranged; what a selfish animal I must have become
+ since I have undertaken this southern tour! I wonder if the
+ northern air and manners have had the same effect upon you and
+ Lamar?
+
+ "After our visiters had departed (you see I am domiciliated), Bell
+ said to me, starting up suddenly, 'Mr. Randolph, if my memory
+ serves me, you told me at the door, on the morning of your
+ departure, that indispensable business would put it entirely out
+ of your power to take our house in your way home; I hope you have
+ heard favourable accounts from that urgent business?'
+
+ "The little _devil_ within was now completely triumphant; and
+ then, to make my intended pathos still more ridiculous, by
+ inventing more than half of my speech! I had a great mind to say,
+ 'Oh, Mr. Randolph, how glad I am to see you!' and almost run into
+ her arms; but your mother's dignity, Chevillere, though it is mild
+ and benevolent, keeps me always on my good behaviour in her
+ presence; so I only answered, 'The horse! the horse! you forget
+ the horse!' and then she enjoyed a peculiarly sincere and
+ triumphant laugh; and the first, too, with which she has greeted
+ my return. I love them so much that I can almost bear to hear her
+ laugh at myself, provided it is at my knavery and not at my folly.
+
+ "B. RANDOLPH."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+
+ V. CHEVILLERE TO B. RANDOLPH.
+
+ "New-York, 18--.
+
+ "I told you in my last of our surprise at the little coincidence
+ of the number on the card, and that on the house where the lady
+ alighted, with whom Lamar had exchanged some intelligent glances
+ in her more girlish days; but I did not complete the relation,
+ which I will do presently.
+
+ "In the mean time, was there ever a man of any travel or
+ adventure, who has not been alarmed at these seeming accidents,
+ or, what is more probable, made superstitious by their frequent
+ recurrence? I think that I hazard nothing in saying, that more of
+ such strange coincidences have occurred to me than I have ever
+ seen in any work of fiction; not the clap-traps, and other little
+ contrivances, which are intended to electrify the blunted nerves
+ of veteran readers; but the coincidences of ordinary life in
+ society, which reveal to us occasionally the finger of Providence
+ in the course we vainly suppose we are chalking out for ourselves.
+ What is it to a man to possess the will, when all the
+ circumstances upon which that will is to operate, are ready
+ arranged to his hand? I do not repine at this, if it be a fact.
+ On the contrary, it is often a matter of consolation to me to
+ think, how narrow is the choice which the Creator has given us;
+ thereby, of course, decreasing our means of doing wrong; nor is
+ this all his beneficence to us,--he has made it easier for us to
+ do right than wrong; often leaving us but two plain roads to
+ follow, the right one being the easier, plainer, more attractive
+ to a cultivated head and heart, and more profitable in this world.
+ There! you see I never preach beyond this world; and hard enough
+ it is to see clearly all around us in that.
+
+ "This brings me, by a very circuitous route you will no doubt
+ think, to the further coincidence spoken of.
+
+ "As Damon does not take up his abode with us, besides other
+ reasons, he was not of our party when we went to pay our respects
+ to the Hazlehurst family. On entering the parlour, we found the
+ young gentleman who had invited us, with Arthur and the lady, who
+ were sitting, at the time of our entrance, engaged in an
+ apparently interesting conversation, in the recess of one of the
+ windows. Arthur and Lamar seemed pleased to meet again. The lady
+ smiled upon Lamar, and acknowledged her recollection of his
+ countenance. She is elegant and lofty; not in height, indeed, for
+ she is not remarkably tall, but lofty in her demeanour and
+ bearing. There are none of the gentle whisperings which come
+ directly from the heart of a certain little unhappy runaway. The
+ one would captivate an assembly; the other has made terrible
+ inroads upon the heart of a single gentleman; and this brings me
+ to the matter with which I began this epistle.
+
+ "Lamar, having mentioned to Arthur something about the young lady
+ we had met on our travels, and having thrown many gratuitous
+ remarks and glances towards me, the lady seemed at length to take
+ some interest in the subject, and in Lamar's description. She then
+ appealed to me for the name.
+
+ "'Miss St. Clair!' exclaimed she, when I had succeeded in uttering
+ it, 'and have you really fallen into her toils? Alas, I pity you!'
+
+ "Why the plague should she pity me, Randolph? It was evident
+ enough that she did not mean the mock pity, which is only another
+ way for saying, 'how I am rejoiced!'
+
+ "'But,' continued she, 'the lady is a dear and valued friend of
+ mine, and you shall see her.'
+
+ "'But when?' said I, eagerly, awakening out of a brown study.
+
+ "All laughed; and I cannot say from my own experience, that I like
+ the sport any better than yourself.
+
+ "You could have amused yourself (it was no amusement to me) with
+ the odd looks of Lamar, in presence of the object of a first and
+ youthful attachment. There is something pure and primitive in
+ these boyish loves, and they are too much out of fashion in the
+ present age, even in this country. It is not certainly because
+ matches of mere convenience have supplanted them, so much as
+ because it has become too much the custom to treat very young
+ affairs of the heart with ridicule and contempt. People are apt to
+ say 'Oh! it is nothing more than puppy love!' (a refined
+ expression truly) and to throw derision upon all such
+ demonstrations, at the very time, too, when we are most sensitive
+ upon such subjects, and when our impressions of the fair one are
+ but too easily modified by the pretended opinions of our seniors
+ and superiors. Opposition, direct and serious, will indeed
+ sometimes make the youth steady in his course, but ridicule of the
+ object, never!
+
+ "From the little I know of the science of political economy and
+ human happiness, I am inclined to run right into the teeth of the
+ prevailing doctrines on this subject. I have never known a couple
+ who married, whether young or old, upon the strength of a first
+ and mutual passion, who were not contented, prosperous, and happy.
+ There are doubtless exceptions to this sweeping rule, but I have
+ not seen them.
+
+ "Its enemies urge that the youthful pair are not capable of
+ estimating each other's qualifications. But do age and experience
+ qualify them? Or is the judgment of so much avail in these matters
+ as is pretended? Look at the men most remarkable for discretion
+ and judgment; I will venture to say you will find that most of
+ them have trusted too much to their judgments, and too little to
+ their hearts, to be happy. The truth is, that nature has made the
+ heart the magnetic point of mutual attraction in these affairs,
+ and the head of the wisest man is here out of its sphere.
+
+ "It is too true, that many of your slow, cautious, miserly
+ characters, attempt to reduce the whole business to a question in
+ the single rule of three; as thus: if Caroline B. with a sweet
+ face and a prudent turn makes a thrifty wife, what will Adeline B.
+ make, with a sweet face, thrifty ways, and a heavy purse?
+
+ "Thanks be to an overruling providence, they are often carried a
+ rule or two farther in their mathematics than they intended; the
+ honey-moon winds up with doleful calculations, in the ashes of the
+ chimney-corner, with the end of their rattans; such as Vulgar
+ Fractions, Profit and Loss, Tare and Trett, et cetera.
+
+ "You must not imagine, from what I have here said, that I am one
+ of those dreamers who contend that the world might again become a
+ paradise; if, in these things, men would always consult the
+ dictates of the heart.
+
+ "If we look forward at the marriages which are to come, we can
+ discern nothing. This you may think is too true to make a joke of,
+ and too serious to discuss. But look back over all the world that
+ you have seen, and I think you will own that Providence or destiny
+ has had a great design constantly in view in their fulfilment. The
+ human character has been equipoised, extremes have been avoided,
+ the humble elevated, the exalted humbled; all the genius, and the
+ wit, and the judgment, and the virtues, have not been suffered to
+ be concentrated in the descendants of a single pair, but have been
+ as nearly as possible divided among us, the descendants of the
+ multitude. Opposite, or rather diverging characters, are
+ frequently enamoured of each other--the brave man loves the gentle
+ woman; the gentle man, the gay woman; and thus in their
+ descendants we have the grand compromise of nature.
+
+ "There is a sermon, now for the text--'neither is the battle to
+ the strong nor the race to the swift.'
+
+ "V. CHEVILLERE."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ V. CHEVILLERE TO B. RANDOLPH.
+
+ (In continuation.)
+
+ "New-York, 18--.
+
+ "The day being Sunday, I sent old Cato this morning to arouse
+ Lamar quite early, in order to ascertain if he was disposed to
+ walk before breakfast, and view some of the boasted parks, groves,
+ and gardens of these hospitable Gothamites. Old Cato soon
+ returned, saying that Lamar had but that moment fallen asleep, but
+ that he would be with me as soon as he could make a hasty toilet;
+ hasty it indeed was, for he was not many minutes behind Cato, in
+ his morning-gown and slippers, yawning and stretching his clenched
+ fists through the room as if he had sat in his chair all night.
+
+ "'Beshrew me, Chevillere,' said he, 'but you are an uneasy and
+ restless spirit, to be waking a man up at all hours of the night
+ in this style. I thought, at least, when I saw old Cato's grisly
+ head, that you had had a surfeit, or a fit of indigestion.'
+
+ "I suppose then you are disappointed to find me well; but tell me,
+ Lamar, how you intend to spend the day?
+
+ "'Why, I have not laid it down in a regular campaign, but I
+ suppose, as you are too much of a Roundhead to kill the day with
+ me at cards, that I shall have to submit myself to be whined to
+ death with nasal psalmody, at some conventicle or other. Be that
+ as it may, Damon shall sit on the stool of repentance as well as
+ myself.'
+
+ "'In the mean time, suppose we walk to the Battery and Castle
+ Garden?'
+
+ "'Agreed!' said he, 'provided you wait till I jump into a more
+ seemly garb.'
+
+ "We were soon arm in arm, sauntering down the southern extremity
+ of Broadway, which terminates in a beautiful oval grass-plot,
+ called the Bowling Green; surrounded by a handsome iron railing,
+ and containing a young and an old grove of trees; in imitation,
+ doubtless, of human life, the young to supplant the aged. During
+ the colonial government, there stood in the centre of this
+ beautiful spot a painted leaden equestrian statue of George the
+ Third, but as soon as the revolutionary war broke out, it was
+ melted into bullets, and shot at his own ships and soldiers. On
+ the opposite side of the right branch of Broadway, in a
+ southwesterly direction, is the Battery--a noble lawn, covering
+ some acres of the southern extremity of Manhattan Island, and of
+ course looking into the Bay of New-York. What is by a misnomer
+ called Castle Garden, stands out in the waters of the bay on the
+ south-west side, and is connected with the lawn by a wooden bridge
+ of some thirty or forty yards length, and not too strong to give
+ way under some future pressure. Castle Garden is a castellated
+ structure, without turrets and battlements, built of hewn stone,
+ and pierced with a row of port-holes. It seems to have been built
+ for warlike purposes, but is now used as a public promenade, and
+ exhibition garden, having tiers of seats inside, and around an
+ extensive area, in the manner of an amphitheatre. In the centre of
+ the area is a little temple or dome, supported on columns.
+ Surmounting the whole body of the castle is an esplanade,
+ protected by plain railings; from the top of this extends high
+ into the air a flag-staff, from which, on national festivals, the
+ 'star spangled banner' proudly floats over the blue waves which
+ beat against its base.
+
+ "It was here that the corporation entertained Lafayette, a
+ platform having been thrown over the area, and a canvass marquee
+ over the top; this ball-room is said to have been capable of
+ containing from six to ten thousand persons.
+
+ "Lamar and I mounted the esplanade, and seated ourselves upon the
+ benches, just within the railing.
+
+ "We could see the ships of every nation, as they rode triumphantly
+ over the waters of this magnificent bay, gliding about like
+ 'things of life;' marine birds screaming and diving among them,
+ and sometimes the porpoises in their clumsy gambols, shooting
+ their black masses above the water and down again; steamers with
+ their gay pennants, thundering noises, and deafening bells; the
+ rude music and songs of the sailors, the hoarse voice of the
+ pilot, as he stepped on board some outward-bound vessel, and the
+ 'ay! ay!' of the sailor, as the order reached his ears, through
+ the rattling of the shrouds, and the whistling of the breeze.
+
+ "Farther out in the bay, between us and the ocean, is a beautiful
+ chain of islands; first Ellis's, then Bedloe's, and lastly, next
+ the ocean, Staten Island.
+
+ "Gay throngs of well-dressed people began now to crowd the
+ gravelled walks of the Battery; maids attending on children were
+ seen with their little charges, gambolling over the green in their
+ Sunday suits; the emancipated mechanics, with their snow-white
+ jackets and collars; and the happy negro, with his tawdry and
+ cast-off finery, as free (personally, not politically, free) as
+ any of the loungers. There was something in this Sunday scene
+ inexpressibly soothing and delightful to my feelings.
+
+ "Every southern should visit New-York. It would allay provincial
+ prejudices, and calm his excitement against his northern
+ countrymen. The people here are warm-hearted, generous, and
+ enthusiastic, in a degree scarcely inferior to our own southerns.
+ The multitude move as one man, in all public-spirited, benevolent,
+ or charitable measures. Many of these Yorkers are above local
+ prejudices, and truly consider this as the commercial metropolis
+ of the Union, and all the people of the land as their customers,
+ friends, patrons, and countrymen.
+
+ "Nor is trade the only thing that flourishes. The arts of polished
+ and refined life, refined literature, and the profounder studies
+ of the schoolmen, all have their distinguished votaries,--I say
+ distinguished, with reference to the standard of science in our
+ country.
+
+ "This much I have written before going to church. The further
+ adventures of the day, in the evening.
+
+ "V. CHEVILLERE."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ V. CHEVILLERE TO B. RANDOLPH.
+
+ (In continuation.)
+
+ "10 o'clock P. M.
+
+ "About ten o'clock this morning the bells began to ring, from
+ Trinity to St. John's. A forest of steeples seemed to have let
+ loose their artillery at once upon us tardy Christians. These
+ gongs seemed to take effect in about fifteen minutes, for
+ simultaneously the houses poured out their thronging occupants,
+ until the streets literally swarmed with these church-going
+ people.
+
+ "'Whither shall we bend our steps?' said I; 'here are various
+ routes to heaven; which do you choose, Episcopal, Methodist, or
+ Presbyterian?'
+
+ "'Not any one of the three,' said he.
+
+ "'Indeed! Perhaps Jewishly inclined?'
+
+ "'No; I thought that you were aware of my partiality for the
+ close-communion Baptists,' said he, with mock gravity.
+
+ "'But seriously, Lamar, you accused me of wishing to drag you to
+ some conventicle or other; choose for us both; indeed for _three_,
+ for here comes Damon.'
+
+ "'Then,' said he, 'I choose the most celebrated preacher! you will
+ thus be most likely to see a certain demure little runaway.'
+
+ "'And there,' said I, 'you will be most likely to see her friend,
+ with Arthur by her side.'
+
+ "Damon now coming up, was asked by me where he would choose to
+ spend the forenoon of the day.
+
+ "'I can't tell exactly,' replied he, 'for the truth is, I feel
+ pretty much like a fish out of water even of week days; but Sunday
+ I'm completely dished; I was thinking of walking out into the
+ country, and bantering somebody for a foot-race.'
+
+ "I proposed that we should all go and hear Dr. ----, and
+ forthwith led the way, my two companions following on, much like
+ truant boys on their return march to school. We entered a low
+ white church, I don't recollect where exactly, but on the western
+ side of Broadway. The preacher was already in the pulpit, and the
+ aisles and pews on the lower floor were crammed with hearers,
+ insomuch that we were compelled to seek seats in the small
+ gallery, where with great difficulty we found them.
+
+ "The preacher, who had already begun, was a commanding-looking
+ gentleman, clothed in black, and, like most of our dissenting
+ clergymen, without gown or surplice; his features were large and
+ well-formed; his forehead lofty beyond any thing I have ever seen,
+ but falling back at the top until it was lost in little short
+ bristly curls; his attitudes were lofty and dignified. He had, as
+ I said before, announced the portion of Scripture which he was
+ attempting to elucidate, before we entered the church. The subject
+ seemed to be, the practicability and means of a direct revelation
+ from God! When he spoke of the Great Spirit who rules our
+ destinies revealing himself, and his manner of doing it, he was
+ almost sublime. I must try to recollect a few passages for your
+ edification, but you must remember that they are transposed into
+ my own language.
+
+ "He painted in vivid and striking colours, the utter incapacity of
+ man to conceive identically of such a being as God. 'The little
+ puny brain of man,' said he, 'which you may hold in the hollow of
+ your hand, cannot contain a true conception of God in all his
+ majesty! the little arteries and fibres of our poor heads would
+ rend and burst asunder with such an idea.
+
+ "'To form one single correct thought of so great a Spirit, you
+ must first conceive of those things which surround him; as, when
+ we view a painting of some earthly object, there must first be a
+ background to relieve the eye. So when you would conceive of that
+ great Being truly and fully, you must be able to realize the
+ duration of eternity, obliterate the little periods of time and
+ chronology, which require a starting and a resting-place in our
+ human minds,--soar out of the reach of the sickly atmospheres
+ which surround these little planets, and stand erect in the broad
+ and fathomless light of God's own atmosphere! Could the human eye
+ see with such rays, and stretch its glances over the great waves
+ and boundless oceans of light in which he dwells, one single ray
+ of it would blast your optic nerves.
+
+ "'Even here upon earth, if we are suddenly brought from a dark
+ dungeon into the bright rays of his reflected glory, our little
+ optical machinery quails and dances with the shock; but take that
+ same creature from his gloomy dungeon, and place him in the glassy
+ sea of light in which God dwells! The utter horrors of such a
+ moment, if they did not instantly explode the soul into its
+ elements, would be worse than the terrors of convulsions, and
+ earthquakes, and the black and fathomless chasms of the sea. And
+ yet! some of us desire in our hearts a direct revelation to
+ ourselves from this sublime Being! Know you what you desire? You
+ desire that God should stretch out his mighty power, and draw away
+ the friendly veil of the heavens, and burst upon an astounded
+ world in all his fearful attributes! Before such an immediate
+ presence, the sun and moon would become dark in contrast. The
+ natural laws which he has given us for our protection, of
+ gravitation, electricity, and magnetism, would burst loose from
+ their reflected positions, and all animate and inanimate nature
+ would fall before their First Great Cause! We cannot have direct
+ physical intercourse with God. We are physically incompetent to
+ encounter him, either in his goodness or in his wrath.
+
+ "You say in your hearts, that there is mystery in this revelation
+ of the Bible! Can mystery be separable from sublime or profound
+ greatness, when viewed through human powers? Are not height, and
+ depth, and space, and air, all mysterious to your minds, when
+ beyond the reach of the eye? Is not darkness alone profoundly
+ mysterious? mysterious in its effects and in its properties! Can
+ any mind analyze darkness? Is it positive or negative? Does it
+ extend through eternal and measureless space? or is it only a
+ creative property dependent upon the functions of the eye? Our
+ darkness is to one part of creation light, and our light their
+ darkness.
+
+ "Is measureless space a positive creation, or a negative
+ nonentity! No human intellect can fathom these subjects; not from
+ any of their delusive properties, but from our limited capacities!
+ These then are but the beginning of those things which interpose
+ between us and our great and sublime Creator!
+
+ "You can now, perhaps, form some idea of the difficulties of
+ revealing God to man!
+
+ "What would you have with a more powerful and sublime revelation
+ than this? Would you disorganize the minds of the whole human
+ family, by opening to them frightful volumes which would craze and
+ bewilder, rather than direct them? Do you complain of mystery, and
+ yet call upon God for more?
+
+ "But the greatest difficulty between us and a direct revelation
+ from our Creator, has yet to be considered.
+
+ "This revelation of the Bible was necessarily conveyed to us
+ through the medium of human language. Now let us examine what this
+ human language is. It is a system of words or signs, which convey
+ to our minds the ideas of things. These words only represent such
+ ideas as we ourselves have formed from the things we have seen,
+ and their various combinations. How then can these signs and
+ symbols convey identical ideas of God and his attributes? All the
+ imperfections of this revelation then are confessedly owing to our
+ imperfections, both as it regards mind and language.
+
+ "I have given you but a faint outline of this powerful and
+ vehement speaker's discourse. During its delivery I once or twice
+ turned to Lamar and the Kentuckian, to see how they were affected.
+ The former had insensibly risen during the fervency of the
+ preacher's eloquence, and stood leaning over the balustrade,
+ drinking in the sounds of a voice which are truly powerful though
+ not musical, until he came to a pause; he then sank into his seat,
+ a grim smile passing over his pale sickly features, clearly
+ showing to those who knew him, how intently he had listened. Damon
+ chewed tobacco at a prodigious rate, and the more eloquent the
+ speaker became, the more energetic was the action of his jaws. His
+ eye was wild and savage, like that of a forest animal when it
+ suddenly finds itself in the midst of a settlement. He sometimes
+ cracked his fingers together, for the same purpose, I suppose,
+ that he used to crack his whip when travelling on horseback, to
+ give emphasis and round his periods.
+
+ "But I had not long to consider these effects upon different
+ characters, for at this moment Lamar pointed over the balustrade
+ at two moving figures on the lower floor. You already guess, if
+ you are any thing of a Yankee, what these were. Lamar and I
+ simultaneously arose to our feet and gazed at the heads which
+ filled up every crevice, as a veteran soldier would have gazed at
+ so many bristling bayonets upon an impregnable bastion. We soon
+ heard the steps of a carriage let down, and then the rolling of
+ the wheels. Lamar bit his lip till the blood almost started from
+ it. Whether the pressure was increased by his having seen that
+ Arthur joined the ladies near the door, I shall not undertake to
+ say.
+
+ "The sermon now being over we had merely to throw ourselves into
+ the tide of human figures which moved down stairs, to be carried
+ safely to the bottom.
+
+ "When there, Damon drew one long and whistling breath, and an
+ inarticulate sound not unlike the snort of a whale.
+
+ "'I'm flambergasted! if that ain't what I call goin the whole
+ cretur, he'd go to Congress from old Kentuck as easy as I could
+ put a gin sling under my jacket. O Christopher! what a stump
+ speech he could make, if he would only turn his hand to it,
+ instead of wasting his wind here among the old wives!'
+
+ "'Well, Lamar, what did you think of him?'
+
+ "'Think of him! (rousing himself from a brown study), I never
+ knew before that I had nerves in the hairs of my head.'
+
+ "'And where did you now obtain that precious piece of anatomical
+ news?'
+
+ "'In the church, to be sure! Were not my locks dancing all the
+ while to the music of that eccentric man's voice? The cold chills
+ ran over me, as if I had been under the influence of miasma.'
+
+ "I watched Damon through an unusually long silence, while he
+ several times snapped his fingers and took a fresh chew of
+ tobacco.
+
+ "'I'll tell you what it is, that's what I call a real tear-down
+ sneezer,' ejaculated he; 'he's a bark-well and hold-fast too; he
+ doesn't honey it up to 'em, and mince his words--he lets it down
+ upon 'em hot and heavy; he knocks down and drags out; first he
+ gives it to 'em in one eye and then in 'tother, then in the
+ gizzard, and at last he gits your head under his arm, and then I
+ reckon he feathers it in, between the lug and the horn; he gives a
+ feller no more chance nor a 'coon has in a black jack.'
+
+ "'Then you give him more credit for sincerity than you usually do
+ men of his cloth,' said I.
+
+ "'Yes, yes! there's no whippin the devil round the stump with him;
+ he jumps right at him, tooth and toe-nail, and I'm flambergasted
+ if I don't think he rather worsted the _Old Boy_ this morning; and
+ he's the best match I ever saw him have, he looks so stout and
+ soldier-like; and then his eye! Did you see his eye, stranger? I'm
+ shot if he didn't look as if he could'a jumped right a-straddle
+ of the devil's neck, and just run his thumbs in, and scooped out
+ his two eyes, as easy as I would scoop an oyster out of his
+ shell.'
+
+ "'You don't go to church often when you are at home?'
+
+ "'No; but I _would_ go, if we had such a Samson as this; he raises
+ old Kentuck in me in a minute. I feel full of fight, and ready for
+ any thing now! But our old parson! he's an entirely different cut
+ in the jib. He whines it out to us like an old woman in the last
+ of pea-time; he doesn't thunder it down to 'em like this chap, and
+ like old Hickory did the grape-shot at New-Orleans.'
+
+ "We had now arrived at that point of the street where we were to
+ separate. Damon abruptly informed us of his intention to return
+ soon to Baltimore. I asked him if he was not pleased with
+ New-York.
+
+ "'O, yes;' said he, 'it's a real Kentuck of a place, a man can do
+ here what he likes; they don't look at the cut of a feller's coat,
+ but at the cut of his jib. I could wear my coat upside down here,
+ and my hat smashed all into a gin-shop, and nobody has time to
+ turn round and look at me. Yes, yes, stranger, they are a
+ whole-souled people, and I like 'em, but I have staid long
+ enough.'
+
+ "Here we separated for the day. Lamar intends to try and prevail
+ upon him to accompany us to the theatre, and the Italian opera. I
+ have great curiosity to see him at the latter place. Pedrotti,
+ they say, can tame a tiger with her melodious and touching voice.
+ As you may suppose, I am anxious to hear it myself, and to see its
+ effects upon one so unschooled in the music of luxurious and
+ effeminate Italy.
+
+ "I have written you more at length than I intended, but I could
+ not do otherwise in return for your amusing, friendly, and
+ satisfactory epistle. We shall meet again, as in days of yore, and
+ then we will gather up all these scribblings, and enjoy these
+ scenes again. In the mean time, believe that I wish you success in
+ your present suit, for the sake of three of us,--but more
+ particularly and selfishly that of
+
+ "V. CHEVILLERE."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+
+ V. CHEVILLERE TO B. RANDOLPH.
+
+ "New-York, 18--.
+
+ "DEAR CHUM,
+
+ "Events which seem to me worth recording, crowd upon us so fast
+ now, that it is almost impossible to give you, according to
+ promise, even a profile view of our movements.
+
+ "This morning, about the same hour at which we went to church
+ yesterday, we strolled down Wall-street (and we seemed the only
+ strollers there) to see the Shylocks in their dens, if any such
+ could be found. I was instantly struck with the concentrated
+ looks, and absorbed countenances of all the persons we met. Most
+ of them were running in and out of the banks, with their little
+ bank books in their hands, making mental calculations of notes to
+ be taken up, deposites where made, and how much. Brokers were
+ standing behind their counters, ready to commence their brisk, and
+ (in this country) almost unhazardous game. Many of them amass
+ immense fortunes; it is not at all uncommon for one of these
+ houses to loan to a state several millions at once.
+
+ "We went upon 'change at the hour of twelve. There, in the large
+ room of the rotunda, or circular part of the exchange, merchants,
+ and brokers, and bankers, and moneyed men meet, pretty much after
+ the same fashion as our jockeys and racers upon the turf. The
+ light falls from the dome upon these faces, and reveals the best
+ study for a picture I have ever seen. The seller and the sellee,
+ the shaver and the shavee, or diamond cut diamond, as Damon
+ expresses it:--bear with me but a moment while I go over these
+ dull details, and in return I will tell you something more of the
+ lady with the black mantle.
+
+ "The most predominant expression that I saw upon 'change was
+ _affectation_; the affectation of business; not the silly
+ school-boy affectation which wears off with the improving mind,
+ but that which is first put on by business men, to disguise the
+ real operations of the mind, and which afterward grows into a
+ confirmed habit, and is seen deeply set in wrinkles, long after
+ the first exciting cause has disappeared.
+
+ "This symptom, among the moneyed men, varies according to
+ character and strength of mind in the individual. One man I saw
+ standing with his back against a window, his thumbs stuck into the
+ armholes of his waistcoat, his quill toothpick tight between his
+ teeth,--his features large and fleshy, his complexion between a
+ copper and an apoplectic dapple of blue and red,--his teeth large,
+ white, and flat, his eye small and gray, and his head grizzled; he
+ had evidently been a free, but what is _called_ a _temperate_
+ liver. I tried to trace back through the wrinkles in this man's
+ face, what the emotions were which in his younger days he had
+ attempted to engrave upon it, and which long habit had now made
+ part of his nature; but I should first attempt to describe _the_
+ expression itself. His upper lip was turned into a curl of
+ contempt; his eye was thrown a little down, and the eyelid raised
+ high, so as to show much of the white of the eye, as when a person
+ is in the attitude of profound thought upon some far distant
+ subject. This man had, I thought, the best chosen affectation; it
+ expressed profound abstraction in _one_ direction, when he was no
+ doubt really abstracted in another.
+
+ "His right-hand neighbour had not been so fortunate in his
+ selection of a vizor for the moneyed masquerade. He had chosen
+ comedy; and attempted to hide pounds, shillings, and pence under a
+ comic visage. It was not well chosen. His business-laugh was too
+ horrid. It displayed teeth, gums, and throat, and was too
+ affectedly sincere. He too frequently passed his glances quickly
+ round from one face to the other, to see if they enjoyed the
+ sport. This species of affectation had its origin in a settled
+ contempt for the sense of his associates, and an exalted
+ conception of his own, and especially of his powers to amuse. He
+ frequently drew the corners of his mouth towards his ears, by a
+ voluntary motion, without exercising the corresponding risible
+ muscles; elevating his eyebrows at the same time in a knowing
+ way. Do this yourself, and you will have the expression instantly.
+ His only additional comic resource consisted in sticking one thumb
+ directly under his chin, like a pillar. This man is celebrated on
+ 'change for telling what _he_ considers a good story.
+
+ "Another description of affectation here seen, and by far the most
+ common, is the affectation of decision, firmness, stability, and
+ concentrated purpose.
+
+ "Various methods, I saw, had been practised through long lives to
+ attain this safe look. Some, to whom it was not natural to do so,
+ pushed out the under jaw, like a person who (to use a Southern
+ term) is _jimber_-jawed. Others carried the head on one side, drew
+ up the muscles at the outer angle of one eye, and kept the
+ nostrils distended. Others clenched the teeth, looked fierce and
+ steady, and habitually patted one foot upon the floor, as if in
+ high-spirited impatience. Some looked pensive and sad, and
+ occasionally drew long sighs. Beware of these, if you ever trade
+ in the money-market.
+
+ "The most ludicrous of all moneyed whims is a desire to make
+ others suppose that you think yourself poor. A heartless man
+ begging for sympathy is, of all kinds of affectation, the most
+ contemptible. But the most dangerous of all others, and the most
+ apt to deceive a candid and upright mind, is the affectation of
+ being unaffected. Such is the sin of those who affect bold,
+ independent, and reckless looks. If good fortune had not made
+ them brokers, bad fortune (they seem to say) might have made them
+ robbers.
+
+ "There is yet another class to describe--the sincere and the
+ honest. These are easily descried. Something like an electric
+ intelligence passes from the eye of one honest man to that of
+ another. These are usually modest, retiring, and humble. I speak
+ of real humility, which is best displayed in a respect for the
+ understanding of other men; a desire to place one's companions at
+ their ease; and a tenderness and sympathy towards the failings of
+ the bankrupt, the vicious, and the unfortunate generally.
+
+ "Not that these indications occur only on 'change; they may be
+ seen in the pulpit, at the bar, at the bedside, and behind the
+ counter. As you read my descriptions, try to produce the
+ expression upon your face; then call up some individual of your
+ acquaintance, who may have sat for such a picture--poor, indeed,
+ in its finish, but if it convey to you the idea, my ambition is
+ satisfied. This is a severe test, but I think you may muster up
+ _dramatis personæ_ for all the characters.
+
+ "As I am now upon this subject, permit me to make one or two
+ general remarks.
+
+ "I have learned to hold no intimacy with those men who are harsh
+ and uncompromising towards unfortunates and criminals. These
+ feelings often arise from the identical weaknesses, or faults,
+ which drove their victims to ruin. You have, doubtless, seen two
+ slaves quarrel because one belonged to a rich and the other to a
+ poor man.
+
+ "As one well-fed dog is sure to be snarlish to a poorer
+ brother--poor human nature--this currish principle is but too true
+ when applied to us.
+
+ "There is none who appears so virtuously indignant at crime as the
+ man who is a rogue in his heart. A horse-stealer who has blundered
+ into better fortune is scandalized at his former craft; and a
+ sheep-stealer can weep in the very face of the lamb which another
+ has stolen.
+
+ "Those ladies, the purity of whose characters is most
+ questionable, are uniformly the first to cease visiting an openly
+ suspected sister.
+
+ "But I see plainly that if I go on, the subject must become too
+ revolting; at all events I must give it to you in broken doses;
+ and by the time Arthur introduces me into the human catacombs,
+ where the living are _soul_-dead, you will be ready to take
+ another view of those dark and dismal abodes, and attempt further
+ observations of humanity in its darker developments.
+
+ "A malignant disease, as Arthur thinks, has broken out in the
+ portions of the city alluded to; if so, I will remain with him.
+ This is the time to see fearful sights; and we Southerns, you
+ know, have looked the grim monster too often in the face in this
+ shape to be easily frightened from a cherished purpose.
+
+ "Damon begins to be very uneasy under these reports of sudden
+ deaths, and black infections sweeping through the air."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ V. CHEVILLERE TO B. RANDOLPH.
+
+ (In continuation.)
+
+ "New-York, 18--.
+
+ "I have seen her, Randolph, and seen her far more captivating and
+ beautiful than ever!
+
+ "Yesterday, after I had finished the former part of this letter, I
+ met, on my way down to dinner, Arthur and young Hazlehurst. The
+ latter had come expressly to invite Lamar and myself to spend the
+ evening at their house. As you may suppose, it was not refused; we
+ pressed them to go in with us, as they had not yet dined, to which
+ they finally consented.
+
+ "I find Hazlehurst an intelligent young man, but with many
+ erroneous opinions concerning the south, of which he must be
+ disabused. He imagines us to be a generous and hospitable people,
+ but in a rather semi-barbarous state.
+
+ "As this very subject occupied our attention in presence of the
+ ladies, I prefer giving you an imperfect sketch of the discourse.
+ I must not omit a table lecture of Lamar's on nicotiana, however
+ impatient you may be to hear more of a certain fair one.
+
+ "The subject of tobacco was introduced simultaneously with the
+ segars, after most of the company had retired. One having been
+ offered to young Hazlehurst, he declined it, saying that he did
+ not use tobacco in any shape.
+
+ "'Not use tobacco! not smoke!' said Lamar; 'why, sir, you have yet
+ to experience one of the most calm, delightful, and soothing
+ pleasures of which human nerves are sensible.'
+
+ "'I have always understood,' said the other, 'that the stimulus
+ leaves one far more miserable than if he had not applied it.'
+
+ "'Then you labour under some mistake,' said Lamar; 'and if you
+ will permit, and your doctorships will forbear laughter, I will
+ explain to you the effects of a fine segar upon my system, and
+ "suit the action to the word."
+
+ "'When a man takes a genuine, dappled Havana segar in his mouth,
+ places his legs upon a hair cushioned chair, his head thrown back
+ on that upon which he sits, or against the wall; his arms folded
+ upon his chest,--the following phenomena occur:
+
+ "'_First stage._ He becomes heroic and chivalrous, or perhaps
+ eloquent; if the last, and thinks himself alone, you will see him
+ wave his hand in the most graceful and captivating style of
+ oratory. His eye is the soul of imaginary eloquence, his features
+ are all swelled out until they seem grand--gloomy--and profound;
+ his nostrils pant and show their red lining, like a fiery and
+ blooded steed. He rolls out thick volumes of smoke, and puffs it
+ from him like a forty-two-pounder. He draws down his feet, and
+ raises his head and looks after it, as if victory or conviction
+ had been hurled upon its clouds. Perhaps some one laughs at him,
+ as you laugh now at me.
+
+ "'He replaces his legs, leans back his head again; the _second
+ stage_ is come; he smiles, perhaps, at the laurels just won; he
+ closes his eyes, delightful visions of green meadows and lawns,
+ fragrant flowers, meandering streams, limpid brooks, beautiful
+ nymphs, twilight amid tall and venerable trees, and lengthening
+ shadows, flit before his imagination. His face now is towards the
+ heavens; his features are calm and serene; he wafts the smoke
+ gently upward in long continued columns, and wreaths, and
+ garlands; his hands fall by his side--the diminished stump falls
+ from his hand.
+
+ "'And now, in the _third stage_, he is in a revery. A servant
+ touches him three times, and tells him a gentleman wants to see
+ him; he kicks his shins; servant retreats. Eyes being still
+ closed, he draws a long sigh or two, but full, pleasant, and
+ satisfactory. Servant returns; shakes him by the shoulder; he
+ jumps up and throws an empty bottle at his head, as I do this one,
+ at that grinning fellow there (making a mock effort), and then the
+ trance is over.
+
+ "'Now where are the bad effects, except upon Cato's shins, if he
+ should happen to be the man?'
+
+ "We all applauded Lamar for his treat, with three hearty cheers,
+ in a small way.
+
+ "I am sorry to see a little sly, stealthy, unmentionable coldness
+ arising between Lamar and Arthur. I first discovered it in little
+ acts of what the world calls politeness, but which I call
+ formality, towards each other. They are unconscious of it, as yet,
+ for it seems to have sprung up by irresistible mutual repulsion
+ between them: deep seated self appears to have warned each of a
+ dangerous rival in the other. These are little secret
+ selfishnesses of the soul, which lie deep, dark, and still,
+ running in an unseen current, far below the soundings of the
+ self-searching consciousness. How mysterious is the mind of man!
+ We may draw up the flood-gates, and let loose the dammed-up waters
+ in order to find some secret at the bottom; but the flood rolls
+ by, and the secret still lies buried as profoundly as before. At
+ some future day, when the thunder and the storms shall come, these
+ secrets may, perhaps, be washed up to the surface, like wonders of
+ the deep, when least expected!
+
+ "At about eight o'clock, Lamar and I sallied out to find Mrs.
+ Hazlehurst's house in Broadway; amid music from clarionet, violin,
+ and kent bugle. These were stationed in the balconies of the
+ different museums. Carriages were just setting down their company
+ at the old Park Theatre. Little blind and lame boys sat about the
+ iron railing at St. Paul's church, grinding hand-organs, and
+ making music little better than so many grindstones--all for a
+ miserable pittance which they collect in the shape of pennies,
+ perhaps to the amount of a dozen a day.
+
+ "Negroes were screaming 'ice-cream' at the top of their lungs,
+ though it is now becoming cold in the evenings and mornings. At
+ every corner some old huckster sang out 'Hot corn! hot corn!'
+ though the regular season of 'roasting-ears,' has long since
+ passed by. Little tables of fruit, cakes, and spruce-beer were
+ strewed along the walks and under the awnings, which often remain
+ extended during the night.
+
+ "We at length found the house, and entered with palpitating
+ hearts. I had a sort of presentiment that I was to meet Miss St.
+ Clair, from what the lively Isabel had said.
+
+ "When we entered the saloon she was nowhere to be seen! my
+ disappointment was no doubt visible, for I saw an arch smile upon
+ Isabel's countenance, and, I must say, a very singular one upon
+ that of her brother. The idea first struck me that he is either
+ now, or has been, a suitor of the absent lady! Was there a lurking
+ jealousy at the bottom of my own heart, at the very time that I
+ was fishing up green monsters from Lamar's mental pandemonium?
+ Randolph, Oh! the human heart is deceitful above all things; and
+ it oftener deceives ourselves than others. We have radiated rays
+ of light for our mental vision outwards which we may extend _ad
+ infinitum_, but once turn our observations inwards, and it is like
+ inverting the telescope.
+
+ "We were presented to the lady of the mansion immediately upon our
+ entrance. She is benignant and bland, yet aristocratic withal. She
+ discovers a warm heart towards the South, probably from an idea of
+ a kindred aristocratic feeling in us. The two are, however, very
+ different in their developments. It is necessary here to have many
+ more bulwarks between this class and those below them than is
+ needful with us; as there is here a regular gradation in the
+ divisions of society. The end of one and the beginning of the next
+ are so merged, that it would be impossible to separate them
+ without these barriers. What are they? you would ask. They consist
+ in little formalities,--rigid adherence to fashion in its higher
+ flights,--exhibition of European and Oriental luxuries, et cetera,
+ et cetera.
+
+ "We were presented to the company in general; most of the
+ fashionable ladies were sitting or standing around a fine-toned
+ upright piano-forte, at which two of the party were executing, in
+ a very finished style of fashionable elegance, some of Rossini's
+ compositions, accompanied by a gentleman on the flute. And in good
+ truth, they produced scientific and fashionable music; but,
+ Randolph, it was not to my taste. You know that I have cultivated
+ music as a science, from my earliest youth; that I am an
+ enthusiast here, and not altogether a bungler in my own execution.
+ I have now discovered either that I lack taste, or that the
+ fashionable world is therein deficient. You shall decide between
+ us at another time.
+
+ "Lamar very soon contrived (how, heaven only knows) to throw me
+ completely in the shade; but the first evidence I had of it was
+ his sitting bolt upright between the gay Isabel and her mother. He
+ had already betrayed them into laughter,--not fashionable
+ laughter, for I saw the old lady wiping the tears from her eyes.
+ It is almost impossible for any one to adhere long to conventional
+ forms, when he is of the party,--so manly, generous, and sincere
+ is he. My chagrin at not finding myself situated equally to my
+ heart's content did not escape him, and he perhaps discovered my
+ awkwardness, for he attempted to draw me into a discussion
+ concerning the provincial rivalry of the North and South. I evaded
+ his friendly hand, but soon the younger lady renewed the attack.
+
+ "'Come, Mr. Chevillere, you will tell us what peculiarities you
+ have observed, as existing between the northern and southern
+ ladies as to polish,--fashion,--education,--any thing! This
+ gentleman is so wonderfully free from prejudices and rivalry, that
+ he declares the instant he beholds a beautiful woman, he forgets
+ that she has a local habitation upon earth. You, sir, I hope, are
+ not so catholic an admirer of beauty?'
+
+ "'I too, madam, am always disarmed of local prejudices when I see
+ a beautiful northern lady; but that is not what you wish me to
+ answer. If I understood you right, I suppose you wish to know
+ whether any peculiarity in fashion, habits, or manners strikes us
+ at first sight disagreeably.'
+
+ "'Precisely. Your general opinion of us.'
+
+ "'I am glad to be able to say, then, that with regard to this city
+ I am a perfect enthusiast. Every thing is arranged as I would have
+ it. Nature appears to be the criterion here in matters of taste;
+ utility and improvement seem to prompt the efforts of your men of
+ talents, and that delightful politeness to prevail, which consists
+ in placing all well-meaning persons at their ease, without useless
+ conventional forms.'
+
+ "I hate this formal speech-making, Randolph, across a room _at_
+ people, so I thought I would be myself at once. I therefore
+ continued my remarks for the remainder of the evening rather more
+ in a nonchalant way, and as an introduction to a more free and
+ easy tone to the company. I asked Lamar to repeat his lecture of
+ the day, on smoking. Hazlehurst, as soon as he heard the subject
+ mentioned, began to describe it to a party of young ladies who
+ stood round the piano. Their curiosity was excited immediately;
+ and though Lamar frowned at me, the ladies entreated until he was
+ forced to comply.
+
+ "He set the room in a perfect roar of laughter, and then a
+ delightful confusion prevailed. Lamar did not repeat exactly the
+ same things which he had treated us with at the dinner-table, but
+ he preserved the stages, dwelling a much shorter time on the
+ heroic, and much longer on the two latter.
+
+ "He introduced a heroine into his shades and bowers, and painted
+ Isabel as he saw her at the Springs; so, at least, I suspect from
+ a certain mantling of the colour into her cheeks.
+
+ "'Then,' said he, speaking of the third stage, 'his hands fall by
+ his side, his eyes are closed, he sighs profoundly, but
+ comfortably and _somnolently_; perhaps he is married; his wife
+ steals gently up and kisses him. 'My dear, the milliner's bill has
+ come.'--'O _dam_ the miller!' In a short time she returns--'My
+ dear, my pin money is out: come now, you are not asleep, I know:
+ and that is not all--the carriage wants painting; the house wants
+ repairs; the children want toys; servants want wages.' He rolls
+ his head over on one shoulder, opens his eyes, and fixes them in a
+ deliberate stare, as I do now, upon Miss Isabel.' This last idea
+ became either too sentimental or too ludicrous for Lamar; and he
+ jumped up in an unsuppressed fit of laughter. You know Lamar,
+ therefore I need not tell you that this is a very imperfect sketch
+ of the manner in which he acted the ludicrous and careless, but
+ _hen-pecked_, husband. I do not wonder that he laughed, when he
+ looked at Isabel, for her face was indescribably arch and
+ sanctimonious.
+
+ "Hilarity and glee seemed now to be the order of the evening with
+ all except poor Arthur. I thought that Lamar would actually sow
+ the seeds of a future quarrel, while discussing something
+ relating to the West. How introduced I do not know, unless Lamar
+ was talking of Damon. However, Arthur stated one fact which
+ surprised us all, and of which we had been all equally ignorant.
+ He stated that Kentucky had one more college than any other State
+ in the Union; half as many as all New-England; and more than North
+ Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Alabama, united.
+
+ "While these things were going on, I heard a gentle and scarcely
+ perceptible step behind me, on the carpet; and seeing the other
+ gentlemen rise, I mechanically rose also--to be electrified by the
+ vision of Miss St. Clair. She was pale and trembling, but far more
+ beautiful than I had ever seen her. It was not the beauty of the
+ waxen figure, or the picture; it was the beauty of feeling,
+ sensibility, and tenderness. You have seen that little plant which
+ shrinks at the rude touch of man, Randolph; that should be her
+ emblem.
+
+ "She glided into a rather darkened recess of the room, near where
+ I stood, and seated herself alone, as if to be out of the reach of
+ observation; yet by some means I was seated by her side, almost as
+ dumb as a statue. I even longed for more of Lamar's delineations,
+ if for nothing else but to see her smile again, and light up those
+ features which nature evidently made to smile. Her hair was still
+ parted over the forehead in the Grecian manner; a single ringlet
+ stole down behind her ear. Her dress was simplicity itself,
+ exceedingly plain and tasteful.
+
+ "I need not tell Miss St. Clair how much gratified I am at again
+ meeting her in a circle composed almost entirely of my friends and
+ my friends' friends; but, if I have been rightly informed, we are
+ more indebted to accident than to any benevolent designs on her
+ part for this meeting.
+
+ "'A strange accident indeed, my being here. Not less so than your
+ own. But _you_ are not a believer in accidents.'
+
+ "How beautiful a little act sometimes appears, Randolph, when it
+ sits upon the countenance of one so artless by nature that you can
+ see all the machinery which she imagines is so completely hidden,
+ as a child often hides its eyes and vainly supposes itself unseen.
+ This _ruse_, intended to draw me into some argument about
+ accidents, and to avoid the real case at issue, really amused me;
+ I was willing, however, to follow her lead for a time.
+ 'Accidents,' said I, 'seem to us, at first sight, to be without
+ the usual train of cause and effect; but, if they were all placed
+ in my hands, I think I could govern the destinies of the world, so
+ long as I could control my own destiny.'
+
+ "'I do not understand you, sir,' said she, with the simplest
+ cunning imaginable; feigning deep interest, though her countenance
+ would not join in the plot.
+
+ "'The condition,' I continued, 'and the present circumstances of
+ every individual now in this room might be traced back to some
+ accident which has happened--to the person, his father, or his
+ grandfather; the death of one friend, the marriage of another, may
+ affect the destinies of the persons themselves and all connected
+ with them.'
+
+ "Ah, Randolph! there was a tender chord touched. Did you ever see
+ a person shot through and through? The countenance expresses a
+ whole age of misery in an instant. The soul is conscious of it
+ before the body. One will even ask whether he is shot--while his
+ countenance proclaims death more forcibly than a hundred tongues
+ could utter it. There is a writhing, convulsive, retreating
+ misery; part of which I saw I had inflicted upon this gentle
+ being. This mystery must be solved. The system on which she is
+ treated by those around her is false.
+
+ "You have, perhaps, seen a whole family after the death of one of
+ its members, religiously observe profound silence on the subject.
+ Should any one rudely or even gently mention the deceased, all are
+ instantly horrified. Each fears that the feelings of all the rest
+ have been shocked. At this moment, a calm and judicious friend,
+ when the ice is once broken, may cure all this amiable weakness by
+ steadily and tenderly persevering. I was determined to try the
+ experiment in this case. A bold measure, when you consider the
+ person and the circumstances.
+
+ "'Miss St. Clair,' said I, after she had recovered her composure;
+ 'allow me to ask whether your family is related to that of General
+ St. Clair?'
+
+ "'I believe not,' she composedly answered.
+
+ "'Has your father been long dead?'
+
+ "'Not a very long time: and the loss is the greater, as I have
+ never known the value of a brother or a sister.'
+
+ "'You do not seem to labour under the usual disadvantages of
+ step-daughters.'
+
+ "'Never was step-father more devoted and affectionate than mine,
+ in his own peculiar way; and with that I am quite contented.'
+
+ "Now, Randolph, you know that impertinence had no share in
+ dictating these questions, but could impertinence have gone
+ farther? what ramification could I next attempt? Here was nearly
+ the whole genealogical tree, but farther down there was no hope of
+ touching the true branch.
+
+ "Her own gentle heart alone remained to be suspected. How could I
+ suspect it, Randolph? so young, so pure, so gentle, so beautiful!
+ Alas! that is but a poor protection against suitors. Besides, she
+ is said to be rich. Must the question be asked? I resolved upon
+ it! Was I not justifiable in doing so? Am I not an avowed suitor?
+ at least have I not shown myself ready to become so? The
+ opportunity was good; the company were all engaged in little
+ coteries around the saloon. My previous questions seemed rather to
+ have tranquillized her than otherwise; it was a trying moment!
+ but no other step could be gained until this obstacle was
+ surmounted. I therefore proceeded to make one or two anxious
+ inquiries, critical as it regards my happiness, but which a lover
+ cannot confide even to the ear of Randolph.
+
+ "My object was to know whether I had aught to fear from rivalry.
+ Her lips moved, but no sound issued from them. I resumed; 'Believe
+ me, that this pain would not have been inflicted, if my supposed
+ relation to yourself had not imboldened me to ask whether any
+ other man were so happy as to render me miserable.'
+
+ "'I see no impropriety in answering your question, though it can
+ avail nothing; my _affections_ are now as they have always
+ been--disengaged.'
+
+ "These words were wafted along the vestibule of my ear, like some
+ gentle breathings of magic; you have heard the soft vibrations of
+ the Æolian harp, as a gentle summer breeze bore them along the
+ air, redolent of the rich perfumes of summer flowers, and attuned
+ to the wild music of songsters without.
+
+ "Sweeter, far sweeter, was her voice; a silvery voice is at all
+ times the organ of the heart, but when it dies away in a thrilling
+ whisper from the profoundness of the internal struggle, the ardent
+ sympathy of the hearer is involuntary. Tragedians understand this
+ language of the heart, insomuch that custom has now established
+ the imitation, in deep-toned pathos.
+
+ "She placed emphasis on the word _affections_; why was this,
+ unless her hand is engaged without them? This idea flashed upon me
+ with electric force; you can well imagine how suddenly it broke
+ asunder the links of the delicious revery of which I have
+ attempted to give you a glimpse. Another more painful question
+ than any of the former now became absolutely necessary;
+ consequently I resumed: 'I think that I know Miss St. Clair
+ sufficiently well to presume with a good deal of certainty that
+ her hand is not pledged where her heart cannot accompany it?'
+
+ "'My hand, sir, is like my affections.'
+
+ "Her head now hung down a little, and her eye sought the carpet;
+ my own expressive glances, sanguine as they perhaps had
+ occasionally been, were themselves much softened and humbled; but
+ again I summoned my scattered thoughts to the charge.
+
+ "'Will Miss St. Clair grant me an interview on the morrow, or some
+ other day more convenient to herself?'
+
+ "The words had hardly escaped my mouth, when Isabel stood before
+ us. Lamar was soon by her side. I also arose.
+
+ "'My dear Frances,' said she, taking my seat, and locking her hand
+ where I would have given kingdoms to have had mine; 'we are
+ talking of making up a little equestrian party to the Passaic
+ Falls. Will you be of the company? Pray join us, like a dear girl;
+ it is only fifteen miles.'
+
+ "The lady addressed shook her head gravely. Isabel arose, and
+ turning to me, 'I leave the case in your hands, sir, and you are a
+ poor diplomatist for a southern, if you do not succeed in
+ persuading her to go.'
+
+ "I was much alarmed to hear many ladies calling for shawls and
+ bonnets. I was not long, therefore, in urging the case, for it was
+ emphatically _my_ case.
+
+ "'I cannot go,' said she; 'in the first place, I have not been on
+ horseback since my boarding-school days; and in the next place, I
+ could not undergo the fatigue.'
+
+ "'But if all these objections could be obviated?' I eagerly
+ inquired.
+
+ "'Then I should certainly be pleased to go, and still more pleased
+ to gratify others by going.'
+
+ "To make the story a short one, as my letter has already become
+ too long, she finally consented that I should drive her in a
+ cabriolet, provided her father, who was not present, thought it
+ proper for her to go.
+
+ "I reported progress to Isabel, who looked sly and arch; her
+ brother was as solemn as a tombstone. I do not say this in
+ triumph, Randolph, for God knows I have little cause as yet. I
+ merely state the fact in all plainness and honesty, that you may
+ have the whole case before you.
+
+ "'This augurs well for you, Mr. Chevillere,' whispered the lively
+ girl.
+
+ "'I am not so certain of that,' said I.
+
+ "Finally, we agreed to go, 'weather permitting,' as they say at
+ country sales, on the day after to-morrow.
+
+ "I did not urge this interview any farther, for a reason which you
+ will easily perceive. What has become of you? I write two pages to
+ your one now. Is the North more prolific than the South in
+ incidents?
+
+ "Your Friend and Chum,
+
+ "V. CHEVILLERE."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+
+ V. CHEVILLERE TO B. RANDOLPH.
+
+ "New-York, 18--.
+
+ "DEAR FRIEND,
+
+ "Certainly I must be one of the most unfortunate fellows that ever
+ lived. And none the less so because the bitter strokes come upon
+ me in the midst of apparent prosperity; but before I tell you of
+ one disappointment, I must tell you of the things which preceded
+ it, in the order of their occurrence.
+
+ "On the evening after the assemblage of our little party at
+ Hazlehurst's, Lamar, Damon, and myself went to the Italian Opera;
+ and to please Lamar no less than Damon, we took seats in the pit.
+
+ "The assemblage was brilliant beyond any thing I have seen, in the
+ two lower tiers of boxes. All the fashion, and wealth, and beauty
+ of this fair city seemed to be assembled around us, with their gay
+ plumage and foreign head-attire, and opera-glasses. As a shading
+ to this gay picture, there were the gentlemen, with enormous
+ whiskers and mustaches curling sentimentally and greasily over
+ the upper lip; their teeth glistening through the bristles,
+ ghastly as Peale's mummy itself.
+
+ "The passion for hairy visages is a singular characteristic of
+ this phrenological age. Large and frizzled locks puffed out on
+ each side of the head to hide the absence of development are
+ easily enough accounted for; but this supererogatory disfiguration
+ of ugly faces is altogether unaccountable on the same principles.
+
+ "'I'll be dad shamed if it ain't all cowardice, and I hate to see
+ it practised,' said Damon.
+
+ "There is, perhaps, more truth in this remark than you would at
+ first suppose. No man is so desirous to appear fierce, courageous,
+ and even piratical as he that is a dastard in his heart. Indeed
+ most men are fond of making a parade of those qualifications with
+ which they are least endowed by nature.
+
+ "There is one bewhiskered class, however, from whom we ought to
+ expect better things; I mean young and thoughtless men, who are
+ led away by fashion; many of whom have rubbed through the walls,
+ if not through the studies, of college; and whose taste ought to
+ have been more refined by associating with gentlemen, however
+ great their stolidity or idleness.
+
+ "Finally, as to whiskers, I have seen most of the American naval
+ and military heroes; and I cannot now recall a single one of them
+ who ever wore remarkable whiskers, or bristles on the upper lip.
+ Nor have I ever seen a polished southern gentleman remarkable for
+ either. There is one fact which, if generally known, would root
+ out the evil at its source; and that is, that men who flourish
+ large whiskers are very apt to become _bald_!
+
+ "'O! corn-stalks and jews-harps!' said Damon, after worrying on
+ his seat during the performance of the overture by the orchestra;
+ 'will they tune their banjoes all night, and never get to playin?'
+
+ "'That is called fine Italian music,' said Lamar.
+
+ "'Yes! yes!' replied he, 'there's 'four-and-twenty fiddlers' sure
+ enough! but I rather suspicion that it would puzzle some of our
+ Kentuck gals to dance a reel to that music. O my grandmother! what
+ jaunty heels they would have to sling after such elbow-greese as
+ that. But you are stuffing me with soft corn--I see you are by
+ your laughing. They know better than to pass that for music; no,
+ no, catch a weasel asleep!'
+
+ "The opera now commenced, and I must own that I saw more of Damon
+ than I did of the play. He was struck dumb with astonishment;
+ seemed scarcely to believe his own senses, but looking round the
+ house after an unusual silence, and seeing the audience serious
+ and apparently attentive, he burst into a cachinnation.
+
+ "'Well,' said he, with a long breath, 'I wish I may be tetotally
+ smashed in a cider-mill, if that don't out-Cherokee old Kentuck;
+ why that ain't a chaw-tobacco better nor Cherokee! Just wait a
+ minute, and they'll raise the whoop, it's likely; and if they do,
+ if I don't give them a touch of Kentuck pipes that'll make them
+ think somebody's busted their biler. Look! some of the men have
+ got rings in their ears too; and leather skinned. Now I'm snagged
+ if I was to meet that feller in a Mississip cane-brake, and my
+ rifle on my arm, if I wouldn't be apt to let the wind through his
+ whistle cross-ways.'
+
+ "'Not if he was to speak to you, and tell you he was a Christian
+ like yourself?'
+
+ "'Speak to me! he would do a devilish sight better to play dummy:
+ for sure as he spoke, I should let fly at him, because I wouldn't
+ know but he belonged to some of those far away tribes of
+ Black-feet, or the likes of that.'
+
+ "'But you do not really think that they look and speak any thing
+ like the western savages, Damon?' said I.
+
+ "'I'm smashed if I don't bet that I can put blankets and leggins
+ on the whole tribe, and pass them through the Cherokee nation for
+ friendly Black-feet.'
+
+ "The incomparable Prima Donna (as she is called here) now made her
+ first appearance; her voice is exquisite, Randolph, and her
+ execution beyond the conception of an unsophisticated student.
+
+ "The music is pleasing to the ear, and may touch an Italian heart,
+ but it found no response from mine. I tell this to you in all
+ sincerity and confidence, but it would lower a man, I fear, to
+ say so in the fashionable circles.
+
+ "'Well, Damon, would the Italian ladies pass for squaws?'
+
+ "'No, no; they are better than the men, and they are right pretty
+ too, if they didn't talk such outlandish gibberish; but that dark
+ skinn'd man there, I swear Pete Ironsides would kick him if he was
+ to go in my stable; for he hates an Injin, as I do an allegator;
+ poor Pete! I reckon he thinks I'm skulped.'
+
+ "'Pete is well cared for, I will guaranty,' said Lamar, very
+ pathetically.
+
+ "'Look! look!' exclaimed Damon; 'what's that under the green
+ umbrella there, at the front of the stage among the lights?'
+
+ "'That is the prompter, to put them right when they go wrong.'
+
+ "'Yes, yes! I see, I see!' continued he; 'he gives them a wink
+ every now and then.'
+
+ "In the operas it is very frequently the case that one of the
+ subordinate characters comes to the front of the stage after the
+ principals have made their exit, and explains what rare sport is
+ coming.
+
+ "'What does that fellow slip out here every now and then like a
+ dropped stitch for?'
+
+ "We explained to him the meaning of it, as well as we understood
+ it ourselves.
+
+ "'Ay, ay! I see it now; he is the Nota Bene!'
+
+ "We found great difficulty in getting Damon to understand, with
+ his shrewd natural view of things, that an opera was nothing more
+ than a common play; the parts being sung, instead of spoken.
+
+ "'Now I wish my head may be knocked into a cocked-hat, if a man
+ had told this to me of the Yorkers in old Kentuck, if I wouldn't
+ have thought he was spinnin long yarns; there is no sense in it,
+ nor there's no fun in it, as they all take it up there in the
+ pews; if so moutbe now that they were all of my way of thinking,
+ and would only join in a _leetle_ touch of the warwhoop, why we
+ might show them fellers a little of the real Cherokee, that I
+ rather suspicion they haven't seen.'
+
+ "'Why, what would you do, Damon?'
+
+ "'_Jist_ set them four-and-twenty fiddlers to playin of something
+ like Christian reels; hand the gals down on the floor; then I
+ reckon there would be a little sort of a regular hand-round!
+ Confound their jimmy simequivers, and their supple elbows! Smash
+ me, if they don't think the whole cream of the ball lies in
+ rattlin the bones of their elbows. Give me your long sweeping bow
+ hands, that saws the music right in under your ribs, and sets your
+ legs to dancin, whether they will or not. Do you think them
+ fellers ever made anybody feel in the humour for a hand-round?'
+
+ "'I can't say that I think they ever did.'
+
+ "'No, nor they never will! they may set people's teeth on a wire
+ edge, or make their flesh crawl, or set them into an ague fit with
+ their shakin, and grindin, and squawkin. And now I think of it,
+ the whole business sounds more like grinding ramrods in an
+ armory, than any thing I ever come across; there's the squeakin of
+ the wheels, that would go for them goose guzzles them fellers are
+ pipin on. The ramrods on the grindstones will go for the
+ fiddles,--only I don't see any fire flyin out of the catgut, but
+ I've been watchin sharp for it some time. Then there's the old
+ leather bellows groanin and gruntin away, jist like those two
+ fellers seesawin there, on them two big-bellied fiddles, and the
+ leather bands flappin every time they come round, keeps the time
+ for the whole concern.'
+
+ "'Well, have you seen any fire yet?' after a long pause.
+
+ "'Yes, plenty of it! they make it fly out of my eyes, if they
+ don't out of the catguts; confound them, I say, they keep me all
+ the time drawin down first one eye and then another, first one
+ corner of my mouth and then another, jist as if a horse was on a
+ dead strain, and you were bowing your neck and stickin your leg
+ straight in the ground, and then strainin with all your might as
+ if you could help him; but this is worse! a confounded sight
+ worse! for every now and then all the fiddlers and trumpeters
+ comes rattlin down their tinklin quivers, like a four-horse load
+ of china, goin to the devil down a steep hill at the rate of ten
+ knots an hour; and then it all dies away agin, as if horses,
+ wagon, and chinaware had all gone over a bank as high as a church
+ steeple. Then! I begin to draw a long breath agin, and feel a
+ little comfortable. But here's a dyin away sound! hop and come
+ agin, rising and whooping, until the whole team's going full tilt,
+ pull dick, pull devil, here they go again! old Nick take the
+ hindmost. See their elbows now, how they move out and in, out and
+ in, like spinning jinnies. And see that feller that sets at the
+ top of the mob, on the high chair in the middle, how his head
+ goes. See how he looks at that book before him, as if that stuff
+ could be put down there in black and white.'
+
+ "'It _is_ all down there, Damon.'
+
+ "'Come, come, now, strangers, you have stuffed me enough! I can't
+ swallow that exactly neither! All the lawyers in Philadelphia
+ couldn't write down half the wriggle-ma-rees one of them chaps has
+ made since I set here! Smash my apple-cart, if I wouldn't like
+ jist to see a goosequill goin at the rate of one of them elbows.
+ Ink would fly like mud at a scrub-race, and when it was done it
+ would look like my copy-book used to do at school; more stops than
+ words.'
+
+ "'But you keep your eye on the orchestra all the while; why not
+ look on the stage?'
+
+ "'I do, I do; and that puzzles me the blamedest,--how they all
+ come out square at the stops, fiddlers and all. Every now and then
+ they seem to git into a fair race, and one feller's eye is poppin
+ out of his head, and the veins on the woman's neck is ready to
+ burst, and the fiddlers and the pipers and the trumpeters are all
+ puffin and blowin, like our Kentuck jockeys at a pony
+ sweepstakes; and then all at once, jist as there begins to be a
+ little sport, to see who has the wind and the bottom, their heads
+ begin to move first one side and then the other all so kind, and
+ ready to make a draw game of it, blabbering all the time; till the
+ trumpeter sees they're pretty well blown, then he begins to come
+ down a little with his toot! toot! toot! That's to call all hands
+ off, you see, and they slip down as easy and as quiet as if it had
+ all been in fun. Then they all clear out but one, and he watches
+ his chance till they're all gone. Then he comes here to the front,
+ and flaps his wings and crows over them, as if he had done some
+ great things, if we hadn't been here to show fair play.'
+
+ "I am sure, Randolph, that I give you but a poor idea of the
+ reality, but you must supply the deficiencies by your imagination.
+ Damon talked incessantly, and I enjoyed it far more than I could
+ have done the opera, even if I had been a perfect Italian scholar.
+ I find that I must defer the account of our disappointment till
+ another time, when I will tell you some matters of interest.
+
+ "Truly yours,
+
+ "V. CHEVILLERE."
+
+
+END OF VOL. I.
+
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's note:
+
+ Alternate, archaic, and inconsistent spelling of some words have
+ been retained.
+
+ Punctuation has been made consistent including the use of
+ quotation marks.
+
+ page 36: "faintin" changed to "faintin'" (a faintin' spell).
+
+ page 57: "ear" changed to "dear" (Believe me, dear lady,).
+
+ page 114: "doggrel" changed to "doggerel" so as to be consistent
+ with other places this word is used (and singing doggerel to the
+ music).
+
+
+
+***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE KENTUCKIAN IN NEW-YORK, VOLUME I
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+<body>
+<h1 class="pg">The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Kentuckian in New-York, Volume I (of 2),
+by William Alexander Caruthers</h1>
+<pre>
+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 <a href = "http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p>Title: The Kentuckian in New-York, Volume I (of 2)</p>
+<p> or, The Adventures of Three Southerns</p>
+<p>Author: William Alexander Caruthers</p>
+<p>Release Date: July 4, 2011 [eBook #36613]</p>
+<p>Language: English</p>
+<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE KENTUCKIAN IN NEW-YORK, VOLUME I (OF 2)***</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<h4>E-text prepared by Roberta Staehlin, Pat McCoy,<br />
+ and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
+ (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br />
+ from page images generously made available by<br />
+ Internet Archive/American Libraries<br />
+ (<a href="http://www.archive.org/details/americana">http://www.archive.org/details/americana</a>)</h4>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
+ <tr>
+ <td valign="top">
+ Note:
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ Images of the original pages are available through
+ Internet Archive/American Libraries. See
+ <a href="http://www.archive.org/details/kentuckianinnewy01carurich">
+ http://www.archive.org/details/kentuckianinnewy01carurich</a>
+ </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a></span></p>
+
+<h4>THE</h4>
+
+<h1>KENTUCKIAN</h1>
+
+<h4>IN</h4>
+
+<h1>NEW-YORK.</h1>
+
+
+<p class="title"><br />
+OR, THE<br />
+<br />
+<big>ADVENTURES OF THREE SOUTHERNS.<br />
+<br />
+BY A VIRGINIAN.</big></p>
+
+
+
+<div class='center'>
+<table border="0" cellpadding="1" cellspacing="0" summary="">
+<tr><td align='left'>"Perhaps it may turn out a sang,</td></tr>
+<tr><td align='left'>Perhaps turn out a sermon."&mdash;<i>Burns.</i></td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+
+<p class="title"><br />
+IN TWO VOLUMES.<br />
+
+<big>VOL. I.</big></p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+
+
+<p class="title"><big>NEW-YORK:</big><br />
+PUBLISHED BY HARPER &amp; BROTHERS,<br />
+NO. 82 CLIFF-STREET.<br />
+<br />
+<big>1834.</big></p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p class="title">Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1834,<br />
+By <span class="smcap">Harper &amp; Brothers</span>,<br />
+In the Clerk's Office of the Southern District of New-York.</p>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<p class="title">NEARLY READY.
+</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>HELEN. A new Tale. By <span class="smcap">Maria Edgeworth</span>&mdash;forming
+the <i>tenth</i> volume of Harper's Uniform Edition of
+her Works. Containing two beautiful Engravings on
+steel.</p>
+
+<p>TALES AND SKETCHES,&mdash;such as they are. By
+<span class="smcap">W. L. Stone</span>, Esq. In 2 vols. 12mo.</p>
+
+<p>THE FROLICS OF PUCK. In 2 vols. 12mo.</p>
+
+<p>THE KENTUCKIAN IN NEW-YORK. By <span class="smcap">A Virginian</span>.
+In 2 vols. 12mo.</p>
+
+<p>GUY RIVERS. A Novel. By the Author of "Martin
+Faber." In 2 vols. 12mo.</p>
+
+<p>MRS. SHERWOOD'S WORKS. Uniform Edition.
+With Engravings on steel. 12mo.</p>
+
+<p>PAULDING'S WORKS. Uniform Edition. Revised
+and corrected by the Author. 12mo.</p></blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>THE<br />
+
+KENTUCKIAN IN NEW-YORK.</h2>
+
+<!-- Autogenerated TOC. Modify or delete as required. -->
+<p class="center">
+<a href="#CHAPTER_I"><b>CHAPTER I.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_II"><b>CHAPTER II.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_III"><b>CHAPTER III.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IV"><b>CHAPTER IV.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_V"><b>CHAPTER V.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VI"><b>CHAPTER VI.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VII"><b>CHAPTER VII.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VIII"><b>CHAPTER VIII.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IX"><b>CHAPTER IX.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_X"><b>CHAPTER X.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XI"><b>CHAPTER XI.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XII"><b>CHAPTER XII.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIII"><b>CHAPTER XIII.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIV"><b>CHAPTER XIV.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XV"><b>CHAPTER XV.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVI"><b>CHAPTER XVI.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVII"><b>CHAPTER XVII.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XVIII"><b>CHAPTER XVIII.</b></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_XIX"><b>CHAPTER XIX.</b></a><br />
+</p>
+<!-- End Autogenerated TOC. -->
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I.</h2>
+
+
+<p>Towards the latter part of the summer of 18&mdash;,
+on one of those cool, delightful, and invigorating
+mornings which are frequent in the southern regions
+of the United States, there issued from the
+principal hotel on the valley-side of Harper's Ferry
+two travellers, attended by a venerable and stately
+southern slave. The experienced eye of the old
+ferryman, as he stood in his flat-bottomed boat
+awaiting the arrival of this party, discovered at
+once that our travellers were from the far South.</p>
+
+<p>The first of these, Victor Chevillere, entered the
+"flat," leading by the bridle a mettlesome southern
+horse; when he had stationed this fine animal to
+his satisfaction, he stood directly fronting the prescriptive
+Charon of the region. This young gentleman,
+who appeared to be the principal character
+of the party just entering the boat, was handsomely
+formed, moderately tall, and fashionably dressed.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>
+His face was bold, dignified, and resolute, and
+not remarkable for any very peculiar fashion
+of the hair or beard which shaded it. He appeared
+to be about twenty-three years of age,
+and though so young, much and early experience
+of the world had already o'ershadowed his face
+with a becoming serenity, if not sadness. Not
+that silly, affected melancholy, however, which is
+so often worn in these days by young and romantic
+idle gentlemen, to catch the errant sympathies of
+some untravelled country beauty.</p>
+
+<p>The next personage of the party (who likewise
+entered the boat leading a fine southern animal),
+was a fashionable young gentleman, about the
+middle size; his face was pale and wan, as if he
+had but just recovered from an attack of illness.
+Nevertheless there was a brilliant fire in his eye,
+and a lurking, but too evident, disposition to fun
+and humour, which illness had not been entirely
+able to subdue. Augustus Lamar, for such was
+his name, was the confidential and long-tried friend
+of the first-named gentleman: their mutual regard
+had existed undiminished from the time of their
+early school days in South Carolina, through their
+whole college career in Virginia up to the moment
+of which we speak.</p>
+
+<p>The third and more humble personage of the
+party bore the time-honoured appellation of Cato.
+He was a tall old negro, with a face so black as to
+form a perfect contrast to his white hair and brilliant
+teeth. He was well dressed and cleanly in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span>
+his person, and rather solemn and pompous in his
+manners. Cato had served the father of his present
+highly honoured young master, and was deeply
+imbued with that strong feudal attachment to the
+family, which is a distinguishing characteristic of
+the southern negroes who serve immediately near
+the persons of the great landholders.</p>
+
+<p>Our travellers were now smoothly gliding over
+that most magnificent "meeting of the waters" of
+the Shenandoah and Potomack, which is usually
+known by the unpretending name of "Harper's
+Ferry." It was early morning; the moon was
+still visible above the horizon, and the sun had not
+yet risen above those stupendous fragments whose
+chaotic and irregular position gives token of the
+violence with which the mass of waters rent for
+themselves a passage through the mountains, when
+rushing on to meet that other congregation of
+rivers, with whose waters they unite to form the
+Bay of the Chesapeake. The black bituminous
+smoke from the hundred smithies of the United
+States' armory, had just begun to rise above the
+towering crags that seemed, at this early period, to
+battle with the vapours which are here sent up in
+thick volumes from the contest of rocks and rivers
+beneath.</p>
+
+<p>Old Cato had by this time assumed his post at
+the heads of the three horses, while our southerns
+stood with folded arms, each impressed with the
+scene according to his individual impulses. As
+they approached nearer to the northern shore, Che<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>villere,
+addressing Lamar, observed: "An unhappy
+young lady she must be who arrived at our hotel
+last evening. I could hear her weeping bitterly as
+she paced the floor, until a late hour of the night,
+when finally she seemed to throw herself upon the
+bed, and fall asleep from mere exhaustion;" and
+then, turning to the weather-beaten steersman, continued:
+"I suppose we are the first passengers in
+the 'flat' this morning?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir, you are not; a carriage from the same
+tavern went over half an hour ago. There was
+an old gray-headed man, and two young women
+in it, besides the driver, and the driver told me
+that they were all the way from York State,&mdash;the
+mail stage, too, went over."</p>
+
+<p>"The same party," said Chevillere, abstractedly;
+"Did you learn where they were to breakfast,
+boatman?"</p>
+
+<p>"About ten miles from this, I think I heard say."</p>
+
+<p>They were soon landed and mounted, and cantering
+away through the fog and vapours of the
+early morning. Nor were they long in overtaking
+a handsome travelling-carriage, which was moving
+at a brisk rate, in accordance with the exertions of
+two fine, evidently northern, horses. The carriage
+contained an elderly, grave, formal, and magisterial
+gentleman; his locks quite gray, and hanging loose
+upon the collar of his coat; his countenance harsh,
+austere, and forbidding in the extreme. By his
+side sat a youthful lady, so enveloped in a large
+black mantle, and travelling hat and veil, that but<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
+little of her form or features could be seen, except
+a pair of brilliant blue eyes.</p>
+
+<p>It is not to be denied, that these sudden apparitions
+of young and beautiful females, almost completely
+shrouded in mantles, drapery, or veils, are
+the very circumstances fully to arouse the slumbering
+energies of a lately emancipated college Quixotte.
+A lovely pair of eyes, brimful of tears,&mdash;a
+"Cinderella" foot and ankle,&mdash;a white and beautifully
+turned hand and tapered fingers, with perhaps
+a mourning ring or two,&mdash;or a bonnet suddenly
+blown off, so as to dishevel a magnificent head of
+hair, its pretty mistress meanwhile all confusion,
+and her snowy neck and temples suffused with
+blushes,&mdash;these are the little incidents on which the
+real romances of human life are founded. How
+many persons can look back to such a commencement
+of their youthful loves! nay, perhaps, refer
+to it all the little enjoyment with which they have
+been blessed through life! We venture to say,
+that those who were so unfortunate as never to
+bring their first youthful romance to a fortunate
+denouement, can likewise look back upon such
+occurrences with many pleasing emotions. A
+bachelor or a widower, indeed, may not always
+recur with pleasure to these first passages in the
+book of life,&mdash;but the feelings even of these are
+not altogether of the melancholy kind. The fairy
+queens of their spring-tide will sometimes arise in
+the present tense, until they almost imagine themselves
+in the possession again of youth and all its<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
+raptures,&mdash;its brilliant dreams, airy castles, "hair-breadth
+'scapes," and miraculous deliverances,&mdash;cruel
+fathers, and perverse guardians, and stolen
+interviews, and lovers' vows and tokens,&mdash;winding
+up finally with a runaway match&mdash;all of the imagination.</p>
+
+<p>After the equipage before alluded to had been
+for some time left behind, our travellers began to
+descry, at the distance of several miles, the long
+white portico of the country inn at which they
+proposed to breakfast. The United States mail-coach
+for Baltimore was standing at the door, evidently
+waiting till the passengers should have
+performed the same needful operation. Servants
+were running hither and thither, some to the roost,
+others to the stable, as if a large number of the
+most distinguished dignitaries of the land had just
+arrived.</p>
+
+<p>But, behold, when our travellers drew up, they
+found that all this stir among the servants of the
+inn was called into being by the real or affected
+wants of a number of very young gentlemen. We
+say affected, because we are sorry to acknowledge
+that it is not uncommon to see very young and
+inexperienced gentlemen, on such occasions, assume
+airs and graces which are merely put on as a travelling
+dress, and which would be thrown aside at
+the first appearance of an old acquaintance. At
+such times it is by no means rare to see all the
+servants of the inn, together with the host and
+hostess, entirely engrossed by one of these over<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>grown
+boys or ill-bred men, while their elders and
+superiors are compelled either to want or wait
+upon themselves. At the time we notice, some
+young bloods of the cities were exercising themselves
+in their new suit of stage-coach manners.</p>
+
+<p>"Here waiter! waiter!" with an affectedly delicate
+and foreign voice, cried one of these youths,
+enveloped in a brown "Petersham box" coat, and
+with his hands stuck into his pockets over his hips.
+Under the arm of this person was a black riding-switch,
+with a golden head, and a small chain of
+the same precious metal, fastened about six inches
+therefrom, after the fashion of some old rapier
+guards. He wore a rakish-looking fur cap, round
+and tight on the top of his head as a bladder of
+snuff; this was cocked on one side after a most
+piratical fashion, so as to show off, in the best possible
+manner, a great profusion of coarse, shining
+black hair, which was evidently indebted to art
+rather than nature for the curls that frizzled out
+over his ears, while the back part of his head was
+left as bare and defenceless as if he had already
+been under the hands of a deputy turnkey. He
+practised what may be called American puppyism,
+as technically distinguished from the London species
+of the same genus. "Here waiter! waiter!"
+said he, "bring me a gin sling,&mdash;and half-a-dozen
+Bagdad segars,&mdash;and a lighted taper,&mdash;and a fresh
+egg,&mdash;and a bowl of water, and a clean towel,&mdash;and
+polish my boots,&mdash;and dust my coat,&mdash;and then
+send me the barber, do you hear?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"O, sir! we has no barber, nor Bagdab segars
+neither; but we has plenty of the real Baltimores,&mdash;real
+good ones, too,&mdash;as I knows very well, for
+I smokes the old sodgers what the gentlemen throws
+on the bar-room floor."</p>
+
+<p>"It is one of the most amusing scenes imaginable,"
+said Victor Chevillere to Augustus Lamar,
+as they sat witnessing this scene, "when the waiter
+and the master pro tempore are both fools. The
+fawning, bowing, cringing waiter, with his big lips
+upon the <i>qui vive</i>, his head and shoulders constantly
+in motion, and rubbing his hands one over the other
+after the most approved fashion of the men of
+business. In such a case as that which we have
+just witnessed, where puppyism comes in contact
+with the kindred monkey-tricks of the waiter, I
+can enjoy it. But when it happens, as I have
+more than once seen, that the waiter is a manly,
+sensible, and dignified old negro of the loftier sort,
+such as old Cato,&mdash;then you can soon detect the
+curl of contempt upon his lip,&mdash;and he is not long
+thereafter in selecting the real gentlemen of the
+party,&mdash;always choosing to wait most upon those
+who least demand it."</p>
+
+<p>"I would bet my horse Talleyrand against an
+old field scrub, that that fellow is a Yankee," answered
+Lamar.</p>
+
+<p>"He may be a Yankee," continued Victor Chevillere,
+"but you have travelled too much and reflected
+too long upon the nature of man, to ascribe
+every thing disgusting to a Yankee origin. For<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
+my part, I make the character of every man I
+meet in some measure my study during my travels,
+and as we have agreed to exchange opinions upon
+men and things, I will tell you freely what I think
+of that fellow who has just retreated from our
+laughter. I have found it not at all uncommon, to
+see the most undisguised hatred arise between two
+such persons as he of the stage-coach,&mdash;the one
+from the north, and the other from the south,&mdash;when
+in truth, the actuating impulse was precisely
+the same in both, but had taken a different direction,
+and was differently developed by different
+exciting causes.</p>
+
+<p>"The puppyism of Charleston and that of Boston
+are only different shades of the same character,
+yet these kindred spirits can in nowise tolerate
+each other. As is universally the case, those are
+most intolerant to others who have most need of
+forgiveness themselves. The mutual jealousy of
+the north and south is a decided evidence of littleness
+in both regions, and ample cause for shame to
+the educated gentlemen of all parties of this happy
+country. If pecuniary interest had not been mixed
+up with this provincial rivalry, the feeling could
+easily have been so held up to the broad light of
+intelligence, as to be a fertile source of amusement,
+and furnish many a subject for comedy and farce
+in after-times."</p>
+
+<p>This specimen was by no means the only one
+among the arrivals by the stage-coach. Every
+waiter in the house was pressed into the service of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
+these coxcombs,&mdash;some smoked,&mdash;some swaggered
+through the private rooms,&mdash;others adjusted their
+frizzled locks at the mirrors with brushes carried
+for the purpose,&mdash;and all together created a vast
+commotion in the quiet country inn.</p>
+
+<p>As our two young southerns sat in the long
+piazza, eying these stage-coach travellers and waiting
+for breakfast, the same equipage which they
+had passed on the road, and containing our northern
+party, drew up to the door.</p>
+
+<p>Not many minutes had elapsed before a black
+servant stood in the entry between the double
+suite of apartments, and briskly swung a small
+bell to and fro, which seemed to announce breakfast,
+from the precipitate haste with which the gentlemen
+of the stage-coach found their way into the
+long breakfasting-hall of the establishment. Our
+southerns followed their example, but more quietly,
+and by the invitation of the host. At the upper
+end of the table stood the hostess, who, like most
+of her kind in America, was the wife of a wealthy
+landholder and farmer, as well as tavern-keeper.
+She was a genteel and modest-looking woman, and
+did the honours of the table like a lady at her own
+hospitable board, and among selected guests. It
+is owing to a mistake in the character of the host
+and hostess, that so many foreigners give and take
+offence at these establishments. They often contumaciously
+demand as a right, what would have
+been offered to them in all courtesy after the established
+usages of the country.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>On the right of the hostess sat the youthful lady
+who had spent such an unhappy night at the ferry,&mdash;in
+the hearing of Victor Chevillere,&mdash;and whom
+they had passed on the road. She was still so enveloped
+in her travelling dress and veil as to be
+but partially seen. On the same side, unfortunately,
+as he no doubt thought, sat Chevillere with
+Lamar. The grave-looking old gentleman, the
+companion of the youthful lady mentioned, sat immediately
+opposite to her. The gentlemen of extreme
+ton (as they wished to be thought), were
+ranged along the table, already mangling the dishes,
+cracking and replacing the eggs, and apparently
+much dissatisfied with the number of seconds they
+had remained in heated water. Nor were they
+long in striking up a conversation, as loud and full
+of slang as their previous displays had been. During
+this unseemly and boisterous conduct, some
+more tender chord seemed to be touched within
+the bosom of the lovely young female, than would
+have been supposed from the character of the assailants.
+Victor Chevillere turned his head in that
+direction, and saw that her face had become more
+deadly pale; at the same moment he heard her say,
+in an under-tone, to the old gentleman her companion,
+"My dear sir, assist me from this room,&mdash;my
+head grows dizzy, and I feel a deathlike sickness."</p>
+
+<p>Chevillere was upon his feet in an instant, and
+assisted the lady to rise; by this time, the old gentleman
+having taken her other arm, they carried
+rather than led her into one of the adjoining apart<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>ments,
+where, after depositing their beautiful burden
+upon a sofa, Chevillere left her to the care of
+the hostess, who had followed, and returned to the
+breakfast-table.</p>
+
+<p>Let us describe a country breakfast for the uninitiated.
+At the head of the table was a large
+salver, or japanned waiter, upon which was spread
+out various utensils of China-ware,&mdash;the only articles
+of plate being a sugar-dish and cream-pot.
+On the right of this salver stood a coffee and tea-urn,
+of some composition metal, resembling silver
+in appearance. At the other end of the table,
+under the skilful hands of the host, was a large
+steak, cut and sawed entirely through the sirloin
+of the beef. Half-way up the table, on either side,
+were dishes of broiled game, the intermediate
+spaces being filled up with various kinds of hot
+bread, biscuit and pancakes (as they are called
+in some parts of the north). This custom of eating
+hot bread at the morning and evening meal, is
+almost universal at the south. Immediately in the
+centre stood a pyramid of fresh-churned butter,
+with a silver butter-knife sticking into the various
+ornaments of vine-leaves and grapes with which
+it was stamped.</p>
+
+<p>To this fare Chevillere found his friend Lamar
+doing the most ample justice, nor was his own
+keen appetite entirely destroyed by the temporary
+indisposition of the lady who had so much excited
+his curiosity and his sympathy. He could have
+congratulated himself on the little occurrence<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
+which had given him some claims to a farther acquaintance,
+and doubtless could have indulged in
+delightful reveries as to the fair and youthful
+stranger,&mdash;had not all his gay dreams been put to
+flight by the boisterous laughter and meager attempts
+at wit of the other travellers. As he returned
+towards the table, the one whom we have
+more particularly described elevated a glass, with
+a golden handle, to his large, full, and impudent
+eye. Chevillere returned the gaze until his look
+almost amounted to a deliberate stare. The
+"bloods" looked fierce, and exchanged pugnacious
+looks, but all chance of a collision was prevented
+by the return of the hostess. Notwithstanding the
+disagreeable qualities of most of the guests at the
+table, Chevillere found time to turn the little incident
+of the sudden indisposition and its probable
+cause several times in his own mind; and, as may
+be well imagined, his mental soliloquy resulted in
+no injurious imputation upon the youthful lady,&mdash;there
+was evidently no trait of affectation.</p>
+
+<p>At length the meal was brought to a close,&mdash;not
+however, before the driver of the mail-coach had
+wound sundry impatient blasts upon his bugle,&mdash;general
+joy seemed to pervade every remaining
+countenance after the departure of the coxcombs.
+Both the northern and southern travellers, who
+were journeying northward, and who had breakfasted
+at the inn, were soon likewise plodding along
+at the usual rate of weary travellers by a private
+conveyance.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II.</h2>
+
+
+<p>The misery of the young and the beautiful is
+at all times infectious. Few young persons can
+withhold sympathy in such a case,&mdash;especially if
+the person thus afflicted be unmarried&mdash;of the other
+sex&mdash;and near one's own age.</p>
+
+<p>Victor Chevillere could not expel from his imagination
+the image of the fair stranger. Again
+and again did he essay to join Lamar in his light
+and sprightly conversation, as they, on the day
+after the one recorded in the last chapter, pursued
+their journey along the noble turnpike between
+Fredericktown and Baltimore. The same profound
+revery would steal upon him, and abide
+until broken by the merry peals of Lamar's peculiarly
+loud and joyous laughter, at the new mood
+which seemed to have visited the former. When
+a young person first begins to experience these
+abstracted moods, there is nothing, perhaps, that
+sounds more harsh and startling to his senses, than
+the mirthful voice of his best friend. He looks up
+as one would naturally look at any unseemly or
+boisterous conduct at a funeral. He seems to
+gaze and wonder, for the first time, that all things
+and all men are jogging on at their usual gait.
+Thus were things moving upon the Fredericktown<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>
+turnpike: Lamar riding forty or fifty paces in front,
+singing away the blue devils; Chevillere in the
+centre, moody and silent; and old Cato, stately as
+a statue on horseback, bringing up the rear.</p>
+
+<p>From hearing sundry merry peals of laughter
+from Lamar's quarter, Chevillere was induced at
+length to forego his own society for a moment, to
+see what new subject his Quixotic friend had found
+for such unusual merriment; and a subject he had
+indeed found in the shape of a tall Kentuckian.
+The name of the stranger, it seems, was Montgomery
+Damon. He was six feet high, with broad
+shoulders, full, projecting chest, light hair and complexion,
+and a countenance that was upon the first
+blush an index to a mind full of quaint, rude, and
+wild humour. His dress was any thing but fashionable;
+he wore a large, two-story hat, with a
+bandana handkerchief hanging out in front, partly
+over his forehead, as if to protect it from the great
+weight of his castor. His coat and pantaloons
+were of home-made cotton and woollen jeans, and
+he carried in his hand a warlike riding-whip, loaded
+with lead, and mounted with silver, with which,
+now and then, he gave emphasis to his words, by
+an unexpected and sonorous crack.</p>
+
+<p>Our Kentuckian was no quiet man; but, like most
+of his race, bold, talkative, and exceedingly democratic
+in all his notions; feeling as much pride in
+his occupation of drover, as if he had been a senator
+in Congress from his own "Kentuck," as he emphatically
+called it. He was a politician, too, inas<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>much
+as he despised <i>tories</i>, as he called the federalists,
+approved of the late war, and had a most
+venomous hatred against Indians, of whatever
+tribe or nation. We shall break into their dialogue
+at the point at which Victor became a
+listener.</p>
+
+<p>"How did it happen," said Lamar, "that you
+did not join the army either of the north or south,
+when your heart seems to have been so entirely
+with them?"</p>
+
+<p>"O! as to <i>jine</i>en the army to the north," said
+Damon, "I was afraid the blasted tories would sell
+me to the British, me and my messmates, like old
+Hull, the infernal old traitor, sold his men for so
+much a head, <i>jist</i> as I sell my hogs. As to t'other
+business, down yonder, under Old Hickory, I
+reckon I <i>did</i> take a hand or so aginst the bloody
+Injins."</p>
+
+<p>"You prefer a fight with Indians, then, to one
+with white men."</p>
+
+<p>"To be sure I do; I think no more of taking
+my jack-knife, and unbuttonin the collar of a Creek
+Injin, than I would of takin the jacket off a good
+fat bell-wether, or mout-be a yerlin calf. Old
+Hickory's the boy to <i>sculp</i> the bloody creters; he's
+the boy to walk into their bread-baskets; and Dick
+Johnston ain't far behind him, I can tell you,
+stranger; he's the chap what plumped a bullet
+right into old Tecumseh's bagpipes. Let him alone
+for stoppin their war-whoops."</p>
+
+<p>"You were a rifleman, I suppose," said Lamar.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Right agin, stranger. Give me a rifle for ever;
+they never spiles meat, though, as one may say,
+Injin's meat ain't as good as blue-lick buck's; but
+for all that, it's a pity to make bunglin work of a
+neat job; besides, your smooth bores waste a
+deal of powder and lead upon the outlandish
+creters."</p>
+
+<p>"Were you ever wounded?" asked Lamar.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes! don't you see this here hare-lip to my
+right eye? Well! that was jist the corner of an
+Injin's hatchet. Bob Wiley jist knocked up his arm
+in time to save me for another whet at the varmints;
+if so mout be that we ever has another
+brush with 'em, and Bob goes out agin, maybe I
+may do him a good turn yet; he's what I call a
+tear down sneezer (crack went the whip). He's
+got no more fear among the Injins than a wild cat
+in a weasel's nest; O! it would have done your
+heart good to see him jist lie down behind an old
+log, and watch for one of the varmint's heads bobbin
+up and down like a muskovy drake in a barn
+yard, and as sure as you saw the fire at the muzzle
+of his gun, so sure he knocked the creter's hind
+sights out. You see he always took 'em on the
+bob, jist as you would shoot a divin bird, and that's
+what I always called taking the bread out of the
+creter's mouth, for he was watchin for the same
+chance."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you scalp the slain?" said Lamar.</p>
+
+<p>"No!" replied Damon, "we had plenty of
+friendly Injins to do that, and it used to make me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
+laugh to see the yallow raskals sculpin their kin;
+that's what I call dog eat dog."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think an Indian has a soul?" said
+Lamar.</p>
+
+<p>"Ha! ha! ha!" roared the Kentuckian, giving
+a crack of unusual emphasis, "that's what I call a
+stumper; but as you're no missionary, I 'spose I'll
+tell you. I knows some dumb brutes&mdash;here's this
+Pete Ironsides that I'm ridin on, has more of a
+Christian soul in him than any leather-skin between
+Missouri and Red River. Why! stranger! what's
+an Injin good for, more nor a wild cat? You
+can't tame ne'er a one of 'em."</p>
+
+<p>"But those missionaries you spoke of, don't you
+think they will civilize, if not Christianize them?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ha! ha! ha!" shouted Damon, with another
+loud crack, and rolling a huge quid of tobacco
+to the opposite side of his mouth, "they might as
+well mount the trees and preach to the 'coons
+and tree-frogs; one of your real psalm-singers
+mout tree a coon at it, but hang me if he can ever
+put the pluck of a white man under a yellow jacket.
+Catch a weasel asleep or a fox at a foot race. I
+rather suspicion, stranger, that I've seen more
+Injins than your missionaries, and I'll tell you the
+way to tame 'em;&mdash;slit their windpipes and hamstring
+'em."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps you are an enemy to religion, or prejudiced
+against the missionaries?"</p>
+
+<p>"No! no! stranger, no! I likes religion well
+enough of a Sunday; but hang me if I should not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+die of laughin to see 'em layin it down to the redskins.
+I'd as soon think of going into my horse
+stable and preachin to the dumb brutes. Old Pete
+here knows more now than many an Injin, and he's
+got more soul than some Yankees that mout be
+named; but come, stranger, here's a public house,
+let's go in and cut the phlegm."</p>
+
+<p>"Agreed," said Lamar, "but it must be at my
+expense."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Damon, "we'll not quarrel about
+that;" and turning to Victor, "Stranger, won't
+you join us in a glass of tight?"</p>
+
+<p>"No! I thank you," said Chevillere, "but I will
+look on while you and my friend drink to the better
+acquaintance of us all."</p>
+
+<p>After the parties had refreshed themselves and
+their horses, and remounted, the conversation was
+resumed. "Well now," said the Kentuckian, addressing
+Victor, "I wish I may be contwisted if
+you ain't one of the queerest men, to come from the
+Carolinas, I have clapped eyes on this many a
+day. You don't chaw tobacco, and you don't
+drink nothin; smash my apple-cart if I can see
+into it."</p>
+
+<p>"I am one of those that don't believe in the
+happy effects of either brandy or tobacco," replied
+Chevillere.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you are off the trail for once in your life,
+stranger, for I take tobacco to be one of God's
+mercies to the poor. Whether it came by a rigular
+dispensation of providence (as our parson used<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>
+to say), or in a natural way, I can't tell; but hang
+me, if when I gets a quid of the real Kentuck twist
+or Maryland kite-foot into my mouth, if I ain't as
+proud a man as the grand Turk himself. It drives
+away the solemncholies, and makes a fellow feel
+so good-natured, and so comfortable; it turns the
+shillings in his pocket into dollars, and his wrath
+into fun and deviltry. Let them talk about tobacco
+as they choose among the fine gals, and at their
+theatres, and balls, and cotillions, and all them sort
+of things; but let one of 'em git twenty miles deep
+into a Kentuck forest, and then see if a chew of
+the stuff ain't good for company and comfort."</p>
+
+<p>"But you did not tell me," resumed Lamar,
+"whether you had ever shot at a white man?"</p>
+
+<p>"No! no! I never did; and I don't know that
+I ever will. I think I should feel a leetle particlar,
+at standin up and shooting at a real Christian man,
+with flesh and blood like you and me. You see,
+when we boys of the long guns shoot, we don't
+turn our heads away and pull trigger in a world
+of smoke, so that nobody can tell where the lead
+goes; we look right into the white of a fellow's
+eye, and can most always tell which side of his
+nose the ball went, and you see that would be but
+a slayin and skinnen business among white people;
+but as to shootin and sculpin
+Injins, that's a thing
+there is no bones made about, because out on the
+frontiers at the west, if a man should stand addlin
+his brains about the right and the wrong of the thing,
+the red devils would just knock them out to settle<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+the matter, and sculp him for his pains into the bargain.
+Shooting real Christian men's quite another
+thing. It's what I ha'nt tried yet; but when we
+Kentuck boys gits at it, it won't all end like a log-rollin,
+with one or two broken shins and a black
+eye. But I'm told the Yankees always sings a
+psalm before they go to battle. Now, according
+to my notion, a chap would make a blue fist of
+takin a dead aim through double sights, with the
+butt end of a psalm in his guzzle."</p>
+
+<p>"Some person must have told you that as a
+joke," said Lamar.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, I believe it, because we had just such
+a fellow once in our neighbourhood&mdash;a Yankee
+schoolmaster&mdash;and we took him out a deer-driving
+two or three times, and he was always singing a
+psalm at his stand. He spoilt the fun, confound
+him! Hang me if I didn't always think the fellow
+was afraid to stand in the woods by himself without
+it. I went to his singin school of Saturday
+nights, too; but I never had a turn that way. All
+the master could do, he could'nt keep me on the
+trail,&mdash;I was for ever slipping into Yankee Doodle;
+you see, every once in a while, the tune would take
+a quick turn, like one I knowed afore, so I used to
+blaze away at it with the best of 'em, but the same
+old Yankee Doodle always turned up at the end.
+But the worst of it was, the infernal Yankee spoiled
+all the music I ever had in me; when I come out
+of the school, I thought the gals at home would
+have killed themselves laughin' at me. They said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
+I ground up Yankee Doodle and Old Hundred
+together, all in a hodge-podge, so I never sings to
+no one now but the dumb brutes in the stable,
+when they gits melancholy of a rainy day. Old
+Pete here raises his ears, and begins to snort the
+minute I raises a tune."</p>
+
+<p>"Your singing-master was, like his scholar, an
+original."</p>
+
+<p>"An original! When he come to them parts,
+he drove what we call a Yankee cart, half wagon
+and half carriage, full of all sorts of odds and ends;
+when he had sold them out, he sold his horse and
+cart too, and then turned in to keepin a little old-field
+school; and over and above this, he opened a
+Saturday night singin-school,&mdash;and I reckon we
+had rare times with the gals there. At last, when
+the feller had got considerable ahead, the word
+came out that he was studyin to be a doctor; and
+sure enough, in a few months, he sold out the school
+for so much a head, just like we sell our hogs; then
+off the Yankee starts to git made a doctor of; and
+hang me if ever I could see into that business.
+How they can turn a pedlar into a doctor in four
+months, is a leetle jist over my head. It's true
+enough they works a mighty change in the chaps
+in that time. Our Yankee went off, as well-behaved
+and as down-faced a chap as you would wish to
+see in a hundred, and wore home-made clothes like
+mine; but when he had staid his four months out,
+and 'most everybody had forgot him, one day as
+I was leanen up against one of the poplar trees in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
+the little town, I saw a sign goin up on the side of
+a house, with <span class="smcap">Doctor Gun</span> in large letters. I'll
+take my Bible oath, when I saw the thing, I thought
+I should have broke a blood-vessel. Howsomever,
+I strained 'em down, till an old woman would have
+sworn I had the high-strikes, with a knot o' wind
+in my guzzle. But I quieted the devil in me, and
+then I slipped slyly over the street, behind where
+the doctor was standing with his new suit of black;
+one hand stuck in his side, and the other holding
+an ivory-headed stick up to his mouth in the most
+knowing fashion, I tell you. I stole up behind
+him, and bawled out in his ear, as loud as I could
+yell, '<i>faw&mdash;sol&mdash;law&mdash;me</i>.' Oh! my grandmother!
+what a smashin rage he flew into; he shook his
+cane&mdash;he walked backwards and forwards&mdash;and
+didn't he make the tobacco juice fly? I rather
+reckon, if I hadn't had so many inches, he'd have
+been into my meat; but the fun of it all was, the
+feller had foreswore his mother tongue; dash me
+if he could talk a word of common lingo, much less
+sing psalms and hymns by note; he rattled off
+words as long as my arm, and as fast as a windmill.
+Some of the old knowing ones says they've
+got some kind of a mill, like these little hand-organs,
+and that chops it out to the chaps eny
+night and morning, pretty much as I chop straw to
+my horses; but I'm going in to see that doctor-factory,
+when I git to Philadelphia, if they don't
+charge a feller more nor half a dollar a head."</p>
+
+<p>"I hope we shall travel together to Philadelphia,"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
+said Lamar; "and if so, I will introduce you into
+the establishment, free of expense."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, sir, thank you," said the Kentuckian;
+"but I'm rather inclined to think that we
+will hardly meet again after to-day; 'cause, you
+see, I'm 'bliged to do a might of business in Baltimore
+afore I can go on. After that, then I can
+go on as I please; as I'm only goin to see the
+world abit, afore I settle down for life."</p>
+
+<p>"But," said Lamar, "if you will call at Barnum's,
+and leave word what day you will set out, I will
+see that we travel together, for I will suit my time
+to yours; and I would advise you to send your
+horse a short distance into the country, both for the
+sake of convenience and economy."</p>
+
+<p>"What! part with old Pete here! Bless my
+soul, stranger! he would go into a gallopin consumption!
+or die of the solemncholies, if a rainy
+spell should come on, and he and I couldn't have a
+dish of chat together; and then I shouldn't know
+no more what to do in one of your coaches nor a
+cow with a side-pocket."</p>
+
+<p>"My word for it," replied Victor, "you would
+soon enjoy yourself inside of a stage-coach. Come,
+let us make a bargain. I will engage to have your
+horse well taken care of in the country, and provide
+him with a groom that will soon learn his
+ways, and be able to cheer him up when he gets
+low-spirited."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, do!" said Lamar, jocosely; "we are
+anxious to have your company during our visit to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>
+the cities. We are from Carolina, and you are
+from Kentuck; and after you get through with
+your business, we shall all be on the same errand&mdash;pleasure
+and improvement."</p>
+
+<p>"And a wild-goose chase it's like to be, I'm
+afraid; especially if I'm to be of your mess. But
+suppose you should meet with some fine lady
+acquaintances, what, in the name of old Sam, would
+you do with me? I should be like a fifth wheel to
+a wagon."</p>
+
+<p>"Were you never in the company of fine ladies?"
+asked Chevillere.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes! and flummuck me if ever I want to be
+so fixed again; for there I sat with my feet drawn
+straight under my knees, heads up, and hands
+laid close along my legs, like a new recruit on
+drill, or a horse in the stocks; and, twist me, if I
+didn't feel as if I was about to be nicked. The
+whole company stared at me as if I had come
+without an invite; and I swear I thought my arms
+had grown a foot longer, for I couldn't get my
+hands in no sort of a comfortable fix&mdash;first I tried
+them on my lap; there they looked like goin to
+prayers, or as if I was tied in that way; then I
+slung 'em down by my side, and they looked like
+two weights to a clock; and then I wanted to cross
+my legs, and I tried that, but my leg stuck out like
+a pump handle; then my head stuck up through a
+glazed shirt-collar, like a pig in a yoke; then I
+wanted to spit, but the floor looked so fine, that I
+would as soon have thought of spittin on the win<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>dow;
+and then to fix me out and out, they asked us
+all to sit down to dinner! Well, things went on
+smooth enough for a while, till we had got through
+one whet at it. Then a blasted imp of a nigger come
+to me first with a waiter of little bowls full of something,
+and a parcel of towels slung over his arm;
+so I clapped one of the bowls to my head, and
+drank it down at a swallow. Now, stranger, what
+do you think was in it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Punch, I suppose," said Lamar, laughing; "or
+perhaps apple toddy."</p>
+
+<p>"So I thought, and so would anybody, as dry as
+I was, and that wanted something to wash down
+the fainty stuffs I had been layin in; but no! it
+was warm water! Yes! you may laugh! but it
+was clean warm water. The others dipped their
+fingers into the bowls, and wiped them on the
+towels as well as they could for gigglin; but it
+was all the fault of that pampered nigger, in bringin
+it to me first. As soon as I catched his eye, I gin
+him a wink, as much as to let him know that if ever
+I caught him on my trail, I would wipe him down
+with a hickory towel."</p>
+
+<p>"But I suppose you enjoyed yourself highly before
+it was all over?" said Chevillere.</p>
+
+<p>"When it was all over, I was glad enough; I
+jumped and capered like a school-boy at the first
+of the holydays."</p>
+
+<p>"Have you never been invited out since?"
+asked Lamar.</p>
+
+<p>"O yes, often," said Damon; "but you don't<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
+catch a weasel asleep again. I like to give a joke,
+and take a joke; but then the joke was all on one
+side. If I can take a hand in the laugh, I don't care
+whether a person laughs <i>at</i> me, or <i>with</i> me."</p>
+
+<p>"But what say you?" said Chevillere; "shall
+we send your horse to the country with ours?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why! as you gentlemen seem to speak me so
+fair, and to know the world so well, I don't care if
+I do send old Pete out to board awhile. I shouldn't
+be surprised though if he should give me up for
+lost, and fret himself to death. But I must see the
+man that goes to the country with them; 'cause
+Pete couldn't bear shabby talk; he's what I call a
+leetle particular in his company for a dumb brute."</p>
+
+<p>"The man rides behind us," said Chevillere,
+"who will perform that duty. Cato! this gentleman
+wishes to speak to you."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you call, your honour?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Cato! Mr. Damon wishes to give you
+some charges about his horse, which you are to
+take into the country with ours."</p>
+
+<p>"Cato," said Damon, "tell the farmer who takes
+the horses, that old Pete Ironsides here has been
+used to good company, and that he has been treated
+more like a Christian nor a horse, and that I wish
+him indulged in his old ways."</p>
+
+<p>During this harangue, Cato cast sundry glances
+from his master to the speaker, as if to ascertain
+whether he was in earnest, or only playing off one
+of those freaks in which the young men had so often
+indulged in his presence. Being accustomed, how<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>ever,
+to treat with respect those whom his master
+respected, and seeing his eye calm and serious, he
+bowed with grave deference, saying, "It shall be
+done as you direct, your honour;" and then fell
+back.</p>
+
+<p>"Now," said Damon, "that's what I call a well-bred
+nigger. I would venture that old Scip
+would'nt have puzzled me with the warm water;
+'cause he knows that I'm not one of them there sort
+of chaps what knows all their new-fangled kick-shaws.
+He knows in a case of real needcessity,
+or life and death, as I may say, either to man,
+woman, or horse, I'm more to be depended on than
+a dozen such chaps as went along here in the stage
+this morning."</p>
+
+<p>"You saw the dandies in the stage, then?" asked
+Victor.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and one of 'em popped his head out of the
+window, and says to me as they went by, 'Country,'
+says he, 'there's something on your horse's tail.'&mdash;'Yes,'
+says I, 'and there's something in his head that
+you hav'nt got, if his ears ain't so long.'"</p>
+
+<p>Thus were our acquaintances and their new
+companion jogging along when the distant rumbling
+of wheels upon the pavements and the dense clouds
+of black smoke which seemed to be hanging in the
+heavens but a short distance ahead, announced
+that they were soon to enter the monumental city.</p>
+
+<p>There is not, perhaps, a feeling of more truly
+unmixed melancholy, incident to the heart of an
+inexperienced and modest student, than that which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
+steals over him upon his first entrance into a strange
+city; a feeling of incomparable loneliness, even
+deeper than if the same individual were standing
+alone upon the highest blue peak of the far stretching
+Alleghany. The vanishing rays of twilight
+were extending their lengthening shadows; the
+husbandman and his cattle were seen wending their
+way to their accustomed abodes for the night; and
+the feathered tribes had already sought the resting-places
+which nature so plentifully provides for
+them in our well-wooded land. The sad, and it
+may be pleasing reflections which such sights produced,
+were occasionally interrupted by the clattering
+of a horse's hoofs upon the turnpike, as some
+belated countryman sought to redeem the time he
+had spent at the alehouse; or as the solitary marketman,
+with more staid and quiet demeanour, sped
+upon a like errand. Occasionally the scene was
+marred by some besotted and staggering wretch,
+seeking his lowly and miserable hut in the suburbs.
+At intervals too, the barking of dogs and the lowing
+of cattle contributed their share to remind our
+friends that they were about to take leave of these
+quiet and pastoral scenes, for an indefinite period,
+and to mix in the bustle and gay assemblage of city
+life. Often, at such junctures, there is a presentiment
+of the evil which awaits the unhappy exchange.
+Warning clouds of the mind are believed
+to exist by many of the clearest heads and soundest
+hearts: we do not say that our heroes were thus
+sadly affected, nor that the Kentuckian had a fore-<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>taste
+of evil; but certain it is, that all were silent
+until they arrived at the place of separation. All
+things having been previously settled, they exchanged
+salutations, and departed upon their separate
+routes. They passed a variety of streets in
+that most gloomy period of the day when lamp-lighters
+are to be seen, with their torches and ladders,
+starting their glimmering lights first in one
+direction and then in another, as they hurry from
+post to post. Draymen were driving home with
+reckless and Jehu-like speed; and the brilliant
+lights which began to appear at long intervals,
+gave evidence that the trading community carried
+their operations also into that portion of time
+which nature has allotted for rest and repose to
+nearly all living things. Our travellers now
+alighted at Barnum's; but as their adventures
+were of an interesting character, we shall defer
+them till a new chapter.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III.</h2>
+
+
+<p>After a substantial meal had been despatched,
+our travellers repaired to the livery-stable, to inspect
+in person the condition of their horses. The establishment
+was lighted with a single lamp, swung in
+the centre of the building. The approach of the
+two young gentlemen was not therefore immediately
+noticed by old Cato and another groom (who
+proved to be the coachman of the equipage they had
+left on the road), as they were busily engaged in
+rubbing down their horses, the dialogue between
+them was not brought to a close at once.</p>
+
+<p>"Who did you say the gentleman was?" said old
+Cato.</p>
+
+<p>"His name is Brumley," replied coachee.</p>
+
+<p>"And the young lady is his daughter, I suppose?"
+continued Cato.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! as to that, I cannot say," continued coachee,
+"but I believe she is only his step-daughter; they
+calls her Miss Fanny St. Clair, and sometimes of
+late the old gentleman calls her Mrs. Frances; but
+between you and me and the horse-stall, there is
+some strange things about this family; I rather
+guess that Sukey, the maid up yonder, could tell us
+something that would make us open our eyes, if
+she was not so confounded close; all that I know<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
+about it is, that the harsh old gentleman sometimes
+gives her a talk in the carriage that throws her
+a'most into a faintin' spell. But I could never
+see into it, not I; I don't somehow believe in all
+these little hurrahs the women kicks up just for
+pastime."</p>
+
+<p>Our travellers did not think proper to listen further
+to the gossip of the grooms, and having executed
+their business at the livery, they retraced
+their steps to the splendid establishment at which
+they had put up. Notwithstanding the doubtful
+source from which Chevillere had gained his latest
+information concerning the singularly interesting
+young lady whom they had seen at the inn, it made
+its impression. Corrupt indeed must be that channel
+of information relative to a beautiful and attractive
+female, apparently in distress, which will not find
+an auditor in the person of a sensitive young man
+just emancipated from college. On such occasions,
+and with such persons, the credibility of all witnesses
+is the same, and the most improbable tale
+is taken at once, and made the foundation of a whole
+train of reveries, dreams, and plans.</p>
+
+<p>It is not to be denied that Victor Chevillere had
+worked his imagination up to a very romantic
+height, and had allowed his curiosity concerning the
+youthful lady to reach such a pitch that little else
+gave occupation to his fancies.</p>
+
+<p>He was in this state of mind, leisurely marking
+time with lazy steps, and in an abstracted mood,
+as he ascended the grand staircase of the establish<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>ment,
+when his attention was again riveted by
+the sound of the lady's voice in earnest entreaty
+with the old gentleman.</p>
+
+<p>"Consider, my dear Frances," said the latter,
+"that your health is now nearly re-established, and
+that these are subjects that you must dwell upon;
+why not, therefore, become accustomed to it at
+once?"</p>
+
+<p>"For heaven's sake! for my dear mother's!
+never, sir, mention that fearful marriage, and more
+fearful death to me again! Why should I recall
+hideous and frightful dreams!"</p>
+
+<p>Chevillere was compelled to move on, but it must
+be confessed that his steps were slower than before;
+and it may be readily imagined, that his fancy
+and his curiosity were not much allayed by the
+shreds of conversation which he had involuntarily
+overheard. When he had ascended to his own
+apartment, and could indulge freely in that bachelor
+recreation of pacing to and fro, the two words
+still involuntarily quickened his movements whenever
+they flashed through his mind&mdash;-"marriage"
+and "death" were words of opposite import certainly,
+viewed in the abstract, and we doubt whether
+he had ever connected them together before;&mdash;-"Fearful
+marriage! and more fearful death!" what
+could it mean? to whom could they refer? Only
+one of them could refer to her, that was certain;
+who then was married and died so fearfully?
+Ah! thought he, I have it! her mother has married
+this old man, and died suddenly; and he has got<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
+the fortune of both in his hands! Suspicious circumstance!
+If fortune puts it in my power, I will
+watch him narrowly! I disliked his countenance
+from the first!&mdash;must be cool, however, and deliberate&mdash;must
+watch&mdash;and wait! pshaw, what am I
+at! Thus ended Victor Chevillere's solution of
+the enigma, when Lamar stepped into the room
+and disturbed his revery.</p>
+
+<p>"What! still musing, Chevillere. By my troth,
+she must be a witch; but it will be glorious
+news to write to our friend Beverly Randolph, of
+old Virginia. What say you? Shall I sit down
+and indite an epistle? Let me see&mdash;how do such
+narratives generally begin? Cupid, and darts, and
+arrows&mdash;blind of an eye&mdash;shot right through the
+vitals of a poor innocent youth that never did him
+any harm&mdash;never was struck before&mdash;covered with
+a panoply, and shield, and armour, and all that;
+and then worship prostrate before the shrine; and
+vows, and tears, and tokens; and then the dart is
+taken out&mdash;and the wound heals up&mdash;and then&mdash;'Richard's
+himself again!' What say you to that,
+or rather what would Randolph say to that, think
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>"He would say that Augustus Lamar was still
+the same mirth-loving fellow, without regard to
+time or place."</p>
+
+<p>"Then it is a serious affair, and too true to
+make a joke of! Well, then I have done! She's a
+beautiful young creature, it is true; but then from
+what I had seen of your cold philosophy, I did not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
+think you were the man to be slain at first sight,
+and surrender at discretion before a single charge."</p>
+
+<p>"I will acknowledge to you, Lamar, that my
+curiosity is most painfully excited with regard to
+that unhappy young lady, but nothing more, I
+assure you. Some facts have, without my seeking,
+come to my knowledge, with which you are entirely
+unacquainted, and which have tended greatly
+to increase that curiosity. I cannot at this time
+explain; as soon as my own mind is satisfied on
+the subject, my confidence shall not be withheld
+from you."</p>
+
+<p>"Lovers are truly a singular set of mortals&mdash;-here
+is a young lady (and a Yankee too, perhaps)
+of some dozen hours' acquaintance, and with whom
+you have never exchanged a dozen words; and
+yet you are already entrusted with profound
+secrets, which excite you in the most painful
+manner!"</p>
+
+<p>"Come, come, Lamar, I see you are determined
+to misunderstand me. Let us drop the subject.
+What do you think of the Kentuckian?"</p>
+
+<p>"I think he is an admirable fellow; and I intend
+to patronise him; and induct him into fashionable
+life; but do you think his singularities are the
+natural products of the life, manners, and climate
+of Kentucky?"</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot decide whether there is much in him
+that is peculiar to Kentucky. Some of the most
+elegant and accomplished gentleman I have seen
+were natives of that state."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"He takes a laugh at his expense admirably."</p>
+
+<p>"He does, but you must be careful not to exceed
+the limits he has laid down for himself and us, in
+that respect. For my own part, I entertain a
+serious respect for Damon and his unsophisticated
+honesty, degenerating, as it sometimes does, into
+prejudices and ludicrous fancies."</p>
+
+<p>"Good night, and pleasant dreams to you. I
+will call early to interpret them for you."</p>
+
+<p>As Lamar closed the door, Chevillere drew from
+his pocket a little basket segar-case, from which he
+extracted a genuine Havana, and lighting a taper
+at the candle, and throwing himself into one of those
+easy attitudes familiar to smokers, with his head
+back, and his eyes closed, gave himself up to those
+absorbing reveries, generally delightful in proportion
+to the goodness of the segar, which a southern
+knows so well how to enjoy. To be fully relished,
+segars should be resorted to only in the evening,
+and then in moderation. The sensibility is blunted
+by excess, and in that case, tobacco, like the intoxicating
+drinks, will sometimes conjure up frightful
+images upon the wall of a dimly-lighted chamber,
+or among the embers of a dying fire. Victor,
+however, had not converted his capacity for enjoyment
+into fruitful sources of mental and physical
+suffering&mdash;-he sat for a long time gently throwing
+the fragrant results of his efforts into various columns,
+wreaths, and pyramids. Not that his mind
+dwelt upon these things for a moment; he was
+far distant in spirit; his imagination was calling up<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>
+delightful dreams of love and friendship, with
+thoughts of a beloved cousin, of his friend and
+room-mate Beverley Randolph&mdash;his mother, his
+home, and the scenes of his childhood, and finally,
+of the lady of the black mantle. He beheld airy
+castles,&mdash;romantic adventures,&mdash;bridal scenes&mdash;and
+flowers,&mdash;assemblies,&mdash;parties,&mdash;and the high
+hills of the Santee.</p>
+
+<p>Aladdin's lamp never wrought more rich and
+highly-coloured scenes of enchantment than did
+this same Havana; but the most pleasant dream
+must come to an end, as well as the richest flavoured
+segar&mdash;and so did Chevillere's. Tossing
+the little hot remnant from him with a passionate
+jerk, as if in anger at the insensible cause of his
+interruption, he bounced into the centre of the floor
+and began to pace to and fro, in his accustomed
+mood, clenching his fists now and then, and by his
+whole appearance showing a perfect contrast to
+the calm and delightful revery attendant upon the
+first stage of tobacco intoxication.</p>
+
+<p>In this mood we shall leave him to seek his rest,
+while we recount in the next chapter what farther
+befel our late collegians on the following morning.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV.</h2>
+
+
+<p>A brilliant morning found our collegians refreshed
+in health and elastic in spirits. The more
+gloomy fancies of the previous night, which had
+beset Chevillere both in his waking and sleeping
+hours&mdash;like the mists of the morning, had been dispelled
+by the bright sunshine, and the refreshing
+breezes of the bay. After the usual meal had been
+some time despatched; and while Chevillere was
+leisurely turning over the papers of the day (Lamar
+having departed in pursuit of the Kentuckian) he
+was surprised by the entrance of Mr. Brumley
+(the austere gentleman), who saluted him with the
+most friendly greetings of the hour and season,
+and concluded by inviting him into their private
+parlour. It may be readily imagined that this
+invitation was not tardily complied with, for he
+now imagined that the whole history of the lady
+would be unravelled by a single word&mdash;so sanguine
+is youthful hope, and so apt are we, at that interesting
+period, to jump to those conclusions which
+are desirable, without ever considering the previous
+steps, and painful delays, and necessary
+forms, and conventional usages which inevitably
+intervene between our highest hopes and their
+fruition. How often would the ardent wishes and
+the bold hands of youth seize upon futurity, de<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>spoiling
+it of the thin veil which separates us from
+what we wish to know, especially when this could
+be learned by dispensing with the accustomed formalities
+and wholesome restraints of refined society.
+A train of kindred thoughts was passing through
+the mind of Chevillere as he was ushered into a
+small but elegant saloon, connected with the back
+chambers by folding-doors, which were now closed.
+On the left of the door, and between the windows
+opening upon a great thoroughfare, sat the lady
+who occupied his thoughts. She was sitting, or
+rather reclining upon one end of a sofa, her head
+resting upon her hand in a thoughtful mood. As
+is true of most daughters of this favoured land,
+nature had evidently in nowise been thwarted,
+either in her mental or physical education. She
+appeared to possess that naiveté which is so apt
+to be the result of a mixed town, and country education;
+with just enough of self-possession to
+show that native modesty had been properly
+regulated by much good society, but not too much
+to forbid an occasional crimsoning of the neck and
+face. Her eyes were blue, shaded by long dark
+lashes, and so sparkling and joyous in their expression,
+that the evident present sorrow which hung
+over her spirits, could not efface the impression to
+a beholder, that they were naturally much more
+inclined to beam with mirth and gayety, than to
+weeping; her features were regular&mdash;arch in their
+expression, and finely formed&mdash;her complexion of
+the finest shade&mdash;with a rich profusion of light<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
+brown hair, braided and parted on the forehead
+without a single curl; her figure was just tall
+enough to be elegant and graceful, and exhibited
+the graces of that interesting period, when the
+school-girl is merging into the reserved woman.</p>
+
+<p>As Chevillere was ushered into the presence of
+this youthful lady, the old gentleman presented
+him as Mr. Chevillere, of South Carolina, and the
+lady by the name of (his step-daughter) Frances
+St. Clair; she assumed the erect position barely
+long enough to return the salutation of the gentleman,
+then reclined again and lapsed apparently into her
+sad mood; for a moment she pressed her
+handkerchief to her face as if she would drive
+away some horrible image, and then waited a moment
+as if she expected her father to speak upon
+some previously settled subject. Perceiving, however,
+that she waited in vain, she with some difficulty
+forced herself to say, "Mr. Chevillere, I requested
+my father to invite you to our apartments
+to"&mdash;here she seemed overpowered and stopped.
+Chevillere seeing her distress, replied, "Madam,
+you do me too much honour; but I see you are
+distressed&mdash;let me say then, without any farther
+formality, that if there is any way in the world by
+which I can lighten that distress, command me."</p>
+
+<p>"It is about these very emotions that I would
+speak," she answered; "I was afraid you might
+think the scene at the breakfast-table two days
+since was got up in some silly girlish affectation,
+in pretended disgust at the rudeness of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>
+young men present; but believe me when I say,
+their conduct would at many times in my life have
+furnished me with an ample fund for laughter; it
+was not in their manners, it was in the subject of
+one of their discourses that I felt so much affected&mdash;I
+tried to subdue my feelings, but the more I
+tried the more they overcame me; the truth is,
+some painful recollections were awakened"&mdash;Here
+again she covered her face with her handkerchief,
+and seemed to be for a moment almost suffocated.
+The lady resumed; "Nor should I have thought it
+proper to offer this explanation to one who is apparently
+a perfect stranger; but, sir, I have known
+you for some time by reputation."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed, madam, I must be indebted to some
+most flattering mistake for my present good fortune;
+I am but just emancipated from college
+walls and rules, and have, of course, even a reputation
+to make for myself."</p>
+
+<p>"No! no!" said the youthful lady (a beautiful
+smile passing swiftly over her sad countenance),
+"there can be no mistake about it," and drawing
+from her work-bag a small bit of paper, rolled up
+in the shape of a letter, she presented it to him;
+adding, "Do you know that hand-writing?"</p>
+
+<p>He gazed upon the signature for an instant, and
+then exclaimed, "My honoured mother's! by all
+that's fortunate! then indeed we are old acquaintances&mdash;with
+your permission; and I am perfectly
+content with the reputation which you spoke of,
+when I know that it originated in such a source."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Your mother was indeed a prudent and a
+modest, but still a devoted herald of your good
+qualities."</p>
+
+<p>"Believe me, dear lady, that I shall be more
+proud than ever to appear in your eyes to deserve
+some small share of her maternal praise; it was
+always inexpressibly dear to me for its own sake,
+but now I shall endeavour doubly to deserve it.
+You saw her, I suppose, at the White Sulphur
+Springs?"</p>
+
+<p>"We did, sir; and a most fortunate circumstance
+it was for me; for being an invalid, she did every
+thing for me that my own mother could have
+done. Oh! how I regretted that my mother did
+not come, merely to have made her acquaintance."</p>
+
+<p>"Your mother! is your mother alive, madam?"</p>
+
+<p>"I hope and trust she is&mdash;and well; she was
+both when we last heard from her, and that was
+but a few days since; but your agitation alarms
+me! you know no bad news of my mother?" laying
+her hand upon his arm.</p>
+
+<p>"None, madam! none. I don't know what put
+the foolish idea into my head, but I thought that
+both your own parents were dead."</p>
+
+<p>"You alarmed me," said she. "I conjured up
+every dreadful image&mdash;I imagined that you had
+been commissioned by some of our friends here, to
+break the painful intelligence to me&mdash;but you are
+sure she is well?"</p>
+
+<p>Chevillere smiled, as he answered "You forget
+that I am a total stranger to her, and she to me."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"True! true! But tell me how you left your
+charming young cousin Virginia Bell, of whom I
+heard your mother speak so often. She told me, I
+think, that she was at some celebrated school in
+North Carolina?"</p>
+
+<p>"At Salem. She is well, I thank you, or was
+well when I came through the town: my mother
+intends to take her home with her on her return."</p>
+
+<p>"So she told me," said the lady.</p>
+
+<p>"She did not tell you, I suppose, for I believe
+she does not know, that I have promised the hand
+of the dear girl in marriage, though she is scarcely
+sixteen yet. You must know that I had in college
+two dear and beloved friends&mdash;the one, Mr. Lamar,
+you have seen; the other is Mr. Beverley Randolph,
+of Virginia&mdash;we were both class and room-mates.
+Randolph has gone on a journey through
+the Southern States, as he pretends; but, I believe,
+in truth, to take a sly peep at his affianced bride.
+If he likes her looks, it is a bargain; and if not, he
+will pass it all off for a college joke." Here he was
+interrupted by the lady gasping; and on looking in
+her face, he found she was as pale as marble, and
+terribly agitated. She asked her father for water,
+which he handed to her instantly, while Chevillere
+rang violently at the bell.</p>
+
+<p>"It will all be over in a minute," said she; "it is
+only a return of the suffering to which I am
+subject."</p>
+
+<p>Many strange ideas flitted through Chevillere's
+mind during this interruption of the conversation.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
+He now recollected that one of the subjects of discourse
+between the vulgar fops, at the breakfast-table
+the previous morning, had been some runaway
+marriage&mdash;and "the fearful marriage and
+more fearful death" still sounded in his ears, and
+now the same subject again introduced by himself
+produced like consequences,&mdash;he thought it strange
+and incomprehensible; he cheered himself, however,
+with the reflection, that his mother was not
+likely to form an intimacy with persons against
+whom there was any charge of crime; nay, more,
+he felt assured that they must have been well
+sustained by public opinion, or introduced to her
+acquaintance by some judicious friend.</p>
+
+<p>"If I have unaptly said any thing offensive, I
+hope Miss St. Clair will believe me, when I say
+that such a design was the farthest from my
+thoughts."</p>
+
+<p>"Rest easy on that score," said she; "I am now
+well again: you said nothing that it was not proper
+for you to say, and me to hear, had I not been a
+poor silly-headed girl."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Miss Frances, I am anxious to hear your
+opinion of Western Virginia."</p>
+
+<p>"My opinion is not worth having; but such as
+it is, you are welcome to it, or rather to such observations
+as a lady might make. First, then, I was
+delighted with the wild mountain scenery, and the
+beautiful valleys between the mountains; such are
+those, you will recollect, perhaps, in which all of
+those springs are situated. I doubt very much,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>
+whether Switzerland, or Spain, could present as
+many rich and beautiful mountain-scenes, as we
+have passed between Lexington and the White
+Sulphur and Salt Sulphur springs. We have similar
+scenes along and among the highlands of the
+Hudson, it is true; perhaps they are more grand
+and majestic than these; but then, there is such a
+stir of busy life, such an atmosphere of steam, and
+clouds of canvass, that one is perpetually called
+back in spirit to the stir and bustle of a city life.
+But here, among the rugged blue mountains of
+'old Virginia,' as these people love to call it, there
+are the silence and the solitude of nature, which
+more befit such contemplations as the scenes induce.
+We can seat ourselves in one of the green
+forests of the mountains we have just left, and
+imagine ours to be the first human footsteps, which
+have ever been imprinted upon the soil; and we
+can repose amid the shades and the profound and
+solemn silence of those scenes, with a calmness
+and a serenity, and a soothing, delightful, melancholy
+feeling, which no other objects can produce.
+The very atmosphere seems teeming with these
+delightful impressions; primitive nature seems to
+have returned upon us with all its balmy delights,&mdash;quiet
+and peacefulness. The profound solitude
+would become tiresome, perhaps, to those
+who have no resources in unison with such scenes,
+or to those who admire and feign to revel in them,
+because it is fashionable just now to do so. But
+to an educated mind, a natural and feeling, and I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
+may say devout heart, they furnish inexhaustible
+food for contemplation, and ever-renewing sources
+of delight and improvement."</p>
+
+<p>"They are such scenes," replied Chevillere, "as
+I love to dwell upon, even in imagination. But
+come, Miss Frances, I see by the hat and mantle
+upon the table, that I have interrupted some intended
+promenade; shall I have the honour to be
+of your party?"</p>
+
+<p>"Unquestionably, young gentleman&mdash;you may
+take the whole journey off my hands; Frances
+was only going out among the shops," said Mr.
+Brumley.</p>
+
+<p>The plain, but tasteful apparel was soon adjusted,
+and the youthful pair sallied forth upon the
+promised expedition.</p>
+
+<p>The tide of human life seems to be ever rolling
+and tossing, and ever renewing, and then rolling
+on again. Pestilence, and death, and famine may
+do their worst, but the tide is still renewed, and
+still moves on to the great sea of eternity.</p>
+
+<p>Who that walks through the busy and thronged
+streets of a populous city, and sees the gay plumage,
+the fantastic finery, the smiling faces, and the
+splendid equipages, could ever form an adequate
+idea of the real suffering and wo, which constitute
+the sum of one day's pains in a city life? If all the
+miserable&mdash;the lame, the blind, the poor, the dumb,
+the aged, and the diseased, could be poured out
+along one side of the gay promenades, while
+fashionables were parading along the other, a much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
+truer picture of life in a city would be seen. Such
+were the ideas of Victor Chevillere, as he escorted
+his timid and youthful companion through the gay
+throng from shop to shop.</p>
+
+<p>As they emerged into a part of the city less
+thronged, interchange of opinions became more
+practicable.</p>
+
+<p>"I am impatient to hear your opinion of the
+Southerns," said Chevillere; "you had the finest
+opportunity imaginable to see our southern aristocrats
+at the springs."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! I was delighted with the little society in
+which I moved there," replied she; "and, but for
+one unhappy, and most untoward circumstance for
+me, my enjoyments would have far surpassed any
+thing which I had ever laid out for myself again in
+this world."</p>
+
+<p>"You excite my curiosity most strangely,"
+said he; "and, if it would not appear impertinent
+or intrusive, I should like to know two things:
+first, what untoward circumstance you speak of?
+and next, what great bar has been placed between
+you and happiness, that you should have laid off so
+small a share for yourself in all time to come?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! sir, your questions are painful to me, even
+to think of; how much worse then must have been
+the reality of those circumstances, which could
+poison the small share of happiness which is allotted
+to us under the most favourable circumstances. I
+would gratify your curiosity if I could, but indeed,
+indeed, sir, I cannot now relate to you the whole<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
+history of my life; and nothing less could explain
+to you the cruel train of circumstances by which
+I am surrounded, and from which there is no
+escape."</p>
+
+<p>"One question you can, and I am sure you will,
+answer me.</p>
+
+<p>"Could a devoted friend, with a cool head and a
+resolute hand, effect nothing in freeing you from
+this persecution?"</p>
+
+<p>"I will answer you, sir, most plainly. You misunderstand
+my allusions, in the first place; for I
+am not persecuted now, nor can I say that I have
+been. It may seem enigmatical to you, but it is
+all that I can in prudence say. There is no person
+on this side of the grave who can relieve me from
+the cause of those emotions which you have unhappily
+witnessed; nay, more! if those persons
+were to rise from the dead, who were, unfortunately
+for themselves and for me, the cause of my painful
+situation, my condition would be incomparably
+worse than it is now."</p>
+
+<p>"Painful, indeed, must those circumstances be,
+and incomprehensible to me, which seem to have
+been produced by the death of some one; and yet,
+if that person should rise from the dead, you would
+be more miserable than ever," said Chevillere.</p>
+
+<p>During the latter part of this speech, the lady, as
+was often her custom, pressed her handkerchief to
+her face, as if she would by mechanical pressure
+drive off disagreeable images from the mind; and
+then said, "Now, sir, let us drop this subject."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"One more question, and then I have done; and
+believe me, it is not idly asked. Were the circumstances
+you spoke of developed so recently as your
+visit to the Virginia springs?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! by no means, sir; the untoward circumstance
+there that I spoke of, was the frequent and
+unexpected presence of one who forcibly reminded
+me of all the painful particulars; and what made
+it so much worse was, that wherever I moved, he
+moved; he followed the same route round the watering-places,
+and seemed purposely to throw himself
+in my way; and even now I dread every moment
+to encounter him; and the more so, as I
+have heard lately that his mind is unsettled. Poor
+gentleman, I pity him."</p>
+
+<p>By this time they had arrived in a part of the
+city from which Washington's monument could be
+seen, elevating its majestic column above a magnificent
+grove of trees.</p>
+
+<p>"Suppose we extend our walk," said the gentleman,
+"to yonder beautiful grove."</p>
+
+<p>To this the lady readily assented. They found
+rude seats, constructed perhaps by some romantic
+swain; or by some country-bred youths, who came
+there, after the toils of the day, to refresh themselves
+with the pure and invigorating breezes
+which sweep the green, fresh from their dear and
+longed-for homes. Here they seated themselves,
+to enjoy this delightful mixture of town and
+country.</p>
+
+<p>"This is a noble monument to the great and good<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
+father of our Republic; and worthy of the high-minded
+and public-spirited people of Baltimore,"
+said Chevillere. "Give me such evidence as this
+of their veneration for his memory, and none of
+your new-fangled nonsense about enshrining him
+in the hearts of his countrymen. Let him be enshrined
+in the hearts of his countrymen as individuals;
+but let cities, communities, and states
+enshrine him in marble. These speak to the eyes;
+and hundreds, and thousands will stand here, amid
+these beautiful shades, and think of him with profound
+veneration, who would never otherwise look
+into any other kind of history. The effect of such
+works as these is admirable; not only in showing
+veneration for the great dead, but also upon the
+living, in purifying the heart and ennobling its
+impulses."</p>
+
+<p>"Baltimore, indeed, has set a noble example,"
+said the lady.</p>
+
+<p>"And richly will she be rewarded. A few years
+hence, the far West will be brought to her doors;
+and she will grow up to be a mighty city. Standing
+on the middle ground, between the angry sectionists
+of the North and the South, she will present
+a haven in which the rivals may meet, and
+learn to estimate each other's good qualities, and
+bury or forget those errors which are inseparable
+from humanity. But see! Miss St. Clair," said he,
+"what a singular looking man is just emerging
+from within the column!"</p>
+
+<p>"Heavens!" said the lady, in extreme terror,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
+"that is the person! Do take me from this place!
+I would not encounter him for the world!"</p>
+
+<p>She was too late; for already had the object of
+her apprehension caught a glimpse of her person;
+and no sooner had he done so, than with rapid
+strides he advanced directly towards them. The
+lady shook with terror and agitation. When he
+had approached almost in a direct line to within
+some forty or fifty feet, he riveted a long and steady
+gaze upon the lady, and another of shorter duration
+upon her companion, still walking onward. Victor
+stood and gazed after him until he was entirely
+without the enclosure.</p>
+
+<p>He was a well-dressed man, apparently about
+fifty-five years of age, tall, and straight in his
+carriage as an Indian; his hair was slightly silvered;
+his countenance expressed wildness, but
+was steady and consistent in the expression of
+present purpose; his eye was dark and deep,
+and, when you looked upon it steadily for a short
+time, appeared as if you were gazing at two black
+holes in his head; his complexion was sallow;
+its characteristics&mdash;energy and deep determination.</p>
+
+<p>"And that is the maniac?" said Chevillere, in a
+half-abstracted mood.</p>
+
+<p>"I said not so," replied the lady; "but he is, indeed,
+that most unfortunate man, whose whole
+business seems to be to haunt me in my travels;
+otherwise our meeting has been most strangely
+accidental and untoward."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"If he is in ill health," said Victor, "he may have
+gone to the Springs without intending to meet you;
+and now, when the season is nearly over, and he is
+likewise on his return, there is nothing more natural
+than his visiting this monument&mdash;every stranger
+does so,&mdash;do not, therefore, aggravate your distress
+by supposing these meetings to have been
+sought on his part. I will endeavour to find him,
+and demand of him whether he seeks to annoy an
+unhappy invalid by pursuing her from place to
+place, and what are his motives."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! sir, for Heaven's sake, do not think of such
+a thing. He is a powerful and a fearful man,
+when in his right mind; and even in his derangement,
+might do you some harm, especially if you
+went as commissioned by me. Besides, sir, if he
+was undoubtedly sane and respectful, he might demand,
+as a right, to see me, and converse with me
+too. Nay, he might possibly have some claim to
+control my actions; but you see he does not.
+Let him alone, therefore, and do not involve yourself
+in any of my troubles. I am inextricably entangled,
+and pinioned down to a certain routine of
+suffering, perhaps unexampled, and that too by no
+crime of my own."</p>
+
+<p>"Dear lady," said Chevillere, taking her hand, as
+he saw her blue eye filling with tears, and just
+ready to run over; "you cannot imagine how
+much I feel interested for you; and what I am
+about to say, as it will risk your displeasure, is the
+very best evidence that I can give of my deep in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>terest
+in your future peace and contentment. Believe
+me, dear lady, that though I am young,
+and may be inexperienced,&mdash;I am not an indifferent
+observer of the secret machinery of men's
+actions. I have been a steady observer and a
+thinker for myself, without regard to the opinion
+of individuals or the world, when I was conscious
+that I was right, and that they were wrong. Listen
+to me, then, with patience, while I give you my
+opinion, with regard to the difficulties which seem
+to be accumulating around you. Of course, this
+opinion must be a general one; as the circumstances
+upon which it is founded are only such as
+are of a general character. Nor do I seek for more
+confidence on your part towards me; I cannot expect
+that you should unfold the intimate relations
+of your family and your friends to a comparative
+stranger. This, then, is my (of course vague)
+opinion&mdash;I have generally observed, in my intercourse
+with mankind, that the most trying situations
+and the deepset distress are often brought about
+by a small mistake&mdash;misfortune&mdash;or crime in the
+beginning. The latter of these I would defy the
+most malignant misanthrope to look upon your
+countenance and charge you with; one of the two
+former, then, is the point upon which all your distress,
+and ill health, and melancholy hangs. My
+advice then is, upon this general view of the case,
+that you go back to that point, and rectify it as
+speedily as possible; and do it boldly and fearlessly,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
+as I am sure you can. Burst asunder these chains
+that fetter you, whatever they may be."</p>
+
+<p>"I see," said the lady (tears fast stealing down
+her cheeks), "that I am always destined to make
+the same unhappy impression on every acquaintance,
+male or female, valued or unvalued. Before
+I have grown many degrees in their good opinion,
+some of these unlucky things are seen to develop
+themselves, and then I am subject to the greatest
+misfortune to which an honourable and a sensitive
+mind can be exposed; that is, to be supposed weak
+or wicked, though at the same time conscious of
+pure and upright motives. To be plain with you,
+sir, I must tell you again, that in order for me to
+be relieved of that which trammels me in some
+shape or other at every step, <i>the grave must give
+up its own; and the law must give up its own; and
+the avaricious must annul their decrees; and the
+dead of half a century must undo their work; and
+the wisdom of the sage must be instilled into the mind
+of a child; and the slanders, and the wild and
+wicked fancies of the lunatic must be convinced by
+reason or actual demonstration of the foregoing
+things</i>&mdash;before the point you speak of can be
+seized upon, and turned to my advantage."</p>
+
+<p>"Then, indeed, is it a hard case, and I will not
+distress you further on the subject; I will not add
+my persecution to that of others&mdash;I will not say
+enemies; for one so young and so artless, so innocent
+and so unfortunate, can have no enemies."</p>
+
+<p>"And therein consists part of my distress," re<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>plied
+she. "Is it not strange that I have not an
+enemy living, to my knowledge, who has ever wilfully
+injured me in word or deed? unless, indeed,
+it be yon wretched old man, whose mind is now,
+and whose heart, I fear, has always been wrong.
+Now, sir, let me beg of you, in future, whenever
+any of these little occurrences embarrass me during
+my stay here, to take no notice of them whatever;
+let me move along as quietly and as unobtrusively
+as possible. I love the retirement of the country, and
+to the country and retirement I will go. My mother
+loves me, and knows all my actions, and their motives
+too; and even my father loves me in his own
+way. They will be my companions for the remainder
+of a short and weary life."</p>
+
+<p>The colloquy was cut short by their return to
+the hotel.</p>
+
+<p>Lamar, as has been already announced, was a
+humorous gentleman, and would not lose an opportunity
+of enjoying the remarks of one so new
+to the busy world and its ways as Damon. He
+was not long in finding out the retired quarters of
+the gentleman of the west. At the bar-room he
+inquired if there was such a lodger in the house.</p>
+
+<p>"No," said the barkeeper (so are these functionaries
+called), "but he is expected every minute."</p>
+
+<p>Lamar seated himself near the files of morning
+papers which lay strewed along a reading-desk,
+and awaited the arrival of his singular new acquaintance.
+In a few minutes Damon stalked in.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>
+A new black hat and blue frock-coat had so much
+altered his appearance, that Lamar did not recognise
+him until he took off his hat, wiped his dripping
+brows with the handkerchief which he still
+carried in it, and then, seeing Lamar for the first
+time, waved it over his head.</p>
+
+<p>"Hurrah! for old Kentuck!" was his characteristic
+exclamation.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Damon, you have been under the tailor's
+hands," said Lamar.</p>
+
+<p>"I believe I was in Old Sam's hands last night;
+but come up-stairs, and I will tell you all about
+it."</p>
+
+<p>They proceeded to the third story into a small
+apartment, dimly lighted through a single window.
+Damon, after seating Lamar, threw aside his coat,
+and drawing from under the head of his bed the
+one in which Lamar had first seen him, he quickly
+inserted his arms through what remained of the
+garment,&mdash;the lappels were torn off on each side
+down to the waist, so that all the front of the coat
+was gone, leaving nothing but the long straight
+back, collar, and sleeves. What remained was
+smeared with mud, and torn in many places. He
+next proceeded to pull out of his pocket a collar,
+and parts of two sleeves of a shirt, spreading them
+on the bed, as a milliner would do her finery; and
+holding out both his hands with the palms upward
+in the manner of an orator,&mdash;&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"There!" said he, "that's what I call a pretty<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
+tolerable neat job, to shirt a stranger the first night
+he comes to town."</p>
+
+<p>Lamar, who by this time began to see a little
+into the affair, asked, "But, Damon, how did all
+this happen? you seem to have been discomfited."</p>
+
+<p>"Now I'll be smashed if you ain't off the trail,
+stranger, for you see I've only showed you half
+yet."</p>
+
+<p>Upon which he drew from his other pocket a
+pair of spectacles, bent, bloody, and broken,&mdash;then
+a wig,&mdash;and, lastly, the remains of a little black
+rattan with a gold head and chain broken into
+inches. He displayed these on the bed as he had
+done the others; only drawing his handkerchief as
+a line between them. Upon this he fell, rather
+than sat, back into a chair just behind him, and
+burst out into a loud, long, and hearty laugh, seemingly
+excited afresh at the sight of his spoils.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, now," said he, "I wish I may be horn
+swoggled, if ever I thought to live to see the day
+when I should '<i>sculp</i>' a Christian man; but there
+it is, you see; I left his head as clean as a peeled
+onion."</p>
+
+<p>"But how? and when? and who was your antagonist
+in this frolic?"</p>
+
+<p>"Frolic!" exclaimed Damon; "well, now, it's
+what I would call a regular row; I never saw a
+prettier knock down and drag out in all the days
+of my life, even in old Kentuck."</p>
+
+<p>"But do tell me," said Lamar, "was anybody
+seriously hurt?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"There was several chaps in the circus last
+night with their heels uppermost, besides them
+suple chaps on the horses; I can tell you that."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! you were in the circus, were you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; and there was a rip-roaring sight of
+slight o'hand and tumblin work there, besides their
+ground and lofty tumblin they had in the handbills."</p>
+
+<p>"You did some of the ground tumbling yourself
+then?" asked Lamar.</p>
+
+<p>"No, I did the slight o'hand work, as you may
+see by the skin that's gone off these four marrow-bones."</p>
+
+<p>"And who did the ground tumbling?" asked
+Lamar.</p>
+
+<p>"There was a good deal done there last night;
+the chaps in the ring and the chaps in the pit all
+did a little at it; flummuck me if I didn't think the
+heels of the whole house would be uppermost before
+they were done; what an everlastin pity 'tis, these
+critters elbows ain't as suple as their heels."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you think all the people of Baltimore a
+little limber in the heels."</p>
+
+<p>"I can't say as to that; but I wish I may be
+hackled, if there was not so much flyin up of the
+heels there last night, that I was fidlin and tumblin
+all night in my sleep, jumpin through hoops, and
+tanglin my legs in their long red garters, which the
+circus riders jumped over; and then I thought
+they had my poor old horse, Pete Ironsides, jumpin
+over bars, and leapin through fiery balloons, until<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>
+at last they smashed his head right into a tar barrel,
+and then maybe I didn't fly into a tear down
+snortin rage! I was crammed full of fight then,
+and so I got to slingin my arms about in my sleep,
+till I knocked out that head-board there,&mdash;then I
+woke up, and I wish I may be hanged if I didn't
+think it was all a dream; till I found that the forepart
+of my coat had run away from the tail, and
+that I had got an odd collar among my linen. And
+then on t'other hand I began to think it was all
+true, and rung the bell, and sent the nigger down
+to the stable to see if Pete had his head in a tar
+barrel sure enough; presently the nigger came
+back, grinen and giglin, and said Pete had gone to
+the country two hours ago; so I run the little
+nigger down stairs, and sent my old boots after
+him to get blacked; and as I was dodgin through
+that long entry there, I saw the bottles, and tumblers,
+and lemon-skins; so ho! said I, there's the
+mad dog that bit me last night."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you <i>began</i> in a frolic at least," said Lamar.</p>
+
+<p>"Only a small breeze or so; a few tumblers of
+punch, made of that doubled and twisted Irish
+whiskey; it was none of your Kentuck low wines,
+run off at a singlin, for I have made many a barrel.
+It was as strong as <i>pison</i>, and it raised the Irish in
+me pretty quick, or rather old Kentuck, for I
+jumped up and kicked the table over, and broke
+things, afore I would have been cleverly primed
+with the low wines."</p>
+
+<p>"Were you drinking all alone?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"No; there was half-a-dozen milksops set down;
+I believe they board here; but no sooner had I
+kicked the table over, and begun to smash things a
+little, than they all sneaked out one by one, until
+they were all gone but one, and I rather suspicion
+that he's a blackleg, for he stuck pretty close to
+me till the row at the circus was over, and then
+when I had got clear, he come up here with me,
+and sent for the chap who furnished me with my
+new hat and coat; but it wasn't all for nothin, as
+he thought, for he presently proposed that we
+should go down street a piece, and see some fine
+fellers, he said, who were friends of his, and who
+were going to have a night of it. Well, said I, 'a
+little hair of the dog is good for the bite,' and down
+we went to a large room up four pair of stairs in a
+dark alley. And there, sure enough, there was a
+merry-looking set of fellers; but you see they
+overdid the job, for I soon smelt a rat; they most
+all of 'em pretended to be too etarnal drunk. I
+said nothin though, but 'possumed too a little; only
+sipped a little wine, and that made me straight
+instead of crooked. But at last they proposed a
+game of cards. Well, said I, I'm not much of a
+dabster at it, but if the stake ain't high, I don't care
+if I do take a fling or two; so down we set to it,
+and they pulled out their cards for loo. Stop!
+stop! said I, we must have <i>new cards</i>; I never play
+with other men's cards. They began to suspicion,
+maybe, that they had got the wrong sow by the
+ear, but they sent and got some new packs, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>
+then we took a smash or two at the game, and I'm
+a Cherokee if I didn't give 'em a touch or two of
+old Kentuck. I won all the money they had, but
+it wasn't much, and they made me pay most of
+that for the refreshments, as they said the winners
+always paid for them things."</p>
+
+<p>"But you have not yet told me how you got
+into the row," said Lamar; "I wish to know the
+whole story&mdash;come, let us have it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it's soon told. As I was telling you, the
+black-leg chap and I went to the circus, and we
+had'nt set long in the pit before there was a young
+gal come in, and set on one end of the same bench.
+She was'nt so ugly neither, but I took pity on her
+because she looked like a country gal, and there
+was no women settin near her. After a while, three
+chaps come down from the boxes above, and set
+right down by the gal, and began to push one
+another over against her; at last the one next her,
+and he was the same chap you saw in the stage yesterday
+morning, only he had on them green specks&mdash;well,
+he put his arm round her, and called her his
+dear, and all that; well, you see, I had heard tell
+of these city gals, and I thought if she was pleased
+it was none of my business; but presently I heard
+her sobbing and crying, with her apron up to her
+eyes, and she told them they were no gentlemen,
+or they would not treat a poor girl so away from
+home. So the Irish whiskey, or old Kentuck, I
+don't know which, began to rise in my throat. I
+jumped up and raised the war-whoop. 'Old Kentuck
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>
+for ever!' said I; and with that, I took the
+back of my hand and knocked the chap's hat off,
+and his 'sculp' went with it. Call your soul your
+own, said I; he jumped up and gin me a wipe
+with that little black switch across the nose; it
+had hardly cleverly touched me, afore I took him
+a sneezer, between the two eyes, glasses and all;
+he dropped over like a rabbit when you knock 'em
+behind the head; I rather suspicion he thought a
+two year old colt's heels had got a taste of his
+cocoanut.</p>
+
+<p>"Then the other two took it up, and both on 'em
+seized me, and swore they would carry me to the
+police office; but I took 'em at cross purposes, for
+while one of them held the collar of the old home-made,
+I fetched the other a kick that sent him
+over the benches a rip roaring, I tell you.
+The other little chap was hangin on to me
+like a leech to a horse's leg; I jist picked him
+up and throwed him into the ring upon the sand,
+for I did'nt want to hurt him: but then the real
+officers come up and clamped me. I wished
+myself back in old Kentuck bad enough then;
+but while they held me there, like a dog that had
+been killen sheep, the little gal came up to me, and
+said she would go and bring her father, to try and
+get me off; and then she asked me where I lived,&mdash;I
+told her in old Kentuck; then she asked me
+where I put up, and I put my mouth to her ear
+and told her; and I could hardly get it away again
+without givin her a smack, for she would pass for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
+a pretty gal even in old Kentuck; well, this morning,
+her and her father were here by times to thank
+me, and the old man invited me to stop at his house
+as I go home; it's on the same road we came down
+yesterday."</p>
+
+<p>"Did the girl go to the circus by herself?" asked
+Lamar.</p>
+
+<p>"No; the old man stopped at the door to buy a
+ticket, and she went on, and lost him."</p>
+
+<p>"But you have not told me how you came by
+this scalp," said Lamar, taking up the large black
+scratch with curled locks.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! you see, I grabbled that in the scuffle, and
+slipped it into my pocket."</p>
+
+<p>"How did you get away from the officers?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! that's the way I lost the old 'home-made;'
+you see they began to pull me over the benches,
+and I told 'em I would walk myself if they would
+let me, and so they did, but they held on to my
+coat. I kept pretty cool until they got outside of
+the house, and then a crowd gathered round, and
+they began cologueing together, until I saw my
+way out a little, and then I jist slipped my foot
+behind one of 'em and pushed him down, and
+tumbled the other feller over him, and then I showed
+them a clean pair of heels. They raised the whoop&mdash;and
+I raised my tail like a blue-lick buck, for
+you see I had'nt much coat to keep it down;&mdash;dash
+me if it was'nt tail all the way to the collar,
+and stood out straight behind like it was afraid of
+my pantaloons. I made a few turns to throw 'em<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
+off the trail, and then with a curly whoop, and a
+hurrah! for old Kentuck, I got to my own door,
+where I found the black-leg chap. Now you know
+the whole business, and I suppose you can tell me
+whether there is any danger of their finding me
+out in that little excuse for a coat that blasted
+tailor, who was so stingy with his cloth, made me."</p>
+
+<p>"I should suppose there was none in the world.
+Have no fear on that head; there is not a magistrate
+in town who would not honour you in his
+heart for what you did."</p>
+
+<p>"I should think so too, if they had any gals of
+their own. The fact is, if there was a little knockin
+down and draggin out once in a while among
+them dandy chaps, they would take better care
+how they sleeved decent men's daughters."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, good day, Damon," said Lamar; "send
+for me or Chevillere if you get into trouble."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V.</h2>
+
+
+<p>It will readily be perceived, by the reader, that
+Beverley Randolph, the person to whom the following
+letter was written, is one of the three southerns.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p class="center"><span class="smcap">Victor Chevillere to B. Randolph.</span></p>
+
+<p><span class="ralign">Baltimore, 18&mdash;.</span><br />
+
+"<span class="smcap">Dear Randolph</span>,
+</p>
+
+<p>"Five long years have we lived under the same
+roof, pursued the same studies, or rather the same
+studies pursued us;&mdash;engaged in the same dissipation,
+drank of the same sour wine, shed the same
+vinous tears, discussed the same dinners and suppers,
+enjoyed the same dances,&mdash;stag dances, I
+mean,&mdash;played the same music, belonged to the
+same society, and, I was going to say, fallen in love
+with the same nymphs; but that brings me to the
+subject of this letter. I am in for it! Yes, you
+may well look surprised! It is a fact! Who is
+the lady? you ask. I will tell you,&mdash;that is, if I can;
+her name is St. Clair. O! she is the most lovely,
+modest, weeping, melancholy, blue-eyed, fair-haired,
+and mysterious little creature you ever
+beheld. If you could only see her bend that white
+neck, and rest her head upon that small hand, her
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>eye lost in profound thought, until the lower lid
+just overflows, and a tear steals gently down that
+most lovely cheek; and then see her start up
+stealthily to join again in the conversation, with
+the most innocent consciousness of guilt imaginable;&mdash;but
+what is it that brings these tears to sadden
+the heart of one so youthful and so innocent?
+'There's the rub,' as Hamlet says. Yourself,
+Lamar, and I were unanimous, as you perhaps
+remember, that men generally suffer in proportion
+to their crimes, even in this world. I here renounce
+that opinion, with all others founded upon
+college logic. A half-taught college boy, in the
+pride of his little learning and stubborn opinions, is
+little better than an innocent. But, you ought to
+see this fair sufferer in order fully to appreciate
+the foregoing opinion. You would see child-like
+innocence&mdash;intelligence&mdash;benevolence; in short,
+all that is good, in her sad but lovely countenance.</p>
+
+<p>"But to return to college logic; what is it?
+Conclusions without premises, ends without means;
+and opinions adopted without any of the previous
+and inevitable pains and penalties attendant upon
+the acquirement of human knowledge, or, in other
+words, without <i>experience</i>! I would take one of
+our old break-of-day club to tell the flavour of a
+ham, or the difference between a bottle of Bordeaux
+and Seignette brandy, as soon as any one; but
+what else did they know? or rather what else
+did we know? Nothing! not literally nothing,
+but truly nothing. If I now wanted a judicious
+opinion upon any subject, I would go to an ex<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>perienced
+man! one that had suffered in order to
+learn; an original thinker for practical ends.</p>
+
+<p>"You ask me concerning my cousin, Virginia
+Bell; her with whose miniature, infantile as it
+was, you fell so desperately in love, and whom, yet
+unseen, I promised to yourself. She flourishes,
+Randolph, and is as beautiful as you could desire;
+she is yet unengaged in heart or hand, so far as I
+know; but <i>you</i> know, that the little sly, dear,
+delightful creatures will complete a whole life-time
+of love affairs, while fathers, and brothers, and guardians,
+and affianced lords <i>unloved</i>, may be looking
+on none the wiser. And they will look as innocent,
+and as demure, and as child-like, as my dear beautiful
+little enigma of the Black Mantle.</p>
+
+<p>"You say you 'hate Yankees;'&mdash;my dear fellow,
+you forget that you and I would be considered
+Yankees in London or Paris. The national denomination
+we have abroad, is 'the nation of Yankees,'
+or the 'universal Yankee nation.' 'Tis galling
+to our southern pride, I grant you, that we
+should be a mere appendage, in the eyes of a foreigner,
+to a people who are totally dissimilar to
+us. We must brook it until we can outdo them,
+in literature at least. They are (say many) retailers
+of wooden nutmegs&mdash;unfair dealers, and a
+canting, snivelling, hypocritical set; tell me where
+the country is, where the population is growing
+dense&mdash;where means of living are scarce&mdash;land
+high&mdash;trades overstocked&mdash;professions run down&mdash;and
+manufactures injured by foreign competition,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+in which the little arts of trade, and 'tricks upon
+travellers' do not also flourish. Let the population
+of your 'old dominion' be once multiplied
+by wholesome legislation, or rather let the yearly
+emigrants be induced to stay in the land of their
+sires, and the same cunning usages will prevail.
+As to the 'canting and snivelling,' you must allow
+something for the descendants of the Pilgrims.
+Besides, tell me, liberal sir, if you have not, in the
+very bosom of your great valley, as genuine Presbyterians
+and Roundheads as ever graced the
+Rump Parliament, or sung a psalm on horseback.
+And to give the devil his due, these same Presbyterians
+are no bad citizens of a popular government.
+But there is the lady of the Black Mantle. Observe
+that she was born north of the Potomac, yet I would
+wager any thing that you could not look steadily
+upon her face for one minute, and curse the Yankees
+as I have heard you do. I know you will
+say, therein lies the cause of my sudden conversion
+to Yankeeism. By no means! I had begun to
+find out that the Yankees had souls like other
+people, before I had ever seen her.</p>
+
+<p>"I approve of your determination to travel, and
+that even to the south, rather than not to travel at
+all; but is there not some danger lest a Virginian
+should become more bigoted, by travelling among
+a people still more bigoted than himself. I know
+your disposition; it is to hug up your dear southern
+prejudices within your own bosom. Lamar and I
+are becoming liberal, and then we will cast out
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>devils for you. Do not forget that I shall have a
+mother and cousin there by the time you arrive at
+the high hills of the Santee. Lamar has taken desperately
+to a six foot Kentuckian, as fine a specimen
+as you could wish to see; he is what may be
+called an American yeoman of the west.</p>
+
+
+<p class="center">"Yours truly,<br /></p>
+
+<p><span class="ralign">"<span class="smcap">Victor Chevillere</span>."</span><br />
+</p></blockquote>
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+<span class="smcap">B. Randolph to V. Chevillere.</span><br /></p>
+
+<p><span class="ralign">"Salem, North Carolina, 18&mdash;.</span><br />
+
+"<span class="smcap">Dear Chevillere</span>,<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"Thus far I have flown before the wind&mdash;sand,
+I should have said. At any rate, here I am, in this
+town of German religionists. Here dwells the first
+unanimous people I have ever seen. They are
+Moravians; and every thing is managed by this
+little community for the common benefit. They
+have one tavern, one store, one doctor, one tanner,
+one potter, and so on in every trade or occupation.
+Besides these, they have a church and a
+flourishing female seminary. The latter is conducted
+upon the utilitarian plan&mdash;each lady, in turn,
+has to perform the offices of cook, laundress, and
+gardener; and, I need hardly say, that it is admirably
+conducted. After I had visited all these
+establishments&mdash;for every respectable looking
+stranger is waited upon by some one appointed for
+that purpose to conduct him thither,&mdash;I returned
+to the large, cool, and comfortable inn, and had
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>scarcely seated myself to enjoy the comforts of
+nicotiana, when a small billet was handed to me
+by a handsomely dressed and polite black servant
+with a glazed hat, which not a little astonished me,
+you may be sure. I had not a living acquaintance
+in the whole state that I knew of; except, indeed,
+old Father Bagby, the master of ceremonies to the
+little community. It could not be a challenge
+from some Hans Von Puffenburg of these quiet
+burghers: so I concluded it must be a billet-doux
+from some of the beautiful creatures at the
+seminary on the hill. You can easily imagine,
+therefore, that I was no long time in tearing it
+open; when, behold! it was, in good truth, from a
+lady. Can you guess who? No. Then take the
+note itself entire.</p>
+
+<blockquote><p>
+"'<span class="smcap">Dear Sir</span>,<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"'If, as I believe, you are the same Mr. Randolph
+who was a room and class-mate of my son
+Victor Chevillere, in college, I will be very glad
+to see you. The servant will show you to our little
+parlour.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="ralign">"'<span class="smcap">M. J. Chevillere.</span>'</span><br />
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<p>"'I am the luckiest dog alive,' said I, jumping
+nearly over the negro's head, 'Is your young
+mistress here also.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Yes, masta, she is just leaving school for home,
+so please you.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Please me!' said I; 'to be sure it does please
+me; I never was more pleased in all my life. For
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>I was just about to forswear these eternal pine-barrens
+and sand-hills, and face to the right-about.
+So lead the way to your two mistresses.' Whereupon
+he led the way, hat in hand, to a room in the
+inn; and there, Chevillere, sat your honoured
+mother. Commend me to our southern matrons
+in high-life. Not that I know any thing against
+your northern ladies, old or young; but there is
+in our mothers a mild dignity, hospitality, and politeness,
+which makes every one at home. But I
+need not describe to you your own. But I will not
+promise you as much of the little blushing southern
+brunette, who gracefully arose on your mother's
+saying, 'Mr. Randolph, my adopted daughter Virginia
+Bell Chevillere.' I saw in an instant that
+you had told her of our college bargain, and my
+falling in love with her miniature. By-the-by,
+you ought to break that slanderous miniature, or
+the head of the dauber who perpetrated it. Her
+beauty never could be delineated on ivory or canvass.
+Can any one paint the living, breathing soul
+of a very young and beautiful female? No! and
+I'll tell you why. If a man had the genius to do
+so, the very enthusiasm which always attends it
+would throw him into very unpainter-like raptures
+at the sight of such a one; and that's the true reason
+why artists so seldom succeed in delineating
+young females. A precious piece of logic for you.
+But to return to the original of the picture; there
+was a blushing consciousness about the little Bell,
+as everybody calls her, which was truly charming.
+Her jet black hair and eyes shone like ebony; her
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>brilliant white teeth and brunette complexion were
+radiant with blushing smiles at this first reception
+of her long-promised husband. There was no
+girlish pouting, or childish affectation, as is too
+often the case when the parties have been laid off
+for each other; she was at the same time modest
+and self-possessed; her fairy figure glided about,
+as if her little fairy foot scarcely touched the carpet.
+I tell you these things, because you asked me
+to do so in all plainness of speech. Your cousin is
+all that a cousin of my dearest friend should be&mdash;lovely,
+intelligent, and interesting.</p>
+
+<p>"Your mother intended to wait here for some
+male friend, who has diverged a day's ride from
+their route home from the Springs; but she has now
+determined to leave this place to-morrow. I shall
+escort them as far as the Chevilleres' proud family
+seat, Belville. You will, therefore, hear no more
+complaints of the dreariness of the eternal pine-barrens,
+or the fever-and-ague appearance of the
+poor; except, that I will say now, once for all, that
+the poor of a slave-country are the most miserable
+and the most wretched of all the human family.
+The grades of society in this state are even farther
+apart than in Virginia. Here, there is one
+immense chasm from the rich to the abject poor.
+In the valley of Virginia, or in the country where
+you are, there are regular gradations. The very
+happiest, most useful, and most industrious class of a
+well-regulated community, is here wanting. Their
+place is filled up by negroes; in consequence of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>which, your aristocrats are more aristocratic, and
+your poor still poorer. The slaves create an immeasurable
+distance between these two classes,
+which can never be brought together until this
+separating cause be removed. You know I am no
+<i>abolitionist</i>, in the incendiary meaning of the term;
+yet I cannot deny from you and myself, that they
+are an incubus upon our prosperity. This we
+would boldly deny, if a Yankee uttered it in our
+hearing; but to ourselves, we must e'en confess it.
+If I am, therefore, an abolitionist, it is not for conscience-sake,
+but from policy and patriotism.</p>
+
+<p>"We can never rival those northern people, until
+we assume the modern tactics in this provincial
+warfare; that is, throw aside all useless baggage,
+and concentrate our energies upon a single point
+at a time. I have done with this theme for the
+present, and will repair to your friends.</p>
+
+<p>"Your mother knows nothing of our college-treaty,
+therefore she little thinks what a masked
+enemy she has let into the camp. Little Bell
+smiles, and enjoys our mutual understanding highly.
+But there lies the mischief; she smiles too innocently,
+and too calmly, and too openly, and has lost
+too much of that blushing mood in which she first
+received me; and I have thought several times
+that the little arch gipsy was laughing at me. If
+she had not been your cousin, and my affianced
+bride for the last five years, I should have taken
+leave. <i>You</i> know I never could stand to be exhibited;
+and would prefer being shot, at any time,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>to being laughed at. I shall watch the little fairy,
+and see if she is making me her butt; if so, I will
+see them safe to Belville, and then&mdash;you shall hear
+from me again.</p>
+
+<p>"You requested me to point out to you any
+thing in which I should observe that the Carolinas
+differed from Virginia. I must say then, with the
+judges, when they are pronouncing sentence, 'however
+painful may be the duty imposed upon me,'
+that your country appears more miserable the
+more deeply I penetrate it. Not that you lack
+splendid mansions, and magnificent cotton-fields
+varied with flowers, rich and tropical gardens, the
+orange and the 'pride of India,' your wild and fragrant
+swamp-flowers, princely hospitality, accomplished
+men and women,&mdash;not that you lack any of
+these. But the seeds of decay are sown at the
+very point where energy&mdash;enterprise&mdash;national
+pride&mdash;industry&mdash;economy&mdash;amusements&mdash;gayety&mdash;and
+above all, intelligence, should grow, namely,
+with your yeomanry!</p>
+
+<p>"I would not, if I could, have your young
+men and women transformed to spinning-jennies.
+Heaven forefend! I would have your lowest class
+of whites elevated to the dignity of intelligent and
+independent yeomen. How would I effect it? you
+ask. Apply the grand lever by which all human
+movement is brought about&mdash;hope! Has a poor
+North Carolinian hope? See him, on some cloudless
+morning, when the glorious rays of the sun
+are gladdening the hearts even of the unintelligent
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>creation, standing within the door of his pine-log
+cabin, his hands in his pockets, his head leaning
+against the door in melancholy mood. Some half-dozen
+pale and swollen-faced children are sitting
+on a bench against the side of the hut, endeavouring
+to warm away the ague in the sunbeams. The wife
+lies sick in bed. The little fields are barely marked
+out with a rotten and broken-down pole-fence,
+and overgrown with broom, or Bermuda-grass,
+and blackberry-bushes. A miserable horse stands
+beyond the fence, doubtful whether there is better
+grazing within or without. A little short-cotton
+and sweet-potato patch, flanked by an acre of
+scrubby Indian corn; and, added to these, five
+poor sheep, two goats, and a lean cow, complete
+the inventory of his goods and chattels. You have
+all his cause for <i>hope</i>! You have, too, his causes
+for fear. He has in his pocket a summons for debt,
+contracted for sugar and tea, and other needful
+comforts, for his sick wife and children.</p>
+
+<p>"Had he any cause for hope? God knows he
+had none in this world. But you will say the picture
+is exaggerated. As I am a true man and a
+southern, it is not.</p>
+
+<p>"I was benighted, and sought lodgings in the
+very house I have described. 'Who lives here,'
+said I, on riding to the door. 'One Fifer,' said a
+white-headed, half-grown girl, so weak that she
+could scarcely stand. I sat up nearly all night
+with the sick woman and children. On relieving
+the poor man's embarrassments in the morning, I
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>received the heart-felt thanks of the wretched
+family; and almost rode my horse to exhaustion,
+to get away from the wretched image imprinted
+on my memory.</p>
+
+<p>"Is this man a sample of the yeomanry of your
+country? I say, in deep and profound sorrow, I
+believe that he is. Where, then, does the evil lie?
+This is a question which every southern must soon
+ask himself, and one which Nullification cannot
+answer.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Here</i>, then, is a triumphant answer&mdash;an answer
+in deeds, instead of words&mdash;in the happiness, the
+prosperity, and the substantial wealth of these simple
+and primitive Moravians. Here, where I am
+writing, is an industrious, intelligent, and healthy
+community, in the very heart of all the misery I
+before described. Let us then improve by the lesson,
+seek out the sources of their prosperity, find
+the point where their plans diverge from ours, and,
+my word for it (if there be no reason in the case),
+we become a great, a flourishing, and a happy
+people.</p>
+
+<p>"But I must take one small exception to the
+Moravian political economy. They require all the
+young gentlemen to be enrolled on one list, and all
+the willing young ladies on another; and the first
+gentleman on the list must marry the first lady;
+so that they are drafted for marriage, as our Virginia
+militia are drafted for duty. I do not know
+that this is certainly true; but if it be true, that a
+youth must marry the first that comes up, <i>nolens
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>volens</i>, I would put in a plump negative. This excepted,
+they are worthy of all imitation, even to the
+drinking of home-brewed in their pewter mugs,
+and smoking long pipes around their council-table,
+when their little legislature meets.</p>
+
+<p>"There are no slaves in this little nation, and
+labour is no disgrace. In the extensive grounds, belonging
+to the female seminary, I saw many pretty
+little arms bared to work; not Moravian young
+ladies only, but elegant and aristocratic young
+ladies from all parts of the southern states, without
+distinction, and of every sect and denomination;
+and I never saw more beautiful complexions.
+The little gipsies would come in from their work
+in the morning, blooming as roses. Here is a
+complete refutation of the assertion, that the whites
+cannot work in a southern climate; here are as
+fine lands, and as fine husbandry and horticulture,
+as can be found in any country; here are the first
+paved streets south of Petersburg; here the first
+town, in which water is conveyed by pipes, as in
+Philadelphia; here the first stone-fences and grass-plots.</p>
+
+<p>"Your mother and little Bell are cheerful and
+happy. Indeed, the latter looks as if she had never
+suffered for a moment. How happy a life is that
+of a girl at a boarding-school, exempt from all the
+pains and penalties of collegians&mdash;the 'hair-breadth
+'scapes'&mdash;the formal trials for riding other people's
+horses,&mdash;ringing church bells,&mdash;building fences
+across the road,&mdash;hanging cake and beer signs at
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span>
+magistrates' and elders' doors,&mdash;burnings in effigy,
+fights at country weddings and dances,&mdash;exploring
+expeditions in the mountains and caverns, professedly
+for geological, but really for depredating purposes,&mdash;shooting
+house-dogs,&mdash;expeditions upon
+the water, and skating upon the ice,&mdash;swimming,
+duelling, fighting, biting, scratching,&mdash;firing crackers
+and cannons in college entries,&mdash;heavy meat
+suppers, with oceans of strong waters,&mdash;and then
+headache, thirst, soda and congress-water in the
+morning, and perhaps a visit from the doctor or
+the president,&mdash;presentments by the grand jury for
+playing at cards and overturning apple-carts,&mdash;personating
+ghosts with winding-sheets, and getting
+knocked on the head for their pains,&mdash;serenading
+sweethearts, and taking linchpins out of wagons,&mdash;making
+sober people drunk and drunken people
+sober,&mdash;battling with watchmen, constables, and
+sheriffs,&mdash;running away from the tailors and tavern-keepers,&mdash;kissing
+country girls, and battling with
+their beaux,&mdash;tricks upon the tutors, and shaving
+the tails of the president's horses,&mdash;stealing away
+the lion or the elephant at an animal show, and
+pelting strolling players,&mdash;putting hencoops upon
+churches, painting out signs, and carrying off platforms,&mdash;throwing
+hot rolls under the table, and biscuit
+at the steward's head,&mdash;playing musical seals
+at prayers, and saying prayers at rows,&mdash;gambling
+in study hours, and filching at recitation,&mdash;having
+one face for the president and another for the fellows,&mdash;and,
+finally, being sent home with a letter
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>to your father, informing him that you are corrupting
+the morals of your <i>teachers</i> in these pranks.
+These are a few of the classical studies into which
+the dear little innocents are never initiated, while
+they form no small part of collegiate education in
+America, as we can testify from experience.</p>
+
+<p>"Many a fine fellow makes the first trial of a
+stump speech, with an extract from an Irish sermon
+at a drunken row; his head perhaps stuck three
+feet through the window of the little bar in a tavern,
+and his audience sitting round on the beer-tables,
+armed with sticks, stones, and staves. One,
+who with drunken gravity keeps his head and stick
+moving all the while, says, that he concurs fully
+in opinion with the speaker; though, if asked what
+the subject is, he swears it is the Greek question.
+The question and the laugh go round. One avers
+stoutly that it is Catholic emancipation; a third
+vociferates that it is a complete justification of
+Brutus for killing Cæsar; a fourth thinks it a part
+of the recitation of the day, while the most drunken
+man of the company jumps down from his seat on
+the table, and swears that he can see through the
+fellow clearly, 'it's nothing but sleight of hand;'
+with which he exclaims, as he rubs his eyes and
+looks round, 'Bless my soul, boys, how drunk you
+all are; come, I'll help you to your room before
+matters get worse,' leading off the soberest man in
+the room. The party then breaks up in a regular
+row; I think I see the <i>old</i> fellows now, marching
+off two and two with the true would-be sober and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>drunken gravity, every man thinking that he is
+completely cheating his neighbour, by his picked
+steps and exactly poised head and shoulders, like a
+drunken soldier on drill. One gets into a carriage
+rut; another climbs into a pig-sty, and thinks he
+is getting over the college fence. A third falls
+over a cow, while a fourth takes off his hat to a
+blind horse, mistaking him in the dark for the president.
+At length they are lodged in bed, with boots,
+hats, and clubs, like soldiers expecting a surprise.
+Some murder a song or two in a drunken twang,
+while the rest snore in chorus.</p>
+
+<p>"But next comes the awful reward of transgression
+in the morning; dry throats, aching limbs,
+torn coats, sick stomachs, haggard countenances,
+swelled heads. The trembling and moody toilet is
+made; the bell rings for prayers; and a more repentant
+set of sinners never assembled under its
+sound. All wonder what has become of the joyous
+feelings of the previous night, and think with
+shame of such actions and speeches as they can
+recollect. Hereupon follows a gloomy and melancholy
+day. They are home-sick. Relations,
+friends, and the scenes of childhood, with all their
+quiet, innocent, and heartfelt pleasures, glide before
+the imagination. The head becomes dizzy; the
+heart palpitates; the hands tremble, and the sight
+grows double. Then comes the fear of illness,
+and death in a strange land. Associates of the
+'row' are avoided; several chapters in the Bible
+are read; repentance is promised; sleep settles
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>the nervous system; and next morning they arise
+gay and happy. This continues until the scene is
+repeated, and so on, until one half forswear brandy
+and the other half become confirmed sots.</p>
+
+<p>"Here is a coherent epistle for you. But if you
+dislike it, send it back, and I will divide it
+into&mdash;first&mdash;secondly&mdash;thirdly,
+et cetera, as the old
+president did his sermons.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="ralign">"<span class="smcap">B. Randolph.</span>"</span><br />
+</p></blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI.</h2>
+
+
+<p>After the visit to the monument, Chevillere
+daily inquired concerning the health of the interesting
+invalid; and as regularly was indisposition
+pleaded for her non-appearance. Late in the evening
+of the third day, he was slowly pacing the
+pavement in front of the hotel; now and then throwing
+a wistful glance at the lighted window of the
+lady, when all at once he suddenly wheeled round,
+and grasping in the dark, was surprised to find
+that a person whom he had supposed to be impertinently
+dogging his steps, had eluded his grasp.
+He grimly smiled at his own exasperation for an
+imaginary cause, hastily adjusted his cloak, and
+turned down the street leading most directly to
+the bay.</p>
+
+<p>When he arrived at the quiet and deserted
+wharf, and the rapid flow of his impetuous blood
+was retarded by the cool invigorating breeze which
+swept over the face of the water, he saw an old
+yawl lying on the dock, with its broad bottom
+turned to the bay. Negligently leaning his person
+at full length against its weather-beaten bottom,
+and drawing down his hat close over his brows, he
+surrendered himself to one of those habitual reveries
+which the southern well knows how to enjoy.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
+Had his mind and feelings been attuned to such
+things at the time, the scene itself would have furnished
+no uninteresting subject, with its hundred
+little lights, gleaming in the intense fog and darkness,
+and the numberless vessels that lay upon the
+bosom of the waters, with their dark outlines dimly
+visible, like slumbering monsters of their own element.
+He heeded them not; yet were his feelings
+insensibly impressed with the surrounding objects,
+and deeply tinctured with the profound gloom
+of the time and scene. The direct current of his
+thoughts pointed, however, in the direction of the
+invalid. Her extreme youth, beauty, and apparent
+innocence,&mdash;her deep distress and profound
+melancholy, naturally produced a corresponding
+depression in his own otherwise elastic spirits. He
+was perfectly unconscious of the time he had spent
+in this way, when accidentally turning his head to
+one side, he was struck with the appearance of
+something intercepting the line of vision in that
+direction. He was just about to approach the
+cause of his surprise, when a deep voice, issuing
+from the very spot, added not a little to his superstitious
+mood, by the exact manner in which it
+chimed in with the present subject of his meditations.</p>
+
+<p>"A beautiful young woman in affliction is a
+very dangerous subject of meditation, under some
+circumstances."</p>
+
+<p>"An honest heart fears no danger from any
+earthly source," was the reply.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Honesty is no guard against external danger
+in this world, whether moral or physical," said the
+figure.</p>
+
+<p>"Discernment may lend a hand to honesty in
+such a case."</p>
+
+<p>"Ha! ha! ha!" hideously retorted the intruder;
+"Discernment, said you? Man's discernment is a
+mighty thing; by it he reads the past, the present,
+and the future; what can withstand his mighty
+vision? He can descry danger at a distance, and
+bring happiness within his grasp; he can tell the
+objects of his own creation, and his Creator's first
+beginning; he can read the starry alphabet in
+yonder heavens, and fathom the great deep; he
+can laugh at the instinct of grovelling creation, and
+thunder the dogmas of reason in the teeth of revelation
+itself! Discernment, indeed! ha! ha! ha!
+why, man is not half so well off as the brutes.
+What is their instinct but God's ever present and
+supporting hand; but man&mdash;he has neither perfect
+reason nor instinct! He has the conscience of an
+angel, and the impulses of a devil; and reason sits
+between them, for an umpire, with a fool's cap
+upon her head! Impulse bribes reason, and reason
+laughs at conscience. Impulse leads downward,
+like the power of gravity; and conscience struggles
+upward like the nightmare: but reason and
+discernment will traffic and bargain with impulse
+for one moment, and blind or cheat conscience the
+next! Turn mankind loose with all their reason
+without providence, and they will butt each other's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>
+foolish brains out! Bribed conscience makes hypocrites,&mdash;frightened
+conscience makes fanatics,&mdash;but
+reason-drilled conscience makes incarnate
+devils!"</p>
+
+<p>"But," said Chevillere, involuntarily interested
+by this wild rhapsody, "a tender, conscience-instructed
+reason, and christianized impulses, make
+an honest and a discerning man, too."</p>
+
+<p>"Instructed reason! who teaches man's reason,
+but the inward devils of his impulses? A few
+good parents may point upward, periodically, but
+the impulses pull down! down! down! for ever!
+no intermission. If they would let go, I myself
+could plunge into the sea; but the deeper we
+plunge, the harder they pull! The farther we
+sink, the heavier they become. Oh! man! of
+what a cursed race art thou! Think you the inhabitants
+of the moon are likewise under the ban
+of God's displeasure?"</p>
+
+<p>"I indulge in no such impracticable dreams,"
+said Chevillere.</p>
+
+<p>"No! no! <i>you</i> dream of paradise; but remember
+what I now tell you, your paradise will not be
+without its Eve, and its serpent too!"</p>
+
+<p>"To whom do you allude?"</p>
+
+<p>"To the lady of whom you were thinking but
+now."</p>
+
+<p>"You know not what you say," said Chevillere.</p>
+
+<p>"Do I not? Perhaps you would have me speak
+more plainly! Perhaps you could screw up your
+resolution to the point, that I might amputate your<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>
+hopes one by one, as a poor fellow sees the surgeon
+carrying off his bloody limbs; nay, I could do it!"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, sir, you never saw me till within the
+hour."</p>
+
+<p>"Have I not? perhaps not; I would to heaven
+I could say as much about the lady."</p>
+
+<p>"To what lady do you so often allude?"</p>
+
+<p>"To the lady with the <i>black mantle</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Hold, she is all innocence and purity."</p>
+
+<p>"Innocence and purity! Eve was innocent and
+pure too! yea, and surpassingly beautiful! but she
+fell! Alas! her daughters are like her."</p>
+
+<p>"Come, sir," said Chevillere, with some exasperation,
+"let us put a stop to this discourse; it is
+not pleasing to me, and I feel sure it is not useful
+to you."</p>
+
+<p>"Be it so," said the intruder, drawing up his
+long goat's-hair cloak, and pulling a flat cloth cap
+closely over his gray locks, as they for a moment
+became visible by the reflection of the long horizontal
+rays of a lamp from the deck of a neighbouring
+vessel; "be it so, sir; there is no convincing
+a child that a <i>beautiful</i> candle will burn until it
+scorches its fingers."</p>
+
+<p>"In God's name, then, out with it, sir! what is
+it that seems to burn so upon your tongue? come,
+out with it!" said Chevillere, sharply.</p>
+
+<p>"For what do you take me, young man? a gossip
+or a stripling! I am neither one nor the other;
+I am old enough to be your father; as well born
+and as well educated as he ever was; and (not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>withstanding
+your southern blood and aristocratic
+notions) it may be as proud; farewell, sir, and the
+next time I offer to pull you from the edge of a
+precipice, perhaps you will listen with more respect
+to one of double your age, who can have no interest
+in deceiving you. Farewell, sir!"</p>
+
+<p>"Stay! stay! a moment,&mdash;one word more.
+Did you not visit Washington's monument three
+days ago, and see me there for the first time?"</p>
+
+<p>"I could answer either yes or no to that question.
+How do you know, sir, that we have not met
+before, centuries ago? Do you not sometimes
+foresee a whole scene, just as it afterward takes
+place? Do you not sometimes look upon a strange
+face with a shudder? Does not a feature&mdash;a smile&mdash;or
+an expression of them combined&mdash;sometimes
+awake the slumbering memory of ages? Is it not
+so? have you never communed with the dead?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"I have, often! often!&mdash;and many times have I
+been warned of approaching evils, by these dreamy
+conversations; I never dream of seeing my father
+smile upon me, that something good does not
+speedily follow; nor of snakes and serpents, unattended
+by bad news or bad fortune. Of these
+things I usually dream the night before meeting
+the lady yonder, after a long absence."</p>
+
+<p>"I supposed as much," said Chevillere.</p>
+
+<p>"How, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"I supposed that you had <i>dreamed</i> something
+against that pure and unfortunate young lady."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Would to Heaven it were all a dream! Sunshine
+would again break into the dark regions of
+my thoughts."</p>
+
+<p>"Suppose I should undertake and pledge my
+life to convince you that it is so."</p>
+
+<p>"You might convince me of your sincerity,
+but not of your power. Can you raise the dead?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, but what has raising the dead to do with
+the lady?"</p>
+
+<p>"More than you imagine, perhaps."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, I see it is useless to attempt what I proposed
+and hoped to effect for the sake of the lady's
+peace. Have you no friends with you in this
+city?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I have a dog! there sits the best friend I
+ever had, save one!"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear sir! permit me to say I think you
+far from being well."</p>
+
+<p>"I never felt better in health than I do at this
+moment."</p>
+
+<p>"But we are not judges of our own ailments:
+Physicians do not often prescribe for themselves."</p>
+
+<p>"I tell you, sir, I am well!"</p>
+
+<p>"Have it so, sir! but if you are the person whom
+I met a few days since at the monument, I would
+mildly and respectfully recommend to you to think
+no more of the lady you saw there with me. You
+certainly labour under some grievous error, with
+regard to her, at least."</p>
+
+<p>"You will find, when it is too late, perhaps, that
+others instead of me are labouring under <i>fatal</i><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
+errors concerning that young lady! Farewell,
+sir, farewell. When next we meet, you will listen
+with a more attentive ear to what I have to say;
+you will have observed many strange things yourself,
+and you will naturally seek, rather than repel a
+solution of the mystery." Then with a signal to
+his dog, he hastily went from the wharf, leaving
+Chevillere in no enviable state of mind.</p>
+
+<p>Youthful thoughts will not long voluntarily
+dwell upon the gloomy aspect even of the circumstances
+surrounding themselves; it was very
+natural, therefore, that Chevillere should reflect
+with much complacency upon the tendency of his
+friend Lamar's laughing philosophy; nor was he
+long in threading his way to the lodgings of the
+Kentuckian. He had calculated with great certainty
+upon finding his friend there, and on ascending
+the three flights of stairs, he heard the voices
+of both in full chorus of laughter, that of Lamar
+indicating his most joyful mood. He rapped at
+the door once or twice before he was heard.
+"Come in!" shouted the backwoodsman, "what
+the devil's the use of knocking with every mug of
+punch." Lamar sprang to his feet at the sight of
+his friend, with volumes of smoke rolling over his
+head, and laying one hand on Chevillere's back
+and another on his breast, cried in the true mock
+heroic;&mdash;"'Be thy intents wicked or charitable,
+thou com'st in such a questionable shape, that I
+will speak to thee.' 'Revisit'st thou thus the
+glimpses of the moon, making night hideous, and us<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+fools of' liquor&mdash;'so horribly to shake our dispositions,
+with thoughts beyond the reaches of our souls;
+say, why is this?' But, by old Shakspeare's beard,
+you look like a ghost indeed! why, whence com'st
+thou, man? see his cloak, too! it is covered with
+sawdust!"</p>
+
+<p>"Hurrah for old Kentuck!" said Damon, "he's
+been to the circus! I say, stranger, was there any
+knockin down and draggin out there. O! black
+eyes and bruises! what a rascally appetite I've
+got now for a knock down; I swear I think my
+hands will git as tender as a woman's, if I don't
+git a little now and then jist to keep 'em in."</p>
+
+<p>"I may be soiled from leaning against a boat at
+the dock," said Chevillere.</p>
+
+<p>"You certainly have the air of one who had
+tried a few perils by land and sea," said Lamar.</p>
+
+<p>"The fact is, I do not feel well, nor in high
+spirits, and I came here on purpose to see if Damon
+could not brighten me up a little."</p>
+
+<p>"To be sure I can," said he; "but why didn't
+you come sooner, and then we could all have gone
+to the circus together; that's the place for my
+money; you see you want something to make your
+blood circulate: a small taste or two would soon
+bring you round."</p>
+
+<p>"A taste of what?" asked Chevillere.</p>
+
+<p>"A small bit of a regular row, to be sure; all
+in good-nature, you know; a man needn't git in a
+passion, in takin a little exercise after bein cooped
+up here all day, in one of these cocklofts&mdash;why,
+if I sit here an hour, and go down in the street,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
+by hokies, but I want to snort directly; I feel like
+old Pete when he's been stabled up for a week or
+two, and jist turned loose to graze a little; and I'll
+tell you what it is, stranger, I'm for making a
+straight coat-tail out of this place, and that in a
+hurry, for I've got through all my business now,
+and I'm keen to be among the Yorkers; for I've
+heard tell there's smashin work there every night."</p>
+
+<p>"Have you any acquaintances there?" asked
+Lamar.</p>
+
+<p>"No; but I expect to find some of our Kentuck
+boys there, who come round by the lakes; and if
+I do, I rather reckon we'll weed a wide row."</p>
+
+<p>"Take care you do not run against old Hays
+in your mad pranks," said Chevillere.</p>
+
+<p>"They say he's a little touched with the snappin-turtle,
+but I'm thinkin he'd hardly try old Kentuck
+at a fight or a foot-race."</p>
+
+<p>"He has had a good many fights and foot-races
+in his day," said Chevillere.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Damon, "but always with rogues;
+he'd find it rather a different business at an honest
+ground-scuffle, where every man had to take care
+of his own ears."</p>
+
+<p>"You think, then, he could not be so successful
+in Kentucky as he is in New-York, at his occupation,"
+said Lamar.</p>
+
+<p>"He'd be off the scent there, and I rather
+think he'd soon look like the babes in the woods;
+you see he has the rogues in the city like a coon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
+when he's treed; an old dog's better than a young
+one in such a fix."</p>
+
+<p>"But come, Damon, go on with your adventures
+of the day which Chevillere's entrance interrupted."</p>
+
+<p>"Not till we have wet our whistles; come,
+stranger (to Chevillere), you have'nt drank nothin
+since you came into the room, nor into the city
+either, for what I know."</p>
+
+<p>"You know," said Chevillere, "that I am a
+cold water man, upon taste and principle both."</p>
+
+<p>"And that's what I call ra'al hard drink; well,
+here's to the little gal of the circus, and the little
+gal down yonder at the hotel; cold water's but a
+sorry drink to pledge such warm-hearted creters&mdash;but
+I see talking of them makes you look solemncholy
+again, and so here goes for my day's
+work; let me see&mdash;where did I leave off?"</p>
+
+<p>"At the commission house where you carried
+the letter," said Lamar.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, by the hokies! so it was. Well, you see, I
+marched into the great store, as they had told me
+it was, with my nose uppermost, like a pig in the
+wind, I had an order on them for some of the eel-skins&mdash;but
+I soon brought my snout down agin;
+ho! ho! thought I, here's a pretty spot of work!
+I'm a Turk if I aint tetotally dished."</p>
+
+<p>"What was the matter?" said Chevillere.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, instead of all the fine things loomin out
+in the wind as I expected for such great marchants,
+I found nothing but a long empty store, and no<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>
+shelves even, and there sat two or three starched
+lookin dogs, on so many old rum bar'ls; I swear
+I thought in a minute about our old still-house,
+and the school-master, and the miller, and the
+blacksmith, and the stiller, talkin politics over
+the bar'ls, and takin a swig every now and then
+out of the old proof-vial."</p>
+
+<p>"Well! you presented your draft," said Lamar,
+"and what then?"</p>
+
+<p>"No I did'nt&mdash;I got a straddle of a bar'l too; I
+thought I would take a dish of chat, for that was
+about the most I expected to get. Rat me! but I
+began to feel a little particular about the gizzard
+in thoughts of sellin old Pete to get home on; I
+put on a long face. It's everlastin dull times for
+business, said I. 'O sir, you are quite mistaken,
+business is taking a look up&mdash;it's getting very brisk
+indeed.' And he rubbed his hands, and looked as
+glad as if he had had a drink of that hot punch.
+So, thought I, I'm off the trail; but I thought I
+would tree him next time. 'The best horses, said
+I, will stumble sometimes.' 'Sir?' said he, I said
+'the honestest men sometimes make bad speculations.'
+'Oh!' said he, 'I understand you! but I
+hope business is brisk and money plenty this season
+in the west.' Now, thought I, he's got the boot
+on the wrong leg this time; 'yes, said I, we
+can't complain, but I must say I thought it looked
+a little dull hereabouts.' 'O, you western men are
+such driving fellows, that you can't put up with our
+slow way of makin money.' He's feedin me on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>
+soft corn, thought I. 'We do a little now and then,
+but getting the money afterward is all our trouble,'
+said I. 'Why, sir, you have hit the nail upon the
+head; that's the difficulty everywhere,' said he.
+I thought I would run him into a stand 'fore long;
+but he hoisted his tail and flung me clean off the
+trail agin. 'Can't I sell you half a dozen bar'ls
+of cognac brandy to-day,' said he. I snapped my
+fingers and jumped up, and by the long Harry I was
+near raisin the whoop; for I thought old Pete and
+the money was all safe, and so it was. 'O! the
+hunters of Kentucky! old Kentucky;' and he
+began to sing and caper round the table.</p>
+
+<p>"Did he pay the money?" asked Chevillere.</p>
+
+<p>"Not exactly; these city chaps keep their money
+buried, I believe, for you never see none of it; I
+reckon they're 'fraid it'll spile; howsomever, he
+gave me an order on the bank for the eel-skins."</p>
+
+<p>"Then you took your leave," said Lamar.</p>
+
+<p>"No; he asked me if I had ever seen an auction
+of a ship's cargo; I said no, I had never seen more
+nor a Kentuck vendue: he asked me to go along;
+I'm your man, said I, for I expected there would
+be smashin work if a whole ship-load was to be
+sold, for I have seen some very clever little skrimmages
+at a vendue; well, when we got there, there
+was boxes and bags all laying in rows, and little
+troughs laying under them, like them we catch
+sugar-water in. Some had little long spoons made
+on purpose to suck sugar with, and some had little
+augers for boring holes; presently the crier began.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
+'<i>Seven, seven, seven&mdash;eight, eight, eight cents a
+pound, going, going</i>,' and smash went the little
+mallet; 'how many do you take, sir? twenty, or
+the hundred boxes?' said he. 'Take the hundred,'
+said a man, that looked like he wasn't worth the
+powder that would blow him up."</p>
+
+<p>"Could you always tell who bid?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; they mostly did it by winkin, I believe;
+sometimes one fellow would grunt this side and
+another that side; I kept my head bobbin after
+them first one side and then the other; but whenever
+I looked in their faces their eyes looked as
+sleepy as a dog in fly-time, just waitin to snap a
+fellow that was buzzin about his ears."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you find out at last who were the bidders?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; they shut up their faces like steel-traps.
+Once or twice, maybe, I saw a dyin-away
+wrinkle round a feller's mouth, like the rings in
+the water when you throw a stone in; but they
+soon faded away, and they looked as smooth and
+deceitful as a pool of deep water itself agin."</p>
+
+<p>"They tasted and tried the articles, of course,
+before they bought?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; some of them had their mouths daubed,
+like children suckin 'lasses candy; and some of
+their big noses was stuck full of Bohea tea, outside
+and in, like old Pete when he's had a good feed of
+chopped rye and cut straw."</p>
+
+<p>"And what sort of a man was the auctioneer?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, his mouth went so fast when he got to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
+'<i>going, going, going</i>,' that you couldn't say <i>stop</i>, if
+you had had your mouth fixed; but his face I didn't
+like at all."</p>
+
+<p>"What was there in his face objectionable?"</p>
+
+<p>"O! I can't tell exactly, it looked out of all sort
+of nature; a good deal I don't know howish. One
+thing I'll be sworn to, you would never see such a
+one in old Kentuck; there every man wears his
+Sunday face on week days."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose you mean that the man was disfigured
+with affectation," said Chevillere.</p>
+
+<p>"You've hit it, stranger, you've hit it; that's the
+very word I wanted to be at, but I couldn't get it
+out. Well, from the vendue I took a stroll round
+town, to see the lads and lasses; how they carried
+their heads in these parts, and maybe to see how
+they carried on their <i>sparkin</i> in a big town like
+this; for, to tell you the truth, that's one of the
+things I never could see how they carried on
+here."</p>
+
+<p>"How did you manage such things in the west?
+Is there any thing peculiar in your method?"</p>
+
+<p>"I can't say we're different from other folks in
+the country, but you see we have abundance of
+chances to court the gals a little; for there's our
+weddings."</p>
+
+<p>"There are weddings here, too, I hope," said
+Lamar.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, and a pretty business they make of 'em;
+I blundered into a church the other day, and what
+should be goin on there but a weddin; and smash<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>
+my apple-cart, if there wasn't more cryin and
+snifflin than I've seen at many an honest man's
+funeral, and all in broad daylight, too; and when
+the parson had got through his flummery, with his
+long white mornin gown, they all jumped into carriages,
+and off they went away into the country
+somewhere, to hide themselves. I rather suspect
+they had stole a march on the old folks, else they
+wouldn't have run so as if the devil was at their
+heels."</p>
+
+<p>"How do you conduct such things in the west?"
+asked Lamar.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! there we have quiltings, skutchings, and
+sewin frolics, and makin apple butter, and all such
+like; and they always wind up at the little end
+with a rip-sneezin dance, and that's where we do
+the sparkin; well, presently a weddin grows out
+of it, and maybe then there isn't a little fun agoing,
+dance all night, and play all sort of games, at least
+all them sort that wind up in kissin the gals, and
+that they manage to bring about by sellin pawns,
+and one thing or other. For my part, I never could
+see into any but the kissin part, and that you know
+was the cream of the joke."</p>
+
+<p>"They do not often go to church to get married
+then," said Chevillere.</p>
+
+<p>"No; I never saw anybody married at church
+before t'other day, and I hope it'll be a long time
+before their new-fangled ways travels out to old
+Kentuck; there our gals and boys stands up before
+the parson a few minutes, and he rolls his tobacco<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
+two or three times over his teeth, and <i>chaws</i> a few
+words, and it's all over before you could say 'God
+save the commonwealth' three times; and what's
+the use in makin three bites of a cherry?"</p>
+
+<p>"But you have wandered from your point," said
+Lamar; "you started out on an expedition to see
+how the lads and lasses carried themselves here."</p>
+
+<p>"O! ay, sure enough; well, one of the first
+things I come across was a parcel of gals and
+boys on horseback, and I'm flummucked if it
+wouldn't have been a pretty tolerable show in the
+land of hogs and homminy. The gals rode well
+enough, considering how they were hampered with
+clothes and trumpery; but the men! O smashy!
+how they rode! bobbin up and down on the saddle,
+with three motions to the horse's one. I'm an
+Injin if old Pete Ironsides wouldn't have kicked
+up his heels and squealed at the very first motion
+of the rider goin ahead of him; and then the saddles
+were stuck on the shoulders of the animals,
+like a hump on a man's back, or a pair of <i>haims</i> to
+hitch traces to. One of them chaps would ride a
+saddle about twice as hard as a horse. I was
+lookin evry minute for one of 'em to light behind
+his saddle."</p>
+
+<p>"Did all the gentlemen and ladies you met carry
+themselves so unnaturally?" said Lamar.</p>
+
+<p>"No; I met one young lady dressed in black
+that I thought I had seen before somewhere, and
+her spark too; but they were too busy to see me.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>
+<i>She</i> looked more coy and shamefaced, like our
+country gals, than any of them."</p>
+
+<p>"How did the gentleman bear himself? was he
+polite and respectful in his carriage?" said Lamar,
+smiling, and looking at Chevillere.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes! he bowed his head close down to the
+bonnet of the pretty little lady, and walked that
+way all through the street, as if he was afraid to
+lose so much as a word; sometimes she seemed to
+be just ready to cry, and looked pale and frightened.
+I rather suppose her old dad's a little sour or cross,
+maybe; but for all I couldn't help thinkin what a
+clever nice young couple they would make to stand
+up before the parson."</p>
+
+<p>Chevillere attempted reserve of manner, but
+blushed and smiled in spite of himself, as he asked
+Damon, "Not your chaw-tobacco parson, I hope?"</p>
+
+<p>"And why not? what if he <i>would</i> roll his chaw-tobacco
+into one cheek at you, while he coupled
+you up with the other? I'll be bound you'd look
+at somebody else's pretty cheeks more nor you
+would at the parson's chaw-tobacco; besides, what
+harm is there in a parson's chawin? I know an old
+one who would no more git up into his pulpit of a
+Sunday without a good smart plug in his mouth,
+than I would strike my own brother when he's
+down. I've seen him afore now, when his wind
+held out longer than his tobacco, run his finger
+first into one jacket-pocket, and then into the other,
+and at last he'd draw a little piece of pigtail, just up
+to the top of the water (as you may say), and then
+he'd let it go again."<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Some virtuous shame, in view of the congregation,
+I suppose," said Chevillere.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, that was it; but I never heard any of the
+sarmont after the old boy's ammunition run out."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, what had his tobacco to do with your
+listening?"</p>
+
+<p>"A great deal; no sooner would the old feller
+begin to fumble in his pockets, than my hand
+always run into mine, of its own accord, and
+lugged out a chunk of a twist just ready to hand
+to the old man, and then when I'd find it couldn't
+be, I naturally took a plug myself, and chawed for
+the old boss till his wind <i>flagg'd</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Or, in other words, his desire for the weed
+made you desire it, to cure which you chewed for
+yourself, and flattered your conscience all the while
+that you were rendering him a service," said Chevillere.</p>
+
+<p>"Very like! very like! for I know it makes a
+feller husky dry to see another famishin for a little
+of the cretur."</p>
+
+<p>"Not so much so, perhaps, as if a dry person, as
+you call him, should see another drinking, and could
+get none himself."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! but that's a case out of all nature, as one
+may say, in these parts, anyhow, where liquor runs
+down the streets, after a manner."</p>
+
+<p>Chevillere and Lamar, both rising, exchanged
+the usual salutations, and the <i>good night! good
+night!</i> went the rounds of all present.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VII" id="CHAPTER_VII"></a>CHAPTER VII.</h2>
+
+
+<p>"Were you not delighted with the wild and
+mountainous scenery of the country around the
+Virginia Springs?" said Victor Chevillere to Miss
+St. Clair, on the morning after the scene related in
+the last chapter, as the lady reclined, in a pensive
+mood, in the room before described.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, sir, you forget that I was too feeble in mind
+and body to enjoy the scenery around me then, or
+to partake of the enthusiasm of my friends on the
+subject. The rich and romantic scenery of the
+White Sulphur was highly attractive to me, when
+I became somewhat convalescent; yet I shall
+carry with me through life a sad remembrance of
+scenes, which to many others of my age and sex
+will ever be associated with the gay dance, the enlivening
+gallopade, the stirring music, and with
+adventurous equestrian excursions among the
+mountains."</p>
+
+<p>"I believe," said Chevillere, "that the most melancholy
+reflections may be and are much softened
+and mellowed in after-life, by being associated in
+the mind with the profoundly poetical feelings excited
+by the constant view of quiet mountain
+scenery; such as the well-remembered, long, long<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>
+line of blue peaks, stretching far away until they
+reach the clouds and the horizon."</p>
+
+<p>"It is indeed true," said she, "that kind and
+beautiful nature, in the season of green leaves and
+flowers, will sometimes almost tempt us to believe
+that misery is not the inevitable lot of the human
+family; but when the consciousness of the one and
+the beauty of the other are together present to
+us, it depends entirely upon the degree, whether
+the beauty softens the suffering or not."</p>
+
+<p>"In other words," said he, "whether the evil be
+so irremediable that <i>hope</i> cannot enter the heart;
+that the ravishing beauty of nature cannot excite
+benevolence, devotion, and love."</p>
+
+<p>"That was not entirely my case," said she, "for
+I am grateful for having felt some pleasing excitement
+at the time, and for being able now to call up
+many pleasurable remembrances, clouded as they
+are for the most part with sadness."</p>
+
+<p>"If I have been rightly informed, you did not
+visit all the other springs around the White Sulphur."</p>
+
+<p>"My health would not permit of our making
+the entire fashionable round."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, then you have missed much pleasure," said
+he. "There are the Sweet Springs, rising out of
+the earth like a boiling caldron, with brilliant little
+balloons of gas ever ascending to the top of the
+water, and bursting in the sunbeams. There is
+not perhaps in the world such another natural
+fountain of soda-water. And there is the Salt<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>
+Sulphur, with its high romantic hills covered with
+herds, and its beautiful meadows, and its long village
+of neat white cottages, and its splendid assembly-rooms,
+and its sumptuous banquets of wild
+game and artificial luxuries. But, above all, there
+is the Warm Spring, with its clear blue crystal
+baths, large enough for a troop of horse to swim
+in; there, likewise, is an extensive green lawn,
+flanked on the one side by the same kind of neat
+white cottages, and on the other by the line of
+blue mountains, rising abruptly from the plain
+within gun-shot of the baths. On a clear moonlight
+night, one may see the invalids sitting out on
+the green in front of their doors, enjoying the placid
+scenery of the valley, and the profound and solemn
+monotony of the overhanging mountains,&mdash;sometimes,
+indeed, interrupted by the bustle of a
+new arrival, the neighing of horses, the crash of
+the wheels, the hoarse voices of the coachmen as
+they exchange advice upon the descent into the
+valley, or by the meeting of old friends and fellow-invalids,
+perhaps acquaintances of a former season,
+and fellow-sufferers with the gout, bantering each
+other upon their speed."</p>
+
+<p>"From what little I saw of them, I think they
+perfectly justify the southern enthusiasm which we
+found everywhere on the subject; and I should
+think that there is no finer opportunity of seeing
+southern fashionable society."</p>
+
+<p>"True; our wealthiest and most fashionable
+people resort thither every season. Yet I cannot<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
+say in truth, from what I have observed myself,
+that our aristocracy are seen there to the best advantage.
+They are too much in their holyday suit
+of manners,&mdash;too artificial,&mdash;too unnatural. I
+have seen people who were agreeable at home,
+become affected and disagreeable at watering-places.
+I have also seen some who were reserved
+at home, become quite affable there. The latter
+effect, however, was by no means so common as
+the former."</p>
+
+<p>"I did not see much affectation, or many unnatural
+people at the White Sulphur," said the lady.</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot say that it is one of the besetting sins
+of the southern fashionables; all I meant to say
+was, that they show more of it there than at
+home."</p>
+
+<p>"For my own part, I was delighted with the
+generous, free, and open-hearted manner in which
+I was treated by the few female acquaintances I
+made; and I am almost ashamed to acknowledge
+that they were far more intelligent and accomplished
+than my prejudices had taught me to
+expect."</p>
+
+<p>"You acknowledge, then, that you had some
+provincial prejudices. Let me see! <i>then</i> I must
+take you regularly to account, and catechise you."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said the lady, as lightly as her habitual
+sadness ever permitted, "I will answer truly."</p>
+
+<p>"I know you will speak truly whatever you do
+answer; but will you speak the whole truth in answer
+to whatever I shall ask?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>A sad and afflicted expression appeared upon
+her countenance as she replied, "I need hardly
+say to Mr. Chevillere, that those questions which
+are proper for him to ask and for me to hear shall
+be fully answered."</p>
+
+<p>"You do me but justice in supposing that I
+would not discredit my new dignity, by propounding
+questions which would lessen me in the eyes
+of a fair witness; but, to tell you the truth, I seriously
+meditated putting a few in addition to such
+as were local, and perhaps in a more serious mood
+than these might demand."</p>
+
+<p>"Proceed, sir, proceed," said the lady, somewhat
+perturbed; "I must reserve the right to answer or
+not. No trifling impediment, however, shall prevent
+me from gratifying your curiosity."</p>
+
+<p>"Would you consider it a great misfortune to
+reside in the southern states?"</p>
+
+<p>"Places and countries are to me nearly alike."</p>
+
+<p>"How so? You surely prefer your native land
+to all others?"</p>
+
+<p>"Unhappiness soon makes us indifferent to mere
+locality; situated as I am, many would prefer new
+scenes."</p>
+
+<p>"Does not affliction enlarge the heart, and
+extend the affections?"</p>
+
+<p>"I believe that slight sufferings make us captious&mdash;great
+ones, humane and benevolent."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it a natural consequence, that, when benevolence
+becomes universal, personal affections and
+partialities wither in proportion?"<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Certainly not, as a consequence; but it is questionable
+whether blighted hopes do not generally
+precede the enlarged philanthropy spoken of."</p>
+
+<p>"May not much travelling and experience of the
+world produce the same effect?"</p>
+
+<p>"I cannot speak experimentally on that point;
+but I think it is very probable they do upon a masculine
+mind."</p>
+
+<p>As Chevillere was about to continue his half-serious,
+half-jesting questions, Mr. Brumley abruptly
+entered, and announced to his daughter-in-law
+his determination to proceed northward early
+on the following morning; and almost at the same
+moment, old Cato, with his stately step, profound
+bow, and cap in hand, presented a letter to his
+master, which he instantly knew by the superscription
+to be from Randolph. Presenting his regards
+to them both, he retired to peruse the epistle,
+which will be found in the next chapter.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VIII" id="CHAPTER_VIII"></a>CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
+
+
+<blockquote><p class="center"><span class="smcap">B. Randolph to V. Chevillere.</span></p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="ralign">"Belville, High Hills of the Santee, S. Carolina.</span><br />
+
+"<span class="smcap">Dear Chum</span>,<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"The deserts of Africa are not to be compared,
+for loneliness, to a South Carolinian swamp. Oh!
+the comforts and blessings of a corduroy turnpike!
+These, you know, are made of poles laid down in
+the bottom of the swamps for a road, in humble
+imitation of that same most durable web. But the
+swamps gone through, and myself safely landed
+here&mdash;this Belville of yours is a most desirable
+place. Your father must have been a man of taste,
+friend Victor. The grove of Pride of India trees,
+in front of the villa, stands exactly as you left it;
+the vines run up and around Bell's window as
+beautiful as ever; the pigeons wheel over the
+garden and cotton-fields as gayly as of old. The
+flowers which perfume this delightful and balmy
+air, send up their sweets from the garden and the
+lawn as they have done these forty years; at least
+so testifies old Tombo the gardener. Your favourite
+horse thrives, and is none the worse for a
+trial of his speed and bottom which I made the
+other day in a race with my own impetuous
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>thoughts. Your mother seems happier than I have
+ever seen her; and little Virginia Bell is the fairest
+flower on the Chevillere estate. Will you believe
+it! she introduced me to the housekeeper on my
+arrival as having been her affianced bridegroom
+ever since she was three months old, and then enjoyed
+a school-girl laugh. By St. Benedict, that
+laugh cut nearer to my heart than a funeral
+sermon.</p>
+
+<p>"Why have you not written to her and extolled
+some of my good qualities? She will never find
+them out! and as to my becoming a serious, sighing
+suitor, I am ten times farther from it than I was
+the first day I blundered into such dangerous company.
+If I were to elongate my phiz by way of
+preparative for a sigh, she would split her little
+sides with laughing at me. The fact is, I begin
+to think myself pretty considerably of an ass among
+the ladies, as your Yankees would express it.
+What shall I do? shall I run for it? or shall I
+stand here and die of the cold plague? If I laugh,
+she laughs with me; if I look serious, she laughs at
+me; if we visit, I am laughed at; if we are visited, I
+am stared at; and thus it is, day after day, and week
+after week. To your mother, I no doubt appear
+like a more rational creature, but before Miss
+Bell I am utterly at a loss and dumbfoundered.</p>
+
+<p>"How can I show your charming cousin that I
+am not the fool she takes me for? must I shoot
+somebody? That would be too bloody-minded.
+Must I write a book? Sicken and become in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>teresting?
+Ah! I have it! I'll get the fever and
+ague (no hard matter you know here); but then
+a man looks so unromantic with his teeth, and his
+hands, and his feet all in motion like a negro dancing
+'Juba.' A lady would as soon think of falling in
+love with a culprit on the gibbet. I shall certainly
+try what absence will do; but then suppose that I
+am a bore, and no one entreats me to stay! Your
+mother might deem it indelicate, under the circumstances,
+for she certainly sees that I am a lost sinner;
+then I should be blown, indeed, with all my
+sins upon my head! without one redeeming quality
+for the little Bell to dwell upon in my absence.
+If I had rescued somebody from a watery grave&mdash;stopped
+a pair of runaway horses&mdash;saved somebody's
+life&mdash;shot a robber&mdash;been wounded myself&mdash;should
+turn out to be some lord's heir in England&mdash;had
+jumped down the Passaic or the Niagara&mdash;distinguished
+myself against the Indians or the Algerines&mdash;or
+even killed a mad dog&mdash;it would not be
+so desperate a case for the hero of a love affair.</p>
+
+<p>"But here I am&mdash;a poor forlorn somebody, without
+a single trait of heroism in my composition, or
+a solitary past deed of the kind to boast of; unless
+it may be bursting little brass bombs under the
+tutor's windows in College, or shaving a horse's
+tail, or one side of a drunken man's whiskers, or
+laying two drunken fellows at each other's door.
+Suppose I should get old Tombo, the gardener,
+into the river by stratagem, merely that I might
+pull him out again; as he seems to be a universal
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>favourite here. But then suppose I should drown
+him in these mock heroics? Ah, I see I shall have
+to remain plain Beverly Randolph all my days!
+Alas! the days of chivalry are gone! If I could
+splinter a lance with some of these Sir Hotheads,
+or Sir Blunderbys, the case might not be so desperate.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank Heaven, however, that the age of poetry
+is not gone too; for poetry, you know, is but the
+shadow or reflection of chivalry&mdash;heroism&mdash;and
+action! First an age of deeds, and then an age of
+song&mdash;so here goes for the doggerel. But let me
+see; are there not more than two ages? what
+succeeds to an age of poetry? One of philosophy!
+What succeeds philosophy? Cynicism or infidelity&mdash;next
+a utilitarian age, and lastly we have a mongrel
+compound of all&mdash;then we have revolutions,
+bloodshed, sentiment, religion, and spinning-jennies.
+Now you see I have hit it! we live in the
+mongrel age; a hero of this era should fight&mdash;write&mdash;pray&mdash;and
+spin cotton! Let's see how all
+these could be united into a picture suitable for a
+frontispiece to a work of the current age. First
+there must be a spinning-jenny to go by steam, to
+the wheel of which there must be a hand-organ.
+The steam must be scattered against an enemy;
+a long nosed fellow with the real nasal twang
+must be seen upon his knees attending the jenny,
+and singing doggerel to the music of the hand-organ&mdash;there's
+a pretty coat of arms for you, and suitable
+for the present age.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span></p>
+<p>"But seriously, my dear Chevillere, what am I
+to do? I cannot get on without your assistance,
+and yet I am ashamed to ask it; however, I shall
+leave all these things to time&mdash;fate&mdash;and a better
+acquaintance between the charming Miss Bell and
+your humble servant.</p>
+
+<p>"I find you have more negroes here than we have
+in Virginia, in proportion to the whites; and existing
+under totally different circumstances, so far as
+regards the distance between them and their
+masters.</p>
+
+<p>"With us slavery is tolerable, and has something
+soothing about it to the heart of the philanthropist;
+the slaves are more in the condition of tenants to
+their landlords&mdash;they are viewed more as rational
+creatures, and with more kindly feelings; each
+planter owning a smaller number than the planters
+generally do here, of course the direct knowledge
+of, and intercourse between each other is greater.
+Every slave in Virginia knows, even if he does not
+love, his master; and his master knows him, and
+generally respects him according to his deserts.
+<i>Here</i> slavery is intolerable; a single individual
+owning a hundred or more, and often not knowing
+them when he sees them. If they sicken and die,
+he knows it not except through the report of those
+wretched mercenaries, the overseers. The slaves
+here are plantation live-stock; not domestic and
+attached family servants, who have served around
+the person of the master from the childhood of
+both.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I have known masters in Virginia to exhibit the
+most intense sorrow and affliction at the death of
+an old venerable household servant, who was quite
+valueless in a pecuniary point of view.</p>
+
+<p>"Here, besides your white overseers, you have
+your black <i>drivers</i>;&mdash;an odious animal, almost
+peculiar to the far south. It is horrible to see one
+slave following another at his work, with a cow-skin
+dangling at his arm, and occasionally tying
+him up and flogging him when he does not get
+through his two tasks a day. These tasks I believe
+are two acres of land, which they are required to
+hoe without much discrimination, or regard to age,
+sex, health, or condition; now I have seen stout
+active fellows get through their two tasks by one
+o'clock, while another poor, stunted, bilious creature
+toiled the whole day at the same portion of labour.
+Another abomination here, and even known in
+some parts of Virginia, is that the females are required
+to work in the field, and generally to do as
+much as the males. This system is unworthy
+even of refined slave-holders. But the hardest
+part is to tell yet; they receive their provisions
+but once a week, and then, each has for seven days,
+either one peck of Indian corn, or three pecks of
+sweet potatoes, without meat, or any thing else to
+season this dry fare.</p>
+
+<p>"I will confess to you that, at first, I thought this
+allowance much more niggardly than I now consider
+it. In order to see how they lived, I went
+into the thickest of the quarter, on purpose to share
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>a part of their food myself, and observe a little of
+their economy; I found two or three stout fellows
+standing at a large table, or frame, into which were
+fixed two grindstones, or rather one was fixed and
+the other revolved upon it, like two little mill-stones;
+the upper stone was turned by a crank,
+at which the two slaves seemed to work by turns.
+The arrangements for this labour they made among
+themselves. I then went into the best looking hut
+of the quarter, just as they had all drawn round
+a large kettle of small homminy, in the centre of
+which I was pleased to see a piece of salt fat pork
+about the size of a large apple. The family consisted
+of six persons. They had all clubbed their
+portions of food into a common stock.</p>
+
+<p>"'How often do you draw meat?' said I; they
+informed me that they had none except at Christmas,
+and that none were able to buy meat except
+those who finished their two tasks early in the day,
+and then cultivated their own little 'patches,' as
+they are called. I then went round the huts to see
+how many had meat, and was much rejoiced to
+find that more than three-fourths lived substantially
+well.</p>
+
+<p>"I was exceedingly amused at one thing in these
+singular little communities, which was, that matches
+of convenience are almost as common among them
+as among their more fashionable masters. I suspect
+it would puzzle some of your fashionable
+belles to guess how these have their origin, and
+what is the fortune upon which they are founded.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>I will tell you, if you have never observed it yourself.
+The most active and sober hands, who are
+able to finish their tasks early, and of course live
+well, are always in great demand for husbands;
+and a well-favoured girl is almost sure to select
+one of these for her <i>helpmate</i> in the true sense of
+the word. Nor is this excellence confined to the
+males; many of the women are in as much demand
+among the lazy fellows for their prowess in
+the field, as the active men are among the women.</p>
+
+<p>"While the mothers are at work in the field,
+their helpless offspring are all left under the care of
+the superannuated women, in a large hut, or several
+large huts provided for that purpose; and a more
+unearthly set of wrinkled and arid witches you
+never saw, unless you have more curiosity than
+most of your Carolinians. These scenes, especially
+if visited by moonlight, transport a man into
+the centre of Africa at once; there is the dark,
+sluggish stream, the dismal-looking pine-barrens,
+and the palmetto, the oriental-looking cabbage-tree,
+aided by the foreign gibberish, and the
+unsteady light of the pine logs before the door,
+now and then casting a fitful gleam of light upon
+some of these natives of the shores of the Niger,
+with their tattooed visages, ivory teeth, flat noses,
+and yellow and blood-shot eyeballs.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not observe much difference between the
+North and South Carolinians, except in the case of
+those who inhabit the most southern portions of
+the latter state. There your rich are more princely
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>and aristocratic, and your poor more wretched and
+degraded; but to tell you the plain truth, many of
+your little slaveholders are miserably poor and
+ignorant; and what must be the condition of that
+negro who is a slave to one of these miserable
+wretches? They are uniformly hard and cruel
+masters, and the more fortune or fate frowns upon
+them, the more cruel they become to their slaves.
+This is a singular development of human character,
+and not easily accounted for, unless we suppose
+them to be revenging themselves of fate.</p>
+
+<p>"Most of the accomplished ladies whom I have
+seen, were educated either at Salem or at the
+north, and sometimes at both,&mdash;the preference being
+given to New-York and Philadelphia. Therein
+Virginia has the advantage; for scarcely a town
+of two thousand inhabitants is without its seminary
+for girls. I have myself visited those at Richmond,
+Petersburg, Fredericksburg, Charlottesville,
+Staunton, Lexington, Fincastle, &amp;c. &amp;c. This,
+you will acknowledge, shows deep-seated wisdom
+and foresight in the people; for if our wives and
+mothers are intelligent, their offspring will be so
+too.</p>
+
+<p>"Virginia Bell has just stolen into the parlour in
+the south wing, where I am now writing, so there
+is an end of slavery, and education, and all that
+sort of thing; unless, indeed, your humble servant
+may be said to have surrendered his freedom, and
+to be now undergoing a new sort of schooling.
+Her look is arch and knowing, as if she had read
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>every word I have written; I will finish my letter
+when she goes out.</p>
+
+<p>"There now, I breathe more easily,&mdash;she is
+gone! 'Mr. Randolph,' said she, 'I have a very
+great curiosity to see the letter of a young gentleman;
+I never saw one in my life.' 'Indeed!' said
+I, 'then I will write you one before I leave my
+seat.'</p>
+
+<p>"'No, no, no!' said she, blushing just perceptibly,
+'you understand me very well; I mean such letters
+as you write to my cousin; there would be
+something worth reading in them; as for your letters
+to young ladies, I have seen some of them.
+O! deliver me from the side-ache, and weeping
+till my eyes are red with irrepressible laughter;
+if they would write naturally and simply, it would
+not be so bad. There would then be only the natural
+awkwardness of the subject; but to get upon
+stilts, merely because the letter is to a lady, is too
+bad. But you have not answered my question;
+do you intend to show me that letter?'</p>
+
+<p>"'I will show you a better one.'</p>
+
+<p>"'No, no! I want to see none of your set
+speeches upon paper, all so prim and formal; if
+you care any thing for my good opinion, you will
+show me one of your careless ones,' said she.</p>
+
+<p>"'Care any thing for your good opinion!' said
+I, rising, and trying to seize her hand, which she
+held behind her; 'I value your opinion more than
+that of the whole sex besides.' She raised her
+eyes in mock astonishment, and puckering up her
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>beautiful little lips, whistled as if in amazement,
+and then deliberately marched out of the room,
+saying, as she stood at the entrance, 'Finish your
+copy like a good boy, and be sure not to blot it,
+and you shall have some nuts and a sweet cake;'
+and I crushed the unfortunate epistle with chagrin.
+She certainly takes me for a fool, and truly I begin
+to think she is not very far wrong.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="ralign">"<span class="smcap">B. Randolph.</span>"</span><br />
+</p></blockquote><p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IX" id="CHAPTER_IX"></a>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
+
+
+<blockquote><p class="center"><span class="smcap">V. Chevillere to B. Randolph.</span><br /></p>
+
+<p><span class="ralign">"Baltimore, 18&mdash;.</span><br /></p>
+
+<p>"You will have learned by the previous letters<a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a>
+of Lamar and myself, every interesting circumstance
+which has occurred to us, together with our
+<i>sage</i> observations upon men and things as they
+were presented.</p>
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_1"><span class="label">[A]</span></a> These letters are omitted, of course, as the same information
+has been already given to the reader.</p></div>
+
+<p>"Lamar spends more than half his time with the
+Kentuckian,&mdash;he declares that he will never rest
+satisfied until he persuades him to remove to the
+high hills of the Santee, where he can have him
+for a neighbour. He has found a new source of
+amusement to-day, in the supposed discovery that
+Damon is in love with the pretty country girl, on
+whose account, you will recollect, he got into the
+affray at the circus. Her father invited him to
+pay them a visit, and Lamar has been trying to
+persuade him to take advantage of it immediately,
+and has even offered to accompany him. I have
+no doubt he would succeed, had not the Kentuckian's
+idol, Pete Ironsides, been sent into the country
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>'to board,' as he calls it. As it is, he has determined
+upon accepting the invitation as he returns.</p>
+
+<p>"My own affairs are assuming too sombre a hue
+for me to enjoy Lamar's foolery as I used to do,
+when we three lived together, and when you and I
+were made joint partakers of his animal spirits; <i>I</i>
+in fact lived upon his stock in trade in that respect,
+while you added no little to the joint concern; I
+was always, I fear, but a sullen companion for
+such merry fellows. But have you never observed
+that the most lasting and ardent friendships are
+formed of such materials? Even in married life,
+you will, in nine cases out of ten, see the most opposite
+qualities form the most durable and happy
+connexions. This is running, I know, right in the
+teeth of the romantic twaddle of the day, about
+congenial sentiments, and the like; but is it not
+true? Look around you, and see in every instance
+if the lively woman has not chosen a serious husband;
+the man of genius, a dull drone; the bigot
+and fanatic, a romp; the pious lady, a libertine.
+These observations, however, like most others of
+the college stamp, may be destined to give place
+to others of a very different character. When I
+look back upon all the various revolutions of opinion
+which the mind undergoes, before it arrives
+even at our present state of maturity, I am dismayed,
+and almost afraid to look forward.</p>
+
+<p>"Nor is it in matters of abstract opinion alone,
+I fear, that we are destined to undergo changes.
+Our hopes <i>must</i> be in some measure paralyzed, our<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
+hearts made colder, and our youthful friendships
+broken asunder! Look what sad havoc a single
+year has already made in our own catalogue.
+Where now is that noble band of young and generous
+spirits, who but a single twelvemonth ago
+were all the world to each other? Two of them
+have surrendered the bright hopes of young life
+upon its very threshold, and the others are scattered
+abroad over land and sea. But I have wandered
+from the subject of our adventures, which
+we have promised faithfully to record.</p>
+
+<p>"Is it not strange how fate seems to play with
+us, when once we are fairly embarked upon life's
+great current? I am now completely wound up
+in perplexities and embarrassments, which, a week
+ago, I never once thought of. The actors in this
+new drama in which I am confessedly entangled,
+were then perfect strangers to me; and how handsomely
+has providence, or fate, or whatever you
+may choose to call it, paved the way for my more
+complete introduction into these new mysteries?
+The lady becomes intimate with my mother,
+though coming from opposite ends of the Union.
+She travels home again and is taken ill on the road,
+at the very time when Lamar and I strike into
+the same road. It seemed, too, as if I was placed
+at the table where our acquaintance commenced,
+in the very position where I could not avoid making
+a tender of my services; and now that I have
+become almost a part of their little family here, I
+find that they have been afflicted in some way<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
+beyond measure. They seem to be surrounded
+with mysteries and strange connexions; more than
+once have I gone specially to break the spell, and
+clear away the trammels which render this most
+strange and interesting young lady miserable.
+Various methods have I devised to acquire the
+secret, but they have always ended in awkwardness
+and embarrassment. It is no easy matter to
+initiate one's self into the midst of family secrets,
+when one is comparatively a stranger; yet it
+must be done, and that shortly. I feel that it is
+necessary to my own peace; indeed it is necessary
+in order that I may see my own way clearly, to
+have these cruel doubts solved. Every hour but
+adds to my entanglement, and if there is a shadow
+of foundation for the phantasies of the lunatic, the
+sooner I make the plunge the better. Yet how
+simple I become; if I had now the decision of
+character for which I once had credit in college, I
+should not long suffer the dreams of a maniac to
+disturb my good opinion of this most lovely and
+interesting girl. You may talk of your embarrassments
+and difficulties with Bell's untamable
+humour; they are all child's play,&mdash;mere romping,&mdash;but
+the case is not so easy of adjustment here;
+the old gentleman has just announced, that he shall
+resume his journey early to-morrow morning; so
+that something must be effected this afternoon or
+evening. If there is no other way, I will formally
+seek an interview with the lady, and, however
+painful it may be to her, I will ask her to explain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+her strange fear of the lunatic; of course I must
+avow the reason; you shall hear the result.</p>
+
+<p>"P.S. <i>12 o'clock at night</i>&mdash;I have broken the
+ice, my dear fellow, and no doubt you will think I
+have got a cold bath for my pains.</p>
+
+<p>"Soon after dark I knocked at the door, and
+waited some little time with throbbing pulses, to
+hear that gentle and silvery voice bid me '<i>come
+in!</i>' for I had seen the old gentleman go off in a
+carriage, to the theatre, as I hoped. No summons
+came&mdash;I repeated my knock with the same result.
+I do not know what prompted me to an act so
+rude, but I mechanically pushed open the door before
+I had reflected a moment. I was in the presence
+of the little fairy. She held in her hand an
+open letter, which was wet with tears; her head
+was leaning far back against the wall; her comb,
+carrying with it the large rolls of her fair brown
+hair, was partly lying on the window, and partly
+stuck into its place; the pearl of her cheeks
+was still wet with recent tears. I did not know
+which was now worst, to retreat or go forward.
+At first I thought she had fainted, and would have
+sprung to the bell; but I soon saw that she slumbered
+gently and peacefully. Randolph, there is
+something heavenly in the slumbers of a young,
+innocent, and beautiful female; but I will leave
+my reflections for another time. I was about to
+retreat, and had so far closed the door as to hide
+my person, when she suddenly awoke and said,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+'Come in, dear father, come in!' the lights had
+not yet been brought, but I could see the crimson
+mantling her neck and cheeks as she discovered
+who the visiter was, and replaced her hair at the
+same time.</p>
+
+<p>"I felt confused and ashamed, and stammered
+some vague attempt at an apology. She made
+light of my intrusion; but one thing attracted my
+attention particularly. Just as the maid set the
+lights upon the table in the centre of the room, I
+thought that I recognised my mother's handwriting
+in the letter which she now hastily folded up and
+thrust into her reticule. As I mentioned, she had
+been weeping over it. This set my imagination
+to work; I could not divine on what theme my
+mother could write to her; still less what subject
+for grief they could have between them. I inquired
+if she was well; she said 'yes, as well as usual, but
+exhausted for want of sleep the previous night.' I
+instantly connected her want of sleep and restlessness
+with my mother's letter; and before I had
+sufficiently reflected upon the import of the question,
+I asked her whether her first acquaintance
+with my mother had not been formed during her
+late visit to the springs. She answered in the
+affirmative. 'But why do you ask?' said she,
+searchingly. 'For no particular reason, but the
+question occurred to me, from seeing the handwriting
+of the letter you have just folded up. I
+thought it strange that you should receive a letter
+from my mother, when I have received none,'
+'This letter,' said she, 'was not received at this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+place; I was merely refreshing my memory with
+its contents.' 'It is not often,' said I, 'that my
+mother writes so as to bring tears into the eyes of
+her friends, and if you would not consider the expression
+of the wish too impertinent, and that too
+when I have little expectation of its being granted,
+I would say that I never before had so much curiosity
+to see one of her letters.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Your curiosity,' said she, 'should be gratified
+immediately, but this letter alludes to circumstances
+which would perhaps be uninteresting to you; but
+even were they otherwise, it would excite your
+curiosity still more to read the letter, when I am
+unable to give such explanations <i>now</i> as it requires.'</p>
+
+<p>"'You labour under a most grievous error,' said
+I, 'if you suppose there are any circumstances
+connected in any way with the present distress of
+Miss Frances St. Clair, which would be uninteresting
+to me. The express object of my visit to-night
+was to ask that very explanation. It may seem
+strange and impertinent that I should seek that
+which you evidently avoid; but my excuse is, and
+it is the only one that I can plead, that this is your
+last evening in the city; will Miss St. Clair be
+offended, if I acknowledge that upon this explanation
+turns my happiness? I am fearful of giving
+offence by acknowledging that any previous history
+is necessary of one who carries in her countenance
+a refutation of all calumnies.'</p>
+
+<p>"I had ventured to seize her unresisting hand,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>
+but as I concluded the sentence, she withdrew it,
+and covered her face with her handkerchief, pressing
+it hard, and breathing short. At the same
+time I noticed some confusion with her distress,
+though without anger. This imboldened me to
+proceed.</p>
+
+<p>"'It may appear like double presumption in me
+to ask an explanation before I can proffer a suit,
+which may be instantly and indignantly rejected,
+either with or without your history.'</p>
+
+<p>"'I will not prudishly affect to misunderstand
+you, in either of the prominent points of your remarks,'
+said she, her head sinking in modest guise,
+'but before I reply to them, will you tell me whence
+you have ever heard any thing against me.'</p>
+
+<p>"The question went straight to my suspicious
+heart, and rankled there; insomuch that I coughed
+and hemmed at it several times ineffectually; her
+eyes being riveted on me all the while, like a judge's
+upon a detected thief&mdash;I felt that her pure and
+searching gaze was far more honest than my own,
+and I should speedily have begun an explanation
+if her father had not at that instant entered the
+room. I thought he saw and disrelished the matter
+in hand, for he seated himself in a chair, in a certain
+manner, by which one understands a person
+to say, 'I'll stay all night, if you have no objections.'
+I will be up by daylight in the morning, lest the
+old gentleman steal a march upon me.</p>
+
+<p class="center">"Yours truly,<br /></p>
+
+<p><span class="ralign">"<span class="smcap">V. Chevillere.</span>"</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span></p></blockquote>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_X" id="CHAPTER_X"></a>CHAPTER X.</h2>
+
+
+<blockquote><p class="center"><span class="smcap">B. Randolph to V. Chevillere.</span><br /></p>
+
+
+<p><span class="ralign">"Savannah, 18&mdash;.</span><br />
+
+"<span class="smcap">Dear Friend</span>,<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"After despatching my last letter, not knowing
+exactly what else to do with myself in the present
+state of affairs, I set out on horseback, telling the
+family that I wished to see a little more of Carolina,
+but inwardly resolved to follow the horse's
+nose wherever he might lead, and continue thus to
+ride and thus to be led until I might gather up my
+scattered thoughts and determine what course to
+pursue.</p>
+
+<p>"I will not deny, that on the second day in the
+afternoon, about three o'clock (truth is always precise,
+you know), I discovered in one corner of the
+storehouse of my thoughts a secret design to try
+'Bell' by a leave-taking, absence, and reappearance.
+If you had been upon the ground to charge me
+with the intention, I should no doubt have sworn
+upon a stack of Testaments that it was not so;
+and I could have done so honestly. You have
+looked inwards too often not to know, that in wandering
+through the dreary passages of one's own
+mind, we blunder by accident upon many obscure<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
+motives, which, if boldly charged with them before
+we set out on such a pilgrimage, we should stoutly
+deny.</p>
+
+<p>"When the horses were brought up on the gravelled
+road, and all things in readiness for my departure,
+I cast a furtive glance at that too-knowing
+and too-beautiful little brunette, who calls you
+cousin, to see how she was about to feel on the
+solemn occasion. Her looks were perfectly inexplicable.
+I have thought of them ever since, but
+for my life I cannot say in what feelings they had
+their origin. There was neither sorrow, joy, love,
+hatred, revenge, hope, despair, nor any other definable
+emotion. There was a scarcely perceptible
+smile, a slight shutting of the corner of one eye,
+and a mock solemnity of the other unruly features,
+as if one was winking to the other rebels as much
+as to say, 'wait till he's out of hearing, and we will
+have a rare laugh at his expense.' It was just
+such a look as would make a man say, 'Zounds
+and fury, madam, you'll never see me again; farewell,
+for ever;' and then be laughed at for his
+pains.</p>
+
+<p>"But what sort of a look was it? It was a
+very knowing look, I am sure of that. She looked
+as if she read all the inward workings of my moral
+machinery. It was a serio-comic look; produced,
+no doubt, by the idea that she was scanning me
+thoroughly, while I imagined that I could see just
+as clearly through her. In other words, as I have
+somewhere else beautifully expressed it, she thought<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>
+me 'pretty considerable much of an ass,' and I am
+pretty considerable much of her opinion, at least
+before ladies. It is somewhat singular that this
+tendency to display my weak side should have developed
+itself at the very time when I most desired
+to appear to advantage.</p>
+
+<p>"At last the parting moment came. I had
+bidden your mother farewell in the breakfast-room,
+and then proceeded to the front door, where stood
+Virginia Bell.</p>
+
+<p>"'I think it very doubtful,' said I, 'whether I
+shall be enabled to take your aunt's house in my
+route home.'</p>
+
+<p>"'You are not going to run away with cousin's
+favourite horse, are you?' said she.</p>
+
+<p>"By the Great Mogul! in my earnestness to invent
+a pathetic lie, I forgot to arrange the consistency
+of the plot.</p>
+
+<p>"'True, true!' said I, stammering; 'then I must
+indeed run my head into danger again!' saying
+which I sprang upon your horse, and rode like a
+country doctor who has no practice. By-the-by,
+that was nearer to an avowal than I have ever
+come yet; your joyous, fun-loving creatures are
+the most difficult to address in the world.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! if I only had such a one in love with me,
+what a race I would lead her! I would punish
+the whole class of unapproachable little mischievous
+misses! I would make her ogle me at church;
+hang on my arm to the theatre; sigh by the fire-side,
+and weep when she went to bed; I would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
+almost break her heart before I would take the
+least pity upon her.</p>
+
+<p>"I am curious to know what sort of wives these
+same little romps make. Do they romp it through
+life, or do they settle down into your miserable,
+sad, melancholy drones, who greet their husbands
+when they come home with a sigh, or inexpressible
+look, that drives more men to the bottle than
+all the good wine and good company in the
+world?</p>
+
+<p>"You ask me, at least I know you would ask me,
+what I saw, or what occurred on the road to the
+place from which this letter is dated. I will tell
+you what I have not seen since I entered this land
+of nullification. I have not seen a clear limpid
+river that could be forded on horseback. Your
+water-courses are dark, deep, still, and gloomy.
+The foliage on their banks is superlatively rich
+and abundant, but it is occasionally interspersed
+with a species of natural beauties which I don't
+admire, namely, little alligators; by-the-by, I never
+see alligators, lizards, or tadpoles, that I do not
+think of those weary days when we read together
+Ovid's Metamorphoses.</p>
+
+<p>"Of a southern swamp I had no proper conception.
+I thought they were black, dismal holes, covered
+with old black logs, and black snakes, and
+frogs, and vapours; instead of which, they bear a
+nearer resemblance, in the summer, to a princely
+(or <i>Prince's</i>) botanical garden. The very perfume
+upon the olfactories is far more delightful than the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
+greatest assemblage of artificial odours. Then
+there are the rich and variegated flowers of all
+hues, sizes, and colours, set amid the deep green
+of the rich shrubbery. The soil of which these
+swamps are composed is as black as tar, and pretty
+much of the same consistence.</p>
+
+<p>"I observe, as I travel farther south, that bread
+is seldom seen upon the table. What is called
+here <i>small homminy</i> is used in its place, at breakfast,
+dinner, and supper.</p>
+
+<p>"I saw no ploughs in your fields. Horses
+seemed to be used only for carriages, racing, and
+for the private use of gentlemen and ladies. I saw
+no brick houses; your mother's and that of Col. S.
+being the only two I saw in the whole state. I
+saw many private mansions very tastefully built
+and ornamented; some of them were splendid,
+but mostly built of wood and painted white.</p>
+
+<p>"After three days pretty constant riding after
+my horse's nose, he brought me to the banks of the
+Savannah, at a little miserable-looking town, or
+village, called Purysburg. Here I found a steamboat
+just about to depart for Savannah. I immediately
+engaged passage for myself, servant, and
+two horses (one of which is yours; confound him,
+I say, for betraying me). I amused myself by
+shooting at the alligators, as we glided along the
+water, and had kept up the sport some time, when
+a mellow distant sound came along the surface of
+the water, like an exquisitely played Kent bugle.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
+It was decidedly the most enchanting music I ever
+heard, and seemed nearer and nearer until it
+appeared to rise from under the very bow of the
+boat. You will be surprised when I tell you that
+it was made through a straight wooden tube, about
+five feet long. The musician was a tall, ebony-coloured
+old African, who stood up in one of your
+singular-looking batteaux, amid half-a-dozen other
+negroes, who seemed to be at their luncheon. It
+looked much like a boat on the Niger; indeed, I
+found my imagination carrying me into such distant
+regions, that I instinctively bit my lip to see
+whether I was awake or dreaming.</p>
+
+<p>"The city of Savannah became distinctly visible
+at a distance of about seven miles. A brilliant
+city indeed it is. You cannot imagine any thing
+finer than the view from the river. It is situated
+on a high bluff, and commands an extensive view
+up and down the stream. In the latter direction,
+on a clear day, you can see, without glasses, the
+lighthouse on the island of Tybee.</p>
+
+<p>"By-the-by, I have been down among those
+islands; they are all inhabited, and by a class of
+men as much like our real old-fashioned Virginia
+gentlemen as can well be imagined. This city is
+nobly built, and is laid out on a magnificent scale,
+having a public square, containing a grove of pride
+of India trees, in the centre of every four squares,
+and a row of the same along each side of every
+street.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Talk of Philadelphia, and New-York, and
+Boston, and Richmond, and New-Haven&mdash;Savannah
+outstrips them all, both in artificial and natural
+beauty. It seems the residence of the prince of
+the world and his nobility.</p>
+
+<p class="center">"Yours, most truly,<br /></p>
+
+<p><span class="ralign">"<span class="smcap">B. Randolph.</span>"</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span></p></blockquote>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XI" id="CHAPTER_XI"></a>CHAPTER XI.</h2>
+
+
+<blockquote><p class="center"><span class="smcap">V. Chevillere to B. Randolph.</span><br /></p>
+
+<p><span class="ralign">"Baltimore, 18&mdash;.</span><br />
+
+"<span class="smcap">Dear Friend</span>,<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"Though I had but two hours' sleep, I was up
+betimes to catch a parting glimpse of an interesting
+person who need not be named. When I descended
+into the great vestibule of this extensive
+establishment, I found the door of their parlour
+open, and the entry nearly blocked up by bandboxes,
+trunks, and all the little paraphernalia of
+which you and I are as yet quite ignorant. A carriage
+stood at the door; the lady and the old gentleman
+sat side by side upon the sofa, the former
+in her travelling habit, while the latter held in his
+hand a cup of coffee, which he sipped, giving directions
+from time to time to the servants. I paid
+them the compliments of the morning, not in the
+most bland and courtly style, for to tell you the
+truth I felt a little inclined to poaching, and the
+old gentleman looked <i>to me</i> not unlike a vigilant
+and surly gamekeeper; however, he received me
+with a welcome, perhaps it was a northern one;
+but of that I will tell you more when we get fully
+into the enemy's country, as your namesake of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>
+Roanoke would say. My presence seemed to
+hurry the old gentleman's coffee down his throat,
+hot as it was, and in ten minutes, before I had exchanged
+ten words with the lady, all was pronounced
+in readiness.</p>
+
+<p>"The old gentleman did not leave her for a moment.
+I of course handed her to the carriage,
+and took, as I supposed, a last look. I suppose I
+must have appeared dolorous enough. The parting
+moment came, the last pressure of the hand
+was given, the door closed, whip cracked, and the
+carriage had gone some time, before I found myself
+standing in the middle of the street, my head turned
+to one side just far enough to catch a glimpse of Lamar
+in his nightgown, half-way out of a three-story
+window, laughing with that complacent self-satisfaction
+which is peculiar to him. 'Half-past four and a
+dark stormy morning,' cried he, in true watchman
+style. I pulled my hat down over my face, and
+walked away from the hotel as fast as my impetuous
+blood would drive me; indeed, I felt provoked
+at the time. I had not walked far, before I recollected
+having felt something in my hand, as if it
+had found its way there by accident, while I was
+exchanging adieus with my enslaver. I had mechanically,
+while abstracted in the street, thrust it
+into my waistcoat pocket. I now drew it forth,&mdash;it
+was a small roll of paper, which you might have
+put into a thimble,&mdash;I opened it very carefully, in
+hope that there might be some even carelessly-scribbled
+line, which I could preserve as a me<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>mento.
+By heavens, Randolph, there was a memento
+upon it! and evidently intended for my eye
+alone.</p>
+
+<p>"The writing was in pencil, and scarcely legible;
+with some difficulty I could make out these words.</p>
+
+<p>"'The explanation sought by Mr. Chevillere has
+not been surreptitiously avoided by me, nor will it
+ever be; but if he is wise, he will forget one who
+has already extended the influence of her unhappiness
+too far.'</p>
+
+<p>"I read these lines over again and again. I
+walked round Baltimore as if it had been a hamlet.
+It seemed to me that every person whom I met
+could read in my countenance something strange
+and hurried. At length, however, I found my way
+to the breakfast table. Lamar, as my bad luck
+would have it, sat almost opposite to me. I do not
+think I ever saw him perfectly disagreeable before;
+all his remarks seemed to me <i>mal-apropos</i>,
+and he is not usually so unfortunate, you know. I
+made a hasty breakfast, and hurried out on purpose
+to avoid him, but in vain! he was with me in an
+instant. 'All settled, I suppose, Chevillere,' said he.
+'Yes, all is settled for our journey to New-York,'
+said I, 'except our bills, and that you may attend
+to as soon as you please.' I ordered old Cato to
+see the luggage on board the steamboat for Philadelphia:
+Lamar did the same. 'But, Chevillere,'
+said he, 'you are not going to leave the Kentuckian,'
+upon which he set off to summon our new
+companion.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Our next epistle will in all probability be from
+Philadelphia or New-York; we shall only stay a
+short time in the former place, as we conceive the
+other to be the true point from which to make observations.</p>
+
+<p class="center">"Yours truly,<br /></p>
+
+<p><span class="ralign">"<span class="smcap">V. Chevillere.</span>"</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span></p></blockquote>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></a>CHAPTER XII.</h2>
+
+
+<blockquote><p class="center"><span class="smcap">B. Randolph to V. Chevillere.</span><br /></p>
+
+
+<p><span class="ralign">"High Hills of the Santee, 18&mdash;.</span><br />
+
+
+"<span class="smcap">Dear Friend</span>,</p>
+
+<p>"From the city of Savannah, I paid my first
+visit to our old heathen dad, Neptune, and if first
+impressions of the sea were not as common and as
+numerous as doggerel verses in a modern lady's
+album, I might be tempted to become sublime for
+your edification. I was rowed down from the
+city, in a beautiful boat made of a single cypress,
+by the hands of the gentleman who was so polite
+as to give me this gentle passage. By this you
+may know that they take as much pride in their
+boats as the Venetians themselves. It was beautifully
+painted, and rowed by eight well-formed
+negroes. Inside of the seat at one end was a
+marooning chest, as they called it, full of all kinds
+of liquors and cold meat, with the necessary utensils
+for their use. The gentleman was an islander;
+and during the few hours in which we were gliding
+over the seventeen miles between the city and the
+ocean, he entertained me with an account of his
+marooning expeditions. These are their excursions
+upon the Sea Islands, for purposes of fishing<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>
+and hunting. These islanders are a peculiar, but
+delightful people; however, I must not keep you too
+long in the sea-breeze; at some other time, perhaps,
+I may indite you a history of these hospitable
+and isolated gentlemen.</p>
+
+<p>"When I left Savannah, I determined to pursue
+a different route from the one by which I came.
+I therefore crossed the Savannah river fifteen or
+sixteen miles above the city; I then crossed the
+country in as straight a line as I could draw upon
+the map, between the ferry and the high hills of
+Santee; and in a short time found myself in as
+complete solitude as ever Crusoe experienced upon
+his desolate island. Nothing was to be seen but
+the tall and gloomy-looking pines, stretching away
+into the bosom of the atmosphere, and the interminable
+sands which lay before me as far as the eye
+could reach. Twilight presently came on, and
+those horrible musicians, the tree-frogs, began to
+chirp and sing. The dolorous note of the whippoorwill
+was heard, with a horn accompaniment
+from the throat of a screech-owl. Here was a
+pretty serenade for a man with his heart attuned
+for melody, and his stomach attuned for a slash at
+a cold ham, for I had had no dinner. I struck up
+an accompaniment from my own pipes, but I soon
+found that the vacuum was too profound for a
+due modulation in concert pitch with this sylvan
+band. I wished them all at the d&mdash;l, with their
+shrill pipes and full crops, and set my horse, or
+rather <i>your</i> horse, at full gallop, in a vain effort to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>
+escape from the intended honour; but the harder
+I rode, the more enthusiastic they became. I soon
+made another comfortable discovery; I found that
+I had been riding for the last two hours in a perfect
+wilderness, in utter contempt of what two
+pioneer wheels had made for a highway; nor
+could I tell the north from the south, nor the east
+from the west, having foolishly enough turned the
+horse round and round in order to gaze at the
+stars. 'Like master like man,' my servant did
+the same, as if he could read in the pine tops
+more than I could in the heavens. All my astronomy
+had gone with my dinner; I could see nothing
+in the starry regions but what is sometimes called
+the <i>Frying-pan</i>. Oh! the shades of Thales of
+Miletus, who first imported astronomy into Greece!
+to think that a bachelor of such heavenly arts
+could not look into the face of the Frying-pan
+without thinking of grilled chickens and rashers
+of bacon, and the crackling of fire, and the sputtering
+of fat. I dismounted, and ordered Sam to do
+likewise, and try to find me a piece of flint by
+which to strike a light; he declared that he had
+not seen a stone or a rock since he came into the
+Carolinas. 'So much for geology and astronomy,'
+said I. 'I rader tink they all bad fur empty
+stumuck, masta,' said Sam, considering himself privileged
+by the exigencies of the case. 'True enough,
+Sam,' said I, 'it would be an apt scholar that could
+produce bread or a stone either by his learning, in
+our circumstances.'</p>
+
+<p>"As I mounted, Sam mounted, not a word more<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
+having been uttered; he seemed to be aware of the
+fact, that language generally fails with the food;
+a man's ideas in such a case run fast enough, but
+they are all in humble life; below stairs, diving
+among pots, and pans, and pantries, and receptacles
+for cold victuals. As the ideas ran, so ran
+the horses, until the water began to splash our legs
+from a thick bushy swamp, into which we found
+that we had initiated ourselves. 'Now Sam,' said
+I, 'we are swamped.' Sam said nothing aloud,
+but was evidently muttering something to himself,
+being engaged, as I supposed, at his secret devotions,
+for you must know that he would be a Puritan.
+Like most of his race, however, he has
+more faith in the effect of singing hymns, than devotions
+of any other kind. I saw that he was
+itching for a trial at his usual relief in all his
+troubles. I therefore told him not to suppress it
+on my account, but to give it free utterance; the
+idea of it naturally excited ludicrous recollections
+of old Noll and the veteran Rumpers, but Sam
+saw the new vein I had so inappropriately fallen
+into, and therefore resisted his inward strivings.
+I must say, <i>en passant</i>, that I think him honest
+and sincere in his faith, I therefore do not ridicule
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"We waded through the black regions of this
+little pandemonium for some three-quarters of a
+mile, before the dry sand again greeted our hearing.
+The Frying-pan still stared me in the face,
+and the sylvan band still plied their pipes. We
+had not proceeded far by land before we came<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>
+directly against a fence. I was truly glad to see
+it, for I was sure it must lead to some inhabited
+place, and accordingly ordered Sam to let us into
+the field, which we found to be an immense plain
+covered with cotton,&mdash;the most beautiful of all
+crops. We rode between the rows, for many a
+weary foot, until at length the glimmering of many
+lights greeted our longing eyes. We made directly
+for them, and soon stood in the midst of an immense
+negro quarter. On inquiring whether their
+master's house was near at hand, we found that it
+was many miles distant. The overseer's house,
+they told us, was not more than half a mile off;
+but to these animals I have always had an utter
+aversion. I therefore bought some fodder for the
+horses, and two fowls for ourselves, from the
+<i>driver</i>, who had the privilege of raising them, and
+employed his wife to pick and grill them upon the
+coals, and a delightful and savoury prelude they
+soon sent up to my famished senses; a heartier or
+a sweeter meal was never made than I thus took;
+a fowl seasoned with salt, and a large pot of small
+homminy, served direct to my mouth from a large
+wooden spoon, without the cumbrous intervention
+of plates, knives, and forks. Our meal being finished,&mdash;for
+you must know Sam and I dined at
+the same time and from the same table, which was
+none other than the ground floor, covered with
+the head of a barrel,&mdash;hunger is a wonderful leveller
+of distinctions,&mdash;as I was saying, our meal
+being finished, a goodly number of the more aged,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>
+respectable, and intelligent blacks of the quarter
+assembled to entertain us, or be entertained themselves,
+I scarcely know which. Many of these
+negroes, I found, were born in Africa, and one
+poor tattooed fellow claimed to be of royal blood.
+He told me that his father, the king, had a hundred
+children. I asked if any of those present could
+write; they replied that there was one man in the
+quarter who could write in his own language, and
+several of them went out and brought in a tall,
+bald-headed old fellow, who seemed to come with
+great reluctance. After being told what was
+desired, he acknowledged to me that he could
+write when he last tried, which was many years
+previous. I took out my pocket-book, tore out a
+blank leaf, and handing him a pen from my pocket
+inkstand, requested him to give me a specimen.
+He took the head of the barrel on his lap, and
+began, if I recollect right, on the right side of the
+page; the following is a fac simile of his performance:</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/ill_001.jpg" alt="fac simile" title="fac simile" />
+</div>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"The following is a liberal translation into English:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"'In the name of God the merciful! the compassionate!
+God bless our Lord Mohammed his
+prophet, and his descendants, and his followers,
+and prosper them exceedingly. Praise be to God
+the Lord of all creatures! the merciful, the compassionate
+king of the day of judgment! Thee
+we adore, and of thee we implore assistance!
+Guide us in the right way, the way of those with
+whom thou art well pleased, and not of those with
+whom thou art angry, nor of those who are in
+error. Amen!'</p>
+
+<p>"The original is written in Arabic. The old
+fellow's name is Charno, which it seems he has retained,
+after being enslaved, contrary to their general
+custom in that respect. I became quite affected
+and melancholy in talking to this venerable old
+man, and you may judge from that rare circumstance
+that he is no common character.</p>
+
+<p>"I now fixed my saddle under my head in a
+cotton shed to rest for the night; but, weary as I
+was, I could not directly get to sleep for thinking
+of sandy deserts, old Charno, chicken suppers,
+negro quarters, and Virginia Bell! You see she
+is still the heroine, let my wanderings lay the scenes
+where they will.</p>
+
+<p>"I have no doubt but you will say, on the reception
+of this letter, 'Well! I thought Randolph<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>
+would run his nose into all the out-of-the-way
+places in Carolina,' I plead guilty! I have a sort
+of natural instinct for unbeaten paths, and the one
+by which I arrived at Belville shall be given in my
+next; until then, fare thee well.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="ralign">"<span class="smcap">B. Randolph</span>."</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span></p></blockquote>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></a>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
+
+
+<blockquote><p class="center"><span class="smcap">Victor Chevillere to B. Randolph.</span><br /></p>
+
+<p><span class="ralign">"New-York, 18&mdash;.</span><br />
+
+"<span class="smcap">Dear Friend</span>,<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"At length we have arrived in this flourishing
+city, not, however, without having experienced
+many vicissitudes of weather, humour, and adventure,
+the two latter especially; how could we help it,
+when the Kentuckian formed so large a part of our
+little crew, by steamboat and stage? His animal
+spirits are worth a million.</p>
+
+<p>"You cannot conceive any thing more agreeable
+to an emancipated and sombre student, than to get
+a comfortable high backed leather seat in one of
+these fine northern coaches, his cloak collar put up
+like a mask, and the rim of his cap drawn down
+to meet it, just leaving a peeping-hole sufficient to
+see and enjoy every thing worth enjoying, at
+the same time defying the gaze of intruding eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"If there should fortunately happen to be such
+a reckless, yet generous spirit as Damon among
+the company, the student's happiness is complete,
+for you cannot imagine what a protector he is
+against intruders. In our American stage-coaches
+(and perhaps in all others) there are sometimes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>
+men, full of brandy eloquence, which is kept so
+constantly on the stretch by repeated libations; or
+boisterous politicians, with their mouths so full of
+the last importation of news from Washington, or
+of the contents of the morning papers, that a complaisant
+young man is almost compelled to make
+himself ridiculous, by getting into a political controversy.</p>
+
+<p>"Damon took all that sort of work off our hands,
+in the most generous and chivalrous spirit imaginable.
+His eye was ever bright and ready; there
+was no sinking into dull student-like lethargy one
+moment, and flashing out into erratic folly the
+next; he was ready with lance in rest, to take a
+tilt against anybody's windmill; at home upon
+all subjects, being exactly in such a state of refinement
+as not to be ashamed to show his ignorance,
+and always eager to acquire information.
+Nor is his mind dull or unapt; he will rebut or
+ridicule an adversary with astonishing shrewdness.
+One of his peculiarities amused me much; he was
+evidently more excited in the stage-coaches than
+in the boats. He was never satisfied until he had
+let down the front glasses, so that he could see the
+horses; then he would talk fluently to his near
+neighbour, and keep his neck stretched all the
+while, so as to have all the horses in view, throwing
+out occasional digressive remarks as to their
+various powers, as thus, 'that's my little hearty,
+make a straight back to it;' and then turning to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>
+his antagonist he would continue his remarks, as
+if nothing had drawn off his attention.</p>
+
+<p>"But I must not take up all your time with our
+comic adventures. When I get into that vein
+more completely, you shall have his exploits in the
+city. By-the-by, I suggested to Lamar that he
+should take that part of the correspondence off my
+hands, but he said, 'Randolph knows I'm not one
+of the writing sort, therefore you must write for
+us both; action,' said he, with a mock heroic flourish,
+'is my forte.'</p>
+
+<p>"We are comfortably situated at the City Hotel
+in Broadway. After we had selected our rooms,
+I sallied out into that gay and brilliant promenade,
+which intersects the city from north-east to
+south-west. You may there see, on a fine sunshiny
+afternoon, all the fashion and beauty of this
+great city; the neat, tasteful, Parisian costume, in
+close contrast with the more sober guise of London.
+There you may hear intermingled the language of
+the Gaul, the German, and the modern Roman. To
+the right and left you see the spires of various
+Christian temples; and smiling faces, and happy
+hearts, will greet you at every step.</p>
+
+<p>"To a secluded college novice like myself, there
+is something new and moving in all this life and
+bustle; it irresistibly brings to my mind ideas of
+gay feats, tilts, tournaments, and brilliant fairs.
+Within the finished bow-windows are wealth and
+splendour, and brilliancy, which we poor southerns
+have not seen in our own native land; marble<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>
+buildings, stores with granite columns, and the
+streets crowded with immense omnibuses (these
+are stages to transport persons from one part of
+the city to another); splendid private equipages,
+<i>republican</i> liveries, and carts loaded with merchandise.</p>
+
+<p>"Seeing some trees and a comfortable green plat
+a little farther up the street, I worked through the
+crowd of persons, and carts, and stages, and found
+myself in the midst of the far famed Park, and immediately
+in front of that proud edifice the City Hall.
+I ascended the marble platform, and surveyed the
+gay throng, as they moved on in one continued and
+dense current, with merry faces, miserable hearts,
+and empty heads and pockets; but to talk of these
+stale things, you know, in the present age, is all
+stuff and sheer nonsense. I therefore put my reflections
+in my portfolio to carry home with me,
+and proceeded to the house-keeper's room, as I had
+been directed, to obtain the good lady's pilotage,
+or that of some deputy, to the governor's room,
+which I readily found. There is nothing remarkable
+in the two rooms which contain the paintings,
+except that they command from the windows a
+fine view of the park and the surrounding streets.
+Yes, there are two venerable old stuffed chairs.
+The one in the north wing was used by Washington
+at his inauguration as first President of the
+United States, and the one in the east room by
+the elder Adams. There are portraits of George
+Washington, George Clinton, Alexander Hamil<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>ton,
+Commodore Bainbridge, Monroe, Jackson,
+Duane, Varick, Livingston, Clinton, Willet, Radcliff,
+Captain Hull, Governor Lewis, Macomb,
+Yates, Van Buren, Brown, Perry, La Fayette,
+Decatur, Tompkins, Colden, Allen, Paulding,
+Hone, Stuyvesant, Bolivar, Columbus, Monkton,
+Williams: some of these last are only half-length.
+Over the portrait of Washington is a blue flag
+rolled up, with the following inscription in golden
+letters:&mdash;'This standard was displayed at the inauguration
+of George Washington, first President
+of the United States, on the 30th day of April, 1789.
+And was presented to the Corporation of New-York
+by the Second Regt. of N. Y. State Artillery,
+Nov. 25th, 1821.'</p>
+
+<p>"While I was standing at one of the front windows
+again looking over the moving masses of
+Broadway, I saw a lady approach on the eastern
+footway of the Park, with a hurried step, until she
+came nearly opposite to the Hall. Crossing Chatham,
+she turned abruptly down one of the narrow
+streets running at right angles to the eastern line
+of the Park. There was something in the figure
+and carriage of this lady which, unknown at first
+to my consciousness, quickened my pulsations;
+but when she approached to the nearest point in
+her course, I felt morally certain that it was none
+other than that mysterious charmer, who by her
+father's connivance, or rather management, slipped
+through my fingers at Baltimore, and that, too,
+without my even having asked her address in this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>
+city. The recollection of this latter circumstance
+prompted me instantly to seize my hat and hurry
+after her. Throwing the accustomed fee to my
+obliging pilotess, I walked with all possible haste
+to the corner of the street which I supposed she
+had taken. I found that a little crowd of ragged
+urchins had collected upon some occasion of their
+own, and asked the most intelligent-looking among
+them if he had seen a lady in black go down that
+street,&mdash;pointing down the hill from Tammany
+Hall; and, by way of reply, one of the most disgusting,
+discordant, and ill-timed peals of laughter
+that I ever heard burst upon my senses.</p>
+
+<p>"'Lady in black!' said the most forward fellow,
+'you will find plenty of black ladies down that
+street, with black eyes to boot.' I retreated in
+perfect disgust with these precocious vagabonds,
+not, however, before I was saluted with another
+peal of laughter, accompanied by the epithets&mdash;'greenhorn,'
+'young 'un,' 'bumpkin,' &amp;c. &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>"You cannot conceive of any more thoroughly
+disgusting feeling than that produced upon the
+mind of a young man bred up in the country, upon
+this first exhibition of the detestable forms which
+vice and dissipation assume in every large city,&mdash;young
+females with bloated countenances,&mdash;boys
+with <i>black</i> eyes and bruised faces, with their disgusting
+slang and familiar nicknames, of Sal, Bet,
+Kate, Tom, Josh, Jack, or Jim, and their unmeaning
+oaths, Billingsgate wit, and filthy and ragged
+garments. There are certain districts of the city
+in which these are always to be seen, I am in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>formed,&mdash;but
+of these more anon. I turned down
+the street, and pursued the course which I supposed
+the lady had taken, until I got to the bottom of
+what had once been a deep glen in its rural days.
+I could see nothing but entrances to tanyards, and
+warehouses full of leather and morocco. The
+houses, too, looked at least a century and a half
+behind those on the hill, in architectural taste.
+Turning to a woman who was sweeping the little
+narrow pavement in front of one of the houses, I
+asked her what part of the city I was in.</p>
+
+<p>"'This is called the <i>swamp</i>, sir,' was the reply.</p>
+
+<p>"'This,' thought I to myself, 'is a very different
+affair from our swamps.' Just at that moment,
+casting my eye along one of the narrow streets, I
+caught a glimpse of the same figure, attended only
+by her maid, entering a low, Dutch, dingy-looking
+house, with the gable end to the street. I walked
+as rapidly as I could in the same direction, and was
+within some twenty yards of the house, when two
+young men issued from the door, with the air and
+dress of gentlemen. I did not immediately observe
+their faces, because my mind was intently occupied
+with the lady, and the probable cause of her visit
+to such a strange part of the city. These reflections
+were suddenly interrupted by some one slapping
+me on the back, and exclaiming in my ear,
+'Ha! my Chevillere! you here! how do you do?
+what brought you here?' but I am resolved to
+put your curiosity to a serious test; names in my
+next. Yours, truly,</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="ralign">"<span class="smcap">V. Chevillere</span>."</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span></p></blockquote>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></a>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
+
+
+<blockquote><p class="center"><span class="smcap">V. Chevillere to B. Randolph.</span><br />
+
+(In continuation.)<br /></p>
+
+
+<p><span class="ralign">"New-York, 18&mdash;.</span><br /></p>
+
+<p>"Who do you think it was who met me at such
+an unlucky moment, just, perhaps, as I was about
+to stumble upon some clew to unravel the mysteries
+of this fair little breathing ignis fatuus? It
+was no other than young Arthur, our old schoolfellow,
+from Kentucky. He has come hither to
+attend a course of medical lectures, though they
+have medical lectures in his own State. Arthur
+was not of our class, nor yet one of the glorious
+three, but he was an old and respected friend and
+schoolmate, and therefore his acquaintance could
+not be cut quite so unceremoniously at the very
+moment of its renewal; and even if I had made
+some silly excuse to avoid him for the moment, he
+would undoubtedly have seen me kicking my heels
+in the street, 'like a strange dog in a crowd,' as
+Damon has it; so I reluctantly wheeled about with
+him. His companion was also a student of medicine,
+and a native of this city; he was introduced
+to me by the name of Hazlehurst. I am aware you
+are anxious to know what they could be seeking<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>
+in the identical house in which I had just blockaded
+my fair fugitive. I wish, as heartily as you can do,
+that I could explain that matter to our mutual satisfaction.
+I pumped our inchoate doctors in vain;
+they explained their own visit to the house very
+satisfactorily, upon the grounds of professional
+business, in the name and on behalf of their preceptor,
+for it seems Arthur has been here all the
+summer; but they neither saw nor heard of any
+lady in the premises, and all further inquiries were
+of course ended by the interpretation which Arthur
+chose to put upon my inquiries concerning a fair
+fugitive, so soon after my arrival. He was not a
+little pleased to hear that Lamar was in the city, in
+close league with a countryman of his own.</p>
+
+<p>"By-the-way, Arthur is a noble fellow and an
+accomplished gentleman. He has all the prerequisites
+of natural capacity and elementary acquirements,
+for the study of his arduous profession.
+I know no young gentleman who has chosen a
+profession in every way better suited to his peculiarities
+of mind and temperament. You will
+doubtless recollect that he always had a fondness
+for the natural sciences, and this, after all, is the
+true 'condition precedent' for making a profound
+and philosophic physician. How lamentable it is
+that such minds are always thrown in the background
+in our colleges! This results from that
+everlasting <i>dingdong</i> hammering at languages,
+before the pupil has discovered their uses, and
+without any regard to his peculiarities of mind.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>
+Those students who, like Arthur, exhibit an apt
+capacity for the study of things, and their properties
+and relations, are almost always dull at the
+study of their representatives, or, in other words,
+languages; why, then, do the instructers in these
+institutions destroy the energies and the vigour of
+such a mind, by making him fail at those things
+for which nature has disqualified him, or, rather,
+for which nature has too nobly endowed him? I
+am no enemy to the study of the vehicles by which
+we communicate with our fellow-men, but I am an
+enemy to the uniform, monotonous drilling, which
+all collegians in this country receive alike, because
+I have observed in this process, that third-rate
+minds invariably rank first. There are, in every
+college, numbers of young gentlemen who have
+parrot-like capacities, and memories that retain
+little words; but who, if required to originate ideas
+of their own, would soon show the native barrenness
+of their understandings.</p>
+
+<p>"Look around you now in the world, and see
+what has become of these <i>distinguished</i> linguists!
+One out of a hundred, perhaps, has received a professorship
+in some new institution, and the others
+are all falsifying the promises of their precocious
+youth; while of the thoughtful and abstract dunces,
+as they were considered in college, many are building
+up lasting reputations, upon the deep and solid
+foundations which our hackneyed systems of education
+could not develop. Necessity and the
+world develop them; and these, we soon find, are<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>
+very different from college life. Now, college
+discipline should imitate the world in this respect;
+it should develope every man's peculiar genius.
+Neglect of this is the true reason why so many
+men distinguish themselves in the world, who were
+considered asses in college, and why so many who
+were considered amazingly clever in college, are
+found to be little better than asses in the world.</p>
+
+<p>"Now that I have somewhat recovered from the
+chagrin of Arthur's mal-apropos appearance, I am
+really glad that he is here. I must surely see
+the lady again. Indeed, I am resolved to do so, if
+I have to stay here twelve months; and then Arthur's
+presence will much facilitate our design of
+surveying the under-currents of the busy world.
+You know that I am not prone to trust the surface
+of things. I shall therefore follow him into many
+places besides his fashionable resorts. He tells me
+that a malignant epidemic is said to be prevailing
+here, and that their visit to the sick person before
+mentioned was with a view to ascertain whether
+the patient really had malignant symptoms. They
+think she had not. I was not so much interested
+in the affairs of their patient during the discussion
+on the subject, as I was in their possible consequences
+upon others,&mdash;but of that more in my
+next. Young Doctor Hazlehurst seems to be a
+very fashionable personage, but gentlemanly in his
+manners, and unaffected in his deportment.</p>
+
+<p>"They walked with me to our hotel, in order to
+see Lamar, but unfortunately he was out. How<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>ever,
+Arthur left college greetings for him, and
+young Hazlehurst left his address, and invitations
+for us both to call at his father's house, who, it
+seems, lives in the city; so you see we have made
+the first step towards seeing both the upper and
+under-currents during our sojourn. Whatever
+they bring forth shall be as faithfully chronicled as
+your own adventures. Truly,</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="ralign">"<span class="smcap">V. Chevillere</span>."</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span></p></blockquote>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></a>CHAPTER XV.</h2>
+
+
+<blockquote><p class="center"><span class="smcap">V. Chevillere to B. Randolph.</span><br />
+
+(In continuation.)<br /></p>
+
+
+<p><span class="ralign">"New-York, 18&mdash;.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"The little coincidences of real life are of much
+more frequent occurrence than is generally allowed
+by our prim historians. Arthur and his companion
+had not long departed, when Lamar and Damon
+came in. I mentioned their visit to the former,
+when, picking up the card and examining it with
+evident surprise, he placed his finger upon the number
+of the street, and held it across the table for
+Damon to see it, who immediately exclaimed,
+'Well! I'm flambergasted now! if that ain't what
+I call a <i>leetle</i> particular.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Why, what is the matter?' said I, astonished
+in my turn at their astonishment.</p>
+
+<p>"'Oh, nothing more,' said Lamar, 'than that
+Damon and myself have but just come from the
+very door upon which that name and number are
+placed.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Are you acquainted with the family?' said I.</p>
+
+<p>"'No,' replied he; 'I was standing opposite to
+the door in question, when a young lady alighted
+from her carriage and entered the house; not,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span>
+however, before she suddenly stopped and took a
+searching look at your humble servant.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Had you ever seen her before?'</p>
+
+<p>"'If I am not mistaken she is the same young
+lady whom I saw two years ago at the Virginia
+springs, when I obtained leave from college to go
+there on account of my health; she was then
+quite young; just entering her teens, I should
+suppose.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Ah! ha! have I caught you at last?' said I,
+as Lamar began to redden under a searching
+glance; 'then there was some foundation for the
+stories which followed you upon that occasion.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Bah!' said he, 'they were all nonsense; but
+come, Damon, tell Chevillere what fine stump
+speeches you heard this morning at a New-York
+election.'</p>
+
+<p>"I saw his drift in amusing me with Damon, and
+I was indeed quite willing to be so amused.</p>
+
+<p>"'Smash me if I heard any speeches,' said Damon,
+'nor saw any candidates either; they manage
+them things here quite after a different fashion.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Why, how do they manage them, if they
+have no candidates and no speeches?' said I.</p>
+
+<p>"'By the art of hocus pocus, I believe,' continued
+Damon; 'I had whetted my appetite for a
+New-York speech till I was completely on a wire
+edge, by the time we got to the polls; then they
+had a parcel of chaps standing behind a little counter,
+with gold headed poles, like freemasons in a
+cake-shop, playing at long-pole with the boys.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
+Why! where's the election,' said I, to a chap outside
+the counter, with one black eye too many.
+'Right under your nose,' said he; 'clap down your
+tickets and kiss the calf-skin, as I did just now;'
+and then he cramm'd my hands full of little bits of
+paper, 'H&mdash;l in the West,' said I, 'are we going
+to have no speeches, no drink, no fighten?' 'O!'
+said he, 'there's plenty of drink in the bar-room
+next door, and you can get your stomach full of
+fight, if you will walk down to the <i>Five Points</i>.'</p>
+
+<p>"'And how do the people know whom they vote
+for?' said I to Lamar.</p>
+
+<p>"His answer satisfied me that Damon's account
+of the business was nearly correct as to matters of
+fact; and that the New-Yorkers never have what
+we call 'stump speeches,' and never personally
+know, or even see their representatives. These
+city mobocracies, composed as they are, principally
+of wild Irish, are terrible things; but I must
+adhere to our bargain, to have nothing to do with
+politics.</p>
+
+<p>"Lamar has evidently ripped up an old wound
+this morning, and I am truly rejoiced thereat; we
+shall take an early day to pay the visit spoken of,
+at which time I shall observe the gentleman's
+movements, and see if I cannot treasure up a little
+ammunition for future use, wherewithal to pay off
+old scores against him.</p>
+
+<p>"You recollect, perhaps, the old woman's comfort
+in a time of great famine; 'she thanked God
+her neighbours were as bad off as herself.' I find<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>
+very little comfort in this truly philanthropic doctrine,
+save from occasionally amusing myself with
+anticipations of Lamar's more fashionable dilemma.</p>
+
+<p>"The Kentuckian's pulsations seem to be regulated
+by a gigantic and equipoised animal impulse.
+There is very little sinking of the heart in gloomy
+anticipation, with him; he enjoys the present, uninterrupted
+by the past or future. After all, are
+not these hardy and free sons of the west the happiest
+of all created beings? They enjoy nearly
+every thing that we do, perhaps not exactly in the
+same degree, but certainly with as much of the
+heart, if not so much of the head; I really envy
+Damon his hearty and joyous laughs, such as I
+could once indulge in myself, and I have often
+asked what is it that has made the change? Can
+you answer the question, Randolph?</p>
+
+<p>"I once thought that you and Lamar would
+laugh it on through life, but it seems that you have
+scarcely started, each in his distinct career, before
+you begin sowing the seeds of your future sorrows,
+don't be frightened; it is the appointed race we
+must all run, sooner or later; we cannot be joyous
+and jovial college-lads all our days; but we may,
+and I hope will, be calm and tranquil old <i>country
+gentlemen</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"But pshaw! I grow old before my time; 'sufficient
+for the day is the evil thereof;' lay that
+flattering unction to your soul, and all will soon be
+well, that is now ill with you.</p>
+
+<p>"The more I see of these northern states, the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>
+more I am convinced that some great revolution
+awaits our own cherished communities. Revolutions,
+whether sudden or gradual, are fearful things;
+we learn to feel attachments to those things which
+they tear up, as a poor cripple feels attached to
+the mortified limb, that must be amputated to save
+his life. A line of demarkation in such a case is
+distinctly drawn between the diseased and the
+healthy flesh. Such a line is now drawing between
+the slave and free states, I fear. God send
+that the disease may be cured without amputation,
+and before mortification takes place. I know that
+this latter is your own belief. What think you
+now, since you have seen the greater extent of the
+disease? Truly,</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="ralign">"<span class="smcap">V. Chevillere.</span>"</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span></p></blockquote>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVI" id="CHAPTER_XVI"></a>CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
+
+
+<blockquote><p class="center"><span class="smcap">B. Randolph to V. Chevillere.</span><br /></p>
+
+
+<p><span class="ralign">"Belville, High Hills of the Santee.</span><br />
+
+"<span class="smcap">Dear Friend</span>,<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard of weeping willows, but I never
+saw weeping pines and black Jacks (scrub oaks)
+before I came into South Carolina; these are made
+so by the moss which here grows from the trees
+in long pendulous masses, which makes them look
+like gigantic weeping willows.</p>
+
+<p>"On the day of my arrival here, I was again
+benighted within a few miles of Belville, and again
+found my way into Christendom by a delightful
+custom which prevails among your city refugees.
+You know that they have a little village erected
+here among your sandhills, which is entirely owned
+by wealthy residents of Charleston; to these they
+retire during the sickly season, and of course they
+are now full of fashionables. Before each door is
+a large wooden pillar, with a hearth on the top of
+it, a kind of rude imitation of our urn. On these
+they kindle pine-knot fires to keep the mosquitoes
+away from the premises, and the effect is doubtless
+at all times brilliant; but it is doubly so when
+they are the means of restoring a poor benighted<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
+traveller to the region of hope and comfort; such
+was the case with your humble servant. I had
+but just begun to look out for the usual concert, and
+the Frying-pan, and the swamp, when I discovered
+these fires away to my right; I was not more than
+a mile out of my road.</p>
+
+<p>"This little mushroom village was entirely deserted
+when I passed through it before; I was
+therefore surprised to find carriages standing by
+each cabin, and fine ladies promenading along the
+sandy roads with their attendant beaux.</p>
+
+<p>"Sounds of infantile laughter, sweet music, and
+the still sweeter notes of frying-pans (very different
+affairs from my assortment), saluted my delighted
+ears as I cantered through the encamped throng.
+I did not stop, because the distance was but short
+to your own house, at which I soon arrived, and,
+for once in my life, not before I was wanted.</p>
+
+<p>"As I briskly rode up the long sandy avenue, I
+heard a strange confusion of noises and sounds
+from the direction of the quarter, which you have
+here dangerously near, but from benevolent views
+I suppose; I next discovered Bell walking to and
+fro along the little esplanade which surmounts the
+front portico, wringing her hands, weeping, and
+calling upon your mother's name most piteously.
+I dismounted, and ran towards the nearest entrance
+with all my speed, and there I met the dear girl,
+just in time to catch her in my arms for fear of a
+worse resting-place. As soon as she had recovered
+a little from her exhaustion, the effect of her pre<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>vious
+excitement, she exclaimed, 'Oh! Mr. Randolph,
+how glad I am to see you!'</p>
+
+<p>"'Not more so than I am to see you, my dear
+Bell; but tell me the cause of all this noise at the
+quarter, and of your alarm.'</p>
+
+<p>"She told me, as well as she could for her
+short and convulsive breathing, that the driver had
+undertaken, in the absence of the overseer, to whip
+a young negro who is a great favourite among his
+fellows; and it seems that he had beaten him unmercifully.
+Some time after, a party had assailed
+his house where he had shut himself in; as I came
+up, they had just succeeded in breaking down the
+door; but the bird had been some time flown, out
+of a back window. Your mother had gone to
+drink tea with one of the refugees, a city acquaintance
+of hers, at the little encampment before mentioned.
+Under these circumstances, I seized a
+cudgel and departed to the scene of action, not,
+however, with Bell's consent. She declared that
+they would murder me, and clung to my garments
+until I gently disengaged myself and committed
+her to her maid. It is not to be denied that I
+almost blessed the rebellion, for its showing me
+that I was a person to be preserved in the eyes of
+your cousin.</p>
+
+<p>"When I arrived upon the ground, it was some
+minutes before I could make the principal actors
+conscious of the presence of any one not in the
+number of their confederates; however, by dint
+of lungs and violent gesticulations, I at length<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>
+gained an audience, and no sooner had I done so,
+than the victory was gained. I merely promised
+to have the matter investigated, and the offender
+punished himself, if he should prove, upon investigation,
+to have whipped the favourite either without
+cause, or unmercifully, with cause. This desirable
+conclusion to the affair could not have been brought
+about in every quarter in this neighbourhood, or at
+any one where they had been less accustomed to
+have their mutual wrongs redressed.</p>
+
+<p>"When I returned to the house, the news of the
+result had preceded me, and Bell had retired to
+her room; she soon, however, again made her appearance,
+more beautiful, if possible, than when I
+left her; she found it exceedingly difficult to amalgamate
+her present evident gratitude with her former
+comico-quizzico treatment of me,&mdash;and though
+the latter decidedly had the advantage, the struggles
+between the little devil of mischief within,
+and a proper behaviour to me on the present occasion,
+kept me quite amused, considering our late
+excitement, until your mother, who had been sent
+for, arrived with a number of gentlemen from the
+sandhills. With these we formed quite a party;
+your mother was less moved than I expected,
+owing, I suppose, to her having so long been in the
+habit of putting her energies to the test. She was
+undisguisedly pleased to see me.</p>
+
+<p>"Among the gentlemen who returned with her,
+my green eyes soon discovered a suitor of Bell's;
+whether one formerly discarded, or at present<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>
+encouraged, I could not tell; but I rather suspect
+the latter, as your mother's visit was to his
+sister, and Bell had excused herself from going
+upon some grounds, for which he was now taking
+her to task.</p>
+
+<p>"I was not so much surprised as I have been,
+at her easy control of <i>my</i> poor generalship, when
+I saw with what admirable discipline she managed
+her troops, both raw militia and regulars; of course
+I class myself with the latter.</p>
+
+<p>"I was not too much delighted to hear many
+parties and excursions talked of and arranged;
+what a selfish animal I must have become since I
+have undertaken this southern tour! I wonder if
+the northern air and manners have had the same
+effect upon you and Lamar?</p>
+
+<p>"After our visiters had departed (you see I am
+domiciliated), Bell said to me, starting up suddenly,
+'Mr. Randolph, if my memory serves me, you
+told me at the door, on the morning of your departure,
+that indispensable business would put it entirely
+out of your power to take our house in your
+way home; I hope you have heard favourable
+accounts from that urgent business?'</p>
+
+<p>"The little <i>devil</i> within was now completely
+triumphant; and then, to make my intended pathos
+still more ridiculous, by inventing more than half
+of my speech! I had a great mind to say, 'Oh,
+Mr. Randolph, how glad I am to see you!' and
+almost run into her arms; but your mother's dignity,
+Chevillere, though it is mild and benevolent,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>
+keeps me always on my good behaviour in her
+presence; so I only answered, 'The horse! the
+horse! you forget the horse!' and then she enjoyed
+a peculiarly sincere and triumphant laugh; and
+the first, too, with which she has greeted my
+return. I love them so much that I can almost
+bear to hear her laugh at myself, provided it is at
+my knavery and not at my folly.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="ralign">"<span class="smcap">B. Randolph.</span>"</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span></p></blockquote>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVII" id="CHAPTER_XVII"></a>CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
+
+
+<blockquote><p class="center"><span class="smcap">V. Chevillere to B. Randolph.</span><br /></p>
+
+<p><span class="ralign">"New-York, 18&mdash;.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"I told you in my last of our surprise at the
+little coincidence of the number on the card, and
+that on the house where the lady alighted, with
+whom Lamar had exchanged some intelligent
+glances in her more girlish days; but I did not
+complete the relation, which I will do presently.</p>
+
+<p>"In the mean time, was there ever a man of
+any travel or adventure, who has not been alarmed
+at these seeming accidents, or, what is more probable,
+made superstitious by their frequent recurrence?
+I think that I hazard nothing in saying,
+that more of such strange coincidences have occurred
+to me than I have ever seen in any work
+of fiction; not the clap-traps, and other little contrivances,
+which are intended to electrify the
+blunted nerves of veteran readers; but the coincidences
+of ordinary life in society, which reveal
+to us occasionally the finger of Providence in the
+course we vainly suppose we are chalking out for
+ourselves. What is it to a man to possess the will,
+when all the circumstances upon which that will
+is to operate, are ready arranged to his hand? I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>
+do not repine at this, if it be a fact. On the contrary,
+it is often a matter of consolation to me to
+think, how narrow is the choice which the Creator
+has given us; thereby, of course, decreasing our
+means of doing wrong; nor is this all his beneficence
+to us,&mdash;he has made it easier for us to do
+right than wrong; often leaving us but two plain
+roads to follow, the right one being the easier,
+plainer, more attractive to a cultivated head and
+heart, and more profitable in this world. There!
+you see I never preach beyond this world; and
+hard enough it is to see clearly all around us in
+that.</p>
+
+<p>"This brings me, by a very circuitous route you
+will no doubt think, to the further coincidence
+spoken of.</p>
+
+<p>"As Damon does not take up his abode with us,
+besides other reasons, he was not of our party
+when we went to pay our respects to the Hazlehurst
+family. On entering the parlour, we found
+the young gentleman who had invited us, with
+Arthur and the lady, who were sitting, at the time
+of our entrance, engaged in an apparently interesting
+conversation, in the recess of one of the
+windows. Arthur and Lamar seemed pleased to
+meet again. The lady smiled upon Lamar, and
+acknowledged her recollection of his countenance.
+She is elegant and lofty; not in height, indeed, for
+she is not remarkably tall, but lofty in her demeanour
+and bearing. There are none of the
+gentle whisperings which come directly from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
+heart of a certain little unhappy runaway. The
+one would captivate an assembly; the other has
+made terrible inroads upon the heart of a single
+gentleman; and this brings me to the matter with
+which I began this epistle.</p>
+
+<p>"Lamar, having mentioned to Arthur something
+about the young lady we had met on our travels,
+and having thrown many gratuitous remarks and
+glances towards me, the lady seemed at length to
+take some interest in the subject, and in Lamar's
+description. She then appealed to me for the
+name.</p>
+
+<p>"'Miss St. Clair!' exclaimed she, when I had
+succeeded in uttering it, 'and have you really
+fallen into her toils? Alas, I pity you!'</p>
+
+<p>"Why the plague should she pity me, Randolph?
+It was evident enough that she did not mean the
+mock pity, which is only another way for saying,
+'how I am rejoiced!'</p>
+
+<p>"'But,' continued she, 'the lady is a dear and
+valued friend of mine, and you shall see her.'</p>
+
+<p>"'But when?' said I, eagerly, awakening out of
+a brown study.</p>
+
+<p>"All laughed; and I cannot say from my own
+experience, that I like the sport any better than
+yourself.</p>
+
+<p>"You could have amused yourself (it was no
+amusement to me) with the odd looks of Lamar,
+in presence of the object of a first and youthful
+attachment. There is something pure and primitive
+in these boyish loves, and they are too much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>
+out of fashion in the present age, even in this country.
+It is not certainly because matches of mere
+convenience have supplanted them, so much as
+because it has become too much the custom to treat
+very young affairs of the heart with ridicule and
+contempt. People are apt to say 'Oh! it is nothing
+more than puppy love!' (a refined expression
+truly) and to throw derision upon all such demonstrations,
+at the very time, too, when we are most
+sensitive upon such subjects, and when our impressions
+of the fair one are but too easily modified
+by the pretended opinions of our seniors and
+superiors. Opposition, direct and serious, will
+indeed sometimes make the youth steady in his
+course, but ridicule of the object, never!</p>
+
+<p>"From the little I know of the science of political
+economy and human happiness, I am inclined
+to run right into the teeth of the prevailing doctrines
+on this subject. I have never known a
+couple who married, whether young or old, upon
+the strength of a first and mutual passion, who
+were not contented, prosperous, and happy. There
+are doubtless exceptions to this sweeping rule, but
+I have not seen them.</p>
+
+<p>"Its enemies urge that the youthful pair are not
+capable of estimating each other's qualifications.
+But do age and experience qualify them? Or is
+the judgment of so much avail in these matters as
+is pretended? Look at the men most remarkable
+for discretion and judgment; I will venture to say
+you will find that most of them have trusted too<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>
+much to their judgments, and too little to their
+hearts, to be happy. The truth is, that nature has
+made the heart the magnetic point of mutual attraction
+in these affairs, and the head of the wisest
+man is here out of its sphere.</p>
+
+<p>"It is too true, that many of your slow, cautious,
+miserly characters, attempt to reduce the whole
+business to a question in the single rule of three;
+as thus: if Caroline B. with a sweet face and a
+prudent turn makes a thrifty wife, what will Adeline
+B. make, with a sweet face, thrifty ways, and
+a heavy purse?</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks be to an overruling providence, they
+are often carried a rule or two farther in their
+mathematics than they intended; the honey-moon
+winds up with doleful calculations, in the ashes of
+the chimney-corner, with the end of their rattans;
+such as Vulgar Fractions, Profit and Loss, Tare
+and Trett, et cetera.</p>
+
+<p>"You must not imagine, from what I have here
+said, that I am one of those dreamers who contend
+that the world might again become a paradise;
+if, in these things, men would always consult the
+dictates of the heart.</p>
+
+<p>"If we look forward at the marriages which are
+to come, we can discern nothing. This you may
+think is too true to make a joke of, and too serious
+to discuss. But look back over all the world that
+you have seen, and I think you will own that
+Providence or destiny has had a great design constantly
+in view in their fulfilment. The human<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span>
+character has been equipoised, extremes have been
+avoided, the humble elevated, the exalted humbled;
+all the genius, and the wit, and the judgment, and
+the virtues, have not been suffered to be concentrated
+in the descendants of a single pair, but
+have been as nearly as possible divided among us,
+the descendants of the multitude. Opposite, or
+rather diverging characters, are frequently enamoured
+of each other&mdash;the brave man loves the
+gentle woman; the gentle man, the gay woman;
+and thus in their descendants we have the grand
+compromise of nature.</p>
+
+<p>"There is a sermon, now for the text&mdash;'neither
+is the battle to the strong nor the race to the swift.'</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="ralign">"<span class="smcap">V. Chevillere.</span>"</span><br />
+</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<blockquote><p class="center"><span class="smcap">V. Chevillere to B. Randolph.</span><br />
+
+(In continuation.)<br /></p>
+
+<p><span class="ralign">"New-York, 18&mdash;.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"The day being Sunday, I sent old Cato this
+morning to arouse Lamar quite early, in order to
+ascertain if he was disposed to walk before breakfast,
+and view some of the boasted parks, groves,
+and gardens of these hospitable Gothamites. Old
+Cato soon returned, saying that Lamar had but
+that moment fallen asleep, but that he would be
+with me as soon as he could make a hasty toilet;
+hasty it indeed was, for he was not many minutes<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>
+behind Cato, in his morning-gown and slippers,
+yawning and stretching his clenched fists through
+the room as if he had sat in his chair all night.</p>
+
+<p>"'Beshrew me, Chevillere,' said he, 'but you
+are an uneasy and restless spirit, to be waking a
+man up at all hours of the night in this style. I
+thought, at least, when I saw old Cato's grisly
+head, that you had had a surfeit, or a fit of indigestion.'</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose then you are disappointed to find
+me well; but tell me, Lamar, how you intend to
+spend the day?</p>
+
+<p>"'Why, I have not laid it down in a regular
+campaign, but I suppose, as you are too much of
+a Roundhead to kill the day with me at cards, that
+I shall have to submit myself to be whined to death
+with nasal psalmody, at some conventicle or other.
+Be that as it may, Damon shall sit on the stool of
+repentance as well as myself.'</p>
+
+<p>"'In the mean time, suppose we walk to the
+Battery and Castle Garden?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Agreed!' said he, 'provided you wait till I
+jump into a more seemly garb.'</p>
+
+<p>"We were soon arm in arm, sauntering down
+the southern extremity of Broadway, which terminates
+in a beautiful oval grass-plot, called the
+Bowling Green; surrounded by a handsome iron
+railing, and containing a young and an old grove
+of trees; in imitation, doubtless, of human life, the
+young to supplant the aged. During the colonial
+government, there stood in the centre of this beau<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>tiful
+spot a painted leaden equestrian statue of
+George the Third, but as soon as the revolutionary
+war broke out, it was melted into bullets, and shot
+at his own ships and soldiers. On the opposite
+side of the right branch of Broadway, in a southwesterly
+direction, is the Battery&mdash;a noble lawn,
+covering some acres of the southern extremity of
+Manhattan Island, and of course looking into the
+Bay of New-York. What is by a misnomer called
+Castle Garden, stands out in the waters of the bay
+on the south-west side, and is connected with the
+lawn by a wooden bridge of some thirty or forty
+yards length, and not too strong to give way under
+some future pressure. Castle Garden is a castellated
+structure, without turrets and battlements,
+built of hewn stone, and pierced with a row of
+port-holes. It seems to have been built for warlike
+purposes, but is now used as a public promenade,
+and exhibition garden, having tiers of seats
+inside, and around an extensive area, in the manner
+of an amphitheatre. In the centre of the area
+is a little temple or dome, supported on columns.
+Surmounting the whole body of the castle is an
+esplanade, protected by plain railings; from the
+top of this extends high into the air a flag-staff,
+from which, on national festivals, the 'star spangled
+banner' proudly floats over the blue waves which
+beat against its base.</p>
+
+<p>"It was here that the corporation entertained
+Lafayette, a platform having been thrown over the
+area, and a canvass marquee over the top; this<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>
+ball-room is said to have been capable of containing
+from six to ten thousand persons.</p>
+
+<p>"Lamar and I mounted the esplanade, and
+seated ourselves upon the benches, just within the
+railing.</p>
+
+<p>"We could see the ships of every nation, as
+they rode triumphantly over the waters of this
+magnificent bay, gliding about like 'things of life;'
+marine birds screaming and diving among them,
+and sometimes the porpoises in their clumsy gambols,
+shooting their black masses above the water
+and down again; steamers with their gay pennants,
+thundering noises, and deafening bells; the rude
+music and songs of the sailors, the hoarse voice of
+the pilot, as he stepped on board some outward-bound
+vessel, and the 'ay! ay!' of the sailor,
+as the order reached his ears, through the rattling
+of the shrouds, and the whistling of the breeze.</p>
+
+<p>"Farther out in the bay, between us and the
+ocean, is a beautiful chain of islands; first Ellis's,
+then Bedloe's, and lastly, next the ocean, Staten
+Island.</p>
+
+<p>"Gay throngs of well-dressed people began now
+to crowd the gravelled walks of the Battery;
+maids attending on children were seen with their
+little charges, gambolling over the green in their
+Sunday suits; the emancipated mechanics, with
+their snow-white jackets and collars; and the
+happy negro, with his tawdry and cast-off finery,
+as free (personally, not politically, free) as any of
+the loungers. There was something in this Sun<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>day
+scene inexpressibly soothing and delightful to
+my feelings.</p>
+
+<p>"Every southern should visit New-York. It
+would allay provincial prejudices, and calm his
+excitement against his northern countrymen. The
+people here are warm-hearted, generous, and
+enthusiastic, in a degree scarcely inferior to our
+own southerns. The multitude move as one man,
+in all public-spirited, benevolent, or charitable
+measures. Many of these Yorkers are above
+local prejudices, and truly consider this as the commercial
+metropolis of the Union, and all the people
+of the land as their customers, friends, patrons, and
+countrymen.</p>
+
+<p>"Nor is trade the only thing that flourishes.
+The arts of polished and refined life, refined literature,
+and the profounder studies of the schoolmen,
+all have their distinguished votaries,&mdash;I say distinguished,
+with reference to the standard of science
+in our country.</p>
+
+<p>"This much I have written before going to
+church. The further adventures of the day, in the
+evening.</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="ralign">"<span class="smcap">V. Chevillere.</span>"</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span></p></blockquote>
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<blockquote><p class="center"><span class="smcap">V. Chevillere to B. Randolph.</span><br />
+
+(In continuation.)<br /></p>
+
+<p><span class="ralign">"10 o'clock P. M.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"About ten o'clock this morning the bells began
+to ring, from Trinity to St. John's. A forest of
+steeples seemed to have let loose their artillery at
+once upon us tardy Christians. These gongs
+seemed to take effect in about fifteen minutes, for
+simultaneously the houses poured out their thronging
+occupants, until the streets literally swarmed
+with these church-going people.</p>
+
+<p>"'Whither shall we bend our steps?' said I;
+'here are various routes to heaven; which do you
+choose, Episcopal, Methodist, or Presbyterian?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Not any one of the three,' said he.</p>
+
+<p>"'Indeed! Perhaps Jewishly inclined?'</p>
+
+<p>"'No; I thought that you were aware of my
+partiality for the close-communion Baptists,' said
+he, with mock gravity.</p>
+
+<p>"'But seriously, Lamar, you accused me of
+wishing to drag you to some conventicle or other;
+choose for us both; indeed for <i>three</i>, for here comes
+Damon.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Then,' said he, 'I choose the most celebrated
+preacher! you will thus be most likely to see a
+certain demure little runaway.'</p>
+
+<p>"'And there,' said I, 'you will be most likely to
+see her friend, with Arthur by her side.'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Damon now coming up, was asked by me
+where he would choose to spend the forenoon of
+the day.</p>
+
+<p>"'I can't tell exactly,' replied he, 'for the truth
+is, I feel pretty much like a fish out of water even
+of week days; but Sunday I'm completely dished;
+I was thinking of walking out into the country, and
+bantering somebody for a foot-race.'</p>
+
+<p>"I proposed that we should all go and hear Dr.
+&mdash;&mdash;, and forthwith led the way, my two companions
+following on, much like truant boys on their
+return march to school. We entered a low white
+church, I don't recollect where exactly, but on the
+western side of Broadway. The preacher was
+already in the pulpit, and the aisles and pews on
+the lower floor were crammed with hearers, insomuch
+that we were compelled to seek seats in the
+small gallery, where with great difficulty we found
+them.</p>
+
+<p>"The preacher, who had already begun, was a
+commanding-looking gentleman, clothed in black,
+and, like most of our dissenting clergymen, without
+gown or surplice; his features were large and
+well-formed; his forehead lofty beyond any thing
+I have ever seen, but falling back at the top until
+it was lost in little short bristly curls; his attitudes
+were lofty and dignified. He had, as I said
+before, announced the portion of Scripture which
+he was attempting to elucidate, before we entered
+the church. The subject seemed to be, the practicability
+and means of a direct revelation from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>
+God! When he spoke of the Great Spirit who
+rules our destinies revealing himself, and his manner
+of doing it, he was almost sublime. I must
+try to recollect a few passages for your edification,
+but you must remember that they are transposed
+into my own language.</p>
+
+<p>"He painted in vivid and striking colours, the
+utter incapacity of man to conceive identically of
+such a being as God. 'The little puny brain of
+man,' said he, 'which you may hold in the hollow
+of your hand, cannot contain a true conception of
+God in all his majesty! the little arteries and fibres
+of our poor heads would rend and burst asunder
+with such an idea.</p>
+
+<p>"'To form one single correct thought of so great
+a Spirit, you must first conceive of those things
+which surround him; as, when we view a painting
+of some earthly object, there must first be a background
+to relieve the eye. So when you would
+conceive of that great Being truly and fully, you
+must be able to realize the duration of eternity,
+obliterate the little periods of time and chronology,
+which require a starting and a resting-place in our
+human minds,&mdash;soar out of the reach of the sickly
+atmospheres which surround these little planets, and
+stand erect in the broad and fathomless light of
+God's own atmosphere! Could the human eye see
+with such rays, and stretch its glances over the
+great waves and boundless oceans of light in
+which he dwells, one single ray of it would blast
+your optic nerves.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"'Even here upon earth, if we are suddenly
+brought from a dark dungeon into the bright rays
+of his reflected glory, our little optical machinery
+quails and dances with the shock; but take that
+same creature from his gloomy dungeon, and place
+him in the glassy sea of light in which God dwells!
+The utter horrors of such a moment, if they did
+not instantly explode the soul into its elements,
+would be worse than the terrors of convulsions,
+and earthquakes, and the black and fathomless
+chasms of the sea. And yet! some of us desire
+in our hearts a direct revelation to ourselves from
+this sublime Being! Know you what you desire?
+You desire that God should stretch out his mighty
+power, and draw away the friendly veil of the
+heavens, and burst upon an astounded world in all
+his fearful attributes! Before such an immediate
+presence, the sun and moon would become dark
+in contrast. The natural laws which he has given
+us for our protection, of gravitation, electricity,
+and magnetism, would burst loose from their reflected
+positions, and all animate and inanimate
+nature would fall before their First Great Cause!
+We cannot have direct physical intercourse with
+God. We are physically incompetent to encounter
+him, either in his goodness or in his wrath.</p>
+
+<p>"You say in your hearts, that there is mystery
+in this revelation of the Bible! Can mystery be
+separable from sublime or profound greatness,
+when viewed through human powers? Are not
+height, and depth, and space, and air, all mysterious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>
+to your minds, when beyond the reach of the eye?
+Is not darkness alone profoundly mysterious?
+mysterious in its effects and in its properties! Can
+any mind analyze darkness? Is it positive or negative?
+Does it extend through eternal and measureless
+space? or is it only a creative property
+dependent upon the functions of the eye? Our
+darkness is to one part of creation light, and our
+light their darkness.</p>
+
+<p>"Is measureless space a positive creation, or a
+negative nonentity! No human intellect can
+fathom these subjects; not from any of their delusive
+properties, but from our limited capacities!
+These then are but the beginning of those things
+which interpose between us and our great and
+sublime Creator!</p>
+
+<p>"You can now, perhaps, form some idea of the
+difficulties of revealing God to man!</p>
+
+<p>"What would you have with a more powerful
+and sublime revelation than this? Would you
+disorganize the minds of the whole human family,
+by opening to them frightful volumes which would
+craze and bewilder, rather than direct them? Do
+you complain of mystery, and yet call upon God
+for more?</p>
+
+<p>"But the greatest difficulty between us and a direct
+revelation from our Creator, has yet to be
+considered.</p>
+
+<p>"This revelation of the Bible was necessarily
+conveyed to us through the medium of human
+language. Now let us examine what this human<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span>
+language is. It is a system of words or signs,
+which convey to our minds the ideas of things.
+These words only represent such ideas as we ourselves
+have formed from the things we have seen,
+and their various combinations. How then can
+these signs and symbols convey identical ideas of
+God and his attributes? All the imperfections of
+this revelation then are confessedly owing to our
+imperfections, both as it regards mind and language.</p>
+
+<p>"I have given you but a faint outline of this
+powerful and vehement speaker's discourse. During
+its delivery I once or twice turned to Lamar and
+the Kentuckian, to see how they were affected.
+The former had insensibly risen during the fervency
+of the preacher's eloquence, and stood leaning
+over the balustrade, drinking in the sounds of
+a voice which are truly powerful though not musical,
+until he came to a pause; he then sank into
+his seat, a grim smile passing over his pale sickly
+features, clearly showing to those who knew him,
+how intently he had listened. Damon chewed
+tobacco at a prodigious rate, and the more eloquent
+the speaker became, the more energetic was the action
+of his jaws. His eye was wild and savage, like
+that of a forest animal when it suddenly finds itself
+in the midst of a settlement. He sometimes cracked
+his fingers together, for the same purpose, I suppose,
+that he used to crack his whip when travelling
+on horseback, to give emphasis and round
+his periods.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"But I had not long to consider these effects upon
+different characters, for at this moment Lamar pointed
+over the balustrade at two moving figures on the
+lower floor. You already guess, if you are any thing
+of a Yankee, what these were. Lamar and I simultaneously
+arose to our feet and gazed at the heads
+which filled up every crevice, as a veteran soldier
+would have gazed at so many bristling bayonets
+upon an impregnable bastion. We soon heard the
+steps of a carriage let down, and then the rolling
+of the wheels. Lamar bit his lip till the blood
+almost started from it. Whether the pressure
+was increased by his having seen that Arthur
+joined the ladies near the door, I shall not undertake
+to say.</p>
+
+<p>"The sermon now being over we had merely to
+throw ourselves into the tide of human figures
+which moved down stairs, to be carried safely to
+the bottom.</p>
+
+<p>"When there, Damon drew one long and whistling
+breath, and an inarticulate sound not unlike
+the snort of a whale.</p>
+
+<p>"'I'm flambergasted! if that ain't what I call
+goin the whole cretur, he'd go to Congress from
+old Kentuck as easy as I could put a gin sling
+under my jacket. O Christopher! what a stump
+speech he could make, if he would only turn his
+hand to it, instead of wasting his wind here among
+the old wives!'</p>
+
+<p>"'Well, Lamar, what did you think of him?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Think of him! (rousing himself from a brown<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>
+study), I never knew before that I had nerves in
+the hairs of my head.'</p>
+
+<p>"'And where did you now obtain that precious
+piece of anatomical news?'</p>
+
+<p>"'In the church, to be sure! Were not my
+locks dancing all the while to the music of that
+eccentric man's voice? The cold chills ran over
+me, as if I had been under the influence of miasma.'</p>
+
+<p>"I watched Damon through an unusually long
+silence, while he several times snapped his fingers
+and took a fresh chew of tobacco.</p>
+
+<p>"'I'll tell you what it is, that's what I call a real
+tear-down sneezer,' ejaculated he; 'he's a bark-well
+and hold-fast too; he doesn't honey it up to
+'em, and mince his words&mdash;he lets it down upon
+'em hot and heavy; he knocks down and drags
+out; first he gives it to 'em in one eye and then in
+'tother, then in the gizzard, and at last he gits your
+head under his arm, and then I reckon he feathers
+it in, between the lug and the horn; he gives a
+feller no more chance nor a 'coon has in a black
+jack.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Then you give him more credit for sincerity
+than you usually do men of his cloth,' said I.</p>
+
+<p>"'Yes, yes! there's no whippin the devil round
+the stump with him; he jumps right at him, tooth
+and toe-nail, and I'm flambergasted if I don't think
+he rather worsted the <i>Old Boy</i> this morning; and
+he's the best match I ever saw him have, he looks
+so stout and soldier-like; and then his eye! Did
+you see his eye, stranger? I'm shot if he didn't<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>
+look as if he could'a jumped right a-straddle of
+the devil's neck, and just run his thumbs in, and
+scooped out his two eyes, as easy as I would scoop
+an oyster out of his shell.'</p>
+
+<p>"'You don't go to church often when you are at
+home?'</p>
+
+<p>"'No; but I <i>would</i> go, if we had such a Samson
+as this; he raises old Kentuck in me in a minute.
+I feel full of fight, and ready for any thing
+now! But our old parson! he's an entirely different
+cut in the jib. He whines it out to us like an
+old woman in the last of pea-time; he doesn't
+thunder it down to 'em like this chap, and like old
+Hickory did the grape-shot at New-Orleans.'</p>
+
+<p>"We had now arrived at that point of the street
+where we were to separate. Damon abruptly informed
+us of his intention to return soon to Baltimore.
+I asked him if he was not pleased with
+New-York.</p>
+
+<p>"'O, yes;' said he, 'it's a real Kentuck of a
+place, a man can do here what he likes; they don't
+look at the cut of a feller's coat, but at the cut of
+his jib. I could wear my coat upside down here,
+and my hat smashed all into a gin-shop, and nobody
+has time to turn round and look at me. Yes, yes,
+stranger, they are a whole-souled people, and I
+like 'em, but I have staid long enough.'</p>
+
+<p>"Here we separated for the day. Lamar intends
+to try and prevail upon him to accompany
+us to the theatre, and the Italian opera. I have
+great curiosity to see him at the latter place. Pe<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>drotti,
+they say, can tame a tiger with her melodious
+and touching voice. As you may suppose,
+I am anxious to hear it myself, and to see its effects
+upon one so unschooled in the music of luxurious
+and effeminate Italy.</p>
+
+<p>"I have written you more at length than I intended,
+but I could not do otherwise in return for
+your amusing, friendly, and satisfactory epistle.
+We shall meet again, as in days of yore, and then
+we will gather up all these scribblings, and enjoy
+these scenes again. In the mean time, believe
+that I wish you success in your present suit, for
+the sake of three of us,&mdash;but more particularly
+and selfishly that of</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="ralign">"<span class="smcap">V. Chevillere.</span>"</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span></p></blockquote>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XVIII" id="CHAPTER_XVIII"></a>CHAPTER XVIII.</h2>
+
+
+<blockquote><p class="center">
+<span class="smcap">V. Chevillere to B. Randolph.</span><br /></p>
+
+<p><span class="ralign">"New-York, 18&mdash;.</span><br />
+
+"<span class="smcap">Dear Chum</span>,<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"Events which seem to me worth recording,
+crowd upon us so fast now, that it is almost impossible
+to give you, according to promise, even a
+profile view of our movements.</p>
+
+<p>"This morning, about the same hour at which
+we went to church yesterday, we strolled down
+Wall-street (and we seemed the only strollers
+there) to see the Shylocks in their dens, if any
+such could be found. I was instantly struck with
+the concentrated looks, and absorbed countenances
+of all the persons we met. Most of them were
+running in and out of the banks, with their little
+bank books in their hands, making mental calculations
+of notes to be taken up, deposites where
+made, and how much. Brokers were standing
+behind their counters, ready to commence their
+brisk, and (in this country) almost unhazardous
+game. Many of them amass immense fortunes;
+it is not at all uncommon for one of these houses
+to loan to a state several millions at once.</p>
+
+<p>"We went upon 'change at the hour of twelve.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>
+There, in the large room of the rotunda, or circular
+part of the exchange, merchants, and brokers, and
+bankers, and moneyed men meet, pretty much
+after the same fashion as our jockeys and racers
+upon the turf. The light falls from the dome upon
+these faces, and reveals the best study for a picture
+I have ever seen. The seller and the sellee, the
+shaver and the shavee, or diamond cut diamond,
+as Damon expresses it:&mdash;bear with me but a moment
+while I go over these dull details, and in return
+I will tell you something more of the lady
+with the black mantle.</p>
+
+<p>"The most predominant expression that I saw
+upon 'change was <i>affectation</i>; the affectation of
+business; not the silly school-boy affectation which
+wears off with the improving mind, but that which
+is first put on by business men, to disguise the real
+operations of the mind, and which afterward
+grows into a confirmed habit, and is seen deeply
+set in wrinkles, long after the first exciting cause
+has disappeared.</p>
+
+<p>"This symptom, among the moneyed men, varies
+according to character and strength of mind
+in the individual. One man I saw standing with
+his back against a window, his thumbs stuck into
+the armholes of his waistcoat, his quill toothpick
+tight between his teeth,&mdash;his features large and
+fleshy, his complexion between a copper and an
+apoplectic dapple of blue and red,&mdash;his teeth large,
+white, and flat, his eye small and gray, and his head
+grizzled; he had evidently been a free, but what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>
+is <i>called</i> a <i>temperate</i> liver. I tried to trace back
+through the wrinkles in this man's face, what the
+emotions were which in his younger days he had
+attempted to engrave upon it, and which long
+habit had now made part of his nature; but I
+should first attempt to describe <i>the</i> expression
+itself. His upper lip was turned into a curl of
+contempt; his eye was thrown a little down, and
+the eyelid raised high, so as to show much of the
+white of the eye, as when a person is in the attitude
+of profound thought upon some far distant
+subject. This man had, I thought, the best chosen
+affectation; it expressed profound abstraction in
+<i>one</i> direction, when he was no doubt really abstracted
+in another.</p>
+
+<p>"His right-hand neighbour had not been so fortunate
+in his selection of a vizor for the moneyed masquerade.
+He had chosen comedy; and attempted
+to hide pounds, shillings, and pence under a comic
+visage. It was not well chosen. His business-laugh
+was too horrid. It displayed teeth, gums,
+and throat, and was too affectedly sincere. He too
+frequently passed his glances quickly round from
+one face to the other, to see if they enjoyed the
+sport. This species of affectation had its origin in
+a settled contempt for the sense of his associates,
+and an exalted conception of his own, and especially
+of his powers to amuse. He frequently
+drew the corners of his mouth towards his ears, by
+a voluntary motion, without exercising the corresponding
+risible muscles; elevating his eyebrows at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>
+the same time in a knowing way. Do this yourself,
+and you will have the expression instantly.
+His only additional comic resource consisted in
+sticking one thumb directly under his chin, like a
+pillar. This man is celebrated on 'change for telling
+what <i>he</i> considers a good story.</p>
+
+<p>"Another description of affectation here seen,
+and by far the most common, is the affectation of
+decision, firmness, stability, and concentrated
+purpose.</p>
+
+<p>"Various methods, I saw, had been practised
+through long lives to attain this safe look. Some,
+to whom it was not natural to do so, pushed out
+the under jaw, like a person who (to use a Southern
+term) is <i>jimber</i>-jawed. Others carried the head on
+one side, drew up the muscles at the outer angle
+of one eye, and kept the nostrils distended.
+Others clenched the teeth, looked fierce and steady,
+and habitually patted one foot upon the floor, as if
+in high-spirited impatience. Some looked pensive
+and sad, and occasionally drew long sighs. Beware
+of these, if you ever trade in the money-market.</p>
+
+<p>"The most ludicrous of all moneyed whims is a
+desire to make others suppose that you think yourself
+poor. A heartless man begging for sympathy
+is, of all kinds of affectation, the most contemptible.
+But the most dangerous of all others, and the
+most apt to deceive a candid and upright mind,
+is the affectation of being unaffected. Such is the
+sin of those who affect bold, independent, and reck<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span>less
+looks. If good fortune had not made them
+brokers, bad fortune (they seem to say) might have
+made them robbers.</p>
+
+<p>"There is yet another class to describe&mdash;the sincere
+and the honest. These are easily descried.
+Something like an electric intelligence passes from
+the eye of one honest man to that of another.
+These are usually modest, retiring, and humble.
+I speak of real humility, which is best displayed in
+a respect for the understanding of other men; a
+desire to place one's companions at their ease; and
+a tenderness and sympathy towards the failings
+of the bankrupt, the vicious, and the unfortunate
+generally.</p>
+
+<p>"Not that these indications occur only on 'change;
+they may be seen in the pulpit, at the bar, at the
+bedside, and behind the counter. As you read
+my descriptions, try to produce the expression upon
+your face; then call up some individual of your
+acquaintance, who may have sat for such a picture&mdash;poor,
+indeed, in its finish, but if it convey to
+you the idea, my ambition is satisfied. This is a
+severe test, but I think you may muster up <i>dramatis
+personæ</i> for all the characters.</p>
+
+<p>"As I am now upon this subject, permit me to
+make one or two general remarks.</p>
+
+<p>"I have learned to hold no intimacy with those
+men who are harsh and uncompromising towards
+unfortunates and criminals. These feelings often
+arise from the identical weaknesses, or faults,
+which drove their victims to ruin. You have,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>
+doubtless, seen two slaves quarrel because one
+belonged to a rich and the other to a poor
+man.</p>
+
+<p>"As one well-fed dog is sure to be snarlish to a
+poorer brother&mdash;poor human nature&mdash;this currish
+principle is but too true when applied to us.</p>
+
+<p>"There is none who appears so virtuously indignant
+at crime as the man who is a rogue in his
+heart. A horse-stealer who has blundered into
+better fortune is scandalized at his former craft;
+and a sheep-stealer can weep in the very face of
+the lamb which another has stolen.</p>
+
+<p>"Those ladies, the purity of whose characters is
+most questionable, are uniformly the first to cease
+visiting an openly suspected sister.</p>
+
+<p>"But I see plainly that if I go on, the subject
+must become too revolting; at all events I must
+give it to you in broken doses; and by the time
+Arthur introduces me into the human catacombs,
+where the living are <i>soul</i>-dead, you will be ready
+to take another view of those dark and dismal
+abodes, and attempt further observations of humanity
+in its darker developments.</p>
+
+<p>"A malignant disease, as Arthur thinks, has
+broken out in the portions of the city alluded to;
+if so, I will remain with him. This is the time to
+see fearful sights; and we Southerns, you know,
+have looked the grim monster too often in the face
+in this shape to be easily frightened from a cherished
+purpose.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Damon begins to be very uneasy under these
+reports of sudden deaths, and black infections
+sweeping through the air."</p></blockquote>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<blockquote><p class="center"><span class="smcap">V. Chevillere to B. Randolph.</span><br />
+
+(In continuation.)<br /></p>
+
+<p><span class="ralign">"New-York, 18&mdash;.</span><br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"I have seen her, Randolph, and seen her far
+more captivating and beautiful than ever!</p>
+
+<p>"Yesterday, after I had finished the former part
+of this letter, I met, on my way down to dinner,
+Arthur and young Hazlehurst. The latter had
+come expressly to invite Lamar and myself to
+spend the evening at their house. As you may
+suppose, it was not refused; we pressed them to
+go in with us, as they had not yet dined, to which
+they finally consented.</p>
+
+<p>"I find Hazlehurst an intelligent young man,
+but with many erroneous opinions concerning the
+south, of which he must be disabused. He imagines
+us to be a generous and hospitable people, but
+in a rather semi-barbarous state.</p>
+
+<p>"As this very subject occupied our attention in
+presence of the ladies, I prefer giving you an imperfect
+sketch of the discourse. I must not omit
+a table lecture of Lamar's on nicotiana, however
+impatient you may be to hear more of a certain
+fair one.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"The subject of tobacco was introduced simultaneously
+with the segars, after most of the company
+had retired. One having been offered to
+young Hazlehurst, he declined it, saying that he
+did not use tobacco in any shape.</p>
+
+<p>"'Not use tobacco! not smoke!' said Lamar;
+'why, sir, you have yet to experience one of the
+most calm, delightful, and soothing pleasures of
+which human nerves are sensible.'</p>
+
+<p>"'I have always understood,' said the other,
+'that the stimulus leaves one far more miserable
+than if he had not applied it.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Then you labour under some mistake,' said
+Lamar; 'and if you will permit, and your doctorships
+will forbear laughter, I will explain to you
+the effects of a fine segar upon my system, and
+"suit the action to the word."</p>
+
+<p>"'When a man takes a genuine, dappled Havana
+segar in his mouth, places his legs upon a
+hair cushioned chair, his head thrown back on that
+upon which he sits, or against the wall; his arms
+folded upon his chest,&mdash;the following phenomena
+occur:</p>
+
+<p>"'<i>First stage.</i> He becomes heroic and chivalrous,
+or perhaps eloquent; if the last, and thinks himself
+alone, you will see him wave his hand in the most
+graceful and captivating style of oratory. His
+eye is the soul of imaginary eloquence, his features
+are all swelled out until they seem grand&mdash;gloomy&mdash;and
+profound; his nostrils pant and show their
+red lining, like a fiery and blooded steed. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>
+rolls out thick volumes of smoke, and puffs it from
+him like a forty-two-pounder. He draws down
+his feet, and raises his head and looks after it, as if
+victory or conviction had been hurled upon its
+clouds. Perhaps some one laughs at him, as you
+laugh now at me.</p>
+
+<p>"'He replaces his legs, leans back his head
+again; the <i>second stage</i> is come; he smiles, perhaps,
+at the laurels just won; he closes his eyes,
+delightful visions of green meadows and lawns,
+fragrant flowers, meandering streams, limpid
+brooks, beautiful nymphs, twilight amid tall and
+venerable trees, and lengthening shadows, flit before
+his imagination. His face now is towards
+the heavens; his features are calm and serene;
+he wafts the smoke gently upward in long continued
+columns, and wreaths, and garlands; his
+hands fall by his side&mdash;the diminished stump falls
+from his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"'And now, in the <i>third stage</i>, he is in a revery.
+A servant touches him three times, and tells him a
+gentleman wants to see him; he kicks his shins;
+servant retreats. Eyes being still closed, he draws
+a long sigh or two, but full, pleasant, and satisfactory.
+Servant returns; shakes him by the shoulder;
+he jumps up and throws an empty bottle at
+his head, as I do this one, at that grinning fellow
+there (making a mock effort), and then the trance
+is over.</p>
+
+<p>"'Now where are the bad effects, except upon
+Cato's shins, if he should happen to be the man?'</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"We all applauded Lamar for his treat, with
+three hearty cheers, in a small way.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry to see a little sly, stealthy, unmentionable
+coldness arising between Lamar and
+Arthur. I first discovered it in little acts of what
+the world calls politeness, but which I call formality,
+towards each other. They are unconscious
+of it, as yet, for it seems to have sprung up by
+irresistible mutual repulsion between them: deep
+seated self appears to have warned each of a dangerous
+rival in the other. These are little secret
+selfishnesses of the soul, which lie deep, dark, and
+still, running in an unseen current, far below the
+soundings of the self-searching consciousness.
+How mysterious is the mind of man! We may
+draw up the flood-gates, and let loose the dammed-up
+waters in order to find some secret at the bottom;
+but the flood rolls by, and the secret still
+lies buried as profoundly as before. At some
+future day, when the thunder and the storms shall
+come, these secrets may, perhaps, be washed up
+to the surface, like wonders of the deep, when least
+expected!</p>
+
+<p>"At about eight o'clock, Lamar and I sallied out
+to find Mrs. Hazlehurst's house in Broadway;
+amid music from clarionet, violin, and kent bugle.
+These were stationed in the balconies of the different
+museums. Carriages were just setting down
+their company at the old Park Theatre. Little
+blind and lame boys sat about the iron railing at
+St. Paul's church, grinding hand-organs, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span>
+making music little better than so many grindstones&mdash;all
+for a miserable pittance which they
+collect in the shape of pennies, perhaps to the
+amount of a dozen a day.</p>
+
+<p>"Negroes were screaming 'ice-cream' at the
+top of their lungs, though it is now becoming cold
+in the evenings and mornings. At every corner
+some old huckster sang out 'Hot corn! hot corn!'
+though the regular season of 'roasting-ears,' has
+long since passed by. Little tables of fruit, cakes,
+and spruce-beer were strewed along the walks
+and under the awnings, which often remain extended
+during the night.</p>
+
+<p>"We at length found the house, and entered
+with palpitating hearts. I had a sort of presentiment
+that I was to meet Miss St. Clair, from what
+the lively Isabel had said.</p>
+
+<p>"When we entered the saloon she was nowhere
+to be seen! my disappointment was no doubt visible,
+for I saw an arch smile upon Isabel's countenance,
+and, I must say, a very singular one upon
+that of her brother. The idea first struck me that
+he is either now, or has been, a suitor of the absent
+lady! Was there a lurking jealousy at the bottom
+of my own heart, at the very time that I was fishing
+up green monsters from Lamar's mental pandemonium?
+Randolph, Oh! the human heart is
+deceitful above all things; and it oftener deceives
+ourselves than others. We have radiated rays of
+light for our mental vision outwards which we may<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>
+extend <i>ad infinitum</i>, but once turn our observations
+inwards, and it is like inverting the telescope.</p>
+
+<p>"We were presented to the lady of the mansion
+immediately upon our entrance. She is benignant
+and bland, yet aristocratic withal. She discovers
+a warm heart towards the South, probably from
+an idea of a kindred aristocratic feeling in us.
+The two are, however, very different in their developments.
+It is necessary here to have many
+more bulwarks between this class and those below
+them than is needful with us; as there is here a
+regular gradation in the divisions of society. The
+end of one and the beginning of the next are so
+merged, that it would be impossible to separate
+them without these barriers. What are they? you
+would ask. They consist in little formalities,&mdash;rigid
+adherence to fashion in its higher flights,&mdash;exhibition
+of European and Oriental luxuries, et
+cetera, et cetera.</p>
+
+<p>"We were presented to the company in general;
+most of the fashionable ladies were sitting
+or standing around a fine-toned upright piano-forte,
+at which two of the party were executing, in a
+very finished style of fashionable elegance, some
+of Rossini's compositions, accompanied by a gentleman
+on the flute. And in good truth, they produced
+scientific and fashionable music; but, Randolph,
+it was not to my taste. You know that I
+have cultivated music as a science, from my earliest
+youth; that I am an enthusiast here, and not
+altogether a bungler in my own execution. I have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>
+now discovered either that I lack taste, or that the
+fashionable world is therein deficient. You shall
+decide between us at another time.</p>
+
+<p>"Lamar very soon contrived (how, heaven only
+knows) to throw me completely in the shade; but
+the first evidence I had of it was his sitting bolt
+upright between the gay Isabel and her mother.
+He had already betrayed them into laughter,&mdash;not
+fashionable laughter, for I saw the old lady wiping
+the tears from her eyes. It is almost impossible
+for any one to adhere long to conventional forms,
+when he is of the party,&mdash;so manly, generous, and
+sincere is he. My chagrin at not finding myself
+situated equally to my heart's content did not
+escape him, and he perhaps discovered my awkwardness,
+for he attempted to draw me into a discussion
+concerning the provincial rivalry of the
+North and South. I evaded his friendly hand, but
+soon the younger lady renewed the attack.</p>
+
+<p>"'Come, Mr. Chevillere, you will tell us what
+peculiarities you have observed, as existing between
+the northern and southern ladies as to polish,&mdash;fashion,&mdash;education,&mdash;any
+thing! This gentleman
+is so wonderfully free from prejudices and
+rivalry, that he declares the instant he beholds a
+beautiful woman, he forgets that she has a local
+habitation upon earth. You, sir, I hope, are not so
+catholic an admirer of beauty?'</p>
+
+<p>"'I too, madam, am always disarmed of local
+prejudices when I see a beautiful northern lady;
+but that is not what you wish me to answer. If I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>
+understood you right, I suppose you wish to know
+whether any peculiarity in fashion, habits, or manners
+strikes us at first sight disagreeably.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Precisely. Your general opinion of us.'</p>
+
+<p>"'I am glad to be able to say, then, that with
+regard to this city I am a perfect enthusiast. Every
+thing is arranged as I would have it. Nature appears
+to be the criterion here in matters of taste;
+utility and improvement seem to prompt the efforts
+of your men of talents, and that delightful politeness
+to prevail, which consists in placing all well-meaning
+persons at their ease, without useless
+conventional forms.'</p>
+
+<p>"I hate this formal speech-making, Randolph,
+across a room <i>at</i> people, so I thought I would be
+myself at once. I therefore continued my remarks
+for the remainder of the evening rather more in a
+nonchalant way, and as an introduction to a more
+free and easy tone to the company. I asked Lamar
+to repeat his lecture of the day, on smoking.
+Hazlehurst, as soon as he heard the subject mentioned,
+began to describe it to a party of young
+ladies who stood round the piano. Their curiosity
+was excited immediately; and though Lamar
+frowned at me, the ladies entreated until he was
+forced to comply.</p>
+
+<p>"He set the room in a perfect roar of laughter,
+and then a delightful confusion prevailed. Lamar
+did not repeat exactly the same things which he
+had treated us with at the dinner-table, but he
+preserved the stages, dwelling a much shorter<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>
+time on the heroic, and much longer on the two
+latter.</p>
+
+<p>"He introduced a heroine into his shades and
+bowers, and painted Isabel as he saw her at the
+Springs; so, at least, I suspect from a certain
+mantling of the colour into her cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>"'Then,' said he, speaking of the third stage,
+'his hands fall by his side, his eyes are closed, he
+sighs profoundly, but comfortably and <i>somnolently</i>;
+perhaps he is married; his wife steals gently up
+and kisses him. 'My dear, the milliner's bill has
+come.'&mdash;'O <i>dam</i> the miller!' In a short time she
+returns&mdash;'My dear, my pin money is out: come
+now, you are not asleep, I know: and that is
+not all&mdash;the carriage wants painting; the house
+wants repairs; the children want toys; servants
+want wages.' He rolls his head over on one
+shoulder, opens his eyes, and fixes them in a deliberate
+stare, as I do now, upon Miss Isabel.'
+This last idea became either too sentimental or too
+ludicrous for Lamar; and he jumped up in an unsuppressed
+fit of laughter. You know Lamar,
+therefore I need not tell you that this is a very imperfect
+sketch of the manner in which he acted the
+ludicrous and careless, but <i>hen-pecked</i>, husband. I
+do not wonder that he laughed, when he looked at
+Isabel, for her face was indescribably arch and
+sanctimonious.</p>
+
+<p>"Hilarity and glee seemed now to be the order
+of the evening with all except poor Arthur. I
+thought that Lamar would actually sow the seeds<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span>
+of a future quarrel, while discussing something relating
+to the West. How introduced I do not
+know, unless Lamar was talking of Damon. However,
+Arthur stated one fact which surprised us all,
+and of which we had been all equally ignorant.
+He stated that Kentucky had one more college
+than any other State in the Union; half as many
+as all New-England; and more than North Carolina,
+South Carolina, Georgia, and Alabama,
+united.</p>
+
+<p>"While these things were going on, I heard a
+gentle and scarcely perceptible step behind me, on
+the carpet; and seeing the other gentlemen rise, I
+mechanically rose also&mdash;to be electrified by the
+vision of Miss St. Clair. She was pale and trembling,
+but far more beautiful than I had ever seen
+her. It was not the beauty of the waxen figure,
+or the picture; it was the beauty of feeling, sensibility,
+and tenderness. You have seen that little
+plant which shrinks at the rude touch of man, Randolph;
+that should be her emblem.</p>
+
+<p>"She glided into a rather darkened recess of the
+room, near where I stood, and seated herself alone,
+as if to be out of the reach of observation; yet by
+some means I was seated by her side, almost as
+dumb as a statue. I even longed for more of Lamar's
+delineations, if for nothing else but to see her
+smile again, and light up those features which nature
+evidently made to smile. Her hair was still
+parted over the forehead in the Grecian manner;
+a single ringlet stole down behind her ear. Her<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span>
+dress was simplicity itself, exceedingly plain and
+tasteful.</p>
+
+<p>"I need not tell Miss St. Clair how much gratified
+I am at again meeting her in a circle composed
+almost entirely of my friends and my friends'
+friends; but, if I have been rightly informed, we
+are more indebted to accident than to any benevolent
+designs on her part for this meeting.</p>
+
+<p>"'A strange accident indeed, my being here.
+Not less so than your own. But <i>you</i> are not a believer
+in accidents.'</p>
+
+<p>"How beautiful a little act sometimes appears,
+Randolph, when it sits upon the countenance of
+one so artless by nature that you can see all the
+machinery which she imagines is so completely
+hidden, as a child often hides its eyes and vainly
+supposes itself unseen. This <i>ruse</i>, intended to
+draw me into some argument about accidents, and
+to avoid the real case at issue, really amused me;
+I was willing, however, to follow her lead for a
+time. 'Accidents,' said I, 'seem to us, at first
+sight, to be without the usual train of cause and
+effect; but, if they were all placed in my hands, I
+think I could govern the destinies of the world, so
+long as I could control my own destiny.'</p>
+
+<p>"'I do not understand you, sir,' said she, with
+the simplest cunning imaginable; feigning deep interest,
+though her countenance would not join in
+the plot.</p>
+
+<p>"'The condition,' I continued, 'and the present
+circumstances of every individual now in this room<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>
+might be traced back to some accident which has
+happened&mdash;to the person, his father, or his grandfather;
+the death of one friend, the marriage of another,
+may affect the destinies of the persons themselves
+and all connected with them.'</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, Randolph! there was a tender chord
+touched. Did you ever see a person shot through
+and through? The countenance expresses a whole
+age of misery in an instant. The soul is conscious
+of it before the body. One will even ask whether
+he is shot&mdash;while his countenance proclaims death
+more forcibly than a hundred tongues could utter it.
+There is a writhing, convulsive, retreating misery;
+part of which I saw I had inflicted upon this gentle
+being. This mystery must be solved. The system
+on which she is treated by those around her is
+false.</p>
+
+<p>"You have, perhaps, seen a whole family after
+the death of one of its members, religiously observe
+profound silence on the subject. Should any one
+rudely or even gently mention the deceased, all are
+instantly horrified. Each fears that the feelings of
+all the rest have been shocked. At this moment, a
+calm and judicious friend, when the ice is once
+broken, may cure all this amiable weakness by
+steadily and tenderly persevering. I was determined
+to try the experiment in this case. A bold
+measure, when you consider the person and the
+circumstances.</p>
+
+<p>"'Miss St. Clair,' said I, after she had recovered<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span>
+her composure; 'allow me to ask whether your
+family is related to that of General St. Clair?'</p>
+
+<p>"'I believe not,' she composedly answered.</p>
+
+<p>"'Has your father been long dead?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Not a very long time: and the loss is the
+greater, as I have never known the value of a
+brother or a sister.'</p>
+
+<p>"'You do not seem to labour under the usual
+disadvantages of step-daughters.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Never was step-father more devoted and
+affectionate than mine, in his own peculiar way;
+and with that I am quite contented.'</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Randolph, you know that impertinence
+had no share in dictating these questions, but could
+impertinence have gone farther? what ramification
+could I next attempt? Here was nearly the
+whole genealogical tree, but farther down there
+was no hope of touching the true branch.</p>
+
+<p>"Her own gentle heart alone remained to be
+suspected. How could I suspect it, Randolph?
+so young, so pure, so gentle, so beautiful! Alas!
+that is but a poor protection against suitors. Besides,
+she is said to be rich. Must the question be
+asked? I resolved upon it! Was I not justifiable
+in doing so? Am I not an avowed suitor? at
+least have I not shown myself ready to become so?
+The opportunity was good; the company were all
+engaged in little coteries around the saloon. My
+previous questions seemed rather to have tranquillized
+her than otherwise; it was a trying moment!<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>
+but no other step could be gained until this obstacle
+was surmounted. I therefore proceeded to make
+one or two anxious inquiries, critical as it regards
+my happiness, but which a lover cannot confide
+even to the ear of Randolph.</p>
+
+<p>"My object was to know whether I had aught
+to fear from rivalry. Her lips moved, but no sound
+issued from them. I resumed; 'Believe me, that
+this pain would not have been inflicted, if my supposed
+relation to yourself had not imboldened me
+to ask whether any other man were so happy as
+to render me miserable.'</p>
+
+<p>"'I see no impropriety in answering your question,
+though it can avail nothing; my <i>affections</i> are
+now as they have always been&mdash;disengaged.'</p>
+
+<p>"These words were wafted along the vestibule
+of my ear, like some gentle breathings of magic;
+you have heard the soft vibrations of the Æolian
+harp, as a gentle summer breeze bore them along
+the air, redolent of the rich perfumes of summer
+flowers, and attuned to the wild music of songsters
+without.</p>
+
+<p>"Sweeter, far sweeter, was her voice; a silvery
+voice is at all times the organ of the heart, but
+when it dies away in a thrilling whisper from the
+profoundness of the internal struggle, the ardent
+sympathy of the hearer is involuntary. Tragedians
+understand this language of the heart, insomuch
+that custom has now established the imitation,
+in deep-toned pathos.</p>
+
+<p>"She placed emphasis on the word <i>affections</i>;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>
+why was this, unless her hand is engaged without
+them? This idea flashed upon me with electric
+force; you can well imagine how suddenly it broke
+asunder the links of the delicious revery of which
+I have attempted to give you a glimpse. Another
+more painful question than any of the former now
+became absolutely necessary; consequently I resumed:
+'I think that I know Miss St. Clair sufficiently
+well to presume with a good deal of certainty
+that her hand is not pledged where her heart
+cannot accompany it?'</p>
+
+<p>"'My hand, sir, is like my affections.'</p>
+
+<p>"Her head now hung down a little, and her eye
+sought the carpet; my own expressive glances,
+sanguine as they perhaps had occasionally been,
+were themselves much softened and humbled; but
+again I summoned my scattered thoughts to the
+charge.</p>
+
+<p>"'Will Miss St. Clair grant me an interview on
+the morrow, or some other day more convenient
+to herself?'</p>
+
+<p>"The words had hardly escaped my mouth,
+when Isabel stood before us. Lamar was soon by
+her side. I also arose.</p>
+
+<p>"'My dear Frances,' said she, taking my seat,
+and locking her hand where I would have given
+kingdoms to have had mine; 'we are talking of
+making up a little equestrian party to the Passaic
+Falls. Will you be of the company? Pray join
+us, like a dear girl; it is only fifteen miles.'</p>
+
+<p>"The lady addressed shook her head gravely.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>
+Isabel arose, and turning to me, 'I leave the case
+in your hands, sir, and you are a poor diplomatist
+for a southern, if you do not succeed in persuading
+her to go.'</p>
+
+<p>"I was much alarmed to hear many ladies calling
+for shawls and bonnets. I was not long, therefore,
+in urging the case, for it was emphatically <i>my</i>
+case.</p>
+
+<p>"'I cannot go,' said she; 'in the first place, I
+have not been on horseback since my boarding-school
+days; and in the next place, I could not
+undergo the fatigue.'</p>
+
+<p>"'But if all these objections could be obviated?'
+I eagerly inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"'Then I should certainly be pleased to go, and
+still more pleased to gratify others by going.'</p>
+
+<p>"To make the story a short one, as my letter
+has already become too long, she finally consented
+that I should drive her in a cabriolet, provided her
+father, who was not present, thought it proper for
+her to go.</p>
+
+<p>"I reported progress to Isabel, who looked sly
+and arch; her brother was as solemn as a tombstone.
+I do not say this in triumph, Randolph, for
+God knows I have little cause as yet. I merely
+state the fact in all plainness and honesty, that you
+may have the whole case before you.</p>
+
+<p>"'This augurs well for you, Mr. Chevillere,'
+whispered the lively girl.</p>
+
+<p>"'I am not so certain of that,' said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Finally, we agreed to go, 'weather permitting,'
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span>
+as they say at country sales, on the day after to-morrow.</p>
+
+<p>"I did not urge this interview any farther, for a
+reason which you will easily perceive. What has
+become of you? I write two pages to your one
+now. Is the North more prolific than the South
+in incidents?</p>
+
+<p class="center">"Your Friend and Chum,<br /></p>
+
+<p><span class="ralign">"<span class="smcap">V. Chevillere.</span>"</span><br />
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span></p></blockquote>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_XIX" id="CHAPTER_XIX"></a>CHAPTER XIX.</h2>
+
+
+<blockquote><p class="center"><span class="smcap">V. Chevillere to B. Randolph.</span><br /></p>
+
+<p><span class="ralign">"New-York, 18&mdash;.</span><br />
+
+"<span class="smcap">Dear Friend</span>,<br />
+</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly I must be one of the most unfortunate
+fellows that ever lived. And none the less
+so because the bitter strokes come upon me in the
+midst of apparent prosperity; but before I tell
+you of one disappointment, I must tell you of the
+things which preceded it, in the order of their
+occurrence.</p>
+
+<p>"On the evening after the assemblage of our
+little party at Hazlehurst's, Lamar, Damon, and
+myself went to the Italian Opera; and to please
+Lamar no less than Damon, we took seats in the
+pit.</p>
+
+<p>"The assemblage was brilliant beyond any thing
+I have seen, in the two lower tiers of boxes. All
+the fashion, and wealth, and beauty of this fair
+city seemed to be assembled around us, with their
+gay plumage and foreign head-attire, and opera-glasses.
+As a shading to this gay picture, there
+were the gentlemen, with enormous whiskers and
+mustaches curling sentimentally and greasily<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>
+over the upper lip; their teeth glistening through
+the bristles, ghastly as Peale's mummy itself.</p>
+
+<p>"The passion for hairy visages is a singular
+characteristic of this phrenological age. Large and
+frizzled locks puffed out on each side of the head
+to hide the absence of development are easily
+enough accounted for; but this supererogatory disfiguration
+of ugly faces is altogether unaccountable
+on the same principles.</p>
+
+<p>"'I'll be dad shamed if it ain't all cowardice,
+and I hate to see it practised,' said Damon.</p>
+
+<p>"There is, perhaps, more truth in this remark
+than you would at first suppose. No man is so
+desirous to appear fierce, courageous, and even
+piratical as he that is a dastard in his heart. Indeed
+most men are fond of making a parade of
+those qualifications with which they are least endowed
+by nature.</p>
+
+<p>"There is one bewhiskered class, however, from
+whom we ought to expect better things; I mean
+young and thoughtless men, who are led away by
+fashion; many of whom have rubbed through the
+walls, if not through the studies, of college; and
+whose taste ought to have been more refined by
+associating with gentlemen, however great their
+stolidity or idleness.</p>
+
+<p>"Finally, as to whiskers, I have seen most of
+the American naval and military heroes; and I
+cannot now recall a single one of them who ever
+wore remarkable whiskers, or bristles on the upper<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>
+lip. Nor have I ever seen a polished southern
+gentleman remarkable for either. There is one
+fact which, if generally known, would root out the
+evil at its source; and that is, that men who flourish
+large whiskers are very apt to become <i>bald</i>!</p>
+
+<p>"'O! corn-stalks and jews-harps!' said Damon,
+after worrying on his seat during the performance
+of the overture by the orchestra; 'will they tune
+their banjoes all night, and never get to playin?'</p>
+
+<p>"'That is called fine Italian music,' said Lamar.</p>
+
+<p>"'Yes! yes!' replied he, 'there's 'four-and-twenty
+fiddlers' sure enough! but I rather suspicion
+that it would puzzle some of our Kentuck gals
+to dance a reel to that music. O my grandmother!
+what jaunty heels they would have to sling after
+such elbow-greese as that. But you are stuffing
+me with soft corn&mdash;I see you are by your laughing.
+They know better than to pass that for
+music; no, no, catch a weasel asleep!'</p>
+
+<p>"The opera now commenced, and I must own
+that I saw more of Damon than I did of the play.
+He was struck dumb with astonishment; seemed
+scarcely to believe his own senses, but looking
+round the house after an unusual silence, and seeing
+the audience serious and apparently attentive, he
+burst into a cachinnation.</p>
+
+<p>"'Well,' said he, with a long breath, 'I wish I
+may be tetotally smashed in a cider-mill, if that
+don't out-Cherokee old Kentuck; why that ain't
+a chaw-tobacco better nor Cherokee! Just wait a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>
+minute, and they'll raise the whoop, it's likely;
+and if they do, if I don't give them a touch of Kentuck
+pipes that'll make them think somebody's
+busted their biler. Look! some of the men have
+got rings in their ears too; and leather skinned.
+Now I'm snagged if I was to meet that feller in a
+Mississip cane-brake, and my rifle on my arm, if I
+wouldn't be apt to let the wind through his whistle
+cross-ways.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Not if he was to speak to you, and tell you he
+was a Christian like yourself?'</p>
+
+<p>"'Speak to me! he would do a devilish sight
+better to play dummy: for sure as he spoke, I should
+let fly at him, because I wouldn't know but he belonged
+to some of those far away tribes of Black-feet,
+or the likes of that.'</p>
+
+<p>"'But you do not really think that they look
+and speak any thing like the western savages,
+Damon?' said I.</p>
+
+<p>"'I'm smashed if I don't bet that I can put
+blankets and leggins on the whole tribe, and pass
+them through the Cherokee nation for friendly
+Black-feet.'</p>
+
+<p>"The incomparable Prima Donna (as she is
+called here) now made her first appearance; her
+voice is exquisite, Randolph, and her execution
+beyond the conception of an unsophisticated student.</p>
+
+<p>"The music is pleasing to the ear, and may
+touch an Italian heart, but it found no response
+from mine. I tell this to you in all sincerity and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>
+confidence, but it would lower a man, I fear, to
+say so in the fashionable circles.</p>
+
+<p>"'Well, Damon, would the Italian ladies pass for
+squaws?'</p>
+
+<p>"'No, no; they are better than the men, and
+they are right pretty too, if they didn't talk such
+outlandish gibberish; but that dark skinn'd man
+there, I swear Pete Ironsides would kick him if he
+was to go in my stable; for he hates an Injin, as
+I do an allegator; poor Pete! I reckon he thinks
+I'm skulped.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Pete is well cared for, I will guaranty,' said
+Lamar, very pathetically.</p>
+
+<p>"'Look! look!' exclaimed Damon; 'what's
+that under the green umbrella there, at the front of
+the stage among the lights?'</p>
+
+<p>"'That is the prompter, to put them right when
+they go wrong.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Yes, yes! I see, I see!' continued he; 'he
+gives them a wink every now and then.'</p>
+
+<p>"In the operas it is very frequently the case that
+one of the subordinate characters comes to the
+front of the stage after the principals have made
+their exit, and explains what rare sport is coming.</p>
+
+<p>"'What does that fellow slip out here every
+now and then like a dropped stitch for?'</p>
+
+<p>"We explained to him the meaning of it, as well
+as we understood it ourselves.</p>
+
+<p>"'Ay, ay! I see it now; he is the Nota Bene!'</p>
+
+<p>"We found great difficulty in getting Damon to
+understand, with his shrewd natural view of things,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>
+that an opera was nothing more than a common
+play; the parts being sung, instead of spoken.</p>
+
+<p>"'Now I wish my head may be knocked into a
+cocked-hat, if a man had told this to me of the
+Yorkers in old Kentuck, if I wouldn't have thought
+he was spinnin long yarns; there is no sense in it,
+nor there's no fun in it, as they all take it up there
+in the pews; if so moutbe now that they were all
+of my way of thinking, and would only join in a
+<i>leetle</i> touch of the warwhoop, why we might show
+them fellers a little of the real Cherokee, that I
+rather suspicion they haven't seen.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Why, what would you do, Damon?'</p>
+
+<p>"'<i>Jist</i> set them four-and-twenty fiddlers to
+playin of something like Christian reels; hand the
+gals down on the floor; then I reckon there would
+be a little sort of a regular hand-round! Confound
+their jimmy simequivers, and their supple elbows!
+Smash me, if they don't think the whole cream of
+the ball lies in rattlin the bones of their elbows.
+Give me your long sweeping bow hands, that
+saws the music right in under your ribs, and sets
+your legs to dancin, whether they will or not. Do
+you think them fellers ever made anybody feel in
+the humour for a hand-round?'</p>
+
+<p>"'I can't say that I think they ever did.'</p>
+
+<p>"'No, nor they never will! they may set people's
+teeth on a wire edge, or make their flesh crawl, or
+set them into an ague fit with their shakin, and
+grindin, and squawkin. And now I think of it,
+the whole business sounds more like grinding ram<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span>rods
+in an armory, than any thing I ever come
+across; there's the squeakin of the wheels, that
+would go for them goose guzzles them fellers are
+pipin on. The ramrods on the grindstones will go
+for the fiddles,&mdash;only I don't see any fire flyin out
+of the catgut, but I've been watchin sharp for it
+some time. Then there's the old leather bellows
+groanin and gruntin away, jist like those two fellers
+seesawin there, on them two big-bellied fiddles,
+and the leather bands flappin every time they
+come round, keeps the time for the whole concern.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Well, have you seen any fire yet?' after a
+long pause.</p>
+
+<p>"'Yes, plenty of it! they make it fly out of my
+eyes, if they don't out of the catguts; confound
+them, I say, they keep me all the time drawin
+down first one eye and then another, first one corner
+of my mouth and then another, jist as if a
+horse was on a dead strain, and you were bowing
+your neck and stickin your leg straight in the
+ground, and then strainin with all your might as if
+you could help him; but this is worse! a confounded
+sight worse! for every now and then all
+the fiddlers and trumpeters comes rattlin down
+their tinklin quivers, like a four-horse load of
+china, goin to the devil down a steep hill at the
+rate of ten knots an hour; and then it all dies
+away agin, as if horses, wagon, and chinaware
+had all gone over a bank as high as a church
+steeple. Then! I begin to draw a long breath<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>
+agin, and feel a little comfortable. But here's a
+dyin away sound! hop and come agin, rising and
+whooping, until the whole team's going full tilt,
+pull dick, pull devil, here they go again! old Nick
+take the hindmost. See their elbows now, how they
+move out and in, out and in, like spinning jinnies.
+And see that feller that sets at the top of the
+mob, on the high chair in the middle, how his head
+goes. See how he looks at that book before him,
+as if that stuff could be put down there in black
+and white.'</p>
+
+<p>"'It <i>is</i> all down there, Damon.'</p>
+
+<p>"'Come, come, now, strangers, you have stuffed
+me enough! I can't swallow that exactly neither!
+All the lawyers in Philadelphia couldn't write down
+half the wriggle-ma-rees one of them chaps has
+made since I set here! Smash my apple-cart, if
+I wouldn't like jist to see a goosequill goin at the
+rate of one of them elbows. Ink would fly like
+mud at a scrub-race, and when it was done it
+would look like my copy-book used to do at school;
+more stops than words.'</p>
+
+<p>"'But you keep your eye on the orchestra all
+the while; why not look on the stage?'</p>
+
+<p>"'I do, I do; and that puzzles me the blamedest,&mdash;how
+they all come out square at the stops,
+fiddlers and all. Every now and then they seem
+to git into a fair race, and one feller's eye is poppin
+out of his head, and the veins on the woman's neck
+is ready to burst, and the fiddlers and the pipers
+and the trumpeters are all puffin and blowin, like<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>
+our Kentuck jockeys at a pony sweepstakes; and
+then all at once, jist as there begins to be a little
+sport, to see who has the wind and the bottom, their
+heads begin to move first one side and then the
+other all so kind, and ready to make a draw game
+of it, blabbering all the time; till the trumpeter
+sees they're pretty well blown, then he begins to
+come down a little with his toot! toot! toot!
+That's to call all hands off, you see, and they slip
+down as easy and as quiet as if it had all been in
+fun. Then they all clear out but one, and he
+watches his chance till they're all gone. Then he
+comes here to the front, and flaps his wings and
+crows over them, as if he had done some great
+things, if we hadn't been here to show fair play.'</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure, Randolph, that I give you but a
+poor idea of the reality, but you must supply the
+deficiencies by your imagination. Damon talked
+incessantly, and I enjoyed it far more than I could
+have done the opera, even if I had been a perfect
+Italian scholar. I find that I must defer the
+account of our disappointment till another time,
+when I will tell you some matters of interest.</p>
+
+<p class="center">"Truly yours,<br /></p>
+
+<p><span class="ralign">"<span class="smcap">V. Chevillere.</span>"</span><br />
+</p></blockquote>
+
+
+<p class="title">END OF VOL. I.</p>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+
+<p class="center"><b>TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE</b></p>
+
+<blockquote><p>Alternate, archaic, and inconsistently spelled words have been retained.</p>
+
+<p>Punctuation has been made consistent including the use of quotation
+marks.</p>
+
+<p>page 36: "faintin" changed to "faintin'" (a faintin' spell)</p>
+
+<p>page 57: "ear" changed to "dear" (Believe me, dear lady,)</p>
+
+<p>page 114: "doggrel" changed to "doggerel" so as to be consistent with
+other places this word is used (and singing doggerel to the music)</p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<p>&nbsp;</p>
+<hr class="full" />
+<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE KENTUCKIAN IN NEW-YORK, VOLUME I (OF 2)***</p>
+<p>******* This file should be named 36613-h.txt or 36613-h.zip *******</p>
+<p>This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:<br />
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+The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Kentuckian in New-York, Volume I (of 2),
+by William Alexander Caruthers
+
+
+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: The Kentuckian in New-York, Volume I (of 2)
+ or, The Adventures of Three Southerns
+
+
+Author: William Alexander Caruthers
+
+
+
+Release Date: July 4, 2011 [eBook #36613]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
+
+
+***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE KENTUCKIAN IN NEW-YORK, VOLUME
+I (OF 2)***
+
+
+E-text prepared by Roberta Staehlin, Pat McCoy, and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made
+available by Internet Archive/American Libraries
+(http://www.archive.org/details/americana)
+
+
+
+Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
+ file which includes the original illustration.
+ See 36613-h.htm or 36613-h.zip:
+ (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/36613/36613-h/36613-h.htm)
+ or
+ (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/36613/36613-h.zip)
+
+
+ Images of the original pages are available through
+ Internet Archive/American Libraries. See
+ http://www.archive.org/details/kentuckianinnewy01carurich
+
+
+
+
+
+THE KENTUCKIAN IN NEW-YORK.
+
+Or, The Adventures of Three Southerns.
+
+BY A VIRGINIAN.
+
+
+"Perhaps it may turn out a sang,
+Perhaps turn out a sermon."--_Burns._
+
+
+In Two Volumes.
+
+VOL. I.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+New-York:
+Published by Harper & Brothers,
+No. 82 Cliff-Street.
+1834.
+
+Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1834,
+By Harper & Brothers,
+In the Clerk's Office of the Southern District of New-York.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+NEARLY READY.
+
+
+ HELEN. A new Tale. By MARIA EDGEWORTH--forming the _tenth_ volume
+ of Harper's Uniform Edition of her Works. Containing two
+ beautiful Engravings on steel.
+
+ TALES AND SKETCHES,--such as they are. By W. L. STONE, Esq. In 2
+ vols. 12mo.
+
+ THE FROLICS OF PUCK. In 2 vols. 12mo.
+
+ THE KENTUCKIAN IN NEW-YORK. By A VIRGINIAN. In 2 vols. 12mo.
+
+ GUY RIVERS. A Novel. By the Author of "Martin Faber." In 2 vols.
+ 12mo.
+
+ MRS. SHERWOOD'S WORKS. Uniform Edition. With Engravings on steel.
+ 12mo.
+
+ PAULDING'S WORKS. Uniform Edition. Revised and corrected by the
+ Author. 12mo.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+THE
+
+KENTUCKIAN IN NEW-YORK.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+
+Towards the latter part of the summer of 18--, on one of those cool,
+delightful, and invigorating mornings which are frequent in the southern
+regions of the United States, there issued from the principal hotel on
+the valley-side of Harper's Ferry two travellers, attended by a
+venerable and stately southern slave. The experienced eye of the old
+ferryman, as he stood in his flat-bottomed boat awaiting the arrival of
+this party, discovered at once that our travellers were from the far
+South.
+
+The first of these, Victor Chevillere, entered the "flat," leading by
+the bridle a mettlesome southern horse; when he had stationed this fine
+animal to his satisfaction, he stood directly fronting the prescriptive
+Charon of the region. This young gentleman, who appeared to be the
+principal character of the party just entering the boat, was handsomely
+formed, moderately tall, and fashionably dressed. His face was bold,
+dignified, and resolute, and not remarkable for any very peculiar
+fashion of the hair or beard which shaded it. He appeared to be about
+twenty-three years of age, and though so young, much and early
+experience of the world had already o'ershadowed his face with a
+becoming serenity, if not sadness. Not that silly, affected melancholy,
+however, which is so often worn in these days by young and romantic idle
+gentlemen, to catch the errant sympathies of some untravelled country
+beauty.
+
+The next personage of the party (who likewise entered the boat leading a
+fine southern animal), was a fashionable young gentleman, about the
+middle size; his face was pale and wan, as if he had but just recovered
+from an attack of illness. Nevertheless there was a brilliant fire in
+his eye, and a lurking, but too evident, disposition to fun and humour,
+which illness had not been entirely able to subdue. Augustus Lamar, for
+such was his name, was the confidential and long-tried friend of the
+first-named gentleman: their mutual regard had existed undiminished from
+the time of their early school days in South Carolina, through their
+whole college career in Virginia up to the moment of which we speak.
+
+The third and more humble personage of the party bore the time-honoured
+appellation of Cato. He was a tall old negro, with a face so black as to
+form a perfect contrast to his white hair and brilliant teeth. He was
+well dressed and cleanly in his person, and rather solemn and pompous
+in his manners. Cato had served the father of his present highly
+honoured young master, and was deeply imbued with that strong feudal
+attachment to the family, which is a distinguishing characteristic of
+the southern negroes who serve immediately near the persons of the great
+landholders.
+
+Our travellers were now smoothly gliding over that most magnificent
+"meeting of the waters" of the Shenandoah and Potomack, which is usually
+known by the unpretending name of "Harper's Ferry." It was early
+morning; the moon was still visible above the horizon, and the sun had
+not yet risen above those stupendous fragments whose chaotic and
+irregular position gives token of the violence with which the mass of
+waters rent for themselves a passage through the mountains, when rushing
+on to meet that other congregation of rivers, with whose waters they
+unite to form the Bay of the Chesapeake. The black bituminous smoke from
+the hundred smithies of the United States' armory, had just begun to
+rise above the towering crags that seemed, at this early period, to
+battle with the vapours which are here sent up in thick volumes from the
+contest of rocks and rivers beneath.
+
+Old Cato had by this time assumed his post at the heads of the three
+horses, while our southerns stood with folded arms, each impressed with
+the scene according to his individual impulses. As they approached
+nearer to the northern shore, Chevillere, addressing Lamar, observed:
+"An unhappy young lady she must be who arrived at our hotel last
+evening. I could hear her weeping bitterly as she paced the floor, until
+a late hour of the night, when finally she seemed to throw herself upon
+the bed, and fall asleep from mere exhaustion;" and then, turning to the
+weather-beaten steersman, continued: "I suppose we are the first
+passengers in the 'flat' this morning?"
+
+"No, sir, you are not; a carriage from the same tavern went over half an
+hour ago. There was an old gray-headed man, and two young women in it,
+besides the driver, and the driver told me that they were all the way
+from York State,--the mail stage, too, went over."
+
+"The same party," said Chevillere, abstractedly; "Did you learn where
+they were to breakfast, boatman?"
+
+"About ten miles from this, I think I heard say."
+
+They were soon landed and mounted, and cantering away through the fog
+and vapours of the early morning. Nor were they long in overtaking a
+handsome travelling-carriage, which was moving at a brisk rate, in
+accordance with the exertions of two fine, evidently northern, horses.
+The carriage contained an elderly, grave, formal, and magisterial
+gentleman; his locks quite gray, and hanging loose upon the collar of
+his coat; his countenance harsh, austere, and forbidding in the extreme.
+By his side sat a youthful lady, so enveloped in a large black mantle,
+and travelling hat and veil, that but little of her form or features
+could be seen, except a pair of brilliant blue eyes.
+
+It is not to be denied, that these sudden apparitions of young and
+beautiful females, almost completely shrouded in mantles, drapery, or
+veils, are the very circumstances fully to arouse the slumbering
+energies of a lately emancipated college Quixotte. A lovely pair of
+eyes, brimful of tears,--a "Cinderella" foot and ankle,--a white and
+beautifully turned hand and tapered fingers, with perhaps a mourning
+ring or two,--or a bonnet suddenly blown off, so as to dishevel a
+magnificent head of hair, its pretty mistress meanwhile all confusion,
+and her snowy neck and temples suffused with blushes,--these are the
+little incidents on which the real romances of human life are founded.
+How many persons can look back to such a commencement of their youthful
+loves! nay, perhaps, refer to it all the little enjoyment with which
+they have been blessed through life! We venture to say, that those who
+were so unfortunate as never to bring their first youthful romance to a
+fortunate denouement, can likewise look back upon such occurrences with
+many pleasing emotions. A bachelor or a widower, indeed, may not always
+recur with pleasure to these first passages in the book of life,--but
+the feelings even of these are not altogether of the melancholy kind.
+The fairy queens of their spring-tide will sometimes arise in the
+present tense, until they almost imagine themselves in the possession
+again of youth and all its raptures,--its brilliant dreams, airy
+castles, "hair-breadth 'scapes," and miraculous deliverances,--cruel
+fathers, and perverse guardians, and stolen interviews, and lovers' vows
+and tokens,--winding up finally with a runaway match--all of the
+imagination.
+
+After the equipage before alluded to had been for some time left behind,
+our travellers began to descry, at the distance of several miles, the
+long white portico of the country inn at which they proposed to
+breakfast. The United States mail-coach for Baltimore was standing at
+the door, evidently waiting till the passengers should have performed
+the same needful operation. Servants were running hither and thither,
+some to the roost, others to the stable, as if a large number of the
+most distinguished dignitaries of the land had just arrived.
+
+But, behold, when our travellers drew up, they found that all this stir
+among the servants of the inn was called into being by the real or
+affected wants of a number of very young gentlemen. We say affected,
+because we are sorry to acknowledge that it is not uncommon to see very
+young and inexperienced gentlemen, on such occasions, assume airs and
+graces which are merely put on as a travelling dress, and which would be
+thrown aside at the first appearance of an old acquaintance. At such
+times it is by no means rare to see all the servants of the inn,
+together with the host and hostess, entirely engrossed by one of these
+overgrown boys or ill-bred men, while their elders and superiors are
+compelled either to want or wait upon themselves. At the time we notice,
+some young bloods of the cities were exercising themselves in their new
+suit of stage-coach manners.
+
+"Here waiter! waiter!" with an affectedly delicate and foreign voice,
+cried one of these youths, enveloped in a brown "Petersham box" coat,
+and with his hands stuck into his pockets over his hips. Under the arm
+of this person was a black riding-switch, with a golden head, and a
+small chain of the same precious metal, fastened about six inches
+therefrom, after the fashion of some old rapier guards. He wore a
+rakish-looking fur cap, round and tight on the top of his head as a
+bladder of snuff; this was cocked on one side after a most piratical
+fashion, so as to show off, in the best possible manner, a great
+profusion of coarse, shining black hair, which was evidently indebted to
+art rather than nature for the curls that frizzled out over his ears,
+while the back part of his head was left as bare and defenceless as if
+he had already been under the hands of a deputy turnkey. He practised
+what may be called American puppyism, as technically distinguished from
+the London species of the same genus. "Here waiter! waiter!" said he,
+"bring me a gin sling,--and half-a-dozen Bagdad segars,--and a lighted
+taper,--and a fresh egg,--and a bowl of water, and a clean towel,--and
+polish my boots,--and dust my coat,--and then send me the barber, do you
+hear?"
+
+"O, sir! we has no barber, nor Bagdab segars neither; but we has plenty
+of the real Baltimores,--real good ones, too,--as I knows very well, for
+I smokes the old sodgers what the gentlemen throws on the bar-room
+floor."
+
+"It is one of the most amusing scenes imaginable," said Victor
+Chevillere to Augustus Lamar, as they sat witnessing this scene, "when
+the waiter and the master pro tempore are both fools. The fawning,
+bowing, cringing waiter, with his big lips upon the _qui vive_, his head
+and shoulders constantly in motion, and rubbing his hands one over the
+other after the most approved fashion of the men of business. In such a
+case as that which we have just witnessed, where puppyism comes in
+contact with the kindred monkey-tricks of the waiter, I can enjoy it.
+But when it happens, as I have more than once seen, that the waiter is a
+manly, sensible, and dignified old negro of the loftier sort, such as
+old Cato,--then you can soon detect the curl of contempt upon his
+lip,--and he is not long thereafter in selecting the real gentlemen of
+the party,--always choosing to wait most upon those who least demand
+it."
+
+"I would bet my horse Talleyrand against an old field scrub, that that
+fellow is a Yankee," answered Lamar.
+
+"He may be a Yankee," continued Victor Chevillere, "but you have
+travelled too much and reflected too long upon the nature of man, to
+ascribe every thing disgusting to a Yankee origin. For my part, I make
+the character of every man I meet in some measure my study during my
+travels, and as we have agreed to exchange opinions upon men and things,
+I will tell you freely what I think of that fellow who has just
+retreated from our laughter. I have found it not at all uncommon, to see
+the most undisguised hatred arise between two such persons as he of the
+stage-coach,--the one from the north, and the other from the
+south,--when in truth, the actuating impulse was precisely the same in
+both, but had taken a different direction, and was differently developed
+by different exciting causes.
+
+"The puppyism of Charleston and that of Boston are only different shades
+of the same character, yet these kindred spirits can in nowise tolerate
+each other. As is universally the case, those are most intolerant to
+others who have most need of forgiveness themselves. The mutual jealousy
+of the north and south is a decided evidence of littleness in both
+regions, and ample cause for shame to the educated gentlemen of all
+parties of this happy country. If pecuniary interest had not been mixed
+up with this provincial rivalry, the feeling could easily have been so
+held up to the broad light of intelligence, as to be a fertile source of
+amusement, and furnish many a subject for comedy and farce in
+after-times."
+
+This specimen was by no means the only one among the arrivals by the
+stage-coach. Every waiter in the house was pressed into the service of
+these coxcombs,--some smoked,--some swaggered through the private
+rooms,--others adjusted their frizzled locks at the mirrors with brushes
+carried for the purpose,--and all together created a vast commotion in
+the quiet country inn.
+
+As our two young southerns sat in the long piazza, eying these
+stage-coach travellers and waiting for breakfast, the same equipage
+which they had passed on the road, and containing our northern party,
+drew up to the door.
+
+Not many minutes had elapsed before a black servant stood in the entry
+between the double suite of apartments, and briskly swung a small bell
+to and fro, which seemed to announce breakfast, from the precipitate
+haste with which the gentlemen of the stage-coach found their way into
+the long breakfasting-hall of the establishment. Our southerns followed
+their example, but more quietly, and by the invitation of the host. At
+the upper end of the table stood the hostess, who, like most of her kind
+in America, was the wife of a wealthy landholder and farmer, as well as
+tavern-keeper. She was a genteel and modest-looking woman, and did the
+honours of the table like a lady at her own hospitable board, and among
+selected guests. It is owing to a mistake in the character of the host
+and hostess, that so many foreigners give and take offence at these
+establishments. They often contumaciously demand as a right, what would
+have been offered to them in all courtesy after the established usages
+of the country.
+
+On the right of the hostess sat the youthful lady who had spent such an
+unhappy night at the ferry,--in the hearing of Victor Chevillere,--and
+whom they had passed on the road. She was still so enveloped in her
+travelling dress and veil as to be but partially seen. On the same side,
+unfortunately, as he no doubt thought, sat Chevillere with Lamar. The
+grave-looking old gentleman, the companion of the youthful lady
+mentioned, sat immediately opposite to her. The gentlemen of extreme ton
+(as they wished to be thought), were ranged along the table, already
+mangling the dishes, cracking and replacing the eggs, and apparently
+much dissatisfied with the number of seconds they had remained in heated
+water. Nor were they long in striking up a conversation, as loud and
+full of slang as their previous displays had been. During this unseemly
+and boisterous conduct, some more tender chord seemed to be touched
+within the bosom of the lovely young female, than would have been
+supposed from the character of the assailants. Victor Chevillere turned
+his head in that direction, and saw that her face had become more deadly
+pale; at the same moment he heard her say, in an under-tone, to the old
+gentleman her companion, "My dear sir, assist me from this room,--my
+head grows dizzy, and I feel a deathlike sickness."
+
+Chevillere was upon his feet in an instant, and assisted the lady to
+rise; by this time, the old gentleman having taken her other arm, they
+carried rather than led her into one of the adjoining apartments,
+where, after depositing their beautiful burden upon a sofa, Chevillere
+left her to the care of the hostess, who had followed, and returned to
+the breakfast-table.
+
+Let us describe a country breakfast for the uninitiated. At the head of
+the table was a large salver, or japanned waiter, upon which was spread
+out various utensils of China-ware,--the only articles of plate being a
+sugar-dish and cream-pot. On the right of this salver stood a coffee and
+tea-urn, of some composition metal, resembling silver in appearance. At
+the other end of the table, under the skilful hands of the host, was a
+large steak, cut and sawed entirely through the sirloin of the beef.
+Half-way up the table, on either side, were dishes of broiled game, the
+intermediate spaces being filled up with various kinds of hot bread,
+biscuit and pancakes (as they are called in some parts of the north).
+This custom of eating hot bread at the morning and evening meal, is
+almost universal at the south. Immediately in the centre stood a pyramid
+of fresh-churned butter, with a silver butter-knife sticking into the
+various ornaments of vine-leaves and grapes with which it was stamped.
+
+To this fare Chevillere found his friend Lamar doing the most ample
+justice, nor was his own keen appetite entirely destroyed by the
+temporary indisposition of the lady who had so much excited his
+curiosity and his sympathy. He could have congratulated himself on the
+little occurrence which had given him some claims to a farther
+acquaintance, and doubtless could have indulged in delightful reveries
+as to the fair and youthful stranger,--had not all his gay dreams been
+put to flight by the boisterous laughter and meager attempts at wit of
+the other travellers. As he returned towards the table, the one whom we
+have more particularly described elevated a glass, with a golden handle,
+to his large, full, and impudent eye. Chevillere returned the gaze until
+his look almost amounted to a deliberate stare. The "bloods" looked
+fierce, and exchanged pugnacious looks, but all chance of a collision
+was prevented by the return of the hostess. Notwithstanding the
+disagreeable qualities of most of the guests at the table, Chevillere
+found time to turn the little incident of the sudden indisposition and
+its probable cause several times in his own mind; and, as may be well
+imagined, his mental soliloquy resulted in no injurious imputation upon
+the youthful lady,--there was evidently no trait of affectation.
+
+At length the meal was brought to a close,--not however, before the
+driver of the mail-coach had wound sundry impatient blasts upon his
+bugle,--general joy seemed to pervade every remaining countenance after
+the departure of the coxcombs. Both the northern and southern
+travellers, who were journeying northward, and who had breakfasted at
+the inn, were soon likewise plodding along at the usual rate of weary
+travellers by a private conveyance.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+
+The misery of the young and the beautiful is at all times infectious.
+Few young persons can withhold sympathy in such a case,--especially if
+the person thus afflicted be unmarried--of the other sex--and near one's
+own age.
+
+Victor Chevillere could not expel from his imagination the image of the
+fair stranger. Again and again did he essay to join Lamar in his light
+and sprightly conversation, as they, on the day after the one recorded
+in the last chapter, pursued their journey along the noble turnpike
+between Fredericktown and Baltimore. The same profound revery would
+steal upon him, and abide until broken by the merry peals of Lamar's
+peculiarly loud and joyous laughter, at the new mood which seemed to
+have visited the former. When a young person first begins to experience
+these abstracted moods, there is nothing, perhaps, that sounds more
+harsh and startling to his senses, than the mirthful voice of his best
+friend. He looks up as one would naturally look at any unseemly or
+boisterous conduct at a funeral. He seems to gaze and wonder, for the
+first time, that all things and all men are jogging on at their usual
+gait. Thus were things moving upon the Fredericktown turnpike: Lamar
+riding forty or fifty paces in front, singing away the blue devils;
+Chevillere in the centre, moody and silent; and old Cato, stately as a
+statue on horseback, bringing up the rear.
+
+From hearing sundry merry peals of laughter from Lamar's quarter,
+Chevillere was induced at length to forego his own society for a moment,
+to see what new subject his Quixotic friend had found for such unusual
+merriment; and a subject he had indeed found in the shape of a tall
+Kentuckian. The name of the stranger, it seems, was Montgomery Damon. He
+was six feet high, with broad shoulders, full, projecting chest, light
+hair and complexion, and a countenance that was upon the first blush an
+index to a mind full of quaint, rude, and wild humour. His dress was any
+thing but fashionable; he wore a large, two-story hat, with a bandana
+handkerchief hanging out in front, partly over his forehead, as if to
+protect it from the great weight of his castor. His coat and pantaloons
+were of home-made cotton and woollen jeans, and he carried in his hand a
+warlike riding-whip, loaded with lead, and mounted with silver, with
+which, now and then, he gave emphasis to his words, by an unexpected and
+sonorous crack.
+
+Our Kentuckian was no quiet man; but, like most of his race, bold,
+talkative, and exceedingly democratic in all his notions; feeling as
+much pride in his occupation of drover, as if he had been a senator in
+Congress from his own "Kentuck," as he emphatically called it. He was a
+politician, too, inasmuch as he despised _tories_, as he called the
+federalists, approved of the late war, and had a most venomous hatred
+against Indians, of whatever tribe or nation. We shall break into their
+dialogue at the point at which Victor became a listener.
+
+"How did it happen," said Lamar, "that you did not join the army either
+of the north or south, when your heart seems to have been so entirely
+with them?"
+
+"O! as to _jine_en the army to the north," said Damon, "I was afraid the
+blasted tories would sell me to the British, me and my messmates, like
+old Hull, the infernal old traitor, sold his men for so much a head,
+_jist_ as I sell my hogs. As to t'other business, down yonder, under Old
+Hickory, I reckon I _did_ take a hand or so aginst the bloody Injins."
+
+"You prefer a fight with Indians, then, to one with white men."
+
+"To be sure I do; I think no more of taking my jack-knife, and
+unbuttonin the collar of a Creek Injin, than I would of takin the jacket
+off a good fat bell-wether, or mout-be a yerlin calf. Old Hickory's the
+boy to _sculp_ the bloody creters; he's the boy to walk into their
+bread-baskets; and Dick Johnston ain't far behind him, I can tell you,
+stranger; he's the chap what plumped a bullet right into old Tecumseh's
+bagpipes. Let him alone for stoppin their war-whoops."
+
+"You were a rifleman, I suppose," said Lamar.
+
+"Right agin, stranger. Give me a rifle for ever; they never spiles meat,
+though, as one may say, Injin's meat ain't as good as blue-lick buck's;
+but for all that, it's a pity to make bunglin work of a neat job;
+besides, your smooth bores waste a deal of powder and lead upon the
+outlandish creters."
+
+"Were you ever wounded?" asked Lamar.
+
+"Yes! don't you see this here hare-lip to my right eye? Well! that was
+jist the corner of an Injin's hatchet. Bob Wiley jist knocked up his arm
+in time to save me for another whet at the varmints; if so mout be that
+we ever has another brush with 'em, and Bob goes out agin, maybe I may
+do him a good turn yet; he's what I call a tear down sneezer (crack went
+the whip). He's got no more fear among the Injins than a wild cat in a
+weasel's nest; O! it would have done your heart good to see him jist lie
+down behind an old log, and watch for one of the varmint's heads bobbin
+up and down like a muskovy drake in a barn yard, and as sure as you saw
+the fire at the muzzle of his gun, so sure he knocked the creter's hind
+sights out. You see he always took 'em on the bob, jist as you would
+shoot a divin bird, and that's what I always called taking the bread out
+of the creter's mouth, for he was watchin for the same chance."
+
+"Did you scalp the slain?" said Lamar.
+
+"No!" replied Damon, "we had plenty of friendly Injins to do that, and
+it used to make me laugh to see the yallow raskals sculpin their kin;
+that's what I call dog eat dog."
+
+"Do you think an Indian has a soul?" said Lamar.
+
+"Ha! ha! ha!" roared the Kentuckian, giving a crack of unusual emphasis,
+"that's what I call a stumper; but as you're no missionary, I 'spose
+I'll tell you. I knows some dumb brutes--here's this Pete Ironsides that
+I'm ridin on, has more of a Christian soul in him than any leather-skin
+between Missouri and Red River. Why! stranger! what's an Injin good for,
+more nor a wild cat? You can't tame ne'er a one of 'em."
+
+"But those missionaries you spoke of, don't you think they will
+civilize, if not Christianize them?"
+
+"Ha! ha! ha!" shouted Damon, with another loud crack, and rolling a huge
+quid of tobacco to the opposite side of his mouth, "they might as well
+mount the trees and preach to the 'coons and tree-frogs; one of your
+real psalm-singers mout tree a coon at it, but hang me if he can ever
+put the pluck of a white man under a yellow jacket. Catch a weasel
+asleep or a fox at a foot race. I rather suspicion, stranger, that I've
+seen more Injins than your missionaries, and I'll tell you the way to
+tame 'em;--slit their windpipes and hamstring 'em."
+
+"Perhaps you are an enemy to religion, or prejudiced against the
+missionaries?"
+
+"No! no! stranger, no! I likes religion well enough of a Sunday; but
+hang me if I should not die of laughin to see 'em layin it down to the
+redskins. I'd as soon think of going into my horse stable and preachin
+to the dumb brutes. Old Pete here knows more now than many an Injin, and
+he's got more soul than some Yankees that mout be named; but come,
+stranger, here's a public house, let's go in and cut the phlegm."
+
+"Agreed," said Lamar, "but it must be at my expense."
+
+"Well," said Damon, "we'll not quarrel about that;" and turning to
+Victor, "Stranger, won't you join us in a glass of tight?"
+
+"No! I thank you," said Chevillere, "but I will look on while you and my
+friend drink to the better acquaintance of us all."
+
+After the parties had refreshed themselves and their horses, and
+remounted, the conversation was resumed. "Well now," said the
+Kentuckian, addressing Victor, "I wish I may be contwisted if you ain't
+one of the queerest men, to come from the Carolinas, I have clapped eyes
+on this many a day. You don't chaw tobacco, and you don't drink nothin;
+smash my apple-cart if I can see into it."
+
+"I am one of those that don't believe in the happy effects of either
+brandy or tobacco," replied Chevillere.
+
+"Then you are off the trail for once in your life, stranger, for I take
+tobacco to be one of God's mercies to the poor. Whether it came by a
+rigular dispensation of providence (as our parson used to say), or in a
+natural way, I can't tell; but hang me, if when I gets a quid of the
+real Kentuck twist or Maryland kite-foot into my mouth, if I ain't as
+proud a man as the grand Turk himself. It drives away the solemncholies,
+and makes a fellow feel so good-natured, and so comfortable; it turns
+the shillings in his pocket into dollars, and his wrath into fun and
+deviltry. Let them talk about tobacco as they choose among the fine
+gals, and at their theatres, and balls, and cotillions, and all them
+sort of things; but let one of 'em git twenty miles deep into a Kentuck
+forest, and then see if a chew of the stuff ain't good for company and
+comfort."
+
+"But you did not tell me," resumed Lamar, "whether you had ever shot at
+a white man?"
+
+"No! no! I never did; and I don't know that I ever will. I think I
+should feel a leetle particlar, at standin up and shooting at a real
+Christian man, with flesh and blood like you and me. You see, when we
+boys of the long guns shoot, we don't turn our heads away and pull
+trigger in a world of smoke, so that nobody can tell where the lead
+goes; we look right into the white of a fellow's eye, and can most
+always tell which side of his nose the ball went, and you see that would
+be but a slayin and skinnen business among white people; but as to
+shootin and sculpin Injins, that's a thing there is no bones made about,
+because out on the frontiers at the west, if a man should stand addlin
+his brains about the right and the wrong of the thing, the red devils
+would just knock them out to settle the matter, and sculp him for his
+pains into the bargain. Shooting real Christian men's quite another
+thing. It's what I ha'nt tried yet; but when we Kentuck boys gits at it,
+it won't all end like a log-rollin, with one or two broken shins and a
+black eye. But I'm told the Yankees always sings a psalm before they go
+to battle. Now, according to my notion, a chap would make a blue fist of
+takin a dead aim through double sights, with the butt end of a psalm in
+his guzzle."
+
+"Some person must have told you that as a joke," said Lamar.
+
+"No, no, I believe it, because we had just such a fellow once in our
+neighbourhood--a Yankee schoolmaster--and we took him out a deer-driving
+two or three times, and he was always singing a psalm at his stand. He
+spoilt the fun, confound him! Hang me if I didn't always think the
+fellow was afraid to stand in the woods by himself without it. I went to
+his singin school of Saturday nights, too; but I never had a turn that
+way. All the master could do, he could'nt keep me on the trail,--I was
+for ever slipping into Yankee Doodle; you see, every once in a while,
+the tune would take a quick turn, like one I knowed afore, so I used to
+blaze away at it with the best of 'em, but the same old Yankee Doodle
+always turned up at the end. But the worst of it was, the infernal
+Yankee spoiled all the music I ever had in me; when I come out of the
+school, I thought the gals at home would have killed themselves laughin'
+at me. They said I ground up Yankee Doodle and Old Hundred together,
+all in a hodge-podge, so I never sings to no one now but the dumb brutes
+in the stable, when they gits melancholy of a rainy day. Old Pete here
+raises his ears, and begins to snort the minute I raises a tune."
+
+"Your singing-master was, like his scholar, an original."
+
+"An original! When he come to them parts, he drove what we call a Yankee
+cart, half wagon and half carriage, full of all sorts of odds and ends;
+when he had sold them out, he sold his horse and cart too, and then
+turned in to keepin a little old-field school; and over and above this,
+he opened a Saturday night singin-school,--and I reckon we had rare
+times with the gals there. At last, when the feller had got considerable
+ahead, the word came out that he was studyin to be a doctor; and sure
+enough, in a few months, he sold out the school for so much a head, just
+like we sell our hogs; then off the Yankee starts to git made a doctor
+of; and hang me if ever I could see into that business. How they can
+turn a pedlar into a doctor in four months, is a leetle jist over my
+head. It's true enough they works a mighty change in the chaps in that
+time. Our Yankee went off, as well-behaved and as down-faced a chap as
+you would wish to see in a hundred, and wore home-made clothes like
+mine; but when he had staid his four months out, and 'most everybody had
+forgot him, one day as I was leanen up against one of the poplar trees
+in the little town, I saw a sign goin up on the side of a house, with
+DOCTOR GUN in large letters. I'll take my Bible oath, when I saw the
+thing, I thought I should have broke a blood-vessel. Howsomever, I
+strained 'em down, till an old woman would have sworn I had the
+high-strikes, with a knot o' wind in my guzzle. But I quieted the devil
+in me, and then I slipped slyly over the street, behind where the doctor
+was standing with his new suit of black; one hand stuck in his side, and
+the other holding an ivory-headed stick up to his mouth in the most
+knowing fashion, I tell you. I stole up behind him, and bawled out in
+his ear, as loud as I could yell, '_faw--sol--law--me_.' Oh! my
+grandmother! what a smashin rage he flew into; he shook his cane--he
+walked backwards and forwards--and didn't he make the tobacco juice fly?
+I rather reckon, if I hadn't had so many inches, he'd have been into my
+meat; but the fun of it all was, the feller had foreswore his mother
+tongue; dash me if he could talk a word of common lingo, much less sing
+psalms and hymns by note; he rattled off words as long as my arm, and as
+fast as a windmill. Some of the old knowing ones says they've got some
+kind of a mill, like these little hand-organs, and that chops it out to
+the chaps eny night and morning, pretty much as I chop straw to my
+horses; but I'm going in to see that doctor-factory, when I git to
+Philadelphia, if they don't charge a feller more nor half a dollar a
+head."
+
+"I hope we shall travel together to Philadelphia," said Lamar; "and if
+so, I will introduce you into the establishment, free of expense."
+
+"Thank you, sir, thank you," said the Kentuckian; "but I'm rather
+inclined to think that we will hardly meet again after to-day; 'cause,
+you see, I'm 'bliged to do a might of business in Baltimore afore I can
+go on. After that, then I can go on as I please; as I'm only goin to see
+the world abit, afore I settle down for life."
+
+"But," said Lamar, "if you will call at Barnum's, and leave word what
+day you will set out, I will see that we travel together, for I will
+suit my time to yours; and I would advise you to send your horse a short
+distance into the country, both for the sake of convenience and
+economy."
+
+"What! part with old Pete here! Bless my soul, stranger! he would go
+into a gallopin consumption! or die of the solemncholies, if a rainy
+spell should come on, and he and I couldn't have a dish of chat
+together; and then I shouldn't know no more what to do in one of your
+coaches nor a cow with a side-pocket."
+
+"My word for it," replied Victor, "you would soon enjoy yourself inside
+of a stage-coach. Come, let us make a bargain. I will engage to have
+your horse well taken care of in the country, and provide him with a
+groom that will soon learn his ways, and be able to cheer him up when he
+gets low-spirited."
+
+"Yes, do!" said Lamar, jocosely; "we are anxious to have your company
+during our visit to the cities. We are from Carolina, and you are from
+Kentuck; and after you get through with your business, we shall all be
+on the same errand--pleasure and improvement."
+
+"And a wild-goose chase it's like to be, I'm afraid; especially if I'm
+to be of your mess. But suppose you should meet with some fine lady
+acquaintances, what, in the name of old Sam, would you do with me? I
+should be like a fifth wheel to a wagon."
+
+"Were you never in the company of fine ladies?" asked Chevillere.
+
+"Yes! and flummuck me if ever I want to be so fixed again; for there I
+sat with my feet drawn straight under my knees, heads up, and hands laid
+close along my legs, like a new recruit on drill, or a horse in the
+stocks; and, twist me, if I didn't feel as if I was about to be nicked.
+The whole company stared at me as if I had come without an invite; and I
+swear I thought my arms had grown a foot longer, for I couldn't get my
+hands in no sort of a comfortable fix--first I tried them on my lap;
+there they looked like goin to prayers, or as if I was tied in that way;
+then I slung 'em down by my side, and they looked like two weights to a
+clock; and then I wanted to cross my legs, and I tried that, but my leg
+stuck out like a pump handle; then my head stuck up through a glazed
+shirt-collar, like a pig in a yoke; then I wanted to spit, but the floor
+looked so fine, that I would as soon have thought of spittin on the
+window; and then to fix me out and out, they asked us all to sit down
+to dinner! Well, things went on smooth enough for a while, till we had
+got through one whet at it. Then a blasted imp of a nigger come to me
+first with a waiter of little bowls full of something, and a parcel of
+towels slung over his arm; so I clapped one of the bowls to my head, and
+drank it down at a swallow. Now, stranger, what do you think was in it?"
+
+"Punch, I suppose," said Lamar, laughing; "or perhaps apple toddy."
+
+"So I thought, and so would anybody, as dry as I was, and that wanted
+something to wash down the fainty stuffs I had been layin in; but no! it
+was warm water! Yes! you may laugh! but it was clean warm water. The
+others dipped their fingers into the bowls, and wiped them on the towels
+as well as they could for gigglin; but it was all the fault of that
+pampered nigger, in bringin it to me first. As soon as I catched his
+eye, I gin him a wink, as much as to let him know that if ever I caught
+him on my trail, I would wipe him down with a hickory towel."
+
+"But I suppose you enjoyed yourself highly before it was all over?" said
+Chevillere.
+
+"When it was all over, I was glad enough; I jumped and capered like a
+school-boy at the first of the holydays."
+
+"Have you never been invited out since?" asked Lamar.
+
+"O yes, often," said Damon; "but you don't catch a weasel asleep again.
+I like to give a joke, and take a joke; but then the joke was all on one
+side. If I can take a hand in the laugh, I don't care whether a person
+laughs _at_ me, or _with_ me."
+
+"But what say you?" said Chevillere; "shall we send your horse to the
+country with ours?"
+
+"Why! as you gentlemen seem to speak me so fair, and to know the world
+so well, I don't care if I do send old Pete out to board awhile. I
+shouldn't be surprised though if he should give me up for lost, and fret
+himself to death. But I must see the man that goes to the country with
+them; 'cause Pete couldn't bear shabby talk; he's what I call a leetle
+particular in his company for a dumb brute."
+
+"The man rides behind us," said Chevillere, "who will perform that duty.
+Cato! this gentleman wishes to speak to you."
+
+"Did you call, your honour?"
+
+"Yes. Cato! Mr. Damon wishes to give you some charges about his horse,
+which you are to take into the country with ours."
+
+"Cato," said Damon, "tell the farmer who takes the horses, that old Pete
+Ironsides here has been used to good company, and that he has been
+treated more like a Christian nor a horse, and that I wish him indulged
+in his old ways."
+
+During this harangue, Cato cast sundry glances from his master to the
+speaker, as if to ascertain whether he was in earnest, or only playing
+off one of those freaks in which the young men had so often indulged in
+his presence. Being accustomed, however, to treat with respect those
+whom his master respected, and seeing his eye calm and serious, he bowed
+with grave deference, saying, "It shall be done as you direct, your
+honour;" and then fell back.
+
+"Now," said Damon, "that's what I call a well-bred nigger. I would
+venture that old Scip would'nt have puzzled me with the warm water;
+'cause he knows that I'm not one of them there sort of chaps what knows
+all their new-fangled kick-shaws. He knows in a case of real
+needcessity, or life and death, as I may say, either to man, woman, or
+horse, I'm more to be depended on than a dozen such chaps as went along
+here in the stage this morning."
+
+"You saw the dandies in the stage, then?" asked Victor.
+
+"Yes, and one of 'em popped his head out of the window, and says to me
+as they went by, 'Country,' says he, 'there's something on your horse's
+tail.'--'Yes,' says I, 'and there's something in his head that you
+hav'nt got, if his ears ain't so long.'"
+
+Thus were our acquaintances and their new companion jogging along when
+the distant rumbling of wheels upon the pavements and the dense clouds
+of black smoke which seemed to be hanging in the heavens but a short
+distance ahead, announced that they were soon to enter the monumental
+city.
+
+There is not, perhaps, a feeling of more truly unmixed melancholy,
+incident to the heart of an inexperienced and modest student, than that
+which steals over him upon his first entrance into a strange city; a
+feeling of incomparable loneliness, even deeper than if the same
+individual were standing alone upon the highest blue peak of the far
+stretching Alleghany. The vanishing rays of twilight were extending
+their lengthening shadows; the husbandman and his cattle were seen
+wending their way to their accustomed abodes for the night; and the
+feathered tribes had already sought the resting-places which nature so
+plentifully provides for them in our well-wooded land. The sad, and it
+may be pleasing reflections which such sights produced, were
+occasionally interrupted by the clattering of a horse's hoofs upon the
+turnpike, as some belated countryman sought to redeem the time he had
+spent at the alehouse; or as the solitary marketman, with more staid and
+quiet demeanour, sped upon a like errand. Occasionally the scene was
+marred by some besotted and staggering wretch, seeking his lowly and
+miserable hut in the suburbs. At intervals too, the barking of dogs and
+the lowing of cattle contributed their share to remind our friends that
+they were about to take leave of these quiet and pastoral scenes, for an
+indefinite period, and to mix in the bustle and gay assemblage of city
+life. Often, at such junctures, there is a presentiment of the evil
+which awaits the unhappy exchange. Warning clouds of the mind are
+believed to exist by many of the clearest heads and soundest hearts: we
+do not say that our heroes were thus sadly affected, nor that the
+Kentuckian had a fore-taste of evil; but certain it is, that all were
+silent until they arrived at the place of separation. All things having
+been previously settled, they exchanged salutations, and departed upon
+their separate routes. They passed a variety of streets in that most
+gloomy period of the day when lamp-lighters are to be seen, with their
+torches and ladders, starting their glimmering lights first in one
+direction and then in another, as they hurry from post to post. Draymen
+were driving home with reckless and Jehu-like speed; and the brilliant
+lights which began to appear at long intervals, gave evidence that the
+trading community carried their operations also into that portion of
+time which nature has allotted for rest and repose to nearly all living
+things. Our travellers now alighted at Barnum's; but as their adventures
+were of an interesting character, we shall defer them till a new
+chapter.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+
+After a substantial meal had been despatched, our travellers repaired to
+the livery-stable, to inspect in person the condition of their horses.
+The establishment was lighted with a single lamp, swung in the centre of
+the building. The approach of the two young gentlemen was not therefore
+immediately noticed by old Cato and another groom (who proved to be the
+coachman of the equipage they had left on the road), as they were busily
+engaged in rubbing down their horses, the dialogue between them was not
+brought to a close at once.
+
+"Who did you say the gentleman was?" said old Cato.
+
+"His name is Brumley," replied coachee.
+
+"And the young lady is his daughter, I suppose?" continued Cato.
+
+"Oh! as to that, I cannot say," continued coachee, "but I believe she is
+only his step-daughter; they calls her Miss Fanny St. Clair, and
+sometimes of late the old gentleman calls her Mrs. Frances; but between
+you and me and the horse-stall, there is some strange things about this
+family; I rather guess that Sukey, the maid up yonder, could tell us
+something that would make us open our eyes, if she was not so confounded
+close; all that I know about it is, that the harsh old gentleman
+sometimes gives her a talk in the carriage that throws her a'most into a
+faintin' spell. But I could never see into it, not I; I don't somehow
+believe in all these little hurrahs the women kicks up just for
+pastime."
+
+Our travellers did not think proper to listen further to the gossip of
+the grooms, and having executed their business at the livery, they
+retraced their steps to the splendid establishment at which they had put
+up. Notwithstanding the doubtful source from which Chevillere had gained
+his latest information concerning the singularly interesting young lady
+whom they had seen at the inn, it made its impression. Corrupt indeed
+must be that channel of information relative to a beautiful and
+attractive female, apparently in distress, which will not find an
+auditor in the person of a sensitive young man just emancipated from
+college. On such occasions, and with such persons, the credibility of
+all witnesses is the same, and the most improbable tale is taken at
+once, and made the foundation of a whole train of reveries, dreams, and
+plans.
+
+It is not to be denied that Victor Chevillere had worked his imagination
+up to a very romantic height, and had allowed his curiosity concerning
+the youthful lady to reach such a pitch that little else gave occupation
+to his fancies.
+
+He was in this state of mind, leisurely marking time with lazy steps,
+and in an abstracted mood, as he ascended the grand staircase of the
+establishment, when his attention was again riveted by the sound of the
+lady's voice in earnest entreaty with the old gentleman.
+
+"Consider, my dear Frances," said the latter, "that your health is now
+nearly re-established, and that these are subjects that you must dwell
+upon; why not, therefore, become accustomed to it at once?"
+
+"For heaven's sake! for my dear mother's! never, sir, mention that
+fearful marriage, and more fearful death to me again! Why should I
+recall hideous and frightful dreams!"
+
+Chevillere was compelled to move on, but it must be confessed that
+his steps were slower than before; and it may be readily imagined,
+that his fancy and his curiosity were not much allayed by the shreds
+of conversation which he had involuntarily overheard. When he had
+ascended to his own apartment, and could indulge freely in that
+bachelor recreation of pacing to and fro, the two words still
+involuntarily quickened his movements whenever they flashed through his
+mind---"marriage" and "death" were words of opposite import certainly,
+viewed in the abstract, and we doubt whether he had ever connected them
+together before;---"Fearful marriage! and more fearful death!" what
+could it mean? to whom could they refer? Only one of them could refer to
+her, that was certain; who then was married and died so fearfully? Ah!
+thought he, I have it! her mother has married this old man, and died
+suddenly; and he has got the fortune of both in his hands! Suspicious
+circumstance! If fortune puts it in my power, I will watch him narrowly!
+I disliked his countenance from the first!--must be cool, however, and
+deliberate--must watch--and wait! pshaw, what am I at! Thus ended Victor
+Chevillere's solution of the enigma, when Lamar stepped into the room
+and disturbed his revery.
+
+"What! still musing, Chevillere. By my troth, she must be a witch; but
+it will be glorious news to write to our friend Beverly Randolph, of old
+Virginia. What say you? Shall I sit down and indite an epistle? Let me
+see--how do such narratives generally begin? Cupid, and darts, and
+arrows--blind of an eye--shot right through the vitals of a poor
+innocent youth that never did him any harm--never was struck
+before--covered with a panoply, and shield, and armour, and all that;
+and then worship prostrate before the shrine; and vows, and tears, and
+tokens; and then the dart is taken out--and the wound heals up--and
+then--'Richard's himself again!' What say you to that, or rather what
+would Randolph say to that, think you?"
+
+"He would say that Augustus Lamar was still the same mirth-loving
+fellow, without regard to time or place."
+
+"Then it is a serious affair, and too true to make a joke of! Well, then
+I have done! She's a beautiful young creature, it is true; but then from
+what I had seen of your cold philosophy, I did not think you were the
+man to be slain at first sight, and surrender at discretion before a
+single charge."
+
+"I will acknowledge to you, Lamar, that my curiosity is most painfully
+excited with regard to that unhappy young lady, but nothing more, I
+assure you. Some facts have, without my seeking, come to my knowledge,
+with which you are entirely unacquainted, and which have tended greatly
+to increase that curiosity. I cannot at this time explain; as soon as my
+own mind is satisfied on the subject, my confidence shall not be
+withheld from you."
+
+"Lovers are truly a singular set of mortals---here is a young lady (and
+a Yankee too, perhaps) of some dozen hours' acquaintance, and with whom
+you have never exchanged a dozen words; and yet you are already
+entrusted with profound secrets, which excite you in the most painful
+manner!"
+
+"Come, come, Lamar, I see you are determined to misunderstand me. Let us
+drop the subject. What do you think of the Kentuckian?"
+
+"I think he is an admirable fellow; and I intend to patronise him; and
+induct him into fashionable life; but do you think his singularities are
+the natural products of the life, manners, and climate of Kentucky?"
+
+"I cannot decide whether there is much in him that is peculiar to
+Kentucky. Some of the most elegant and accomplished gentleman I have
+seen were natives of that state."
+
+"He takes a laugh at his expense admirably."
+
+"He does, but you must be careful not to exceed the limits he has laid
+down for himself and us, in that respect. For my own part, I entertain a
+serious respect for Damon and his unsophisticated honesty, degenerating,
+as it sometimes does, into prejudices and ludicrous fancies."
+
+"Good night, and pleasant dreams to you. I will call early to interpret
+them for you."
+
+As Lamar closed the door, Chevillere drew from his pocket a little
+basket segar-case, from which he extracted a genuine Havana, and
+lighting a taper at the candle, and throwing himself into one of those
+easy attitudes familiar to smokers, with his head back, and his eyes
+closed, gave himself up to those absorbing reveries, generally
+delightful in proportion to the goodness of the segar, which a southern
+knows so well how to enjoy. To be fully relished, segars should be
+resorted to only in the evening, and then in moderation. The sensibility
+is blunted by excess, and in that case, tobacco, like the intoxicating
+drinks, will sometimes conjure up frightful images upon the wall of a
+dimly-lighted chamber, or among the embers of a dying fire. Victor,
+however, had not converted his capacity for enjoyment into fruitful
+sources of mental and physical suffering---he sat for a long time gently
+throwing the fragrant results of his efforts into various columns,
+wreaths, and pyramids. Not that his mind dwelt upon these things for a
+moment; he was far distant in spirit; his imagination was calling up
+delightful dreams of love and friendship, with thoughts of a beloved
+cousin, of his friend and room-mate Beverley Randolph--his mother, his
+home, and the scenes of his childhood, and finally, of the lady of the
+black mantle. He beheld airy castles,--romantic adventures,--bridal
+scenes--and flowers,--assemblies,--parties,--and the high hills of the
+Santee.
+
+Aladdin's lamp never wrought more rich and highly-coloured scenes of
+enchantment than did this same Havana; but the most pleasant dream must
+come to an end, as well as the richest flavoured segar--and so did
+Chevillere's. Tossing the little hot remnant from him with a passionate
+jerk, as if in anger at the insensible cause of his interruption, he
+bounced into the centre of the floor and began to pace to and fro, in
+his accustomed mood, clenching his fists now and then, and by his whole
+appearance showing a perfect contrast to the calm and delightful revery
+attendant upon the first stage of tobacco intoxication.
+
+In this mood we shall leave him to seek his rest, while we recount in
+the next chapter what farther befel our late collegians on the following
+morning.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+
+A brilliant morning found our collegians refreshed in health and elastic
+in spirits. The more gloomy fancies of the previous night, which had
+beset Chevillere both in his waking and sleeping hours--like the mists
+of the morning, had been dispelled by the bright sunshine, and the
+refreshing breezes of the bay. After the usual meal had been some time
+despatched; and while Chevillere was leisurely turning over the papers
+of the day (Lamar having departed in pursuit of the Kentuckian) he was
+surprised by the entrance of Mr. Brumley (the austere gentleman), who
+saluted him with the most friendly greetings of the hour and season, and
+concluded by inviting him into their private parlour. It may be readily
+imagined that this invitation was not tardily complied with, for he now
+imagined that the whole history of the lady would be unravelled by a
+single word--so sanguine is youthful hope, and so apt are we, at that
+interesting period, to jump to those conclusions which are desirable,
+without ever considering the previous steps, and painful delays, and
+necessary forms, and conventional usages which inevitably intervene
+between our highest hopes and their fruition. How often would the ardent
+wishes and the bold hands of youth seize upon futurity, despoiling it
+of the thin veil which separates us from what we wish to know,
+especially when this could be learned by dispensing with the accustomed
+formalities and wholesome restraints of refined society. A train of
+kindred thoughts was passing through the mind of Chevillere as he was
+ushered into a small but elegant saloon, connected with the back
+chambers by folding-doors, which were now closed. On the left of the
+door, and between the windows opening upon a great thoroughfare, sat the
+lady who occupied his thoughts. She was sitting, or rather reclining
+upon one end of a sofa, her head resting upon her hand in a thoughtful
+mood. As is true of most daughters of this favoured land, nature had
+evidently in nowise been thwarted, either in her mental or physical
+education. She appeared to possess that naivete which is so apt to be
+the result of a mixed town, and country education; with just enough of
+self-possession to show that native modesty had been properly regulated
+by much good society, but not too much to forbid an occasional
+crimsoning of the neck and face. Her eyes were blue, shaded by long dark
+lashes, and so sparkling and joyous in their expression, that the
+evident present sorrow which hung over her spirits, could not efface the
+impression to a beholder, that they were naturally much more inclined to
+beam with mirth and gayety, than to weeping; her features were
+regular--arch in their expression, and finely formed--her complexion of
+the finest shade--with a rich profusion of light brown hair, braided
+and parted on the forehead without a single curl; her figure was just
+tall enough to be elegant and graceful, and exhibited the graces of that
+interesting period, when the school-girl is merging into the reserved
+woman.
+
+As Chevillere was ushered into the presence of this youthful lady, the
+old gentleman presented him as Mr. Chevillere, of South Carolina, and
+the lady by the name of (his step-daughter) Frances St. Clair; she
+assumed the erect position barely long enough to return the salutation
+of the gentleman, then reclined again and lapsed apparently into her sad
+mood; for a moment she pressed her handkerchief to her face as if she
+would drive away some horrible image, and then waited a moment as if she
+expected her father to speak upon some previously settled subject.
+Perceiving, however, that she waited in vain, she with some difficulty
+forced herself to say, "Mr. Chevillere, I requested my father to invite
+you to our apartments to"--here she seemed overpowered and stopped.
+Chevillere seeing her distress, replied, "Madam, you do me too much
+honour; but I see you are distressed--let me say then, without any
+farther formality, that if there is any way in the world by which I can
+lighten that distress, command me."
+
+"It is about these very emotions that I would speak," she answered; "I
+was afraid you might think the scene at the breakfast-table two days
+since was got up in some silly girlish affectation, in pretended disgust
+at the rudeness of the young men present; but believe me when I say,
+their conduct would at many times in my life have furnished me with an
+ample fund for laughter; it was not in their manners, it was in the
+subject of one of their discourses that I felt so much affected--I tried
+to subdue my feelings, but the more I tried the more they overcame me;
+the truth is, some painful recollections were awakened"--Here again she
+covered her face with her handkerchief, and seemed to be for a moment
+almost suffocated. The lady resumed; "Nor should I have thought it
+proper to offer this explanation to one who is apparently a perfect
+stranger; but, sir, I have known you for some time by reputation."
+
+"Indeed, madam, I must be indebted to some most flattering mistake for
+my present good fortune; I am but just emancipated from college walls
+and rules, and have, of course, even a reputation to make for myself."
+
+"No! no!" said the youthful lady (a beautiful smile passing swiftly over
+her sad countenance), "there can be no mistake about it," and drawing
+from her work-bag a small bit of paper, rolled up in the shape of a
+letter, she presented it to him; adding, "Do you know that
+hand-writing?"
+
+He gazed upon the signature for an instant, and then exclaimed, "My
+honoured mother's! by all that's fortunate! then indeed we are old
+acquaintances--with your permission; and I am perfectly content with the
+reputation which you spoke of, when I know that it originated in such a
+source."
+
+"Your mother was indeed a prudent and a modest, but still a devoted
+herald of your good qualities."
+
+"Believe me, dear lady, that I shall be more proud than ever to appear
+in your eyes to deserve some small share of her maternal praise; it was
+always inexpressibly dear to me for its own sake, but now I shall
+endeavour doubly to deserve it. You saw her, I suppose, at the White
+Sulphur Springs?"
+
+"We did, sir; and a most fortunate circumstance it was for me; for being
+an invalid, she did every thing for me that my own mother could have
+done. Oh! how I regretted that my mother did not come, merely to have
+made her acquaintance."
+
+"Your mother! is your mother alive, madam?"
+
+"I hope and trust she is--and well; she was both when we last heard from
+her, and that was but a few days since; but your agitation alarms me!
+you know no bad news of my mother?" laying her hand upon his arm.
+
+"None, madam! none. I don't know what put the foolish idea into my head,
+but I thought that both your own parents were dead."
+
+"You alarmed me," said she. "I conjured up every dreadful image--I
+imagined that you had been commissioned by some of our friends here, to
+break the painful intelligence to me--but you are sure she is well?"
+
+Chevillere smiled, as he answered "You forget that I am a total stranger
+to her, and she to me."
+
+"True! true! But tell me how you left your charming young cousin
+Virginia Bell, of whom I heard your mother speak so often. She told me,
+I think, that she was at some celebrated school in North Carolina?"
+
+"At Salem. She is well, I thank you, or was well when I came through the
+town: my mother intends to take her home with her on her return."
+
+"So she told me," said the lady.
+
+"She did not tell you, I suppose, for I believe she does not know, that
+I have promised the hand of the dear girl in marriage, though she is
+scarcely sixteen yet. You must know that I had in college two dear and
+beloved friends--the one, Mr. Lamar, you have seen; the other is Mr.
+Beverley Randolph, of Virginia--we were both class and room-mates.
+Randolph has gone on a journey through the Southern States, as he
+pretends; but, I believe, in truth, to take a sly peep at his affianced
+bride. If he likes her looks, it is a bargain; and if not, he will pass
+it all off for a college joke." Here he was interrupted by the lady
+gasping; and on looking in her face, he found she was as pale as marble,
+and terribly agitated. She asked her father for water, which he handed
+to her instantly, while Chevillere rang violently at the bell.
+
+"It will all be over in a minute," said she; "it is only a return of the
+suffering to which I am subject."
+
+Many strange ideas flitted through Chevillere's mind during this
+interruption of the conversation. He now recollected that one of the
+subjects of discourse between the vulgar fops, at the breakfast-table
+the previous morning, had been some runaway marriage--and "the fearful
+marriage and more fearful death" still sounded in his ears, and now the
+same subject again introduced by himself produced like consequences,--he
+thought it strange and incomprehensible; he cheered himself, however,
+with the reflection, that his mother was not likely to form an intimacy
+with persons against whom there was any charge of crime; nay, more, he
+felt assured that they must have been well sustained by public opinion,
+or introduced to her acquaintance by some judicious friend.
+
+"If I have unaptly said any thing offensive, I hope Miss St. Clair will
+believe me, when I say that such a design was the farthest from my
+thoughts."
+
+"Rest easy on that score," said she; "I am now well again: you said
+nothing that it was not proper for you to say, and me to hear, had I not
+been a poor silly-headed girl."
+
+"Well, Miss Frances, I am anxious to hear your opinion of Western
+Virginia."
+
+"My opinion is not worth having; but such as it is, you are welcome to
+it, or rather to such observations as a lady might make. First, then, I
+was delighted with the wild mountain scenery, and the beautiful valleys
+between the mountains; such are those, you will recollect, perhaps, in
+which all of those springs are situated. I doubt very much, whether
+Switzerland, or Spain, could present as many rich and beautiful
+mountain-scenes, as we have passed between Lexington and the White
+Sulphur and Salt Sulphur springs. We have similar scenes along and among
+the highlands of the Hudson, it is true; perhaps they are more grand and
+majestic than these; but then, there is such a stir of busy life, such
+an atmosphere of steam, and clouds of canvass, that one is perpetually
+called back in spirit to the stir and bustle of a city life. But here,
+among the rugged blue mountains of 'old Virginia,' as these people love
+to call it, there are the silence and the solitude of nature, which more
+befit such contemplations as the scenes induce. We can seat ourselves in
+one of the green forests of the mountains we have just left, and imagine
+ours to be the first human footsteps, which have ever been imprinted
+upon the soil; and we can repose amid the shades and the profound and
+solemn silence of those scenes, with a calmness and a serenity, and a
+soothing, delightful, melancholy feeling, which no other objects can
+produce. The very atmosphere seems teeming with these delightful
+impressions; primitive nature seems to have returned upon us with all
+its balmy delights,--quiet and peacefulness. The profound solitude would
+become tiresome, perhaps, to those who have no resources in unison with
+such scenes, or to those who admire and feign to revel in them, because
+it is fashionable just now to do so. But to an educated mind, a natural
+and feeling, and I may say devout heart, they furnish inexhaustible
+food for contemplation, and ever-renewing sources of delight and
+improvement."
+
+"They are such scenes," replied Chevillere, "as I love to dwell upon,
+even in imagination. But come, Miss Frances, I see by the hat and mantle
+upon the table, that I have interrupted some intended promenade; shall I
+have the honour to be of your party?"
+
+"Unquestionably, young gentleman--you may take the whole journey off my
+hands; Frances was only going out among the shops," said Mr. Brumley.
+
+The plain, but tasteful apparel was soon adjusted, and the youthful pair
+sallied forth upon the promised expedition.
+
+The tide of human life seems to be ever rolling and tossing, and ever
+renewing, and then rolling on again. Pestilence, and death, and famine
+may do their worst, but the tide is still renewed, and still moves on to
+the great sea of eternity.
+
+Who that walks through the busy and thronged streets of a populous city,
+and sees the gay plumage, the fantastic finery, the smiling faces, and
+the splendid equipages, could ever form an adequate idea of the real
+suffering and wo, which constitute the sum of one day's pains in a city
+life? If all the miserable--the lame, the blind, the poor, the dumb, the
+aged, and the diseased, could be poured out along one side of the gay
+promenades, while fashionables were parading along the other, a much
+truer picture of life in a city would be seen. Such were the ideas of
+Victor Chevillere, as he escorted his timid and youthful companion
+through the gay throng from shop to shop.
+
+As they emerged into a part of the city less thronged, interchange of
+opinions became more practicable.
+
+"I am impatient to hear your opinion of the Southerns," said Chevillere;
+"you had the finest opportunity imaginable to see our southern
+aristocrats at the springs."
+
+"Oh! I was delighted with the little society in which I moved there,"
+replied she; "and, but for one unhappy, and most untoward circumstance
+for me, my enjoyments would have far surpassed any thing which I had
+ever laid out for myself again in this world."
+
+"You excite my curiosity most strangely," said he; "and, if it would not
+appear impertinent or intrusive, I should like to know two things:
+first, what untoward circumstance you speak of? and next, what great bar
+has been placed between you and happiness, that you should have laid off
+so small a share for yourself in all time to come?"
+
+"Oh! sir, your questions are painful to me, even to think of; how much
+worse then must have been the reality of those circumstances, which
+could poison the small share of happiness which is allotted to us under
+the most favourable circumstances. I would gratify your curiosity if I
+could, but indeed, indeed, sir, I cannot now relate to you the whole
+history of my life; and nothing less could explain to you the cruel
+train of circumstances by which I am surrounded, and from which there is
+no escape."
+
+"One question you can, and I am sure you will, answer me.
+
+"Could a devoted friend, with a cool head and a resolute hand, effect
+nothing in freeing you from this persecution?"
+
+"I will answer you, sir, most plainly. You misunderstand my allusions,
+in the first place; for I am not persecuted now, nor can I say that I
+have been. It may seem enigmatical to you, but it is all that I can in
+prudence say. There is no person on this side of the grave who can
+relieve me from the cause of those emotions which you have unhappily
+witnessed; nay, more! if those persons were to rise from the dead, who
+were, unfortunately for themselves and for me, the cause of my painful
+situation, my condition would be incomparably worse than it is now."
+
+"Painful, indeed, must those circumstances be, and incomprehensible to
+me, which seem to have been produced by the death of some one; and yet,
+if that person should rise from the dead, you would be more miserable
+than ever," said Chevillere.
+
+During the latter part of this speech, the lady, as was often her
+custom, pressed her handkerchief to her face, as if she would by
+mechanical pressure drive off disagreeable images from the mind; and
+then said, "Now, sir, let us drop this subject."
+
+"One more question, and then I have done; and believe me, it is not idly
+asked. Were the circumstances you spoke of developed so recently as your
+visit to the Virginia springs?"
+
+"Oh! by no means, sir; the untoward circumstance there that I spoke of,
+was the frequent and unexpected presence of one who forcibly reminded me
+of all the painful particulars; and what made it so much worse was, that
+wherever I moved, he moved; he followed the same route round the
+watering-places, and seemed purposely to throw himself in my way; and
+even now I dread every moment to encounter him; and the more so, as I
+have heard lately that his mind is unsettled. Poor gentleman, I pity
+him."
+
+By this time they had arrived in a part of the city from which
+Washington's monument could be seen, elevating its majestic column above
+a magnificent grove of trees.
+
+"Suppose we extend our walk," said the gentleman, "to yonder beautiful
+grove."
+
+To this the lady readily assented. They found rude seats, constructed
+perhaps by some romantic swain; or by some country-bred youths, who came
+there, after the toils of the day, to refresh themselves with the pure
+and invigorating breezes which sweep the green, fresh from their dear
+and longed-for homes. Here they seated themselves, to enjoy this
+delightful mixture of town and country.
+
+"This is a noble monument to the great and good father of our Republic;
+and worthy of the high-minded and public-spirited people of Baltimore,"
+said Chevillere. "Give me such evidence as this of their veneration for
+his memory, and none of your new-fangled nonsense about enshrining him
+in the hearts of his countrymen. Let him be enshrined in the hearts of
+his countrymen as individuals; but let cities, communities, and states
+enshrine him in marble. These speak to the eyes; and hundreds, and
+thousands will stand here, amid these beautiful shades, and think of him
+with profound veneration, who would never otherwise look into any other
+kind of history. The effect of such works as these is admirable; not
+only in showing veneration for the great dead, but also upon the living,
+in purifying the heart and ennobling its impulses."
+
+"Baltimore, indeed, has set a noble example," said the lady.
+
+"And richly will she be rewarded. A few years hence, the far West will
+be brought to her doors; and she will grow up to be a mighty city.
+Standing on the middle ground, between the angry sectionists of the
+North and the South, she will present a haven in which the rivals may
+meet, and learn to estimate each other's good qualities, and bury or
+forget those errors which are inseparable from humanity. But see! Miss
+St. Clair," said he, "what a singular looking man is just emerging from
+within the column!"
+
+"Heavens!" said the lady, in extreme terror, "that is the person! Do
+take me from this place! I would not encounter him for the world!"
+
+She was too late; for already had the object of her apprehension caught
+a glimpse of her person; and no sooner had he done so, than with rapid
+strides he advanced directly towards them. The lady shook with terror
+and agitation. When he had approached almost in a direct line to within
+some forty or fifty feet, he riveted a long and steady gaze upon the
+lady, and another of shorter duration upon her companion, still walking
+onward. Victor stood and gazed after him until he was entirely without
+the enclosure.
+
+He was a well-dressed man, apparently about fifty-five years of age,
+tall, and straight in his carriage as an Indian; his hair was slightly
+silvered; his countenance expressed wildness, but was steady and
+consistent in the expression of present purpose; his eye was dark and
+deep, and, when you looked upon it steadily for a short time, appeared
+as if you were gazing at two black holes in his head; his complexion was
+sallow; its characteristics--energy and deep determination.
+
+"And that is the maniac?" said Chevillere, in a half-abstracted mood.
+
+"I said not so," replied the lady; "but he is, indeed, that most
+unfortunate man, whose whole business seems to be to haunt me in my
+travels; otherwise our meeting has been most strangely accidental and
+untoward."
+
+"If he is in ill health," said Victor, "he may have gone to the Springs
+without intending to meet you; and now, when the season is nearly over,
+and he is likewise on his return, there is nothing more natural than his
+visiting this monument--every stranger does so,--do not, therefore,
+aggravate your distress by supposing these meetings to have been sought
+on his part. I will endeavour to find him, and demand of him whether he
+seeks to annoy an unhappy invalid by pursuing her from place to place,
+and what are his motives."
+
+"Oh! sir, for Heaven's sake, do not think of such a thing. He is a
+powerful and a fearful man, when in his right mind; and even in his
+derangement, might do you some harm, especially if you went as
+commissioned by me. Besides, sir, if he was undoubtedly sane and
+respectful, he might demand, as a right, to see me, and converse with me
+too. Nay, he might possibly have some claim to control my actions; but
+you see he does not. Let him alone, therefore, and do not involve
+yourself in any of my troubles. I am inextricably entangled, and
+pinioned down to a certain routine of suffering, perhaps unexampled, and
+that too by no crime of my own."
+
+"Dear lady," said Chevillere, taking her hand, as he saw her blue eye
+filling with tears, and just ready to run over; "you cannot imagine how
+much I feel interested for you; and what I am about to say, as it will
+risk your displeasure, is the very best evidence that I can give of my
+deep interest in your future peace and contentment. Believe me, dear
+lady, that though I am young, and may be inexperienced,--I am not an
+indifferent observer of the secret machinery of men's actions. I have
+been a steady observer and a thinker for myself, without regard to the
+opinion of individuals or the world, when I was conscious that I was
+right, and that they were wrong. Listen to me, then, with patience,
+while I give you my opinion, with regard to the difficulties which seem
+to be accumulating around you. Of course, this opinion must be a general
+one; as the circumstances upon which it is founded are only such as are
+of a general character. Nor do I seek for more confidence on your part
+towards me; I cannot expect that you should unfold the intimate
+relations of your family and your friends to a comparative stranger.
+This, then, is my (of course vague) opinion--I have generally observed,
+in my intercourse with mankind, that the most trying situations and the
+deepset distress are often brought about by a small mistake--
+misfortune--or crime in the beginning. The latter of these I would defy
+the most malignant misanthrope to look upon your countenance and charge
+you with; one of the two former, then, is the point upon which all your
+distress, and ill health, and melancholy hangs. My advice then is, upon
+this general view of the case, that you go back to that point, and
+rectify it as speedily as possible; and do it boldly and fearlessly, as
+I am sure you can. Burst asunder these chains that fetter you, whatever
+they may be."
+
+"I see," said the lady (tears fast stealing down her cheeks), "that I am
+always destined to make the same unhappy impression on every
+acquaintance, male or female, valued or unvalued. Before I have grown
+many degrees in their good opinion, some of these unlucky things are
+seen to develop themselves, and then I am subject to the greatest
+misfortune to which an honourable and a sensitive mind can be exposed;
+that is, to be supposed weak or wicked, though at the same time
+conscious of pure and upright motives. To be plain with you, sir, I must
+tell you again, that in order for me to be relieved of that which
+trammels me in some shape or other at every step, _the grave must give
+up its own; and the law must give up its own; and the avaricious must
+annul their decrees; and the dead of half a century must undo their
+work; and the wisdom of the sage must be instilled into the mind of a
+child; and the slanders, and the wild and wicked fancies of the lunatic
+must be convinced by reason or actual demonstration of the foregoing
+things_--before the point you speak of can be seized upon, and turned to
+my advantage."
+
+"Then, indeed, is it a hard case, and I will not distress you further on
+the subject; I will not add my persecution to that of others--I will not
+say enemies; for one so young and so artless, so innocent and so
+unfortunate, can have no enemies."
+
+"And therein consists part of my distress," replied she. "Is it not
+strange that I have not an enemy living, to my knowledge, who has ever
+wilfully injured me in word or deed? unless, indeed, it be yon wretched
+old man, whose mind is now, and whose heart, I fear, has always been
+wrong. Now, sir, let me beg of you, in future, whenever any of these
+little occurrences embarrass me during my stay here, to take no notice
+of them whatever; let me move along as quietly and as unobtrusively as
+possible. I love the retirement of the country, and to the country and
+retirement I will go. My mother loves me, and knows all my actions, and
+their motives too; and even my father loves me in his own way. They will
+be my companions for the remainder of a short and weary life."
+
+The colloquy was cut short by their return to the hotel.
+
+Lamar, as has been already announced, was a humorous gentleman, and
+would not lose an opportunity of enjoying the remarks of one so new to
+the busy world and its ways as Damon. He was not long in finding out the
+retired quarters of the gentleman of the west. At the bar-room he
+inquired if there was such a lodger in the house.
+
+"No," said the barkeeper (so are these functionaries called), "but he is
+expected every minute."
+
+Lamar seated himself near the files of morning papers which lay strewed
+along a reading-desk, and awaited the arrival of his singular new
+acquaintance. In a few minutes Damon stalked in. A new black hat and
+blue frock-coat had so much altered his appearance, that Lamar did not
+recognise him until he took off his hat, wiped his dripping brows with
+the handkerchief which he still carried in it, and then, seeing Lamar
+for the first time, waved it over his head.
+
+"Hurrah! for old Kentuck!" was his characteristic exclamation.
+
+"Why, Damon, you have been under the tailor's hands," said Lamar.
+
+"I believe I was in Old Sam's hands last night; but come up-stairs, and
+I will tell you all about it."
+
+They proceeded to the third story into a small apartment, dimly lighted
+through a single window. Damon, after seating Lamar, threw aside his
+coat, and drawing from under the head of his bed the one in which Lamar
+had first seen him, he quickly inserted his arms through what remained
+of the garment,--the lappels were torn off on each side down to the
+waist, so that all the front of the coat was gone, leaving nothing but
+the long straight back, collar, and sleeves. What remained was smeared
+with mud, and torn in many places. He next proceeded to pull out of his
+pocket a collar, and parts of two sleeves of a shirt, spreading them on
+the bed, as a milliner would do her finery; and holding out both his
+hands with the palms upward in the manner of an orator,----
+
+"There!" said he, "that's what I call a pretty tolerable neat job, to
+shirt a stranger the first night he comes to town."
+
+Lamar, who by this time began to see a little into the affair, asked,
+"But, Damon, how did all this happen? you seem to have been
+discomfited."
+
+"Now I'll be smashed if you ain't off the trail, stranger, for you see
+I've only showed you half yet."
+
+Upon which he drew from his other pocket a pair of spectacles, bent,
+bloody, and broken,--then a wig,--and, lastly, the remains of a little
+black rattan with a gold head and chain broken into inches. He displayed
+these on the bed as he had done the others; only drawing his
+handkerchief as a line between them. Upon this he fell, rather than sat,
+back into a chair just behind him, and burst out into a loud, long, and
+hearty laugh, seemingly excited afresh at the sight of his spoils.
+
+"Well, now," said he, "I wish I may be horn swoggled, if ever I thought
+to live to see the day when I should '_sculp_' a Christian man; but
+there it is, you see; I left his head as clean as a peeled onion."
+
+"But how? and when? and who was your antagonist in this frolic?"
+
+"Frolic!" exclaimed Damon; "well, now, it's what I would call a regular
+row; I never saw a prettier knock down and drag out in all the days of
+my life, even in old Kentuck."
+
+"But do tell me," said Lamar, "was anybody seriously hurt?"
+
+"There was several chaps in the circus last night with their heels
+uppermost, besides them suple chaps on the horses; I can tell you that."
+
+"Oh! you were in the circus, were you?"
+
+"Yes; and there was a rip-roaring sight of slight o'hand and tumblin
+work there, besides their ground and lofty tumblin they had in the
+handbills."
+
+"You did some of the ground tumbling yourself then?" asked Lamar.
+
+"No, I did the slight o'hand work, as you may see by the skin that's
+gone off these four marrow-bones."
+
+"And who did the ground tumbling?" asked Lamar.
+
+"There was a good deal done there last night; the chaps in the ring and
+the chaps in the pit all did a little at it; flummuck me if I didn't
+think the heels of the whole house would be uppermost before they were
+done; what an everlastin pity 'tis, these critters elbows ain't as suple
+as their heels."
+
+"Then you think all the people of Baltimore a little limber in the
+heels."
+
+"I can't say as to that; but I wish I may be hackled, if there was not
+so much flyin up of the heels there last night, that I was fidlin and
+tumblin all night in my sleep, jumpin through hoops, and tanglin my legs
+in their long red garters, which the circus riders jumped over; and then
+I thought they had my poor old horse, Pete Ironsides, jumpin over bars,
+and leapin through fiery balloons, until at last they smashed his head
+right into a tar barrel, and then maybe I didn't fly into a tear down
+snortin rage! I was crammed full of fight then, and so I got to slingin
+my arms about in my sleep, till I knocked out that head-board
+there,--then I woke up, and I wish I may be hanged if I didn't think it
+was all a dream; till I found that the forepart of my coat had run away
+from the tail, and that I had got an odd collar among my linen. And then
+on t'other hand I began to think it was all true, and rung the bell, and
+sent the nigger down to the stable to see if Pete had his head in a tar
+barrel sure enough; presently the nigger came back, grinen and giglin,
+and said Pete had gone to the country two hours ago; so I run the little
+nigger down stairs, and sent my old boots after him to get blacked; and
+as I was dodgin through that long entry there, I saw the bottles, and
+tumblers, and lemon-skins; so ho! said I, there's the mad dog that bit
+me last night."
+
+"Then you _began_ in a frolic at least," said Lamar.
+
+"Only a small breeze or so; a few tumblers of punch, made of that
+doubled and twisted Irish whiskey; it was none of your Kentuck low
+wines, run off at a singlin, for I have made many a barrel. It was as
+strong as _pison_, and it raised the Irish in me pretty quick, or rather
+old Kentuck, for I jumped up and kicked the table over, and broke
+things, afore I would have been cleverly primed with the low wines."
+
+"Were you drinking all alone?"
+
+"No; there was half-a-dozen milksops set down; I believe they board
+here; but no sooner had I kicked the table over, and begun to smash
+things a little, than they all sneaked out one by one, until they were
+all gone but one, and I rather suspicion that he's a blackleg, for he
+stuck pretty close to me till the row at the circus was over, and then
+when I had got clear, he come up here with me, and sent for the chap who
+furnished me with my new hat and coat; but it wasn't all for nothin, as
+he thought, for he presently proposed that we should go down street a
+piece, and see some fine fellers, he said, who were friends of his, and
+who were going to have a night of it. Well, said I, 'a little hair of
+the dog is good for the bite,' and down we went to a large room up four
+pair of stairs in a dark alley. And there, sure enough, there was a
+merry-looking set of fellers; but you see they overdid the job, for I
+soon smelt a rat; they most all of 'em pretended to be too etarnal
+drunk. I said nothin though, but 'possumed too a little; only sipped a
+little wine, and that made me straight instead of crooked. But at last
+they proposed a game of cards. Well, said I, I'm not much of a dabster
+at it, but if the stake ain't high, I don't care if I do take a fling or
+two; so down we set to it, and they pulled out their cards for loo.
+Stop! stop! said I, we must have _new cards_; I never play with other
+men's cards. They began to suspicion, maybe, that they had got the wrong
+sow by the ear, but they sent and got some new packs, and then we took
+a smash or two at the game, and I'm a Cherokee if I didn't give 'em a
+touch or two of old Kentuck. I won all the money they had, but it wasn't
+much, and they made me pay most of that for the refreshments, as they
+said the winners always paid for them things."
+
+"But you have not yet told me how you got into the row," said Lamar; "I
+wish to know the whole story--come, let us have it?"
+
+"Well, it's soon told. As I was telling you, the black-leg chap and I
+went to the circus, and we had'nt set long in the pit before there was a
+young gal come in, and set on one end of the same bench. She was'nt so
+ugly neither, but I took pity on her because she looked like a country
+gal, and there was no women settin near her. After a while, three chaps
+come down from the boxes above, and set right down by the gal, and began
+to push one another over against her; at last the one next her, and he
+was the same chap you saw in the stage yesterday morning, only he had on
+them green specks--well, he put his arm round her, and called her his
+dear, and all that; well, you see, I had heard tell of these city gals,
+and I thought if she was pleased it was none of my business; but
+presently I heard her sobbing and crying, with her apron up to her eyes,
+and she told them they were no gentlemen, or they would not treat a poor
+girl so away from home. So the Irish whiskey, or old Kentuck, I don't
+know which, began to rise in my throat. I jumped up and raised the
+war-whoop. 'Old Kentuck for ever!' said I; and with that, I took the
+back of my hand and knocked the chap's hat off, and his 'sculp' went
+with it. Call your soul your own, said I; he jumped up and gin me a wipe
+with that little black switch across the nose; it had hardly cleverly
+touched me, afore I took him a sneezer, between the two eyes, glasses
+and all; he dropped over like a rabbit when you knock 'em behind the
+head; I rather suspicion he thought a two year old colt's heels had got
+a taste of his cocoanut.
+
+"Then the other two took it up, and both on 'em seized me, and swore
+they would carry me to the police office; but I took 'em at cross
+purposes, for while one of them held the collar of the old home-made, I
+fetched the other a kick that sent him over the benches a rip roaring, I
+tell you. The other little chap was hangin on to me like a leech to a
+horse's leg; I jist picked him up and throwed him into the ring upon the
+sand, for I did'nt want to hurt him: but then the real officers come up
+and clamped me. I wished myself back in old Kentuck bad enough then; but
+while they held me there, like a dog that had been killen sheep, the
+little gal came up to me, and said she would go and bring her father, to
+try and get me off; and then she asked me where I lived,--I told her in
+old Kentuck; then she asked me where I put up, and I put my mouth to her
+ear and told her; and I could hardly get it away again without givin her
+a smack, for she would pass for a pretty gal even in old Kentuck; well,
+this morning, her and her father were here by times to thank me, and the
+old man invited me to stop at his house as I go home; it's on the same
+road we came down yesterday."
+
+"Did the girl go to the circus by herself?" asked Lamar.
+
+"No; the old man stopped at the door to buy a ticket, and she went on,
+and lost him."
+
+"But you have not told me how you came by this scalp," said Lamar,
+taking up the large black scratch with curled locks.
+
+"Oh! you see, I grabbled that in the scuffle, and slipped it into my
+pocket."
+
+"How did you get away from the officers?"
+
+"Oh! that's the way I lost the old 'home-made;' you see they began to
+pull me over the benches, and I told 'em I would walk myself if they
+would let me, and so they did, but they held on to my coat. I kept
+pretty cool until they got outside of the house, and then a crowd
+gathered round, and they began cologueing together, until I saw my way
+out a little, and then I jist slipped my foot behind one of 'em and
+pushed him down, and tumbled the other feller over him, and then I
+showed them a clean pair of heels. They raised the whoop--and I raised
+my tail like a blue-lick buck, for you see I had'nt much coat to keep it
+down;--dash me if it was'nt tail all the way to the collar, and stood
+out straight behind like it was afraid of my pantaloons. I made a few
+turns to throw 'em off the trail, and then with a curly whoop, and a
+hurrah! for old Kentuck, I got to my own door, where I found the
+black-leg chap. Now you know the whole business, and I suppose you can
+tell me whether there is any danger of their finding me out in that
+little excuse for a coat that blasted tailor, who was so stingy with his
+cloth, made me."
+
+"I should suppose there was none in the world. Have no fear on that
+head; there is not a magistrate in town who would not honour you in his
+heart for what you did."
+
+"I should think so too, if they had any gals of their own. The fact is,
+if there was a little knockin down and draggin out once in a while among
+them dandy chaps, they would take better care how they sleeved decent
+men's daughters."
+
+"Well, good day, Damon," said Lamar; "send for me or Chevillere if you
+get into trouble."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+
+It will readily be perceived, by the reader, that Beverley Randolph, the
+person to whom the following letter was written, is one of the three
+southerns.
+
+
+ VICTOR CHEVILLERE TO B. RANDOLPH.
+
+ Baltimore, 18--.
+
+ "DEAR RANDOLPH,
+
+ "Five long years have we lived under the same roof, pursued the
+ same studies, or rather the same studies pursued us;--engaged in
+ the same dissipation, drank of the same sour wine, shed the same
+ vinous tears, discussed the same dinners and suppers, enjoyed the
+ same dances,--stag dances, I mean,--played the same music,
+ belonged to the same society, and, I was going to say, fallen in
+ love with the same nymphs; but that brings me to the subject of
+ this letter. I am in for it! Yes, you may well look surprised! It
+ is a fact! Who is the lady? you ask. I will tell you,--that is,
+ if I can; her name is St. Clair. O! she is the most lovely,
+ modest, weeping, melancholy, blue-eyed, fair-haired, and
+ mysterious little creature you ever beheld. If you could only see
+ her bend that white neck, and rest her head upon that small hand,
+ her eye lost in profound thought, until the lower lid just
+ overflows, and a tear steals gently down that most lovely cheek;
+ and then see her start up stealthily to join again in the
+ conversation, with the most innocent consciousness of guilt
+ imaginable;--but what is it that brings these tears to sadden the
+ heart of one so youthful and so innocent? 'There's the rub,' as
+ Hamlet says. Yourself, Lamar, and I were unanimous, as you
+ perhaps remember, that men generally suffer in proportion to
+ their crimes, even in this world. I here renounce that opinion,
+ with all others founded upon college logic. A half-taught college
+ boy, in the pride of his little learning and stubborn opinions,
+ is little better than an innocent. But, you ought to see this
+ fair sufferer in order fully to appreciate the foregoing opinion.
+ You would see child-like innocence--intelligence--benevolence; in
+ short, all that is good, in her sad but lovely countenance.
+
+ "But to return to college logic; what is it? Conclusions without
+ premises, ends without means; and opinions adopted without any of
+ the previous and inevitable pains and penalties attendant upon
+ the acquirement of human knowledge, or, in other words, without
+ _experience_! I would take one of our old break-of-day club to
+ tell the flavour of a ham, or the difference between a bottle of
+ Bordeaux and Seignette brandy, as soon as any one; but what else
+ did they know? or rather what else did we know? Nothing! not
+ literally nothing, but truly nothing. If I now wanted a judicious
+ opinion upon any subject, I would go to an experienced man! one
+ that had suffered in order to learn; an original thinker for
+ practical ends.
+
+ "You ask me concerning my cousin, Virginia Bell; her with whose
+ miniature, infantile as it was, you fell so desperately in love,
+ and whom, yet unseen, I promised to yourself. She flourishes,
+ Randolph, and is as beautiful as you could desire; she is yet
+ unengaged in heart or hand, so far as I know; but _you_ know,
+ that the little sly, dear, delightful creatures will complete a
+ whole life-time of love affairs, while fathers, and brothers, and
+ guardians, and affianced lords _unloved_, may be looking on none
+ the wiser. And they will look as innocent, and as demure, and as
+ child-like, as my dear beautiful little enigma of the Black
+ Mantle.
+
+ "You say you 'hate Yankees;'--my dear fellow, you forget that you
+ and I would be considered Yankees in London or Paris. The
+ national denomination we have abroad, is 'the nation of Yankees,'
+ or the 'universal Yankee nation.' 'Tis galling to our southern
+ pride, I grant you, that we should be a mere appendage, in the
+ eyes of a foreigner, to a people who are totally dissimilar to
+ us. We must brook it until we can outdo them, in literature at
+ least. They are (say many) retailers of wooden nutmegs--unfair
+ dealers, and a canting, snivelling, hypocritical set; tell me
+ where the country is, where the population is growing
+ dense--where means of living are scarce--land high--trades
+ overstocked--professions run down--and manufactures injured by
+ foreign competition, in which the little arts of trade, and
+ 'tricks upon travellers' do not also flourish. Let the population
+ of your 'old dominion' be once multiplied by wholesome
+ legislation, or rather let the yearly emigrants be induced to
+ stay in the land of their sires, and the same cunning usages will
+ prevail. As to the 'canting and snivelling,' you must allow
+ something for the descendants of the Pilgrims. Besides, tell me,
+ liberal sir, if you have not, in the very bosom of your great
+ valley, as genuine Presbyterians and Roundheads as ever graced
+ the Rump Parliament, or sung a psalm on horseback. And to give
+ the devil his due, these same Presbyterians are no bad citizens
+ of a popular government. But there is the lady of the Black
+ Mantle. Observe that she was born north of the Potomac, yet I
+ would wager any thing that you could not look steadily upon her
+ face for one minute, and curse the Yankees as I have heard you
+ do. I know you will say, therein lies the cause of my sudden
+ conversion to Yankeeism. By no means! I had begun to find out
+ that the Yankees had souls like other people, before I had ever
+ seen her.
+
+ "I approve of your determination to travel, and that even to the
+ south, rather than not to travel at all; but is there not some
+ danger lest a Virginian should become more bigoted, by travelling
+ among a people still more bigoted than himself. I know your
+ disposition; it is to hug up your dear southern prejudices within
+ your own bosom. Lamar and I are becoming liberal, and then we
+ will cast out devils for you. Do not forget that I shall have a
+ mother and cousin there by the time you arrive at the high hills
+ of the Santee. Lamar has taken desperately to a six foot
+ Kentuckian, as fine a specimen as you could wish to see; he is
+ what may be called an American yeoman of the west.
+
+ "Yours truly,
+
+ "VICTOR CHEVILLERE."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ B. RANDOLPH TO V. CHEVILLERE.
+
+ "Salem, North Carolina, 18--.
+
+ "DEAR CHEVILLERE,
+
+ "Thus far I have flown before the wind--sand, I should have said.
+ At any rate, here I am, in this town of German religionists. Here
+ dwells the first unanimous people I have ever seen. They are
+ Moravians; and every thing is managed by this little community
+ for the common benefit. They have one tavern, one store, one
+ doctor, one tanner, one potter, and so on in every trade or
+ occupation. Besides these, they have a church and a flourishing
+ female seminary. The latter is conducted upon the utilitarian
+ plan--each lady, in turn, has to perform the offices of cook,
+ laundress, and gardener; and, I need hardly say, that it is
+ admirably conducted. After I had visited all these
+ establishments--for every respectable looking stranger is waited
+ upon by some one appointed for that purpose to conduct him
+ thither,--I returned to the large, cool, and comfortable inn, and
+ had scarcely seated myself to enjoy the comforts of nicotiana,
+ when a small billet was handed to me by a handsomely dressed and
+ polite black servant with a glazed hat, which not a little
+ astonished me, you may be sure. I had not a living acquaintance
+ in the whole state that I knew of; except, indeed, old Father
+ Bagby, the master of ceremonies to the little community. It could
+ not be a challenge from some Hans Von Puffenburg of these quiet
+ burghers: so I concluded it must be a billet-doux from some of
+ the beautiful creatures at the seminary on the hill. You can
+ easily imagine, therefore, that I was no long time in tearing it
+ open; when, behold! it was, in good truth, from a lady. Can you
+ guess who? No. Then take the note itself entire.
+
+ "'DEAR SIR,
+
+ "'If, as I believe, you are the same Mr. Randolph who was a
+ room and class-mate of my son Victor Chevillere, in college,
+ I will be very glad to see you. The servant will show you to
+ our little parlour.
+
+ "'M. J. CHEVILLERE.'
+
+ "'I am the luckiest dog alive,' said I, jumping nearly over the
+ negro's head, 'Is your young mistress here also.'
+
+ "'Yes, masta, she is just leaving school for home, so please you.'
+
+ "'Please me!' said I; 'to be sure it does please me; I never was
+ more pleased in all my life. For I was just about to forswear
+ these eternal pine-barrens and sand-hills, and face to the
+ right-about. So lead the way to your two mistresses.' Whereupon he
+ led the way, hat in hand, to a room in the inn; and there,
+ Chevillere, sat your honoured mother. Commend me to our southern
+ matrons in high-life. Not that I know any thing against your
+ northern ladies, old or young; but there is in our mothers a mild
+ dignity, hospitality, and politeness, which makes every one at
+ home. But I need not describe to you your own. But I will not
+ promise you as much of the little blushing southern brunette, who
+ gracefully arose on your mother's saying, 'Mr. Randolph, my
+ adopted daughter Virginia Bell Chevillere.' I saw in an instant
+ that you had told her of our college bargain, and my falling in
+ love with her miniature. By-the-by, you ought to break that
+ slanderous miniature, or the head of the dauber who perpetrated
+ it. Her beauty never could be delineated on ivory or canvass. Can
+ any one paint the living, breathing soul of a very young and
+ beautiful female? No! and I'll tell you why. If a man had the
+ genius to do so, the very enthusiasm which always attends it would
+ throw him into very unpainter-like raptures at the sight of such a
+ one; and that's the true reason why artists so seldom succeed in
+ delineating young females. A precious piece of logic for you. But
+ to return to the original of the picture; there was a blushing
+ consciousness about the little Bell, as everybody calls her, which
+ was truly charming. Her jet black hair and eyes shone like ebony;
+ her brilliant white teeth and brunette complexion were radiant
+ with blushing smiles at this first reception of her long-promised
+ husband. There was no girlish pouting, or childish affectation, as
+ is too often the case when the parties have been laid off for each
+ other; she was at the same time modest and self-possessed; her
+ fairy figure glided about, as if her little fairy foot scarcely
+ touched the carpet. I tell you these things, because you asked me
+ to do so in all plainness of speech. Your cousin is all that a
+ cousin of my dearest friend should be--lovely, intelligent, and
+ interesting.
+
+ "Your mother intended to wait here for some male friend, who has
+ diverged a day's ride from their route home from the Springs; but
+ she has now determined to leave this place to-morrow. I shall
+ escort them as far as the Chevilleres' proud family seat,
+ Belville. You will, therefore, hear no more complaints of the
+ dreariness of the eternal pine-barrens, or the fever-and-ague
+ appearance of the poor; except, that I will say now, once for all,
+ that the poor of a slave-country are the most miserable and the
+ most wretched of all the human family. The grades of society in
+ this state are even farther apart than in Virginia. Here, there is
+ one immense chasm from the rich to the abject poor. In the valley
+ of Virginia, or in the country where you are, there are regular
+ gradations. The very happiest, most useful, and most industrious
+ class of a well-regulated community, is here wanting. Their place
+ is filled up by negroes; in consequence of which, your
+ aristocrats are more aristocratic, and your poor still poorer. The
+ slaves create an immeasurable distance between these two classes,
+ which can never be brought together until this separating cause be
+ removed. You know I am no _abolitionist_, in the incendiary
+ meaning of the term; yet I cannot deny from you and myself, that
+ they are an incubus upon our prosperity. This we would boldly
+ deny, if a Yankee uttered it in our hearing; but to ourselves, we
+ must e'en confess it. If I am, therefore, an abolitionist, it is
+ not for conscience-sake, but from policy and patriotism.
+
+ "We can never rival those northern people, until we assume the
+ modern tactics in this provincial warfare; that is, throw aside
+ all useless baggage, and concentrate our energies upon a single
+ point at a time. I have done with this theme for the present, and
+ will repair to your friends.
+
+ "Your mother knows nothing of our college-treaty, therefore she
+ little thinks what a masked enemy she has let into the camp.
+ Little Bell smiles, and enjoys our mutual understanding highly.
+ But there lies the mischief; she smiles too innocently, and too
+ calmly, and too openly, and has lost too much of that blushing
+ mood in which she first received me; and I have thought several
+ times that the little arch gipsy was laughing at me. If she had
+ not been your cousin, and my affianced bride for the last five
+ years, I should have taken leave. _You_ know I never could stand
+ to be exhibited; and would prefer being shot, at any time, to
+ being laughed at. I shall watch the little fairy, and see if she
+ is making me her butt; if so, I will see them safe to Belville,
+ and then--you shall hear from me again.
+
+ "You requested me to point out to you any thing in which I should
+ observe that the Carolinas differed from Virginia. I must say
+ then, with the judges, when they are pronouncing sentence,
+ 'however painful may be the duty imposed upon me,' that your
+ country appears more miserable the more deeply I penetrate it. Not
+ that you lack splendid mansions, and magnificent cotton-fields
+ varied with flowers, rich and tropical gardens, the orange and the
+ 'pride of India,' your wild and fragrant swamp-flowers, princely
+ hospitality, accomplished men and women,--not that you lack any of
+ these. But the seeds of decay are sown at the very point where
+ energy--enterprise--national
+ pride--industry--economy--amusements--gayety--and above all,
+ intelligence, should grow, namely, with your yeomanry!
+
+ "I would not, if I could, have your young men and women
+ transformed to spinning-jennies. Heaven forefend! I would have
+ your lowest class of whites elevated to the dignity of intelligent
+ and independent yeomen. How would I effect it? you ask. Apply the
+ grand lever by which all human movement is brought about--hope!
+ Has a poor North Carolinian hope? See him, on some cloudless
+ morning, when the glorious rays of the sun are gladdening the
+ hearts even of the unintelligent creation, standing within the
+ door of his pine-log cabin, his hands in his pockets, his head
+ leaning against the door in melancholy mood. Some half-dozen pale
+ and swollen-faced children are sitting on a bench against the side
+ of the hut, endeavouring to warm away the ague in the sunbeams.
+ The wife lies sick in bed. The little fields are barely marked out
+ with a rotten and broken-down pole-fence, and overgrown with
+ broom, or Bermuda-grass, and blackberry-bushes. A miserable horse
+ stands beyond the fence, doubtful whether there is better grazing
+ within or without. A little short-cotton and sweet-potato patch,
+ flanked by an acre of scrubby Indian corn; and, added to these,
+ five poor sheep, two goats, and a lean cow, complete the inventory
+ of his goods and chattels. You have all his cause for _hope_! You
+ have, too, his causes for fear. He has in his pocket a summons for
+ debt, contracted for sugar and tea, and other needful comforts,
+ for his sick wife and children.
+
+ "Had he any cause for hope? God knows he had none in this world.
+ But you will say the picture is exaggerated. As I am a true man
+ and a southern, it is not.
+
+ "I was benighted, and sought lodgings in the very house I have
+ described. 'Who lives here,' said I, on riding to the door. 'One
+ Fifer,' said a white-headed, half-grown girl, so weak that she
+ could scarcely stand. I sat up nearly all night with the sick
+ woman and children. On relieving the poor man's embarrassments in
+ the morning, I received the heart-felt thanks of the wretched
+ family; and almost rode my horse to exhaustion, to get away from
+ the wretched image imprinted on my memory.
+
+ "Is this man a sample of the yeomanry of your country? I say, in
+ deep and profound sorrow, I believe that he is. Where, then, does
+ the evil lie? This is a question which every southern must soon
+ ask himself, and one which Nullification cannot answer.
+
+ "_Here_, then, is a triumphant answer--an answer in deeds, instead
+ of words--in the happiness, the prosperity, and the substantial
+ wealth of these simple and primitive Moravians. Here, where I am
+ writing, is an industrious, intelligent, and healthy community, in
+ the very heart of all the misery I before described. Let us then
+ improve by the lesson, seek out the sources of their prosperity,
+ find the point where their plans diverge from ours, and, my word
+ for it (if there be no reason in the case), we become a great, a
+ flourishing, and a happy people.
+
+ "But I must take one small exception to the Moravian political
+ economy. They require all the young gentlemen to be enrolled on
+ one list, and all the willing young ladies on another; and the
+ first gentleman on the list must marry the first lady; so that
+ they are drafted for marriage, as our Virginia militia are drafted
+ for duty. I do not know that this is certainly true; but if it be
+ true, that a youth must marry the first that comes up, _nolens
+ volens_, I would put in a plump negative. This excepted, they are
+ worthy of all imitation, even to the drinking of home-brewed in
+ their pewter mugs, and smoking long pipes around their
+ council-table, when their little legislature meets.
+
+ "There are no slaves in this little nation, and labour is no
+ disgrace. In the extensive grounds, belonging to the female
+ seminary, I saw many pretty little arms bared to work; not
+ Moravian young ladies only, but elegant and aristocratic young
+ ladies from all parts of the southern states, without distinction,
+ and of every sect and denomination; and I never saw more beautiful
+ complexions. The little gipsies would come in from their work in
+ the morning, blooming as roses. Here is a complete refutation of
+ the assertion, that the whites cannot work in a southern climate;
+ here are as fine lands, and as fine husbandry and horticulture, as
+ can be found in any country; here are the first paved streets
+ south of Petersburg; here the first town, in which water is
+ conveyed by pipes, as in Philadelphia; here the first stone-fences
+ and grass-plots.
+
+ "Your mother and little Bell are cheerful and happy. Indeed, the
+ latter looks as if she had never suffered for a moment. How happy
+ a life is that of a girl at a boarding-school, exempt from all the
+ pains and penalties of collegians--the 'hair-breadth 'scapes'--the
+ formal trials for riding other people's horses,--ringing church
+ bells,--building fences across the road,--hanging cake and beer
+ signs at magistrates' and elders' doors,--burnings in effigy,
+ fights at country weddings and dances,--exploring expeditions in
+ the mountains and caverns, professedly for geological, but really
+ for depredating purposes,--shooting house-dogs,--expeditions upon
+ the water, and skating upon the ice,--swimming, duelling,
+ fighting, biting, scratching,--firing crackers and cannons in
+ college entries,--heavy meat suppers, with oceans of strong
+ waters,--and then headache, thirst, soda and congress-water in the
+ morning, and perhaps a visit from the doctor or the
+ president,--presentments by the grand jury for playing at cards
+ and overturning apple-carts,--personating ghosts with
+ winding-sheets, and getting knocked on the head for their
+ pains,--serenading sweethearts, and taking linchpins out of
+ wagons,--making sober people drunk and drunken people
+ sober,--battling with watchmen, constables, and sheriffs,--running
+ away from the tailors and tavern-keepers,--kissing country girls,
+ and battling with their beaux,--tricks upon the tutors, and
+ shaving the tails of the president's horses,--stealing away the
+ lion or the elephant at an animal show, and pelting strolling
+ players,--putting hencoops upon churches, painting out signs, and
+ carrying off platforms,--throwing hot rolls under the table, and
+ biscuit at the steward's head,--playing musical seals at prayers,
+ and saying prayers at rows,--gambling in study hours, and filching
+ at recitation,--having one face for the president and another for
+ the fellows,--and, finally, being sent home with a letter to your
+ father, informing him that you are corrupting the morals of your
+ _teachers_ in these pranks. These are a few of the classical
+ studies into which the dear little innocents are never initiated,
+ while they form no small part of collegiate education in America,
+ as we can testify from experience.
+
+ "Many a fine fellow makes the first trial of a stump speech, with
+ an extract from an Irish sermon at a drunken row; his head perhaps
+ stuck three feet through the window of the little bar in a tavern,
+ and his audience sitting round on the beer-tables, armed with
+ sticks, stones, and staves. One, who with drunken gravity keeps
+ his head and stick moving all the while, says, that he concurs
+ fully in opinion with the speaker; though, if asked what the
+ subject is, he swears it is the Greek question. The question and
+ the laugh go round. One avers stoutly that it is Catholic
+ emancipation; a third vociferates that it is a complete
+ justification of Brutus for killing Caesar; a fourth thinks it a
+ part of the recitation of the day, while the most drunken man of
+ the company jumps down from his seat on the table, and swears that
+ he can see through the fellow clearly, 'it's nothing but sleight
+ of hand;' with which he exclaims, as he rubs his eyes and looks
+ round, 'Bless my soul, boys, how drunk you all are; come, I'll
+ help you to your room before matters get worse,' leading off the
+ soberest man in the room. The party then breaks up in a regular
+ row; I think I see the _old_ fellows now, marching off two and two
+ with the true would-be sober and drunken gravity, every man
+ thinking that he is completely cheating his neighbour, by his
+ picked steps and exactly poised head and shoulders, like a drunken
+ soldier on drill. One gets into a carriage rut; another climbs
+ into a pig-sty, and thinks he is getting over the college fence. A
+ third falls over a cow, while a fourth takes off his hat to a
+ blind horse, mistaking him in the dark for the president. At
+ length they are lodged in bed, with boots, hats, and clubs, like
+ soldiers expecting a surprise. Some murder a song or two in a
+ drunken twang, while the rest snore in chorus.
+
+ "But next comes the awful reward of transgression in the morning;
+ dry throats, aching limbs, torn coats, sick stomachs, haggard
+ countenances, swelled heads. The trembling and moody toilet is
+ made; the bell rings for prayers; and a more repentant set of
+ sinners never assembled under its sound. All wonder what has
+ become of the joyous feelings of the previous night, and think
+ with shame of such actions and speeches as they can recollect.
+ Hereupon follows a gloomy and melancholy day. They are home-sick.
+ Relations, friends, and the scenes of childhood, with all their
+ quiet, innocent, and heartfelt pleasures, glide before the
+ imagination. The head becomes dizzy; the heart palpitates; the
+ hands tremble, and the sight grows double. Then comes the fear of
+ illness, and death in a strange land. Associates of the 'row' are
+ avoided; several chapters in the Bible are read; repentance is
+ promised; sleep settles the nervous system; and next morning they
+ arise gay and happy. This continues until the scene is repeated,
+ and so on, until one half forswear brandy and the other half
+ become confirmed sots.
+
+ "Here is a coherent epistle for you. But if you dislike it, send
+ it back, and I will divide it into--first--secondly--thirdly, et
+ cetera, as the old president did his sermons.
+
+ "B. RANDOLPH."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+
+After the visit to the monument, Chevillere daily inquired concerning
+the health of the interesting invalid; and as regularly was
+indisposition pleaded for her non-appearance. Late in the evening of the
+third day, he was slowly pacing the pavement in front of the hotel; now
+and then throwing a wistful glance at the lighted window of the lady,
+when all at once he suddenly wheeled round, and grasping in the dark,
+was surprised to find that a person whom he had supposed to be
+impertinently dogging his steps, had eluded his grasp. He grimly smiled
+at his own exasperation for an imaginary cause, hastily adjusted his
+cloak, and turned down the street leading most directly to the bay.
+
+When he arrived at the quiet and deserted wharf, and the rapid flow of
+his impetuous blood was retarded by the cool invigorating breeze which
+swept over the face of the water, he saw an old yawl lying on the dock,
+with its broad bottom turned to the bay. Negligently leaning his person
+at full length against its weather-beaten bottom, and drawing down his
+hat close over his brows, he surrendered himself to one of those
+habitual reveries which the southern well knows how to enjoy. Had his
+mind and feelings been attuned to such things at the time, the scene
+itself would have furnished no uninteresting subject, with its hundred
+little lights, gleaming in the intense fog and darkness, and the
+numberless vessels that lay upon the bosom of the waters, with their
+dark outlines dimly visible, like slumbering monsters of their own
+element. He heeded them not; yet were his feelings insensibly impressed
+with the surrounding objects, and deeply tinctured with the profound
+gloom of the time and scene. The direct current of his thoughts pointed,
+however, in the direction of the invalid. Her extreme youth, beauty, and
+apparent innocence,--her deep distress and profound melancholy,
+naturally produced a corresponding depression in his own otherwise
+elastic spirits. He was perfectly unconscious of the time he had spent
+in this way, when accidentally turning his head to one side, he was
+struck with the appearance of something intercepting the line of vision
+in that direction. He was just about to approach the cause of his
+surprise, when a deep voice, issuing from the very spot, added not a
+little to his superstitious mood, by the exact manner in which it chimed
+in with the present subject of his meditations.
+
+"A beautiful young woman in affliction is a very dangerous subject of
+meditation, under some circumstances."
+
+"An honest heart fears no danger from any earthly source," was the
+reply.
+
+"Honesty is no guard against external danger in this world, whether
+moral or physical," said the figure.
+
+"Discernment may lend a hand to honesty in such a case."
+
+"Ha! ha! ha!" hideously retorted the intruder; "Discernment, said you?
+Man's discernment is a mighty thing; by it he reads the past, the
+present, and the future; what can withstand his mighty vision? He can
+descry danger at a distance, and bring happiness within his grasp; he
+can tell the objects of his own creation, and his Creator's first
+beginning; he can read the starry alphabet in yonder heavens, and fathom
+the great deep; he can laugh at the instinct of grovelling creation, and
+thunder the dogmas of reason in the teeth of revelation itself!
+Discernment, indeed! ha! ha! ha! why, man is not half so well off as the
+brutes. What is their instinct but God's ever present and supporting
+hand; but man--he has neither perfect reason nor instinct! He has the
+conscience of an angel, and the impulses of a devil; and reason sits
+between them, for an umpire, with a fool's cap upon her head! Impulse
+bribes reason, and reason laughs at conscience. Impulse leads downward,
+like the power of gravity; and conscience struggles upward like the
+nightmare: but reason and discernment will traffic and bargain with
+impulse for one moment, and blind or cheat conscience the next! Turn
+mankind loose with all their reason without providence, and they will
+butt each other's foolish brains out! Bribed conscience makes
+hypocrites,--frightened conscience makes fanatics,--but reason-drilled
+conscience makes incarnate devils!"
+
+"But," said Chevillere, involuntarily interested by this wild rhapsody,
+"a tender, conscience-instructed reason, and christianized impulses,
+make an honest and a discerning man, too."
+
+"Instructed reason! who teaches man's reason, but the inward devils of
+his impulses? A few good parents may point upward, periodically, but the
+impulses pull down! down! down! for ever! no intermission. If they would
+let go, I myself could plunge into the sea; but the deeper we plunge,
+the harder they pull! The farther we sink, the heavier they become. Oh!
+man! of what a cursed race art thou! Think you the inhabitants of the
+moon are likewise under the ban of God's displeasure?"
+
+"I indulge in no such impracticable dreams," said Chevillere.
+
+"No! no! _you_ dream of paradise; but remember what I now tell you, your
+paradise will not be without its Eve, and its serpent too!"
+
+"To whom do you allude?"
+
+"To the lady of whom you were thinking but now."
+
+"You know not what you say," said Chevillere.
+
+"Do I not? Perhaps you would have me speak more plainly! Perhaps you
+could screw up your resolution to the point, that I might amputate your
+hopes one by one, as a poor fellow sees the surgeon carrying off his
+bloody limbs; nay, I could do it!"
+
+"Why, sir, you never saw me till within the hour."
+
+"Have I not? perhaps not; I would to heaven I could say as much about
+the lady."
+
+"To what lady do you so often allude?"
+
+"To the lady with the _black mantle_."
+
+"Hold, she is all innocence and purity."
+
+"Innocence and purity! Eve was innocent and pure too! yea, and
+surpassingly beautiful! but she fell! Alas! her daughters are like her."
+
+"Come, sir," said Chevillere, with some exasperation, "let us put a stop
+to this discourse; it is not pleasing to me, and I feel sure it is not
+useful to you."
+
+"Be it so," said the intruder, drawing up his long goat's-hair cloak,
+and pulling a flat cloth cap closely over his gray locks, as they for a
+moment became visible by the reflection of the long horizontal rays of a
+lamp from the deck of a neighbouring vessel; "be it so, sir; there is no
+convincing a child that a _beautiful_ candle will burn until it scorches
+its fingers."
+
+"In God's name, then, out with it, sir! what is it that seems to burn so
+upon your tongue? come, out with it!" said Chevillere, sharply.
+
+"For what do you take me, young man? a gossip or a stripling! I am
+neither one nor the other; I am old enough to be your father; as well
+born and as well educated as he ever was; and (notwithstanding your
+southern blood and aristocratic notions) it may be as proud; farewell,
+sir, and the next time I offer to pull you from the edge of a precipice,
+perhaps you will listen with more respect to one of double your age, who
+can have no interest in deceiving you. Farewell, sir!"
+
+"Stay! stay! a moment,--one word more. Did you not visit Washington's
+monument three days ago, and see me there for the first time?"
+
+"I could answer either yes or no to that question. How do you know, sir,
+that we have not met before, centuries ago? Do you not sometimes foresee
+a whole scene, just as it afterward takes place? Do you not sometimes
+look upon a strange face with a shudder? Does not a feature--a smile--or
+an expression of them combined--sometimes awake the slumbering memory of
+ages? Is it not so? have you never communed with the dead?"
+
+"Never, sir."
+
+"I have, often! often!--and many times have I been warned of approaching
+evils, by these dreamy conversations; I never dream of seeing my father
+smile upon me, that something good does not speedily follow; nor of
+snakes and serpents, unattended by bad news or bad fortune. Of these
+things I usually dream the night before meeting the lady yonder, after a
+long absence."
+
+"I supposed as much," said Chevillere.
+
+"How, sir."
+
+"I supposed that you had _dreamed_ something against that pure and
+unfortunate young lady."
+
+"Would to Heaven it were all a dream! Sunshine would again break into
+the dark regions of my thoughts."
+
+"Suppose I should undertake and pledge my life to convince you that it
+is so."
+
+"You might convince me of your sincerity, but not of your power. Can you
+raise the dead?"
+
+"No, but what has raising the dead to do with the lady?"
+
+"More than you imagine, perhaps."
+
+"Ah, I see it is useless to attempt what I proposed and hoped to effect
+for the sake of the lady's peace. Have you no friends with you in this
+city?"
+
+"Yes, I have a dog! there sits the best friend I ever had, save one!"
+
+"My dear sir! permit me to say I think you far from being well."
+
+"I never felt better in health than I do at this moment."
+
+"But we are not judges of our own ailments: Physicians do not often
+prescribe for themselves."
+
+"I tell you, sir, I am well!"
+
+"Have it so, sir! but if you are the person whom I met a few days since
+at the monument, I would mildly and respectfully recommend to you to
+think no more of the lady you saw there with me. You certainly labour
+under some grievous error, with regard to her, at least."
+
+"You will find, when it is too late, perhaps, that others instead of me
+are labouring under _fatal_ errors concerning that young lady!
+Farewell, sir, farewell. When next we meet, you will listen with a more
+attentive ear to what I have to say; you will have observed many strange
+things yourself, and you will naturally seek, rather than repel a
+solution of the mystery." Then with a signal to his dog, he hastily went
+from the wharf, leaving Chevillere in no enviable state of mind.
+
+Youthful thoughts will not long voluntarily dwell upon the gloomy aspect
+even of the circumstances surrounding themselves; it was very natural,
+therefore, that Chevillere should reflect with much complacency upon the
+tendency of his friend Lamar's laughing philosophy; nor was he long in
+threading his way to the lodgings of the Kentuckian. He had calculated
+with great certainty upon finding his friend there, and on ascending the
+three flights of stairs, he heard the voices of both in full chorus of
+laughter, that of Lamar indicating his most joyful mood. He rapped at
+the door once or twice before he was heard. "Come in!" shouted the
+backwoodsman, "what the devil's the use of knocking with every mug of
+punch." Lamar sprang to his feet at the sight of his friend, with
+volumes of smoke rolling over his head, and laying one hand on
+Chevillere's back and another on his breast, cried in the true mock
+heroic;--"'Be thy intents wicked or charitable, thou com'st in such a
+questionable shape, that I will speak to thee.' 'Revisit'st thou thus
+the glimpses of the moon, making night hideous, and us fools of'
+liquor--'so horribly to shake our dispositions, with thoughts beyond the
+reaches of our souls; say, why is this?' But, by old Shakspeare's beard,
+you look like a ghost indeed! why, whence com'st thou, man? see his
+cloak, too! it is covered with sawdust!"
+
+"Hurrah for old Kentuck!" said Damon, "he's been to the circus! I say,
+stranger, was there any knockin down and draggin out there. O! black
+eyes and bruises! what a rascally appetite I've got now for a knock
+down; I swear I think my hands will git as tender as a woman's, if I
+don't git a little now and then jist to keep 'em in."
+
+"I may be soiled from leaning against a boat at the dock," said
+Chevillere.
+
+"You certainly have the air of one who had tried a few perils by land
+and sea," said Lamar.
+
+"The fact is, I do not feel well, nor in high spirits, and I came here
+on purpose to see if Damon could not brighten me up a little."
+
+"To be sure I can," said he; "but why didn't you come sooner, and then
+we could all have gone to the circus together; that's the place for my
+money; you see you want something to make your blood circulate: a small
+taste or two would soon bring you round."
+
+"A taste of what?" asked Chevillere.
+
+"A small bit of a regular row, to be sure; all in good-nature, you know;
+a man needn't git in a passion, in takin a little exercise after bein
+cooped up here all day, in one of these cocklofts--why, if I sit here an
+hour, and go down in the street, by hokies, but I want to snort
+directly; I feel like old Pete when he's been stabled up for a week or
+two, and jist turned loose to graze a little; and I'll tell you what it
+is, stranger, I'm for making a straight coat-tail out of this place, and
+that in a hurry, for I've got through all my business now, and I'm keen
+to be among the Yorkers; for I've heard tell there's smashin work there
+every night."
+
+"Have you any acquaintances there?" asked Lamar.
+
+"No; but I expect to find some of our Kentuck boys there, who come round
+by the lakes; and if I do, I rather reckon we'll weed a wide row."
+
+"Take care you do not run against old Hays in your mad pranks," said
+Chevillere.
+
+"They say he's a little touched with the snappin-turtle, but I'm thinkin
+he'd hardly try old Kentuck at a fight or a foot-race."
+
+"He has had a good many fights and foot-races in his day," said
+Chevillere.
+
+"Yes," said Damon, "but always with rogues; he'd find it rather a
+different business at an honest ground-scuffle, where every man had to
+take care of his own ears."
+
+"You think, then, he could not be so successful in Kentucky as he is in
+New-York, at his occupation," said Lamar.
+
+"He'd be off the scent there, and I rather think he'd soon look like the
+babes in the woods; you see he has the rogues in the city like a coon
+when he's treed; an old dog's better than a young one in such a fix."
+
+"But come, Damon, go on with your adventures of the day which
+Chevillere's entrance interrupted."
+
+"Not till we have wet our whistles; come, stranger (to Chevillere), you
+have'nt drank nothin since you came into the room, nor into the city
+either, for what I know."
+
+"You know," said Chevillere, "that I am a cold water man, upon taste and
+principle both."
+
+"And that's what I call ra'al hard drink; well, here's to the little gal
+of the circus, and the little gal down yonder at the hotel; cold water's
+but a sorry drink to pledge such warm-hearted creters--but I see talking
+of them makes you look solemncholy again, and so here goes for my day's
+work; let me see--where did I leave off?"
+
+"At the commission house where you carried the letter," said Lamar.
+
+"Ah, by the hokies! so it was. Well, you see, I marched into the great
+store, as they had told me it was, with my nose uppermost, like a pig in
+the wind, I had an order on them for some of the eel-skins--but I soon
+brought my snout down agin; ho! ho! thought I, here's a pretty spot of
+work! I'm a Turk if I aint tetotally dished."
+
+"What was the matter?" said Chevillere.
+
+"Why, instead of all the fine things loomin out in the wind as I
+expected for such great marchants, I found nothing but a long empty
+store, and no shelves even, and there sat two or three starched lookin
+dogs, on so many old rum bar'ls; I swear I thought in a minute about our
+old still-house, and the school-master, and the miller, and the
+blacksmith, and the stiller, talkin politics over the bar'ls, and takin
+a swig every now and then out of the old proof-vial."
+
+"Well! you presented your draft," said Lamar, "and what then?"
+
+"No I did'nt--I got a straddle of a bar'l too; I thought I would take a
+dish of chat, for that was about the most I expected to get. Rat me! but
+I began to feel a little particular about the gizzard in thoughts of
+sellin old Pete to get home on; I put on a long face. It's everlastin
+dull times for business, said I. 'O sir, you are quite mistaken,
+business is taking a look up--it's getting very brisk indeed.' And he
+rubbed his hands, and looked as glad as if he had had a drink of that
+hot punch. So, thought I, I'm off the trail; but I thought I would tree
+him next time. 'The best horses, said I, will stumble sometimes.' 'Sir?'
+said he, I said 'the honestest men sometimes make bad speculations.'
+'Oh!' said he, 'I understand you! but I hope business is brisk and money
+plenty this season in the west.' Now, thought I, he's got the boot on
+the wrong leg this time; 'yes, said I, we can't complain, but I must say
+I thought it looked a little dull hereabouts.' 'O, you western men are
+such driving fellows, that you can't put up with our slow way of makin
+money.' He's feedin me on soft corn, thought I. 'We do a little now and
+then, but getting the money afterward is all our trouble,' said I. 'Why,
+sir, you have hit the nail upon the head; that's the difficulty
+everywhere,' said he. I thought I would run him into a stand 'fore long;
+but he hoisted his tail and flung me clean off the trail agin. 'Can't I
+sell you half a dozen bar'ls of cognac brandy to-day,' said he. I
+snapped my fingers and jumped up, and by the long Harry I was near
+raisin the whoop; for I thought old Pete and the money was all safe, and
+so it was. 'O! the hunters of Kentucky! old Kentucky;' and he began to
+sing and caper round the table.
+
+"Did he pay the money?" asked Chevillere.
+
+"Not exactly; these city chaps keep their money buried, I believe, for
+you never see none of it; I reckon they're 'fraid it'll spile;
+howsomever, he gave me an order on the bank for the eel-skins."
+
+"Then you took your leave," said Lamar.
+
+"No; he asked me if I had ever seen an auction of a ship's cargo; I said
+no, I had never seen more nor a Kentuck vendue: he asked me to go along;
+I'm your man, said I, for I expected there would be smashin work if a
+whole ship-load was to be sold, for I have seen some very clever little
+skrimmages at a vendue; well, when we got there, there was boxes and
+bags all laying in rows, and little troughs laying under them, like them
+we catch sugar-water in. Some had little long spoons made on purpose to
+suck sugar with, and some had little augers for boring holes; presently
+the crier began. '_Seven, seven, seven--eight, eight, eight cents a
+pound, going, going_,' and smash went the little mallet; 'how many do
+you take, sir? twenty, or the hundred boxes?' said he. 'Take the
+hundred,' said a man, that looked like he wasn't worth the powder that
+would blow him up."
+
+"Could you always tell who bid?"
+
+"No; they mostly did it by winkin, I believe; sometimes one fellow would
+grunt this side and another that side; I kept my head bobbin after them
+first one side and then the other; but whenever I looked in their faces
+their eyes looked as sleepy as a dog in fly-time, just waitin to snap a
+fellow that was buzzin about his ears."
+
+"Did you find out at last who were the bidders?"
+
+"No; they shut up their faces like steel-traps. Once or twice, maybe, I
+saw a dyin-away wrinkle round a feller's mouth, like the rings in the
+water when you throw a stone in; but they soon faded away, and they
+looked as smooth and deceitful as a pool of deep water itself agin."
+
+"They tasted and tried the articles, of course, before they bought?"
+
+"Yes; some of them had their mouths daubed, like children suckin 'lasses
+candy; and some of their big noses was stuck full of Bohea tea, outside
+and in, like old Pete when he's had a good feed of chopped rye and cut
+straw."
+
+"And what sort of a man was the auctioneer?"
+
+"Why, his mouth went so fast when he got to '_going, going, going_,'
+that you couldn't say _stop_, if you had had your mouth fixed; but his
+face I didn't like at all."
+
+"What was there in his face objectionable?"
+
+"O! I can't tell exactly, it looked out of all sort of nature; a good
+deal I don't know howish. One thing I'll be sworn to, you would never
+see such a one in old Kentuck; there every man wears his Sunday face on
+week days."
+
+"I suppose you mean that the man was disfigured with affectation," said
+Chevillere.
+
+"You've hit it, stranger, you've hit it; that's the very word I wanted
+to be at, but I couldn't get it out. Well, from the vendue I took a
+stroll round town, to see the lads and lasses; how they carried their
+heads in these parts, and maybe to see how they carried on their
+_sparkin_ in a big town like this; for, to tell you the truth, that's
+one of the things I never could see how they carried on here."
+
+"How did you manage such things in the west? Is there any thing peculiar
+in your method?"
+
+"I can't say we're different from other folks in the country, but you
+see we have abundance of chances to court the gals a little; for there's
+our weddings."
+
+"There are weddings here, too, I hope," said Lamar.
+
+"Yes, and a pretty business they make of 'em; I blundered into a church
+the other day, and what should be goin on there but a weddin; and smash
+my apple-cart, if there wasn't more cryin and snifflin than I've seen at
+many an honest man's funeral, and all in broad daylight, too; and when
+the parson had got through his flummery, with his long white mornin
+gown, they all jumped into carriages, and off they went away into the
+country somewhere, to hide themselves. I rather suspect they had stole a
+march on the old folks, else they wouldn't have run so as if the devil
+was at their heels."
+
+"How do you conduct such things in the west?" asked Lamar.
+
+"Oh! there we have quiltings, skutchings, and sewin frolics, and makin
+apple butter, and all such like; and they always wind up at the little
+end with a rip-sneezin dance, and that's where we do the sparkin; well,
+presently a weddin grows out of it, and maybe then there isn't a little
+fun agoing, dance all night, and play all sort of games, at least all
+them sort that wind up in kissin the gals, and that they manage to bring
+about by sellin pawns, and one thing or other. For my part, I never
+could see into any but the kissin part, and that you know was the cream
+of the joke."
+
+"They do not often go to church to get married then," said Chevillere.
+
+"No; I never saw anybody married at church before t'other day, and I
+hope it'll be a long time before their new-fangled ways travels out to
+old Kentuck; there our gals and boys stands up before the parson a few
+minutes, and he rolls his tobacco two or three times over his teeth,
+and _chaws_ a few words, and it's all over before you could say 'God
+save the commonwealth' three times; and what's the use in makin three
+bites of a cherry?"
+
+"But you have wandered from your point," said Lamar; "you started out on
+an expedition to see how the lads and lasses carried themselves here."
+
+"O! ay, sure enough; well, one of the first things I come across was a
+parcel of gals and boys on horseback, and I'm flummucked if it wouldn't
+have been a pretty tolerable show in the land of hogs and homminy. The
+gals rode well enough, considering how they were hampered with clothes
+and trumpery; but the men! O smashy! how they rode! bobbin up and down
+on the saddle, with three motions to the horse's one. I'm an Injin if
+old Pete Ironsides wouldn't have kicked up his heels and squealed at the
+very first motion of the rider goin ahead of him; and then the saddles
+were stuck on the shoulders of the animals, like a hump on a man's back,
+or a pair of _haims_ to hitch traces to. One of them chaps would ride a
+saddle about twice as hard as a horse. I was lookin evry minute for one
+of 'em to light behind his saddle."
+
+"Did all the gentlemen and ladies you met carry themselves so
+unnaturally?" said Lamar.
+
+"No; I met one young lady dressed in black that I thought I had seen
+before somewhere, and her spark too; but they were too busy to see me.
+_She_ looked more coy and shamefaced, like our country gals, than any of
+them."
+
+"How did the gentleman bear himself? was he polite and respectful in his
+carriage?" said Lamar, smiling, and looking at Chevillere.
+
+"Oh, yes! he bowed his head close down to the bonnet of the pretty
+little lady, and walked that way all through the street, as if he was
+afraid to lose so much as a word; sometimes she seemed to be just ready
+to cry, and looked pale and frightened. I rather suppose her old dad's a
+little sour or cross, maybe; but for all I couldn't help thinkin what a
+clever nice young couple they would make to stand up before the parson."
+
+Chevillere attempted reserve of manner, but blushed and smiled in spite
+of himself, as he asked Damon, "Not your chaw-tobacco parson, I hope?"
+
+"And why not? what if he _would_ roll his chaw-tobacco into one cheek at
+you, while he coupled you up with the other? I'll be bound you'd look at
+somebody else's pretty cheeks more nor you would at the parson's
+chaw-tobacco; besides, what harm is there in a parson's chawin? I know
+an old one who would no more git up into his pulpit of a Sunday without
+a good smart plug in his mouth, than I would strike my own brother when
+he's down. I've seen him afore now, when his wind held out longer than
+his tobacco, run his finger first into one jacket-pocket, and then into
+the other, and at last he'd draw a little piece of pigtail, just up to
+the top of the water (as you may say), and then he'd let it go again."
+
+"Some virtuous shame, in view of the congregation, I suppose," said
+Chevillere.
+
+"Yes, that was it; but I never heard any of the sarmont after the old
+boy's ammunition run out."
+
+"Why, what had his tobacco to do with your listening?"
+
+"A great deal; no sooner would the old feller begin to fumble in his
+pockets, than my hand always run into mine, of its own accord, and
+lugged out a chunk of a twist just ready to hand to the old man, and
+then when I'd find it couldn't be, I naturally took a plug myself, and
+chawed for the old boss till his wind _flagg'd_."
+
+"Or, in other words, his desire for the weed made you desire it, to cure
+which you chewed for yourself, and flattered your conscience all the
+while that you were rendering him a service," said Chevillere.
+
+"Very like! very like! for I know it makes a feller husky dry to see
+another famishin for a little of the cretur."
+
+"Not so much so, perhaps, as if a dry person, as you call him, should
+see another drinking, and could get none himself."
+
+"Oh! but that's a case out of all nature, as one may say, in these
+parts, anyhow, where liquor runs down the streets, after a manner."
+
+Chevillere and Lamar, both rising, exchanged the usual salutations, and
+the _good night! good night!_ went the rounds of all present.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+
+"Were you not delighted with the wild and mountainous scenery of the
+country around the Virginia Springs?" said Victor Chevillere to Miss St.
+Clair, on the morning after the scene related in the last chapter, as
+the lady reclined, in a pensive mood, in the room before described.
+
+"Oh, sir, you forget that I was too feeble in mind and body to enjoy the
+scenery around me then, or to partake of the enthusiasm of my friends on
+the subject. The rich and romantic scenery of the White Sulphur was
+highly attractive to me, when I became somewhat convalescent; yet I
+shall carry with me through life a sad remembrance of scenes, which to
+many others of my age and sex will ever be associated with the gay
+dance, the enlivening gallopade, the stirring music, and with
+adventurous equestrian excursions among the mountains."
+
+"I believe," said Chevillere, "that the most melancholy reflections may
+be and are much softened and mellowed in after-life, by being associated
+in the mind with the profoundly poetical feelings excited by the
+constant view of quiet mountain scenery; such as the well-remembered,
+long, long line of blue peaks, stretching far away until they reach the
+clouds and the horizon."
+
+"It is indeed true," said she, "that kind and beautiful nature, in the
+season of green leaves and flowers, will sometimes almost tempt us to
+believe that misery is not the inevitable lot of the human family; but
+when the consciousness of the one and the beauty of the other are
+together present to us, it depends entirely upon the degree, whether the
+beauty softens the suffering or not."
+
+"In other words," said he, "whether the evil be so irremediable that
+_hope_ cannot enter the heart; that the ravishing beauty of nature
+cannot excite benevolence, devotion, and love."
+
+"That was not entirely my case," said she, "for I am grateful for having
+felt some pleasing excitement at the time, and for being able now to
+call up many pleasurable remembrances, clouded as they are for the most
+part with sadness."
+
+"If I have been rightly informed, you did not visit all the other
+springs around the White Sulphur."
+
+"My health would not permit of our making the entire fashionable round."
+
+"Oh, then you have missed much pleasure," said he. "There are the Sweet
+Springs, rising out of the earth like a boiling caldron, with brilliant
+little balloons of gas ever ascending to the top of the water, and
+bursting in the sunbeams. There is not perhaps in the world such another
+natural fountain of soda-water. And there is the Salt Sulphur, with its
+high romantic hills covered with herds, and its beautiful meadows, and
+its long village of neat white cottages, and its splendid
+assembly-rooms, and its sumptuous banquets of wild game and artificial
+luxuries. But, above all, there is the Warm Spring, with its clear blue
+crystal baths, large enough for a troop of horse to swim in; there,
+likewise, is an extensive green lawn, flanked on the one side by the
+same kind of neat white cottages, and on the other by the line of blue
+mountains, rising abruptly from the plain within gun-shot of the baths.
+On a clear moonlight night, one may see the invalids sitting out on the
+green in front of their doors, enjoying the placid scenery of the
+valley, and the profound and solemn monotony of the overhanging
+mountains,--sometimes, indeed, interrupted by the bustle of a new
+arrival, the neighing of horses, the crash of the wheels, the hoarse
+voices of the coachmen as they exchange advice upon the descent into the
+valley, or by the meeting of old friends and fellow-invalids, perhaps
+acquaintances of a former season, and fellow-sufferers with the gout,
+bantering each other upon their speed."
+
+"From what little I saw of them, I think they perfectly justify the
+southern enthusiasm which we found everywhere on the subject; and I
+should think that there is no finer opportunity of seeing southern
+fashionable society."
+
+"True; our wealthiest and most fashionable people resort thither every
+season. Yet I cannot say in truth, from what I have observed myself,
+that our aristocracy are seen there to the best advantage. They are too
+much in their holyday suit of manners,--too artificial,--too unnatural.
+I have seen people who were agreeable at home, become affected and
+disagreeable at watering-places. I have also seen some who were reserved
+at home, become quite affable there. The latter effect, however, was by
+no means so common as the former."
+
+"I did not see much affectation, or many unnatural people at the White
+Sulphur," said the lady.
+
+"I cannot say that it is one of the besetting sins of the southern
+fashionables; all I meant to say was, that they show more of it there
+than at home."
+
+"For my own part, I was delighted with the generous, free, and
+open-hearted manner in which I was treated by the few female
+acquaintances I made; and I am almost ashamed to acknowledge that they
+were far more intelligent and accomplished than my prejudices had taught
+me to expect."
+
+"You acknowledge, then, that you had some provincial prejudices. Let me
+see! _then_ I must take you regularly to account, and catechise you."
+
+"Well," said the lady, as lightly as her habitual sadness ever
+permitted, "I will answer truly."
+
+"I know you will speak truly whatever you do answer; but will you speak
+the whole truth in answer to whatever I shall ask?"
+
+A sad and afflicted expression appeared upon her countenance as she
+replied, "I need hardly say to Mr. Chevillere, that those questions
+which are proper for him to ask and for me to hear shall be fully
+answered."
+
+"You do me but justice in supposing that I would not discredit my new
+dignity, by propounding questions which would lessen me in the eyes of a
+fair witness; but, to tell you the truth, I seriously meditated putting
+a few in addition to such as were local, and perhaps in a more serious
+mood than these might demand."
+
+"Proceed, sir, proceed," said the lady, somewhat perturbed; "I must
+reserve the right to answer or not. No trifling impediment, however,
+shall prevent me from gratifying your curiosity."
+
+"Would you consider it a great misfortune to reside in the southern
+states?"
+
+"Places and countries are to me nearly alike."
+
+"How so? You surely prefer your native land to all others?"
+
+"Unhappiness soon makes us indifferent to mere locality; situated as I
+am, many would prefer new scenes."
+
+"Does not affliction enlarge the heart, and extend the affections?"
+
+"I believe that slight sufferings make us captious--great ones, humane
+and benevolent."
+
+"Is it a natural consequence, that, when benevolence becomes universal,
+personal affections and partialities wither in proportion?"
+
+"Certainly not, as a consequence; but it is questionable whether
+blighted hopes do not generally precede the enlarged philanthropy spoken
+of."
+
+"May not much travelling and experience of the world produce the same
+effect?"
+
+"I cannot speak experimentally on that point; but I think it is very
+probable they do upon a masculine mind."
+
+As Chevillere was about to continue his half-serious, half-jesting
+questions, Mr. Brumley abruptly entered, and announced to his
+daughter-in-law his determination to proceed northward early on the
+following morning; and almost at the same moment, old Cato, with his
+stately step, profound bow, and cap in hand, presented a letter to his
+master, which he instantly knew by the superscription to be from
+Randolph. Presenting his regards to them both, he retired to peruse the
+epistle, which will be found in the next chapter.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+
+ B. RANDOLPH TO V. CHEVILLERE.
+
+ "Belville, High Hills of the Santee, S. Carolina.
+
+ "DEAR CHUM,
+
+ "The deserts of Africa are not to be compared, for loneliness, to
+ a South Carolinian swamp. Oh! the comforts and blessings of a
+ corduroy turnpike! These, you know, are made of poles laid down
+ in the bottom of the swamps for a road, in humble imitation of
+ that same most durable web. But the swamps gone through, and
+ myself safely landed here--this Belville of yours is a most
+ desirable place. Your father must have been a man of taste,
+ friend Victor. The grove of Pride of India trees, in front of the
+ villa, stands exactly as you left it; the vines run up and around
+ Bell's window as beautiful as ever; the pigeons wheel over the
+ garden and cotton-fields as gayly as of old. The flowers which
+ perfume this delightful and balmy air, send up their sweets from
+ the garden and the lawn as they have done these forty years; at
+ least so testifies old Tombo the gardener. Your favourite horse
+ thrives, and is none the worse for a trial of his speed and
+ bottom which I made the other day in a race with my own impetuous
+ thoughts. Your mother seems happier than I have ever seen her;
+ and little Virginia Bell is the fairest flower on the Chevillere
+ estate. Will you believe it! she introduced me to the housekeeper
+ on my arrival as having been her affianced bridegroom ever since
+ she was three months old, and then enjoyed a school-girl laugh.
+ By St. Benedict, that laugh cut nearer to my heart than a funeral
+ sermon.
+
+ "Why have you not written to her and extolled some of my good
+ qualities? She will never find them out! and as to my becoming a
+ serious, sighing suitor, I am ten times farther from it than I
+ was the first day I blundered into such dangerous company. If I
+ were to elongate my phiz by way of preparative for a sigh, she
+ would split her little sides with laughing at me. The fact is, I
+ begin to think myself pretty considerably of an ass among the
+ ladies, as your Yankees would express it. What shall I do? shall
+ I run for it? or shall I stand here and die of the cold plague?
+ If I laugh, she laughs with me; if I look serious, she laughs at
+ me; if we visit, I am laughed at; if we are visited, I am stared
+ at; and thus it is, day after day, and week after week. To your
+ mother, I no doubt appear like a more rational creature, but
+ before Miss Bell I am utterly at a loss and dumbfoundered.
+
+ "How can I show your charming cousin that I am not the fool she
+ takes me for? must I shoot somebody? That would be too
+ bloody-minded. Must I write a book? Sicken and become
+ interesting? Ah! I have it! I'll get the fever and ague (no hard
+ matter you know here); but then a man looks so unromantic with
+ his teeth, and his hands, and his feet all in motion like a negro
+ dancing 'Juba.' A lady would as soon think of falling in love
+ with a culprit on the gibbet. I shall certainly try what absence
+ will do; but then suppose that I am a bore, and no one entreats
+ me to stay! Your mother might deem it indelicate, under the
+ circumstances, for she certainly sees that I am a lost sinner;
+ then I should be blown, indeed, with all my sins upon my head!
+ without one redeeming quality for the little Bell to dwell upon
+ in my absence. If I had rescued somebody from a watery
+ grave--stopped a pair of runaway horses--saved somebody's
+ life--shot a robber--been wounded myself--should turn out to be
+ some lord's heir in England--had jumped down the Passaic or the
+ Niagara--distinguished myself against the Indians or the
+ Algerines--or even killed a mad dog--it would not be so desperate
+ a case for the hero of a love affair.
+
+ "But here I am--a poor forlorn somebody, without a single trait
+ of heroism in my composition, or a solitary past deed of the kind
+ to boast of; unless it may be bursting little brass bombs under
+ the tutor's windows in College, or shaving a horse's tail, or one
+ side of a drunken man's whiskers, or laying two drunken fellows
+ at each other's door. Suppose I should get old Tombo, the
+ gardener, into the river by stratagem, merely that I might pull
+ him out again; as he seems to be a universal favourite here. But
+ then suppose I should drown him in these mock heroics? Ah, I see
+ I shall have to remain plain Beverly Randolph all my days! Alas!
+ the days of chivalry are gone! If I could splinter a lance with
+ some of these Sir Hotheads, or Sir Blunderbys, the case might not
+ be so desperate.
+
+ "Thank Heaven, however, that the age of poetry is not gone too;
+ for poetry, you know, is but the shadow or reflection of
+ chivalry--heroism--and action! First an age of deeds, and then an
+ age of song--so here goes for the doggerel. But let me see; are
+ there not more than two ages? what succeeds to an age of poetry?
+ One of philosophy! What succeeds philosophy? Cynicism or
+ infidelity--next a utilitarian age, and lastly we have a mongrel
+ compound of all--then we have revolutions, bloodshed, sentiment,
+ religion, and spinning-jennies. Now you see I have hit it! we
+ live in the mongrel age; a hero of this era should
+ fight--write--pray--and spin cotton! Let's see how all these
+ could be united into a picture suitable for a frontispiece to a
+ work of the current age. First there must be a spinning-jenny to
+ go by steam, to the wheel of which there must be a hand-organ.
+ The steam must be scattered against an enemy; a long nosed fellow
+ with the real nasal twang must be seen upon his knees attending
+ the jenny, and singing doggerel to the music of the
+ hand-organ--there's a pretty coat of arms for you, and suitable
+ for the present age.
+
+ "But seriously, my dear Chevillere, what am I to do? I cannot get
+ on without your assistance, and yet I am ashamed to ask it;
+ however, I shall leave all these things to time--fate--and a
+ better acquaintance between the charming Miss Bell and your
+ humble servant.
+
+ "I find you have more negroes here than we have in Virginia, in
+ proportion to the whites; and existing under totally different
+ circumstances, so far as regards the distance between them and
+ their masters.
+
+ "With us slavery is tolerable, and has something soothing about
+ it to the heart of the philanthropist; the slaves are more in the
+ condition of tenants to their landlords--they are viewed more as
+ rational creatures, and with more kindly feelings; each planter
+ owning a smaller number than the planters generally do here, of
+ course the direct knowledge of, and intercourse between each
+ other is greater. Every slave in Virginia knows, even if he does
+ not love, his master; and his master knows him, and generally
+ respects him according to his deserts. _Here_ slavery is
+ intolerable; a single individual owning a hundred or more, and
+ often not knowing them when he sees them. If they sicken and die,
+ he knows it not except through the report of those wretched
+ mercenaries, the overseers. The slaves here are plantation
+ live-stock; not domestic and attached family servants, who have
+ served around the person of the master from the childhood of
+ both.
+
+ "I have known masters in Virginia to exhibit the most intense
+ sorrow and affliction at the death of an old venerable household
+ servant, who was quite valueless in a pecuniary point of view.
+
+ "Here, besides your white overseers, you have your black
+ _drivers_;--an odious animal, almost peculiar to the far south.
+ It is horrible to see one slave following another at his work,
+ with a cow-skin dangling at his arm, and occasionally tying him
+ up and flogging him when he does not get through his two tasks a
+ day. These tasks I believe are two acres of land, which they are
+ required to hoe without much discrimination, or regard to age,
+ sex, health, or condition; now I have seen stout active fellows
+ get through their two tasks by one o'clock, while another poor,
+ stunted, bilious creature toiled the whole day at the same
+ portion of labour. Another abomination here, and even known in
+ some parts of Virginia, is that the females are required to work
+ in the field, and generally to do as much as the males. This
+ system is unworthy even of refined slave-holders. But the hardest
+ part is to tell yet; they receive their provisions but once a
+ week, and then, each has for seven days, either one peck of
+ Indian corn, or three pecks of sweet potatoes, without meat, or
+ any thing else to season this dry fare.
+
+ "I will confess to you that, at first, I thought this allowance
+ much more niggardly than I now consider it. In order to see how
+ they lived, I went into the thickest of the quarter, on purpose
+ to share a part of their food myself, and observe a little of
+ their economy; I found two or three stout fellows standing at a
+ large table, or frame, into which were fixed two grindstones, or
+ rather one was fixed and the other revolved upon it, like two
+ little mill-stones; the upper stone was turned by a crank, at
+ which the two slaves seemed to work by turns. The arrangements
+ for this labour they made among themselves. I then went into the
+ best looking hut of the quarter, just as they had all drawn round
+ a large kettle of small homminy, in the centre of which I was
+ pleased to see a piece of salt fat pork about the size of a large
+ apple. The family consisted of six persons. They had all clubbed
+ their portions of food into a common stock.
+
+ "'How often do you draw meat?' said I; they informed me that they
+ had none except at Christmas, and that none were able to buy meat
+ except those who finished their two tasks early in the day, and
+ then cultivated their own little 'patches,' as they are called. I
+ then went round the huts to see how many had meat, and was much
+ rejoiced to find that more than three-fourths lived substantially
+ well.
+
+ "I was exceedingly amused at one thing in these singular little
+ communities, which was, that matches of convenience are almost as
+ common among them as among their more fashionable masters. I
+ suspect it would puzzle some of your fashionable belles to guess
+ how these have their origin, and what is the fortune upon which
+ they are founded. I will tell you, if you have never observed it
+ yourself. The most active and sober hands, who are able to finish
+ their tasks early, and of course live well, are always in great
+ demand for husbands; and a well-favoured girl is almost sure to
+ select one of these for her _helpmate_ in the true sense of the
+ word. Nor is this excellence confined to the males; many of the
+ women are in as much demand among the lazy fellows for their
+ prowess in the field, as the active men are among the women.
+
+ "While the mothers are at work in the field, their helpless
+ offspring are all left under the care of the superannuated women,
+ in a large hut, or several large huts provided for that purpose;
+ and a more unearthly set of wrinkled and arid witches you never
+ saw, unless you have more curiosity than most of your
+ Carolinians. These scenes, especially if visited by moonlight,
+ transport a man into the centre of Africa at once; there is the
+ dark, sluggish stream, the dismal-looking pine-barrens, and the
+ palmetto, the oriental-looking cabbage-tree, aided by the foreign
+ gibberish, and the unsteady light of the pine logs before the
+ door, now and then casting a fitful gleam of light upon some of
+ these natives of the shores of the Niger, with their tattooed
+ visages, ivory teeth, flat noses, and yellow and blood-shot
+ eyeballs.
+
+ "I do not observe much difference between the North and South
+ Carolinians, except in the case of those who inhabit the most
+ southern portions of the latter state. There your rich are more
+ princely and aristocratic, and your poor more wretched and
+ degraded; but to tell you the plain truth, many of your little
+ slaveholders are miserably poor and ignorant; and what must be
+ the condition of that negro who is a slave to one of these
+ miserable wretches? They are uniformly hard and cruel masters,
+ and the more fortune or fate frowns upon them, the more cruel
+ they become to their slaves. This is a singular development of
+ human character, and not easily accounted for, unless we suppose
+ them to be revenging themselves of fate.
+
+ "Most of the accomplished ladies whom I have seen, were educated
+ either at Salem or at the north, and sometimes at both,--the
+ preference being given to New-York and Philadelphia. Therein
+ Virginia has the advantage; for scarcely a town of two thousand
+ inhabitants is without its seminary for girls. I have myself
+ visited those at Richmond, Petersburg, Fredericksburg,
+ Charlottesville, Staunton, Lexington, Fincastle, &c. &c. This,
+ you will acknowledge, shows deep-seated wisdom and foresight in
+ the people; for if our wives and mothers are intelligent, their
+ offspring will be so too.
+
+ "Virginia Bell has just stolen into the parlour in the south
+ wing, where I am now writing, so there is an end of slavery, and
+ education, and all that sort of thing; unless, indeed, your
+ humble servant may be said to have surrendered his freedom, and
+ to be now undergoing a new sort of schooling. Her look is arch
+ and knowing, as if she had read every word I have written; I
+ will finish my letter when she goes out.
+
+ "There now, I breathe more easily,--she is gone! 'Mr. Randolph,'
+ said she, 'I have a very great curiosity to see the letter of a
+ young gentleman; I never saw one in my life.' 'Indeed!' said I,
+ 'then I will write you one before I leave my seat.'
+
+ "'No, no, no!' said she, blushing just perceptibly, 'you
+ understand me very well; I mean such letters as you write to my
+ cousin; there would be something worth reading in them; as for
+ your letters to young ladies, I have seen some of them. O!
+ deliver me from the side-ache, and weeping till my eyes are red
+ with irrepressible laughter; if they would write naturally and
+ simply, it would not be so bad. There would then be only the
+ natural awkwardness of the subject; but to get upon stilts,
+ merely because the letter is to a lady, is too bad. But you have
+ not answered my question; do you intend to show me that letter?'
+
+ "'I will show you a better one.'
+
+ "'No, no! I want to see none of your set speeches upon paper, all
+ so prim and formal; if you care any thing for my good opinion,
+ you will show me one of your careless ones,' said she.
+
+ "'Care any thing for your good opinion!' said I, rising, and
+ trying to seize her hand, which she held behind her; 'I value
+ your opinion more than that of the whole sex besides.' She raised
+ her eyes in mock astonishment, and puckering up her beautiful
+ little lips, whistled as if in amazement, and then deliberately
+ marched out of the room, saying, as she stood at the entrance,
+ 'Finish your copy like a good boy, and be sure not to blot it,
+ and you shall have some nuts and a sweet cake;' and I crushed the
+ unfortunate epistle with chagrin. She certainly takes me for a
+ fool, and truly I begin to think she is not very far wrong.
+
+ "B. RANDOLPH."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+
+ V. CHEVILLERE TO B. RANDOLPH.
+
+ "Baltimore, 18--.
+
+ "You will have learned by the previous letters[A] of Lamar and
+ myself, every interesting circumstance which has occurred to us,
+ together with our _sage_ observations upon men and things as they
+ were presented.
+
+ [A] These letters are omitted, of course, as the same
+ information has been already given to the reader.
+
+ "Lamar spends more than half his time with the Kentuckian,--he
+ declares that he will never rest satisfied until he persuades him
+ to remove to the high hills of the Santee, where he can have him
+ for a neighbour. He has found a new source of amusement to-day, in
+ the supposed discovery that Damon is in love with the pretty
+ country girl, on whose account, you will recollect, he got into
+ the affray at the circus. Her father invited him to pay them a
+ visit, and Lamar has been trying to persuade him to take advantage
+ of it immediately, and has even offered to accompany him. I have
+ no doubt he would succeed, had not the Kentuckian's idol, Pete
+ Ironsides, been sent into the country 'to board,' as he calls it.
+ As it is, he has determined upon accepting the invitation as he
+ returns.
+
+ "My own affairs are assuming too sombre a hue for me to enjoy
+ Lamar's foolery as I used to do, when we three lived together, and
+ when you and I were made joint partakers of his animal spirits;
+ _I_ in fact lived upon his stock in trade in that respect, while
+ you added no little to the joint concern; I was always, I fear,
+ but a sullen companion for such merry fellows. But have you never
+ observed that the most lasting and ardent friendships are formed
+ of such materials? Even in married life, you will, in nine cases
+ out of ten, see the most opposite qualities form the most durable
+ and happy connexions. This is running, I know, right in the teeth
+ of the romantic twaddle of the day, about congenial sentiments,
+ and the like; but is it not true? Look around you, and see in
+ every instance if the lively woman has not chosen a serious
+ husband; the man of genius, a dull drone; the bigot and fanatic, a
+ romp; the pious lady, a libertine. These observations, however,
+ like most others of the college stamp, may be destined to give
+ place to others of a very different character. When I look back
+ upon all the various revolutions of opinion which the mind
+ undergoes, before it arrives even at our present state of
+ maturity, I am dismayed, and almost afraid to look forward.
+
+ "Nor is it in matters of abstract opinion alone, I fear, that we
+ are destined to undergo changes. Our hopes _must_ be in some
+ measure paralyzed, our hearts made colder, and our youthful
+ friendships broken asunder! Look what sad havoc a single year has
+ already made in our own catalogue. Where now is that noble band of
+ young and generous spirits, who but a single twelvemonth ago were
+ all the world to each other? Two of them have surrendered the
+ bright hopes of young life upon its very threshold, and the others
+ are scattered abroad over land and sea. But I have wandered from
+ the subject of our adventures, which we have promised faithfully
+ to record.
+
+ "Is it not strange how fate seems to play with us, when once we
+ are fairly embarked upon life's great current? I am now completely
+ wound up in perplexities and embarrassments, which, a week ago, I
+ never once thought of. The actors in this new drama in which I am
+ confessedly entangled, were then perfect strangers to me; and how
+ handsomely has providence, or fate, or whatever you may choose to
+ call it, paved the way for my more complete introduction into
+ these new mysteries? The lady becomes intimate with my mother,
+ though coming from opposite ends of the Union. She travels home
+ again and is taken ill on the road, at the very time when Lamar
+ and I strike into the same road. It seemed, too, as if I was
+ placed at the table where our acquaintance commenced, in the very
+ position where I could not avoid making a tender of my services;
+ and now that I have become almost a part of their little family
+ here, I find that they have been afflicted in some way beyond
+ measure. They seem to be surrounded with mysteries and strange
+ connexions; more than once have I gone specially to break the
+ spell, and clear away the trammels which render this most strange
+ and interesting young lady miserable. Various methods have I
+ devised to acquire the secret, but they have always ended in
+ awkwardness and embarrassment. It is no easy matter to initiate
+ one's self into the midst of family secrets, when one is
+ comparatively a stranger; yet it must be done, and that shortly. I
+ feel that it is necessary to my own peace; indeed it is necessary
+ in order that I may see my own way clearly, to have these cruel
+ doubts solved. Every hour but adds to my entanglement, and if
+ there is a shadow of foundation for the phantasies of the lunatic,
+ the sooner I make the plunge the better. Yet how simple I become;
+ if I had now the decision of character for which I once had credit
+ in college, I should not long suffer the dreams of a maniac to
+ disturb my good opinion of this most lovely and interesting girl.
+ You may talk of your embarrassments and difficulties with Bell's
+ untamable humour; they are all child's play,--mere romping,--but
+ the case is not so easy of adjustment here; the old gentleman has
+ just announced, that he shall resume his journey early to-morrow
+ morning; so that something must be effected this afternoon or
+ evening. If there is no other way, I will formally seek an
+ interview with the lady, and, however painful it may be to her, I
+ will ask her to explain her strange fear of the lunatic; of
+ course I must avow the reason; you shall hear the result.
+
+ "P.S. _12 o'clock at night_--I have broken the ice, my dear
+ fellow, and no doubt you will think I have got a cold bath for my
+ pains.
+
+ "Soon after dark I knocked at the door, and waited some little
+ time with throbbing pulses, to hear that gentle and silvery voice
+ bid me '_come in!_' for I had seen the old gentleman go off in a
+ carriage, to the theatre, as I hoped. No summons came--I repeated
+ my knock with the same result. I do not know what prompted me to
+ an act so rude, but I mechanically pushed open the door before I
+ had reflected a moment. I was in the presence of the little fairy.
+ She held in her hand an open letter, which was wet with tears; her
+ head was leaning far back against the wall; her comb, carrying
+ with it the large rolls of her fair brown hair, was partly lying
+ on the window, and partly stuck into its place; the pearl of her
+ cheeks was still wet with recent tears. I did not know which was
+ now worst, to retreat or go forward. At first I thought she had
+ fainted, and would have sprung to the bell; but I soon saw that
+ she slumbered gently and peacefully. Randolph, there is something
+ heavenly in the slumbers of a young, innocent, and beautiful
+ female; but I will leave my reflections for another time. I was
+ about to retreat, and had so far closed the door as to hide my
+ person, when she suddenly awoke and said, 'Come in, dear father,
+ come in!' the lights had not yet been brought, but I could see the
+ crimson mantling her neck and cheeks as she discovered who the
+ visiter was, and replaced her hair at the same time.
+
+ "I felt confused and ashamed, and stammered some vague attempt at
+ an apology. She made light of my intrusion; but one thing
+ attracted my attention particularly. Just as the maid set the
+ lights upon the table in the centre of the room, I thought that I
+ recognised my mother's handwriting in the letter which she now
+ hastily folded up and thrust into her reticule. As I mentioned,
+ she had been weeping over it. This set my imagination to work; I
+ could not divine on what theme my mother could write to her; still
+ less what subject for grief they could have between them. I
+ inquired if she was well; she said 'yes, as well as usual, but
+ exhausted for want of sleep the previous night.' I instantly
+ connected her want of sleep and restlessness with my mother's
+ letter; and before I had sufficiently reflected upon the import of
+ the question, I asked her whether her first acquaintance with my
+ mother had not been formed during her late visit to the springs.
+ She answered in the affirmative. 'But why do you ask?' said she,
+ searchingly. 'For no particular reason, but the question occurred
+ to me, from seeing the handwriting of the letter you have just
+ folded up. I thought it strange that you should receive a letter
+ from my mother, when I have received none,' 'This letter,' said
+ she, 'was not received at this place; I was merely refreshing my
+ memory with its contents.' 'It is not often,' said I, 'that my
+ mother writes so as to bring tears into the eyes of her friends,
+ and if you would not consider the expression of the wish too
+ impertinent, and that too when I have little expectation of its
+ being granted, I would say that I never before had so much
+ curiosity to see one of her letters.'
+
+ "'Your curiosity,' said she, 'should be gratified immediately, but
+ this letter alludes to circumstances which would perhaps be
+ uninteresting to you; but even were they otherwise, it would
+ excite your curiosity still more to read the letter, when I am
+ unable to give such explanations _now_ as it requires.'
+
+ "'You labour under a most grievous error,' said I, 'if you suppose
+ there are any circumstances connected in any way with the present
+ distress of Miss Frances St. Clair, which would be uninteresting
+ to me. The express object of my visit to-night was to ask that
+ very explanation. It may seem strange and impertinent that I
+ should seek that which you evidently avoid; but my excuse is, and
+ it is the only one that I can plead, that this is your last
+ evening in the city; will Miss St. Clair be offended, if I
+ acknowledge that upon this explanation turns my happiness? I am
+ fearful of giving offence by acknowledging that any previous
+ history is necessary of one who carries in her countenance a
+ refutation of all calumnies.'
+
+ "I had ventured to seize her unresisting hand, but as I concluded
+ the sentence, she withdrew it, and covered her face with her
+ handkerchief, pressing it hard, and breathing short. At the same
+ time I noticed some confusion with her distress, though without
+ anger. This imboldened me to proceed.
+
+ "'It may appear like double presumption in me to ask an
+ explanation before I can proffer a suit, which may be instantly
+ and indignantly rejected, either with or without your history.'
+
+ "'I will not prudishly affect to misunderstand you, in either of
+ the prominent points of your remarks,' said she, her head sinking
+ in modest guise, 'but before I reply to them, will you tell me
+ whence you have ever heard any thing against me.'
+
+ "The question went straight to my suspicious heart, and rankled
+ there; insomuch that I coughed and hemmed at it several times
+ ineffectually; her eyes being riveted on me all the while, like a
+ judge's upon a detected thief--I felt that her pure and searching
+ gaze was far more honest than my own, and I should speedily have
+ begun an explanation if her father had not at that instant entered
+ the room. I thought he saw and disrelished the matter in hand, for
+ he seated himself in a chair, in a certain manner, by which one
+ understands a person to say, 'I'll stay all night, if you have no
+ objections.' I will be up by daylight in the morning, lest the old
+ gentleman steal a march upon me.
+
+ "Yours truly,
+
+ "V. CHEVILLERE."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+
+ B. RANDOLPH TO V. CHEVILLERE.
+
+ "Savannah, 18--.
+
+ "DEAR FRIEND,
+
+ "After despatching my last letter, not knowing exactly what else
+ to do with myself in the present state of affairs, I set out on
+ horseback, telling the family that I wished to see a little more
+ of Carolina, but inwardly resolved to follow the horse's nose
+ wherever he might lead, and continue thus to ride and thus to be
+ led until I might gather up my scattered thoughts and determine
+ what course to pursue.
+
+ "I will not deny, that on the second day in the afternoon, about
+ three o'clock (truth is always precise, you know), I discovered in
+ one corner of the storehouse of my thoughts a secret design to try
+ 'Bell' by a leave-taking, absence, and reappearance. If you had
+ been upon the ground to charge me with the intention, I should no
+ doubt have sworn upon a stack of Testaments that it was not so;
+ and I could have done so honestly. You have looked inwards too
+ often not to know, that in wandering through the dreary passages
+ of one's own mind, we blunder by accident upon many obscure
+ motives, which, if boldly charged with them before we set out on
+ such a pilgrimage, we should stoutly deny.
+
+ "When the horses were brought up on the gravelled road, and all
+ things in readiness for my departure, I cast a furtive glance at
+ that too-knowing and too-beautiful little brunette, who calls you
+ cousin, to see how she was about to feel on the solemn occasion.
+ Her looks were perfectly inexplicable. I have thought of them ever
+ since, but for my life I cannot say in what feelings they had
+ their origin. There was neither sorrow, joy, love, hatred,
+ revenge, hope, despair, nor any other definable emotion. There was
+ a scarcely perceptible smile, a slight shutting of the corner of
+ one eye, and a mock solemnity of the other unruly features, as if
+ one was winking to the other rebels as much as to say, 'wait till
+ he's out of hearing, and we will have a rare laugh at his
+ expense.' It was just such a look as would make a man say, 'Zounds
+ and fury, madam, you'll never see me again; farewell, for ever;'
+ and then be laughed at for his pains.
+
+ "But what sort of a look was it? It was a very knowing look, I am
+ sure of that. She looked as if she read all the inward workings of
+ my moral machinery. It was a serio-comic look; produced, no doubt,
+ by the idea that she was scanning me thoroughly, while I imagined
+ that I could see just as clearly through her. In other words, as I
+ have somewhere else beautifully expressed it, she thought me
+ 'pretty considerable much of an ass,' and I am pretty considerable
+ much of her opinion, at least before ladies. It is somewhat
+ singular that this tendency to display my weak side should have
+ developed itself at the very time when I most desired to appear to
+ advantage.
+
+ "At last the parting moment came. I had bidden your mother
+ farewell in the breakfast-room, and then proceeded to the front
+ door, where stood Virginia Bell.
+
+ "'I think it very doubtful,' said I, 'whether I shall be enabled
+ to take your aunt's house in my route home.'
+
+ "'You are not going to run away with cousin's favourite horse, are
+ you?' said she.
+
+ "By the Great Mogul! in my earnestness to invent a pathetic lie, I
+ forgot to arrange the consistency of the plot.
+
+ "'True, true!' said I, stammering; 'then I must indeed run my head
+ into danger again!' saying which I sprang upon your horse, and
+ rode like a country doctor who has no practice. By-the-by, that
+ was nearer to an avowal than I have ever come yet; your joyous,
+ fun-loving creatures are the most difficult to address in the
+ world.
+
+ "Oh! if I only had such a one in love with me, what a race I would
+ lead her! I would punish the whole class of unapproachable little
+ mischievous misses! I would make her ogle me at church; hang on my
+ arm to the theatre; sigh by the fire-side, and weep when she went
+ to bed; I would almost break her heart before I would take the
+ least pity upon her.
+
+ "I am curious to know what sort of wives these same little romps
+ make. Do they romp it through life, or do they settle down into
+ your miserable, sad, melancholy drones, who greet their husbands
+ when they come home with a sigh, or inexpressible look, that
+ drives more men to the bottle than all the good wine and good
+ company in the world?
+
+ "You ask me, at least I know you would ask me, what I saw, or what
+ occurred on the road to the place from which this letter is dated.
+ I will tell you what I have not seen since I entered this land of
+ nullification. I have not seen a clear limpid river that could be
+ forded on horseback. Your water-courses are dark, deep, still, and
+ gloomy. The foliage on their banks is superlatively rich and
+ abundant, but it is occasionally interspersed with a species of
+ natural beauties which I don't admire, namely, little alligators;
+ by-the-by, I never see alligators, lizards, or tadpoles, that I do
+ not think of those weary days when we read together Ovid's
+ Metamorphoses.
+
+ "Of a southern swamp I had no proper conception. I thought they
+ were black, dismal holes, covered with old black logs, and black
+ snakes, and frogs, and vapours; instead of which, they bear a
+ nearer resemblance, in the summer, to a princely (or _Prince's_)
+ botanical garden. The very perfume upon the olfactories is far
+ more delightful than the greatest assemblage of artificial
+ odours. Then there are the rich and variegated flowers of all
+ hues, sizes, and colours, set amid the deep green of the rich
+ shrubbery. The soil of which these swamps are composed is as black
+ as tar, and pretty much of the same consistence.
+
+ "I observe, as I travel farther south, that bread is seldom seen
+ upon the table. What is called here _small homminy_ is used in its
+ place, at breakfast, dinner, and supper.
+
+ "I saw no ploughs in your fields. Horses seemed to be used only
+ for carriages, racing, and for the private use of gentlemen and
+ ladies. I saw no brick houses; your mother's and that of Col. S.
+ being the only two I saw in the whole state. I saw many private
+ mansions very tastefully built and ornamented; some of them were
+ splendid, but mostly built of wood and painted white.
+
+ "After three days pretty constant riding after my horse's nose, he
+ brought me to the banks of the Savannah, at a little
+ miserable-looking town, or village, called Purysburg. Here I found
+ a steamboat just about to depart for Savannah. I immediately
+ engaged passage for myself, servant, and two horses (one of which
+ is yours; confound him, I say, for betraying me). I amused myself
+ by shooting at the alligators, as we glided along the water, and
+ had kept up the sport some time, when a mellow distant sound came
+ along the surface of the water, like an exquisitely played Kent
+ bugle. It was decidedly the most enchanting music I ever heard,
+ and seemed nearer and nearer until it appeared to rise from under
+ the very bow of the boat. You will be surprised when I tell you
+ that it was made through a straight wooden tube, about five feet
+ long. The musician was a tall, ebony-coloured old African, who
+ stood up in one of your singular-looking batteaux, amid
+ half-a-dozen other negroes, who seemed to be at their luncheon. It
+ looked much like a boat on the Niger; indeed, I found my
+ imagination carrying me into such distant regions, that I
+ instinctively bit my lip to see whether I was awake or dreaming.
+
+ "The city of Savannah became distinctly visible at a distance of
+ about seven miles. A brilliant city indeed it is. You cannot
+ imagine any thing finer than the view from the river. It is
+ situated on a high bluff, and commands an extensive view up and
+ down the stream. In the latter direction, on a clear day, you can
+ see, without glasses, the lighthouse on the island of Tybee.
+
+ "By-the-by, I have been down among those islands; they are all
+ inhabited, and by a class of men as much like our real
+ old-fashioned Virginia gentlemen as can well be imagined. This
+ city is nobly built, and is laid out on a magnificent scale,
+ having a public square, containing a grove of pride of India
+ trees, in the centre of every four squares, and a row of the same
+ along each side of every street.
+
+ "Talk of Philadelphia, and New-York, and Boston, and Richmond, and
+ New-Haven--Savannah outstrips them all, both in artificial and
+ natural beauty. It seems the residence of the prince of the world
+ and his nobility.
+
+ "Yours, most truly,
+
+ "B. RANDOLPH."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+
+ V. CHEVILLERE TO B. RANDOLPH.
+
+ "Baltimore, 18--.
+
+ "DEAR FRIEND,
+
+ "Though I had but two hours' sleep, I was up betimes to catch a
+ parting glimpse of an interesting person who need not be named.
+ When I descended into the great vestibule of this extensive
+ establishment, I found the door of their parlour open, and the
+ entry nearly blocked up by bandboxes, trunks, and all the little
+ paraphernalia of which you and I are as yet quite ignorant. A
+ carriage stood at the door; the lady and the old gentleman sat
+ side by side upon the sofa, the former in her travelling habit,
+ while the latter held in his hand a cup of coffee, which he
+ sipped, giving directions from time to time to the servants. I
+ paid them the compliments of the morning, not in the most bland
+ and courtly style, for to tell you the truth I felt a little
+ inclined to poaching, and the old gentleman looked _to me_ not
+ unlike a vigilant and surly gamekeeper; however, he received me
+ with a welcome, perhaps it was a northern one; but of that I will
+ tell you more when we get fully into the enemy's country, as your
+ namesake of Roanoke would say. My presence seemed to hurry the
+ old gentleman's coffee down his throat, hot as it was, and in ten
+ minutes, before I had exchanged ten words with the lady, all was
+ pronounced in readiness.
+
+ "The old gentleman did not leave her for a moment. I of course
+ handed her to the carriage, and took, as I supposed, a last look.
+ I suppose I must have appeared dolorous enough. The parting moment
+ came, the last pressure of the hand was given, the door closed,
+ whip cracked, and the carriage had gone some time, before I found
+ myself standing in the middle of the street, my head turned to one
+ side just far enough to catch a glimpse of Lamar in his nightgown,
+ half-way out of a three-story window, laughing with that
+ complacent self-satisfaction which is peculiar to him. 'Half-past
+ four and a dark stormy morning,' cried he, in true watchman style.
+ I pulled my hat down over my face, and walked away from the hotel
+ as fast as my impetuous blood would drive me; indeed, I felt
+ provoked at the time. I had not walked far, before I recollected
+ having felt something in my hand, as if it had found its way there
+ by accident, while I was exchanging adieus with my enslaver. I had
+ mechanically, while abstracted in the street, thrust it into my
+ waistcoat pocket. I now drew it forth,--it was a small roll of
+ paper, which you might have put into a thimble,--I opened it very
+ carefully, in hope that there might be some even
+ carelessly-scribbled line, which I could preserve as a memento.
+ By heavens, Randolph, there was a memento upon it! and evidently
+ intended for my eye alone.
+
+ "The writing was in pencil, and scarcely legible; with some
+ difficulty I could make out these words.
+
+ "'The explanation sought by Mr. Chevillere has not been
+ surreptitiously avoided by me, nor will it ever be; but if he is
+ wise, he will forget one who has already extended the influence of
+ her unhappiness too far.'
+
+ "I read these lines over again and again. I walked round Baltimore
+ as if it had been a hamlet. It seemed to me that every person whom
+ I met could read in my countenance something strange and hurried.
+ At length, however, I found my way to the breakfast table. Lamar,
+ as my bad luck would have it, sat almost opposite to me. I do not
+ think I ever saw him perfectly disagreeable before; all his
+ remarks seemed to me _mal-apropos_, and he is not usually so
+ unfortunate, you know. I made a hasty breakfast, and hurried out
+ on purpose to avoid him, but in vain! he was with me in an
+ instant. 'All settled, I suppose, Chevillere,' said he. 'Yes, all
+ is settled for our journey to New-York,' said I, 'except our
+ bills, and that you may attend to as soon as you please.' I
+ ordered old Cato to see the luggage on board the steamboat for
+ Philadelphia: Lamar did the same. 'But, Chevillere,' said he, 'you
+ are not going to leave the Kentuckian,' upon which he set off to
+ summon our new companion.
+
+ "Our next epistle will in all probability be from Philadelphia or
+ New-York; we shall only stay a short time in the former place, as
+ we conceive the other to be the true point from which to make
+ observations.
+
+ "Yours truly,
+
+ "V. CHEVILLERE."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+
+ B. RANDOLPH TO V. CHEVILLERE.
+
+ "High Hills of the Santee, 18--.
+
+ "DEAR FRIEND,
+
+ "From the city of Savannah, I paid my first visit to our old
+ heathen dad, Neptune, and if first impressions of the sea were not
+ as common and as numerous as doggerel verses in a modern lady's
+ album, I might be tempted to become sublime for your edification.
+ I was rowed down from the city, in a beautiful boat made of a
+ single cypress, by the hands of the gentleman who was so polite as
+ to give me this gentle passage. By this you may know that they
+ take as much pride in their boats as the Venetians themselves. It
+ was beautifully painted, and rowed by eight well-formed negroes.
+ Inside of the seat at one end was a marooning chest, as they
+ called it, full of all kinds of liquors and cold meat, with the
+ necessary utensils for their use. The gentleman was an islander;
+ and during the few hours in which we were gliding over the
+ seventeen miles between the city and the ocean, he entertained me
+ with an account of his marooning expeditions. These are their
+ excursions upon the Sea Islands, for purposes of fishing and
+ hunting. These islanders are a peculiar, but delightful people;
+ however, I must not keep you too long in the sea-breeze; at some
+ other time, perhaps, I may indite you a history of these
+ hospitable and isolated gentlemen.
+
+ "When I left Savannah, I determined to pursue a different route
+ from the one by which I came. I therefore crossed the Savannah
+ river fifteen or sixteen miles above the city; I then crossed the
+ country in as straight a line as I could draw upon the map,
+ between the ferry and the high hills of Santee; and in a short
+ time found myself in as complete solitude as ever Crusoe
+ experienced upon his desolate island. Nothing was to be seen but
+ the tall and gloomy-looking pines, stretching away into the bosom
+ of the atmosphere, and the interminable sands which lay before me
+ as far as the eye could reach. Twilight presently came on, and
+ those horrible musicians, the tree-frogs, began to chirp and sing.
+ The dolorous note of the whippoorwill was heard, with a horn
+ accompaniment from the throat of a screech-owl. Here was a pretty
+ serenade for a man with his heart attuned for melody, and his
+ stomach attuned for a slash at a cold ham, for I had had no
+ dinner. I struck up an accompaniment from my own pipes, but I soon
+ found that the vacuum was too profound for a due modulation in
+ concert pitch with this sylvan band. I wished them all at the
+ d----l, with their shrill pipes and full crops, and set my horse,
+ or rather _your_ horse, at full gallop, in a vain effort to escape
+ from the intended honour; but the harder I rode, the more
+ enthusiastic they became. I soon made another comfortable
+ discovery; I found that I had been riding for the last two hours
+ in a perfect wilderness, in utter contempt of what two pioneer
+ wheels had made for a highway; nor could I tell the north from the
+ south, nor the east from the west, having foolishly enough turned
+ the horse round and round in order to gaze at the stars. 'Like
+ master like man,' my servant did the same, as if he could read in
+ the pine tops more than I could in the heavens. All my astronomy
+ had gone with my dinner; I could see nothing in the starry regions
+ but what is sometimes called the _Frying-pan_. Oh! the shades of
+ Thales of Miletus, who first imported astronomy into Greece! to
+ think that a bachelor of such heavenly arts could not look into
+ the face of the Frying-pan without thinking of grilled chickens
+ and rashers of bacon, and the crackling of fire, and the
+ sputtering of fat. I dismounted, and ordered Sam to do likewise,
+ and try to find me a piece of flint by which to strike a light; he
+ declared that he had not seen a stone or a rock since he came into
+ the Carolinas. 'So much for geology and astronomy,' said I. 'I
+ rader tink they all bad fur empty stumuck, masta,' said Sam,
+ considering himself privileged by the exigencies of the case.
+ 'True enough, Sam,' said I, 'it would be an apt scholar that could
+ produce bread or a stone either by his learning, in our
+ circumstances.'
+
+ "As I mounted, Sam mounted, not a word more having been uttered;
+ he seemed to be aware of the fact, that language generally fails
+ with the food; a man's ideas in such a case run fast enough, but
+ they are all in humble life; below stairs, diving among pots, and
+ pans, and pantries, and receptacles for cold victuals. As the
+ ideas ran, so ran the horses, until the water began to splash our
+ legs from a thick bushy swamp, into which we found that we had
+ initiated ourselves. 'Now Sam,' said I, 'we are swamped.' Sam said
+ nothing aloud, but was evidently muttering something to himself,
+ being engaged, as I supposed, at his secret devotions, for you
+ must know that he would be a Puritan. Like most of his race,
+ however, he has more faith in the effect of singing hymns, than
+ devotions of any other kind. I saw that he was itching for a trial
+ at his usual relief in all his troubles. I therefore told him not
+ to suppress it on my account, but to give it free utterance; the
+ idea of it naturally excited ludicrous recollections of old Noll
+ and the veteran Rumpers, but Sam saw the new vein I had so
+ inappropriately fallen into, and therefore resisted his inward
+ strivings. I must say, _en passant_, that I think him honest and
+ sincere in his faith, I therefore do not ridicule him.
+
+ "We waded through the black regions of this little pandemonium for
+ some three-quarters of a mile, before the dry sand again greeted
+ our hearing. The Frying-pan still stared me in the face, and the
+ sylvan band still plied their pipes. We had not proceeded far by
+ land before we came directly against a fence. I was truly glad to
+ see it, for I was sure it must lead to some inhabited place, and
+ accordingly ordered Sam to let us into the field, which we found
+ to be an immense plain covered with cotton,--the most beautiful of
+ all crops. We rode between the rows, for many a weary foot, until
+ at length the glimmering of many lights greeted our longing eyes.
+ We made directly for them, and soon stood in the midst of an
+ immense negro quarter. On inquiring whether their master's house
+ was near at hand, we found that it was many miles distant. The
+ overseer's house, they told us, was not more than half a mile off;
+ but to these animals I have always had an utter aversion. I
+ therefore bought some fodder for the horses, and two fowls for
+ ourselves, from the _driver_, who had the privilege of raising
+ them, and employed his wife to pick and grill them upon the coals,
+ and a delightful and savoury prelude they soon sent up to my
+ famished senses; a heartier or a sweeter meal was never made than
+ I thus took; a fowl seasoned with salt, and a large pot of small
+ homminy, served direct to my mouth from a large wooden spoon,
+ without the cumbrous intervention of plates, knives, and forks.
+ Our meal being finished,--for you must know Sam and I dined at the
+ same time and from the same table, which was none other than the
+ ground floor, covered with the head of a barrel,--hunger is a
+ wonderful leveller of distinctions,--as I was saying, our meal
+ being finished, a goodly number of the more aged, respectable,
+ and intelligent blacks of the quarter assembled to entertain us,
+ or be entertained themselves, I scarcely know which. Many of these
+ negroes, I found, were born in Africa, and one poor tattooed
+ fellow claimed to be of royal blood. He told me that his father,
+ the king, had a hundred children. I asked if any of those present
+ could write; they replied that there was one man in the quarter
+ who could write in his own language, and several of them went out
+ and brought in a tall, bald-headed old fellow, who seemed to come
+ with great reluctance. After being told what was desired, he
+ acknowledged to me that he could write when he last tried, which
+ was many years previous. I took out my pocket-book, tore out a
+ blank leaf, and handing him a pen from my pocket inkstand,
+ requested him to give me a specimen. He took the head of the
+ barrel on his lap, and began, if I recollect right, on the right
+ side of the page; the following is a fac simile of his
+ performance:
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ "The following is a liberal translation into English:--
+
+ "'In the name of God the merciful! the compassionate! God bless
+ our Lord Mohammed his prophet, and his descendants, and his
+ followers, and prosper them exceedingly. Praise be to God the
+ Lord of all creatures! the merciful, the compassionate king of
+ the day of judgment! Thee we adore, and of thee we implore
+ assistance! Guide us in the right way, the way of those with whom
+ thou art well pleased, and not of those with whom thou art angry,
+ nor of those who are in error. Amen!'
+
+ "The original is written in Arabic. The old fellow's name is
+ Charno, which it seems he has retained, after being enslaved,
+ contrary to their general custom in that respect. I became quite
+ affected and melancholy in talking to this venerable old man, and
+ you may judge from that rare circumstance that he is no common
+ character.
+
+ "I now fixed my saddle under my head in a cotton shed to rest for
+ the night; but, weary as I was, I could not directly get to sleep
+ for thinking of sandy deserts, old Charno, chicken suppers, negro
+ quarters, and Virginia Bell! You see she is still the heroine, let
+ my wanderings lay the scenes where they will.
+
+ "I have no doubt but you will say, on the reception of this
+ letter, 'Well! I thought Randolph would run his nose into all the
+ out-of-the-way places in Carolina,' I plead guilty! I have a sort
+ of natural instinct for unbeaten paths, and the one by which I
+ arrived at Belville shall be given in my next; until then, fare
+ thee well.
+
+ "B. RANDOLPH."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+
+ VICTOR CHEVILLERE TO B. RANDOLPH.
+
+ "New-York, 18--.
+
+ "DEAR FRIEND,
+
+ "At length we have arrived in this flourishing city, not, however,
+ without having experienced many vicissitudes of weather, humour,
+ and adventure, the two latter especially; how could we help it,
+ when the Kentuckian formed so large a part of our little crew, by
+ steamboat and stage? His animal spirits are worth a million.
+
+ "You cannot conceive any thing more agreeable to an emancipated
+ and sombre student, than to get a comfortable high backed leather
+ seat in one of these fine northern coaches, his cloak collar put
+ up like a mask, and the rim of his cap drawn down to meet it, just
+ leaving a peeping-hole sufficient to see and enjoy every thing
+ worth enjoying, at the same time defying the gaze of intruding
+ eyes.
+
+ "If there should fortunately happen to be such a reckless, yet
+ generous spirit as Damon among the company, the student's
+ happiness is complete, for you cannot imagine what a protector he
+ is against intruders. In our American stage-coaches (and perhaps
+ in all others) there are sometimes men, full of brandy eloquence,
+ which is kept so constantly on the stretch by repeated libations;
+ or boisterous politicians, with their mouths so full of the last
+ importation of news from Washington, or of the contents of the
+ morning papers, that a complaisant young man is almost compelled
+ to make himself ridiculous, by getting into a political
+ controversy.
+
+ "Damon took all that sort of work off our hands, in the most
+ generous and chivalrous spirit imaginable. His eye was ever bright
+ and ready; there was no sinking into dull student-like lethargy
+ one moment, and flashing out into erratic folly the next; he was
+ ready with lance in rest, to take a tilt against anybody's
+ windmill; at home upon all subjects, being exactly in such a state
+ of refinement as not to be ashamed to show his ignorance, and
+ always eager to acquire information. Nor is his mind dull or
+ unapt; he will rebut or ridicule an adversary with astonishing
+ shrewdness. One of his peculiarities amused me much; he was
+ evidently more excited in the stage-coaches than in the boats. He
+ was never satisfied until he had let down the front glasses, so
+ that he could see the horses; then he would talk fluently to his
+ near neighbour, and keep his neck stretched all the while, so as
+ to have all the horses in view, throwing out occasional digressive
+ remarks as to their various powers, as thus, 'that's my little
+ hearty, make a straight back to it;' and then turning to his
+ antagonist he would continue his remarks, as if nothing had drawn
+ off his attention.
+
+ "But I must not take up all your time with our comic adventures.
+ When I get into that vein more completely, you shall have his
+ exploits in the city. By-the-by, I suggested to Lamar that he
+ should take that part of the correspondence off my hands, but he
+ said, 'Randolph knows I'm not one of the writing sort, therefore
+ you must write for us both; action,' said he, with a mock heroic
+ flourish, 'is my forte.'
+
+ "We are comfortably situated at the City Hotel in Broadway. After
+ we had selected our rooms, I sallied out into that gay and
+ brilliant promenade, which intersects the city from north-east to
+ south-west. You may there see, on a fine sunshiny afternoon, all
+ the fashion and beauty of this great city; the neat, tasteful,
+ Parisian costume, in close contrast with the more sober guise of
+ London. There you may hear intermingled the language of the Gaul,
+ the German, and the modern Roman. To the right and left you see
+ the spires of various Christian temples; and smiling faces, and
+ happy hearts, will greet you at every step.
+
+ "To a secluded college novice like myself, there is something new
+ and moving in all this life and bustle; it irresistibly brings to
+ my mind ideas of gay feats, tilts, tournaments, and brilliant
+ fairs. Within the finished bow-windows are wealth and splendour,
+ and brilliancy, which we poor southerns have not seen in our own
+ native land; marble buildings, stores with granite columns, and
+ the streets crowded with immense omnibuses (these are stages to
+ transport persons from one part of the city to another); splendid
+ private equipages, _republican_ liveries, and carts loaded with
+ merchandise.
+
+ "Seeing some trees and a comfortable green plat a little farther
+ up the street, I worked through the crowd of persons, and carts,
+ and stages, and found myself in the midst of the far famed Park,
+ and immediately in front of that proud edifice the City Hall. I
+ ascended the marble platform, and surveyed the gay throng, as they
+ moved on in one continued and dense current, with merry faces,
+ miserable hearts, and empty heads and pockets; but to talk of
+ these stale things, you know, in the present age, is all stuff and
+ sheer nonsense. I therefore put my reflections in my portfolio to
+ carry home with me, and proceeded to the house-keeper's room, as I
+ had been directed, to obtain the good lady's pilotage, or that of
+ some deputy, to the governor's room, which I readily found. There
+ is nothing remarkable in the two rooms which contain the
+ paintings, except that they command from the windows a fine view
+ of the park and the surrounding streets. Yes, there are two
+ venerable old stuffed chairs. The one in the north wing was used
+ by Washington at his inauguration as first President of the United
+ States, and the one in the east room by the elder Adams. There are
+ portraits of George Washington, George Clinton, Alexander
+ Hamilton, Commodore Bainbridge, Monroe, Jackson, Duane, Varick,
+ Livingston, Clinton, Willet, Radcliff, Captain Hull, Governor
+ Lewis, Macomb, Yates, Van Buren, Brown, Perry, La Fayette,
+ Decatur, Tompkins, Colden, Allen, Paulding, Hone, Stuyvesant,
+ Bolivar, Columbus, Monkton, Williams: some of these last are only
+ half-length. Over the portrait of Washington is a blue flag rolled
+ up, with the following inscription in golden letters:--'This
+ standard was displayed at the inauguration of George Washington,
+ first President of the United States, on the 30th day of April,
+ 1789. And was presented to the Corporation of New-York by the
+ Second Regt. of N. Y. State Artillery, Nov. 25th, 1821.'
+
+ "While I was standing at one of the front windows again looking
+ over the moving masses of Broadway, I saw a lady approach on the
+ eastern footway of the Park, with a hurried step, until she came
+ nearly opposite to the Hall. Crossing Chatham, she turned abruptly
+ down one of the narrow streets running at right angles to the
+ eastern line of the Park. There was something in the figure and
+ carriage of this lady which, unknown at first to my consciousness,
+ quickened my pulsations; but when she approached to the nearest
+ point in her course, I felt morally certain that it was none other
+ than that mysterious charmer, who by her father's connivance, or
+ rather management, slipped through my fingers at Baltimore, and
+ that, too, without my even having asked her address in this city.
+ The recollection of this latter circumstance prompted me instantly
+ to seize my hat and hurry after her. Throwing the accustomed fee
+ to my obliging pilotess, I walked with all possible haste to the
+ corner of the street which I supposed she had taken. I found that
+ a little crowd of ragged urchins had collected upon some occasion
+ of their own, and asked the most intelligent-looking among them if
+ he had seen a lady in black go down that street,--pointing down
+ the hill from Tammany Hall; and, by way of reply, one of the most
+ disgusting, discordant, and ill-timed peals of laughter that I
+ ever heard burst upon my senses.
+
+ "'Lady in black!' said the most forward fellow, 'you will find
+ plenty of black ladies down that street, with black eyes to boot.'
+ I retreated in perfect disgust with these precocious vagabonds,
+ not, however, before I was saluted with another peal of laughter,
+ accompanied by the epithets--'greenhorn,' 'young 'un,' 'bumpkin,'
+ &c. &c.
+
+ "You cannot conceive of any more thoroughly disgusting feeling
+ than that produced upon the mind of a young man bred up in the
+ country, upon this first exhibition of the detestable forms which
+ vice and dissipation assume in every large city,--young females
+ with bloated countenances,--boys with _black_ eyes and bruised
+ faces, with their disgusting slang and familiar nicknames, of Sal,
+ Bet, Kate, Tom, Josh, Jack, or Jim, and their unmeaning oaths,
+ Billingsgate wit, and filthy and ragged garments. There are
+ certain districts of the city in which these are always to be
+ seen, I am informed,--but of these more anon. I turned down the
+ street, and pursued the course which I supposed the lady had
+ taken, until I got to the bottom of what had once been a deep glen
+ in its rural days. I could see nothing but entrances to tanyards,
+ and warehouses full of leather and morocco. The houses, too,
+ looked at least a century and a half behind those on the hill, in
+ architectural taste. Turning to a woman who was sweeping the
+ little narrow pavement in front of one of the houses, I asked her
+ what part of the city I was in.
+
+ "'This is called the _swamp_, sir,' was the reply.
+
+ "'This,' thought I to myself, 'is a very different affair from our
+ swamps.' Just at that moment, casting my eye along one of the
+ narrow streets, I caught a glimpse of the same figure, attended
+ only by her maid, entering a low, Dutch, dingy-looking house, with
+ the gable end to the street. I walked as rapidly as I could in the
+ same direction, and was within some twenty yards of the house,
+ when two young men issued from the door, with the air and dress of
+ gentlemen. I did not immediately observe their faces, because my
+ mind was intently occupied with the lady, and the probable cause
+ of her visit to such a strange part of the city. These reflections
+ were suddenly interrupted by some one slapping me on the back, and
+ exclaiming in my ear, 'Ha! my Chevillere! you here! how do you do?
+ what brought you here?' but I am resolved to put your curiosity to
+ a serious test; names in my next. Yours, truly,
+
+ "V. CHEVILLERE."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+
+ V. CHEVILLERE TO B. RANDOLPH.
+
+ (In continuation.)
+
+ "New-York, 18--.
+
+ "Who do you think it was who met me at such an unlucky moment,
+ just, perhaps, as I was about to stumble upon some clew to unravel
+ the mysteries of this fair little breathing ignis fatuus? It was
+ no other than young Arthur, our old schoolfellow, from Kentucky.
+ He has come hither to attend a course of medical lectures, though
+ they have medical lectures in his own State. Arthur was not of our
+ class, nor yet one of the glorious three, but he was an old and
+ respected friend and schoolmate, and therefore his acquaintance
+ could not be cut quite so unceremoniously at the very moment of
+ its renewal; and even if I had made some silly excuse to avoid him
+ for the moment, he would undoubtedly have seen me kicking my heels
+ in the street, 'like a strange dog in a crowd,' as Damon has it;
+ so I reluctantly wheeled about with him. His companion was also a
+ student of medicine, and a native of this city; he was introduced
+ to me by the name of Hazlehurst. I am aware you are anxious to
+ know what they could be seeking in the identical house in which I
+ had just blockaded my fair fugitive. I wish, as heartily as you
+ can do, that I could explain that matter to our mutual
+ satisfaction. I pumped our inchoate doctors in vain; they
+ explained their own visit to the house very satisfactorily, upon
+ the grounds of professional business, in the name and on behalf of
+ their preceptor, for it seems Arthur has been here all the summer;
+ but they neither saw nor heard of any lady in the premises, and
+ all further inquiries were of course ended by the interpretation
+ which Arthur chose to put upon my inquiries concerning a fair
+ fugitive, so soon after my arrival. He was not a little pleased to
+ hear that Lamar was in the city, in close league with a countryman
+ of his own.
+
+ "By-the-way, Arthur is a noble fellow and an accomplished
+ gentleman. He has all the prerequisites of natural capacity and
+ elementary acquirements, for the study of his arduous profession.
+ I know no young gentleman who has chosen a profession in every way
+ better suited to his peculiarities of mind and temperament. You
+ will doubtless recollect that he always had a fondness for the
+ natural sciences, and this, after all, is the true 'condition
+ precedent' for making a profound and philosophic physician. How
+ lamentable it is that such minds are always thrown in the
+ background in our colleges! This results from that everlasting
+ _dingdong_ hammering at languages, before the pupil has discovered
+ their uses, and without any regard to his peculiarities of mind.
+ Those students who, like Arthur, exhibit an apt capacity for the
+ study of things, and their properties and relations, are almost
+ always dull at the study of their representatives, or, in other
+ words, languages; why, then, do the instructers in these
+ institutions destroy the energies and the vigour of such a mind,
+ by making him fail at those things for which nature has
+ disqualified him, or, rather, for which nature has too nobly
+ endowed him? I am no enemy to the study of the vehicles by which
+ we communicate with our fellow-men, but I am an enemy to the
+ uniform, monotonous drilling, which all collegians in this country
+ receive alike, because I have observed in this process, that
+ third-rate minds invariably rank first. There are, in every
+ college, numbers of young gentlemen who have parrot-like
+ capacities, and memories that retain little words; but who, if
+ required to originate ideas of their own, would soon show the
+ native barrenness of their understandings.
+
+ "Look around you now in the world, and see what has become of
+ these _distinguished_ linguists! One out of a hundred, perhaps,
+ has received a professorship in some new institution, and the
+ others are all falsifying the promises of their precocious youth;
+ while of the thoughtful and abstract dunces, as they were
+ considered in college, many are building up lasting reputations,
+ upon the deep and solid foundations which our hackneyed systems of
+ education could not develop. Necessity and the world develop them;
+ and these, we soon find, are very different from college life.
+ Now, college discipline should imitate the world in this respect;
+ it should develope every man's peculiar genius. Neglect of this is
+ the true reason why so many men distinguish themselves in the
+ world, who were considered asses in college, and why so many who
+ were considered amazingly clever in college, are found to be
+ little better than asses in the world.
+
+ "Now that I have somewhat recovered from the chagrin of Arthur's
+ mal-apropos appearance, I am really glad that he is here. I must
+ surely see the lady again. Indeed, I am resolved to do so, if I
+ have to stay here twelve months; and then Arthur's presence will
+ much facilitate our design of surveying the under-currents of the
+ busy world. You know that I am not prone to trust the surface of
+ things. I shall therefore follow him into many places besides his
+ fashionable resorts. He tells me that a malignant epidemic is said
+ to be prevailing here, and that their visit to the sick person
+ before mentioned was with a view to ascertain whether the patient
+ really had malignant symptoms. They think she had not. I was not
+ so much interested in the affairs of their patient during the
+ discussion on the subject, as I was in their possible consequences
+ upon others,--but of that more in my next. Young Doctor Hazlehurst
+ seems to be a very fashionable personage, but gentlemanly in his
+ manners, and unaffected in his deportment.
+
+ "They walked with me to our hotel, in order to see Lamar, but
+ unfortunately he was out. However, Arthur left college greetings
+ for him, and young Hazlehurst left his address, and invitations
+ for us both to call at his father's house, who, it seems, lives in
+ the city; so you see we have made the first step towards seeing
+ both the upper and under-currents during our sojourn. Whatever
+ they bring forth shall be as faithfully chronicled as your own
+ adventures. Truly,
+
+ "V. CHEVILLERE."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+
+ V. CHEVILLERE TO B. RANDOLPH.
+
+ (In continuation.)
+
+ "New-York, 18--.
+
+ "The little coincidences of real life are of much more frequent
+ occurrence than is generally allowed by our prim historians.
+ Arthur and his companion had not long departed, when Lamar and
+ Damon came in. I mentioned their visit to the former, when,
+ picking up the card and examining it with evident surprise, he
+ placed his finger upon the number of the street, and held it
+ across the table for Damon to see it, who immediately exclaimed,
+ 'Well! I'm flambergasted now! if that ain't what I call a _leetle_
+ particular.'
+
+ "'Why, what is the matter?' said I, astonished in my turn at their
+ astonishment.
+
+ "'Oh, nothing more,' said Lamar, 'than that Damon and myself have
+ but just come from the very door upon which that name and number
+ are placed.'
+
+ "'Are you acquainted with the family?' said I.
+
+ "'No,' replied he; 'I was standing opposite to the door in
+ question, when a young lady alighted from her carriage and entered
+ the house; not, however, before she suddenly stopped and took a
+ searching look at your humble servant.'
+
+ "'Had you ever seen her before?'
+
+ "'If I am not mistaken she is the same young lady whom I saw two
+ years ago at the Virginia springs, when I obtained leave from
+ college to go there on account of my health; she was then quite
+ young; just entering her teens, I should suppose.'
+
+ "'Ah! ha! have I caught you at last?' said I, as Lamar began to
+ redden under a searching glance; 'then there was some foundation
+ for the stories which followed you upon that occasion.'
+
+ "'Bah!' said he, 'they were all nonsense; but come, Damon, tell
+ Chevillere what fine stump speeches you heard this morning at a
+ New-York election.'
+
+ "I saw his drift in amusing me with Damon, and I was indeed quite
+ willing to be so amused.
+
+ "'Smash me if I heard any speeches,' said Damon, 'nor saw any
+ candidates either; they manage them things here quite after a
+ different fashion.'
+
+ "'Why, how do they manage them, if they have no candidates and no
+ speeches?' said I.
+
+ "'By the art of hocus pocus, I believe,' continued Damon; 'I had
+ whetted my appetite for a New-York speech till I was completely on
+ a wire edge, by the time we got to the polls; then they had a
+ parcel of chaps standing behind a little counter, with gold headed
+ poles, like freemasons in a cake-shop, playing at long-pole with
+ the boys. Why! where's the election,' said I, to a chap outside
+ the counter, with one black eye too many. 'Right under your nose,'
+ said he; 'clap down your tickets and kiss the calf-skin, as I did
+ just now;' and then he cramm'd my hands full of little bits of
+ paper, 'H----l in the West,' said I, 'are we going to have no
+ speeches, no drink, no fighten?' 'O!' said he, 'there's plenty of
+ drink in the bar-room next door, and you can get your stomach full
+ of fight, if you will walk down to the _Five Points_.'
+
+ "'And how do the people know whom they vote for?' said I to Lamar.
+
+ "His answer satisfied me that Damon's account of the business was
+ nearly correct as to matters of fact; and that the New-Yorkers
+ never have what we call 'stump speeches,' and never personally
+ know, or even see their representatives. These city mobocracies,
+ composed as they are, principally of wild Irish, are terrible
+ things; but I must adhere to our bargain, to have nothing to do
+ with politics.
+
+ "Lamar has evidently ripped up an old wound this morning, and I am
+ truly rejoiced thereat; we shall take an early day to pay the
+ visit spoken of, at which time I shall observe the gentleman's
+ movements, and see if I cannot treasure up a little ammunition for
+ future use, wherewithal to pay off old scores against him.
+
+ "You recollect, perhaps, the old woman's comfort in a time of
+ great famine; 'she thanked God her neighbours were as bad off as
+ herself.' I find very little comfort in this truly philanthropic
+ doctrine, save from occasionally amusing myself with anticipations
+ of Lamar's more fashionable dilemma.
+
+ "The Kentuckian's pulsations seem to be regulated by a gigantic
+ and equipoised animal impulse. There is very little sinking of the
+ heart in gloomy anticipation, with him; he enjoys the present,
+ uninterrupted by the past or future. After all, are not these
+ hardy and free sons of the west the happiest of all created
+ beings? They enjoy nearly every thing that we do, perhaps not
+ exactly in the same degree, but certainly with as much of the
+ heart, if not so much of the head; I really envy Damon his hearty
+ and joyous laughs, such as I could once indulge in myself, and I
+ have often asked what is it that has made the change? Can you
+ answer the question, Randolph?
+
+ "I once thought that you and Lamar would laugh it on through life,
+ but it seems that you have scarcely started, each in his distinct
+ career, before you begin sowing the seeds of your future sorrows,
+ don't be frightened; it is the appointed race we must all run,
+ sooner or later; we cannot be joyous and jovial college-lads all
+ our days; but we may, and I hope will, be calm and tranquil old
+ _country gentlemen_.
+
+ "But pshaw! I grow old before my time; 'sufficient for the day is
+ the evil thereof;' lay that flattering unction to your soul, and
+ all will soon be well, that is now ill with you.
+
+ "The more I see of these northern states, the more I am convinced
+ that some great revolution awaits our own cherished communities.
+ Revolutions, whether sudden or gradual, are fearful things; we
+ learn to feel attachments to those things which they tear up, as a
+ poor cripple feels attached to the mortified limb, that must be
+ amputated to save his life. A line of demarkation in such a case
+ is distinctly drawn between the diseased and the healthy flesh.
+ Such a line is now drawing between the slave and free states, I
+ fear. God send that the disease may be cured without amputation,
+ and before mortification takes place. I know that this latter is
+ your own belief. What think you now, since you have seen the
+ greater extent of the disease? Truly,
+
+ "V. CHEVILLERE."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+
+ B. RANDOLPH TO V. CHEVILLERE.
+
+ "Belville, High Hills of the Santee.
+
+ "DEAR FRIEND,
+
+ "I have heard of weeping willows, but I never saw weeping pines
+ and black Jacks (scrub oaks) before I came into South Carolina;
+ these are made so by the moss which here grows from the trees in
+ long pendulous masses, which makes them look like gigantic weeping
+ willows.
+
+ "On the day of my arrival here, I was again benighted within a few
+ miles of Belville, and again found my way into Christendom by a
+ delightful custom which prevails among your city refugees. You
+ know that they have a little village erected here among your
+ sandhills, which is entirely owned by wealthy residents of
+ Charleston; to these they retire during the sickly season, and of
+ course they are now full of fashionables. Before each door is a
+ large wooden pillar, with a hearth on the top of it, a kind of
+ rude imitation of our urn. On these they kindle pine-knot fires to
+ keep the mosquitoes away from the premises, and the effect is
+ doubtless at all times brilliant; but it is doubly so when they
+ are the means of restoring a poor benighted traveller to the
+ region of hope and comfort; such was the case with your humble
+ servant. I had but just begun to look out for the usual concert,
+ and the Frying-pan, and the swamp, when I discovered these fires
+ away to my right; I was not more than a mile out of my road.
+
+ "This little mushroom village was entirely deserted when I passed
+ through it before; I was therefore surprised to find carriages
+ standing by each cabin, and fine ladies promenading along the
+ sandy roads with their attendant beaux.
+
+ "Sounds of infantile laughter, sweet music, and the still sweeter
+ notes of frying-pans (very different affairs from my assortment),
+ saluted my delighted ears as I cantered through the encamped
+ throng. I did not stop, because the distance was but short to your
+ own house, at which I soon arrived, and, for once in my life, not
+ before I was wanted.
+
+ "As I briskly rode up the long sandy avenue, I heard a strange
+ confusion of noises and sounds from the direction of the quarter,
+ which you have here dangerously near, but from benevolent views I
+ suppose; I next discovered Bell walking to and fro along the
+ little esplanade which surmounts the front portico, wringing her
+ hands, weeping, and calling upon your mother's name most
+ piteously. I dismounted, and ran towards the nearest entrance with
+ all my speed, and there I met the dear girl, just in time to catch
+ her in my arms for fear of a worse resting-place. As soon as she
+ had recovered a little from her exhaustion, the effect of her
+ previous excitement, she exclaimed, 'Oh! Mr. Randolph, how glad I
+ am to see you!'
+
+ "'Not more so than I am to see you, my dear Bell; but tell me the
+ cause of all this noise at the quarter, and of your alarm.'
+
+ "She told me, as well as she could for her short and convulsive
+ breathing, that the driver had undertaken, in the absence of the
+ overseer, to whip a young negro who is a great favourite among his
+ fellows; and it seems that he had beaten him unmercifully. Some
+ time after, a party had assailed his house where he had shut
+ himself in; as I came up, they had just succeeded in breaking down
+ the door; but the bird had been some time flown, out of a back
+ window. Your mother had gone to drink tea with one of the
+ refugees, a city acquaintance of hers, at the little encampment
+ before mentioned. Under these circumstances, I seized a cudgel and
+ departed to the scene of action, not, however, with Bell's
+ consent. She declared that they would murder me, and clung to my
+ garments until I gently disengaged myself and committed her to her
+ maid. It is not to be denied that I almost blessed the rebellion,
+ for its showing me that I was a person to be preserved in the eyes
+ of your cousin.
+
+ "When I arrived upon the ground, it was some minutes before I
+ could make the principal actors conscious of the presence of any
+ one not in the number of their confederates; however, by dint of
+ lungs and violent gesticulations, I at length gained an audience,
+ and no sooner had I done so, than the victory was gained. I merely
+ promised to have the matter investigated, and the offender
+ punished himself, if he should prove, upon investigation, to have
+ whipped the favourite either without cause, or unmercifully, with
+ cause. This desirable conclusion to the affair could not have been
+ brought about in every quarter in this neighbourhood, or at any
+ one where they had been less accustomed to have their mutual
+ wrongs redressed.
+
+ "When I returned to the house, the news of the result had preceded
+ me, and Bell had retired to her room; she soon, however, again
+ made her appearance, more beautiful, if possible, than when I left
+ her; she found it exceedingly difficult to amalgamate her present
+ evident gratitude with her former comico-quizzico treatment of
+ me,--and though the latter decidedly had the advantage, the
+ struggles between the little devil of mischief within, and a
+ proper behaviour to me on the present occasion, kept me quite
+ amused, considering our late excitement, until your mother, who
+ had been sent for, arrived with a number of gentlemen from the
+ sandhills. With these we formed quite a party; your mother was
+ less moved than I expected, owing, I suppose, to her having so
+ long been in the habit of putting her energies to the test. She
+ was undisguisedly pleased to see me.
+
+ "Among the gentlemen who returned with her, my green eyes soon
+ discovered a suitor of Bell's; whether one formerly discarded, or
+ at present encouraged, I could not tell; but I rather suspect the
+ latter, as your mother's visit was to his sister, and Bell had
+ excused herself from going upon some grounds, for which he was now
+ taking her to task.
+
+ "I was not so much surprised as I have been, at her easy control
+ of _my_ poor generalship, when I saw with what admirable
+ discipline she managed her troops, both raw militia and regulars;
+ of course I class myself with the latter.
+
+ "I was not too much delighted to hear many parties and excursions
+ talked of and arranged; what a selfish animal I must have become
+ since I have undertaken this southern tour! I wonder if the
+ northern air and manners have had the same effect upon you and
+ Lamar?
+
+ "After our visiters had departed (you see I am domiciliated), Bell
+ said to me, starting up suddenly, 'Mr. Randolph, if my memory
+ serves me, you told me at the door, on the morning of your
+ departure, that indispensable business would put it entirely out
+ of your power to take our house in your way home; I hope you have
+ heard favourable accounts from that urgent business?'
+
+ "The little _devil_ within was now completely triumphant; and
+ then, to make my intended pathos still more ridiculous, by
+ inventing more than half of my speech! I had a great mind to say,
+ 'Oh, Mr. Randolph, how glad I am to see you!' and almost run into
+ her arms; but your mother's dignity, Chevillere, though it is mild
+ and benevolent, keeps me always on my good behaviour in her
+ presence; so I only answered, 'The horse! the horse! you forget
+ the horse!' and then she enjoyed a peculiarly sincere and
+ triumphant laugh; and the first, too, with which she has greeted
+ my return. I love them so much that I can almost bear to hear her
+ laugh at myself, provided it is at my knavery and not at my folly.
+
+ "B. RANDOLPH."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+
+ V. CHEVILLERE TO B. RANDOLPH.
+
+ "New-York, 18--.
+
+ "I told you in my last of our surprise at the little coincidence
+ of the number on the card, and that on the house where the lady
+ alighted, with whom Lamar had exchanged some intelligent glances
+ in her more girlish days; but I did not complete the relation,
+ which I will do presently.
+
+ "In the mean time, was there ever a man of any travel or
+ adventure, who has not been alarmed at these seeming accidents,
+ or, what is more probable, made superstitious by their frequent
+ recurrence? I think that I hazard nothing in saying, that more of
+ such strange coincidences have occurred to me than I have ever
+ seen in any work of fiction; not the clap-traps, and other little
+ contrivances, which are intended to electrify the blunted nerves
+ of veteran readers; but the coincidences of ordinary life in
+ society, which reveal to us occasionally the finger of Providence
+ in the course we vainly suppose we are chalking out for ourselves.
+ What is it to a man to possess the will, when all the
+ circumstances upon which that will is to operate, are ready
+ arranged to his hand? I do not repine at this, if it be a fact.
+ On the contrary, it is often a matter of consolation to me to
+ think, how narrow is the choice which the Creator has given us;
+ thereby, of course, decreasing our means of doing wrong; nor is
+ this all his beneficence to us,--he has made it easier for us to
+ do right than wrong; often leaving us but two plain roads to
+ follow, the right one being the easier, plainer, more attractive
+ to a cultivated head and heart, and more profitable in this world.
+ There! you see I never preach beyond this world; and hard enough
+ it is to see clearly all around us in that.
+
+ "This brings me, by a very circuitous route you will no doubt
+ think, to the further coincidence spoken of.
+
+ "As Damon does not take up his abode with us, besides other
+ reasons, he was not of our party when we went to pay our respects
+ to the Hazlehurst family. On entering the parlour, we found the
+ young gentleman who had invited us, with Arthur and the lady, who
+ were sitting, at the time of our entrance, engaged in an
+ apparently interesting conversation, in the recess of one of the
+ windows. Arthur and Lamar seemed pleased to meet again. The lady
+ smiled upon Lamar, and acknowledged her recollection of his
+ countenance. She is elegant and lofty; not in height, indeed, for
+ she is not remarkably tall, but lofty in her demeanour and
+ bearing. There are none of the gentle whisperings which come
+ directly from the heart of a certain little unhappy runaway. The
+ one would captivate an assembly; the other has made terrible
+ inroads upon the heart of a single gentleman; and this brings me
+ to the matter with which I began this epistle.
+
+ "Lamar, having mentioned to Arthur something about the young lady
+ we had met on our travels, and having thrown many gratuitous
+ remarks and glances towards me, the lady seemed at length to take
+ some interest in the subject, and in Lamar's description. She then
+ appealed to me for the name.
+
+ "'Miss St. Clair!' exclaimed she, when I had succeeded in uttering
+ it, 'and have you really fallen into her toils? Alas, I pity you!'
+
+ "Why the plague should she pity me, Randolph? It was evident
+ enough that she did not mean the mock pity, which is only another
+ way for saying, 'how I am rejoiced!'
+
+ "'But,' continued she, 'the lady is a dear and valued friend of
+ mine, and you shall see her.'
+
+ "'But when?' said I, eagerly, awakening out of a brown study.
+
+ "All laughed; and I cannot say from my own experience, that I like
+ the sport any better than yourself.
+
+ "You could have amused yourself (it was no amusement to me) with
+ the odd looks of Lamar, in presence of the object of a first and
+ youthful attachment. There is something pure and primitive in
+ these boyish loves, and they are too much out of fashion in the
+ present age, even in this country. It is not certainly because
+ matches of mere convenience have supplanted them, so much as
+ because it has become too much the custom to treat very young
+ affairs of the heart with ridicule and contempt. People are apt to
+ say 'Oh! it is nothing more than puppy love!' (a refined
+ expression truly) and to throw derision upon all such
+ demonstrations, at the very time, too, when we are most sensitive
+ upon such subjects, and when our impressions of the fair one are
+ but too easily modified by the pretended opinions of our seniors
+ and superiors. Opposition, direct and serious, will indeed
+ sometimes make the youth steady in his course, but ridicule of the
+ object, never!
+
+ "From the little I know of the science of political economy and
+ human happiness, I am inclined to run right into the teeth of the
+ prevailing doctrines on this subject. I have never known a couple
+ who married, whether young or old, upon the strength of a first
+ and mutual passion, who were not contented, prosperous, and happy.
+ There are doubtless exceptions to this sweeping rule, but I have
+ not seen them.
+
+ "Its enemies urge that the youthful pair are not capable of
+ estimating each other's qualifications. But do age and experience
+ qualify them? Or is the judgment of so much avail in these matters
+ as is pretended? Look at the men most remarkable for discretion
+ and judgment; I will venture to say you will find that most of
+ them have trusted too much to their judgments, and too little to
+ their hearts, to be happy. The truth is, that nature has made the
+ heart the magnetic point of mutual attraction in these affairs,
+ and the head of the wisest man is here out of its sphere.
+
+ "It is too true, that many of your slow, cautious, miserly
+ characters, attempt to reduce the whole business to a question in
+ the single rule of three; as thus: if Caroline B. with a sweet
+ face and a prudent turn makes a thrifty wife, what will Adeline B.
+ make, with a sweet face, thrifty ways, and a heavy purse?
+
+ "Thanks be to an overruling providence, they are often carried a
+ rule or two farther in their mathematics than they intended; the
+ honey-moon winds up with doleful calculations, in the ashes of the
+ chimney-corner, with the end of their rattans; such as Vulgar
+ Fractions, Profit and Loss, Tare and Trett, et cetera.
+
+ "You must not imagine, from what I have here said, that I am one
+ of those dreamers who contend that the world might again become a
+ paradise; if, in these things, men would always consult the
+ dictates of the heart.
+
+ "If we look forward at the marriages which are to come, we can
+ discern nothing. This you may think is too true to make a joke of,
+ and too serious to discuss. But look back over all the world that
+ you have seen, and I think you will own that Providence or destiny
+ has had a great design constantly in view in their fulfilment. The
+ human character has been equipoised, extremes have been avoided,
+ the humble elevated, the exalted humbled; all the genius, and the
+ wit, and the judgment, and the virtues, have not been suffered to
+ be concentrated in the descendants of a single pair, but have been
+ as nearly as possible divided among us, the descendants of the
+ multitude. Opposite, or rather diverging characters, are
+ frequently enamoured of each other--the brave man loves the gentle
+ woman; the gentle man, the gay woman; and thus in their
+ descendants we have the grand compromise of nature.
+
+ "There is a sermon, now for the text--'neither is the battle to
+ the strong nor the race to the swift.'
+
+ "V. CHEVILLERE."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ V. CHEVILLERE TO B. RANDOLPH.
+
+ (In continuation.)
+
+ "New-York, 18--.
+
+ "The day being Sunday, I sent old Cato this morning to arouse
+ Lamar quite early, in order to ascertain if he was disposed to
+ walk before breakfast, and view some of the boasted parks, groves,
+ and gardens of these hospitable Gothamites. Old Cato soon
+ returned, saying that Lamar had but that moment fallen asleep, but
+ that he would be with me as soon as he could make a hasty toilet;
+ hasty it indeed was, for he was not many minutes behind Cato, in
+ his morning-gown and slippers, yawning and stretching his clenched
+ fists through the room as if he had sat in his chair all night.
+
+ "'Beshrew me, Chevillere,' said he, 'but you are an uneasy and
+ restless spirit, to be waking a man up at all hours of the night
+ in this style. I thought, at least, when I saw old Cato's grisly
+ head, that you had had a surfeit, or a fit of indigestion.'
+
+ "I suppose then you are disappointed to find me well; but tell me,
+ Lamar, how you intend to spend the day?
+
+ "'Why, I have not laid it down in a regular campaign, but I
+ suppose, as you are too much of a Roundhead to kill the day with
+ me at cards, that I shall have to submit myself to be whined to
+ death with nasal psalmody, at some conventicle or other. Be that
+ as it may, Damon shall sit on the stool of repentance as well as
+ myself.'
+
+ "'In the mean time, suppose we walk to the Battery and Castle
+ Garden?'
+
+ "'Agreed!' said he, 'provided you wait till I jump into a more
+ seemly garb.'
+
+ "We were soon arm in arm, sauntering down the southern extremity
+ of Broadway, which terminates in a beautiful oval grass-plot,
+ called the Bowling Green; surrounded by a handsome iron railing,
+ and containing a young and an old grove of trees; in imitation,
+ doubtless, of human life, the young to supplant the aged. During
+ the colonial government, there stood in the centre of this
+ beautiful spot a painted leaden equestrian statue of George the
+ Third, but as soon as the revolutionary war broke out, it was
+ melted into bullets, and shot at his own ships and soldiers. On
+ the opposite side of the right branch of Broadway, in a
+ southwesterly direction, is the Battery--a noble lawn, covering
+ some acres of the southern extremity of Manhattan Island, and of
+ course looking into the Bay of New-York. What is by a misnomer
+ called Castle Garden, stands out in the waters of the bay on the
+ south-west side, and is connected with the lawn by a wooden bridge
+ of some thirty or forty yards length, and not too strong to give
+ way under some future pressure. Castle Garden is a castellated
+ structure, without turrets and battlements, built of hewn stone,
+ and pierced with a row of port-holes. It seems to have been built
+ for warlike purposes, but is now used as a public promenade, and
+ exhibition garden, having tiers of seats inside, and around an
+ extensive area, in the manner of an amphitheatre. In the centre of
+ the area is a little temple or dome, supported on columns.
+ Surmounting the whole body of the castle is an esplanade,
+ protected by plain railings; from the top of this extends high
+ into the air a flag-staff, from which, on national festivals, the
+ 'star spangled banner' proudly floats over the blue waves which
+ beat against its base.
+
+ "It was here that the corporation entertained Lafayette, a
+ platform having been thrown over the area, and a canvass marquee
+ over the top; this ball-room is said to have been capable of
+ containing from six to ten thousand persons.
+
+ "Lamar and I mounted the esplanade, and seated ourselves upon the
+ benches, just within the railing.
+
+ "We could see the ships of every nation, as they rode triumphantly
+ over the waters of this magnificent bay, gliding about like
+ 'things of life;' marine birds screaming and diving among them,
+ and sometimes the porpoises in their clumsy gambols, shooting
+ their black masses above the water and down again; steamers with
+ their gay pennants, thundering noises, and deafening bells; the
+ rude music and songs of the sailors, the hoarse voice of the
+ pilot, as he stepped on board some outward-bound vessel, and the
+ 'ay! ay!' of the sailor, as the order reached his ears, through
+ the rattling of the shrouds, and the whistling of the breeze.
+
+ "Farther out in the bay, between us and the ocean, is a beautiful
+ chain of islands; first Ellis's, then Bedloe's, and lastly, next
+ the ocean, Staten Island.
+
+ "Gay throngs of well-dressed people began now to crowd the
+ gravelled walks of the Battery; maids attending on children were
+ seen with their little charges, gambolling over the green in their
+ Sunday suits; the emancipated mechanics, with their snow-white
+ jackets and collars; and the happy negro, with his tawdry and
+ cast-off finery, as free (personally, not politically, free) as
+ any of the loungers. There was something in this Sunday scene
+ inexpressibly soothing and delightful to my feelings.
+
+ "Every southern should visit New-York. It would allay provincial
+ prejudices, and calm his excitement against his northern
+ countrymen. The people here are warm-hearted, generous, and
+ enthusiastic, in a degree scarcely inferior to our own southerns.
+ The multitude move as one man, in all public-spirited, benevolent,
+ or charitable measures. Many of these Yorkers are above local
+ prejudices, and truly consider this as the commercial metropolis
+ of the Union, and all the people of the land as their customers,
+ friends, patrons, and countrymen.
+
+ "Nor is trade the only thing that flourishes. The arts of polished
+ and refined life, refined literature, and the profounder studies
+ of the schoolmen, all have their distinguished votaries,--I say
+ distinguished, with reference to the standard of science in our
+ country.
+
+ "This much I have written before going to church. The further
+ adventures of the day, in the evening.
+
+ "V. CHEVILLERE."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ V. CHEVILLERE TO B. RANDOLPH.
+
+ (In continuation.)
+
+ "10 o'clock P. M.
+
+ "About ten o'clock this morning the bells began to ring, from
+ Trinity to St. John's. A forest of steeples seemed to have let
+ loose their artillery at once upon us tardy Christians. These
+ gongs seemed to take effect in about fifteen minutes, for
+ simultaneously the houses poured out their thronging occupants,
+ until the streets literally swarmed with these church-going
+ people.
+
+ "'Whither shall we bend our steps?' said I; 'here are various
+ routes to heaven; which do you choose, Episcopal, Methodist, or
+ Presbyterian?'
+
+ "'Not any one of the three,' said he.
+
+ "'Indeed! Perhaps Jewishly inclined?'
+
+ "'No; I thought that you were aware of my partiality for the
+ close-communion Baptists,' said he, with mock gravity.
+
+ "'But seriously, Lamar, you accused me of wishing to drag you to
+ some conventicle or other; choose for us both; indeed for _three_,
+ for here comes Damon.'
+
+ "'Then,' said he, 'I choose the most celebrated preacher! you will
+ thus be most likely to see a certain demure little runaway.'
+
+ "'And there,' said I, 'you will be most likely to see her friend,
+ with Arthur by her side.'
+
+ "Damon now coming up, was asked by me where he would choose to
+ spend the forenoon of the day.
+
+ "'I can't tell exactly,' replied he, 'for the truth is, I feel
+ pretty much like a fish out of water even of week days; but Sunday
+ I'm completely dished; I was thinking of walking out into the
+ country, and bantering somebody for a foot-race.'
+
+ "I proposed that we should all go and hear Dr. ----, and
+ forthwith led the way, my two companions following on, much like
+ truant boys on their return march to school. We entered a low
+ white church, I don't recollect where exactly, but on the western
+ side of Broadway. The preacher was already in the pulpit, and the
+ aisles and pews on the lower floor were crammed with hearers,
+ insomuch that we were compelled to seek seats in the small
+ gallery, where with great difficulty we found them.
+
+ "The preacher, who had already begun, was a commanding-looking
+ gentleman, clothed in black, and, like most of our dissenting
+ clergymen, without gown or surplice; his features were large and
+ well-formed; his forehead lofty beyond any thing I have ever seen,
+ but falling back at the top until it was lost in little short
+ bristly curls; his attitudes were lofty and dignified. He had, as
+ I said before, announced the portion of Scripture which he was
+ attempting to elucidate, before we entered the church. The subject
+ seemed to be, the practicability and means of a direct revelation
+ from God! When he spoke of the Great Spirit who rules our
+ destinies revealing himself, and his manner of doing it, he was
+ almost sublime. I must try to recollect a few passages for your
+ edification, but you must remember that they are transposed into
+ my own language.
+
+ "He painted in vivid and striking colours, the utter incapacity of
+ man to conceive identically of such a being as God. 'The little
+ puny brain of man,' said he, 'which you may hold in the hollow of
+ your hand, cannot contain a true conception of God in all his
+ majesty! the little arteries and fibres of our poor heads would
+ rend and burst asunder with such an idea.
+
+ "'To form one single correct thought of so great a Spirit, you
+ must first conceive of those things which surround him; as, when
+ we view a painting of some earthly object, there must first be a
+ background to relieve the eye. So when you would conceive of that
+ great Being truly and fully, you must be able to realize the
+ duration of eternity, obliterate the little periods of time and
+ chronology, which require a starting and a resting-place in our
+ human minds,--soar out of the reach of the sickly atmospheres
+ which surround these little planets, and stand erect in the broad
+ and fathomless light of God's own atmosphere! Could the human eye
+ see with such rays, and stretch its glances over the great waves
+ and boundless oceans of light in which he dwells, one single ray
+ of it would blast your optic nerves.
+
+ "'Even here upon earth, if we are suddenly brought from a dark
+ dungeon into the bright rays of his reflected glory, our little
+ optical machinery quails and dances with the shock; but take that
+ same creature from his gloomy dungeon, and place him in the glassy
+ sea of light in which God dwells! The utter horrors of such a
+ moment, if they did not instantly explode the soul into its
+ elements, would be worse than the terrors of convulsions, and
+ earthquakes, and the black and fathomless chasms of the sea. And
+ yet! some of us desire in our hearts a direct revelation to
+ ourselves from this sublime Being! Know you what you desire? You
+ desire that God should stretch out his mighty power, and draw away
+ the friendly veil of the heavens, and burst upon an astounded
+ world in all his fearful attributes! Before such an immediate
+ presence, the sun and moon would become dark in contrast. The
+ natural laws which he has given us for our protection, of
+ gravitation, electricity, and magnetism, would burst loose from
+ their reflected positions, and all animate and inanimate nature
+ would fall before their First Great Cause! We cannot have direct
+ physical intercourse with God. We are physically incompetent to
+ encounter him, either in his goodness or in his wrath.
+
+ "You say in your hearts, that there is mystery in this revelation
+ of the Bible! Can mystery be separable from sublime or profound
+ greatness, when viewed through human powers? Are not height, and
+ depth, and space, and air, all mysterious to your minds, when
+ beyond the reach of the eye? Is not darkness alone profoundly
+ mysterious? mysterious in its effects and in its properties! Can
+ any mind analyze darkness? Is it positive or negative? Does it
+ extend through eternal and measureless space? or is it only a
+ creative property dependent upon the functions of the eye? Our
+ darkness is to one part of creation light, and our light their
+ darkness.
+
+ "Is measureless space a positive creation, or a negative
+ nonentity! No human intellect can fathom these subjects; not from
+ any of their delusive properties, but from our limited capacities!
+ These then are but the beginning of those things which interpose
+ between us and our great and sublime Creator!
+
+ "You can now, perhaps, form some idea of the difficulties of
+ revealing God to man!
+
+ "What would you have with a more powerful and sublime revelation
+ than this? Would you disorganize the minds of the whole human
+ family, by opening to them frightful volumes which would craze and
+ bewilder, rather than direct them? Do you complain of mystery, and
+ yet call upon God for more?
+
+ "But the greatest difficulty between us and a direct revelation
+ from our Creator, has yet to be considered.
+
+ "This revelation of the Bible was necessarily conveyed to us
+ through the medium of human language. Now let us examine what this
+ human language is. It is a system of words or signs, which convey
+ to our minds the ideas of things. These words only represent such
+ ideas as we ourselves have formed from the things we have seen,
+ and their various combinations. How then can these signs and
+ symbols convey identical ideas of God and his attributes? All the
+ imperfections of this revelation then are confessedly owing to our
+ imperfections, both as it regards mind and language.
+
+ "I have given you but a faint outline of this powerful and
+ vehement speaker's discourse. During its delivery I once or twice
+ turned to Lamar and the Kentuckian, to see how they were affected.
+ The former had insensibly risen during the fervency of the
+ preacher's eloquence, and stood leaning over the balustrade,
+ drinking in the sounds of a voice which are truly powerful though
+ not musical, until he came to a pause; he then sank into his seat,
+ a grim smile passing over his pale sickly features, clearly
+ showing to those who knew him, how intently he had listened. Damon
+ chewed tobacco at a prodigious rate, and the more eloquent the
+ speaker became, the more energetic was the action of his jaws. His
+ eye was wild and savage, like that of a forest animal when it
+ suddenly finds itself in the midst of a settlement. He sometimes
+ cracked his fingers together, for the same purpose, I suppose,
+ that he used to crack his whip when travelling on horseback, to
+ give emphasis and round his periods.
+
+ "But I had not long to consider these effects upon different
+ characters, for at this moment Lamar pointed over the balustrade
+ at two moving figures on the lower floor. You already guess, if
+ you are any thing of a Yankee, what these were. Lamar and I
+ simultaneously arose to our feet and gazed at the heads which
+ filled up every crevice, as a veteran soldier would have gazed at
+ so many bristling bayonets upon an impregnable bastion. We soon
+ heard the steps of a carriage let down, and then the rolling of
+ the wheels. Lamar bit his lip till the blood almost started from
+ it. Whether the pressure was increased by his having seen that
+ Arthur joined the ladies near the door, I shall not undertake to
+ say.
+
+ "The sermon now being over we had merely to throw ourselves into
+ the tide of human figures which moved down stairs, to be carried
+ safely to the bottom.
+
+ "When there, Damon drew one long and whistling breath, and an
+ inarticulate sound not unlike the snort of a whale.
+
+ "'I'm flambergasted! if that ain't what I call goin the whole
+ cretur, he'd go to Congress from old Kentuck as easy as I could
+ put a gin sling under my jacket. O Christopher! what a stump
+ speech he could make, if he would only turn his hand to it,
+ instead of wasting his wind here among the old wives!'
+
+ "'Well, Lamar, what did you think of him?'
+
+ "'Think of him! (rousing himself from a brown study), I never
+ knew before that I had nerves in the hairs of my head.'
+
+ "'And where did you now obtain that precious piece of anatomical
+ news?'
+
+ "'In the church, to be sure! Were not my locks dancing all the
+ while to the music of that eccentric man's voice? The cold chills
+ ran over me, as if I had been under the influence of miasma.'
+
+ "I watched Damon through an unusually long silence, while he
+ several times snapped his fingers and took a fresh chew of
+ tobacco.
+
+ "'I'll tell you what it is, that's what I call a real tear-down
+ sneezer,' ejaculated he; 'he's a bark-well and hold-fast too; he
+ doesn't honey it up to 'em, and mince his words--he lets it down
+ upon 'em hot and heavy; he knocks down and drags out; first he
+ gives it to 'em in one eye and then in 'tother, then in the
+ gizzard, and at last he gits your head under his arm, and then I
+ reckon he feathers it in, between the lug and the horn; he gives a
+ feller no more chance nor a 'coon has in a black jack.'
+
+ "'Then you give him more credit for sincerity than you usually do
+ men of his cloth,' said I.
+
+ "'Yes, yes! there's no whippin the devil round the stump with him;
+ he jumps right at him, tooth and toe-nail, and I'm flambergasted
+ if I don't think he rather worsted the _Old Boy_ this morning; and
+ he's the best match I ever saw him have, he looks so stout and
+ soldier-like; and then his eye! Did you see his eye, stranger? I'm
+ shot if he didn't look as if he could'a jumped right a-straddle
+ of the devil's neck, and just run his thumbs in, and scooped out
+ his two eyes, as easy as I would scoop an oyster out of his
+ shell.'
+
+ "'You don't go to church often when you are at home?'
+
+ "'No; but I _would_ go, if we had such a Samson as this; he raises
+ old Kentuck in me in a minute. I feel full of fight, and ready for
+ any thing now! But our old parson! he's an entirely different cut
+ in the jib. He whines it out to us like an old woman in the last
+ of pea-time; he doesn't thunder it down to 'em like this chap, and
+ like old Hickory did the grape-shot at New-Orleans.'
+
+ "We had now arrived at that point of the street where we were to
+ separate. Damon abruptly informed us of his intention to return
+ soon to Baltimore. I asked him if he was not pleased with
+ New-York.
+
+ "'O, yes;' said he, 'it's a real Kentuck of a place, a man can do
+ here what he likes; they don't look at the cut of a feller's coat,
+ but at the cut of his jib. I could wear my coat upside down here,
+ and my hat smashed all into a gin-shop, and nobody has time to
+ turn round and look at me. Yes, yes, stranger, they are a
+ whole-souled people, and I like 'em, but I have staid long
+ enough.'
+
+ "Here we separated for the day. Lamar intends to try and prevail
+ upon him to accompany us to the theatre, and the Italian opera. I
+ have great curiosity to see him at the latter place. Pedrotti,
+ they say, can tame a tiger with her melodious and touching voice.
+ As you may suppose, I am anxious to hear it myself, and to see its
+ effects upon one so unschooled in the music of luxurious and
+ effeminate Italy.
+
+ "I have written you more at length than I intended, but I could
+ not do otherwise in return for your amusing, friendly, and
+ satisfactory epistle. We shall meet again, as in days of yore, and
+ then we will gather up all these scribblings, and enjoy these
+ scenes again. In the mean time, believe that I wish you success in
+ your present suit, for the sake of three of us,--but more
+ particularly and selfishly that of
+
+ "V. CHEVILLERE."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+
+ V. CHEVILLERE TO B. RANDOLPH.
+
+ "New-York, 18--.
+
+ "DEAR CHUM,
+
+ "Events which seem to me worth recording, crowd upon us so fast
+ now, that it is almost impossible to give you, according to
+ promise, even a profile view of our movements.
+
+ "This morning, about the same hour at which we went to church
+ yesterday, we strolled down Wall-street (and we seemed the only
+ strollers there) to see the Shylocks in their dens, if any such
+ could be found. I was instantly struck with the concentrated
+ looks, and absorbed countenances of all the persons we met. Most
+ of them were running in and out of the banks, with their little
+ bank books in their hands, making mental calculations of notes to
+ be taken up, deposites where made, and how much. Brokers were
+ standing behind their counters, ready to commence their brisk, and
+ (in this country) almost unhazardous game. Many of them amass
+ immense fortunes; it is not at all uncommon for one of these
+ houses to loan to a state several millions at once.
+
+ "We went upon 'change at the hour of twelve. There, in the large
+ room of the rotunda, or circular part of the exchange, merchants,
+ and brokers, and bankers, and moneyed men meet, pretty much after
+ the same fashion as our jockeys and racers upon the turf. The
+ light falls from the dome upon these faces, and reveals the best
+ study for a picture I have ever seen. The seller and the sellee,
+ the shaver and the shavee, or diamond cut diamond, as Damon
+ expresses it:--bear with me but a moment while I go over these
+ dull details, and in return I will tell you something more of the
+ lady with the black mantle.
+
+ "The most predominant expression that I saw upon 'change was
+ _affectation_; the affectation of business; not the silly
+ school-boy affectation which wears off with the improving mind,
+ but that which is first put on by business men, to disguise the
+ real operations of the mind, and which afterward grows into a
+ confirmed habit, and is seen deeply set in wrinkles, long after
+ the first exciting cause has disappeared.
+
+ "This symptom, among the moneyed men, varies according to
+ character and strength of mind in the individual. One man I saw
+ standing with his back against a window, his thumbs stuck into the
+ armholes of his waistcoat, his quill toothpick tight between his
+ teeth,--his features large and fleshy, his complexion between a
+ copper and an apoplectic dapple of blue and red,--his teeth large,
+ white, and flat, his eye small and gray, and his head grizzled; he
+ had evidently been a free, but what is _called_ a _temperate_
+ liver. I tried to trace back through the wrinkles in this man's
+ face, what the emotions were which in his younger days he had
+ attempted to engrave upon it, and which long habit had now made
+ part of his nature; but I should first attempt to describe _the_
+ expression itself. His upper lip was turned into a curl of
+ contempt; his eye was thrown a little down, and the eyelid raised
+ high, so as to show much of the white of the eye, as when a person
+ is in the attitude of profound thought upon some far distant
+ subject. This man had, I thought, the best chosen affectation; it
+ expressed profound abstraction in _one_ direction, when he was no
+ doubt really abstracted in another.
+
+ "His right-hand neighbour had not been so fortunate in his
+ selection of a vizor for the moneyed masquerade. He had chosen
+ comedy; and attempted to hide pounds, shillings, and pence under a
+ comic visage. It was not well chosen. His business-laugh was too
+ horrid. It displayed teeth, gums, and throat, and was too
+ affectedly sincere. He too frequently passed his glances quickly
+ round from one face to the other, to see if they enjoyed the
+ sport. This species of affectation had its origin in a settled
+ contempt for the sense of his associates, and an exalted
+ conception of his own, and especially of his powers to amuse. He
+ frequently drew the corners of his mouth towards his ears, by a
+ voluntary motion, without exercising the corresponding risible
+ muscles; elevating his eyebrows at the same time in a knowing
+ way. Do this yourself, and you will have the expression instantly.
+ His only additional comic resource consisted in sticking one thumb
+ directly under his chin, like a pillar. This man is celebrated on
+ 'change for telling what _he_ considers a good story.
+
+ "Another description of affectation here seen, and by far the most
+ common, is the affectation of decision, firmness, stability, and
+ concentrated purpose.
+
+ "Various methods, I saw, had been practised through long lives to
+ attain this safe look. Some, to whom it was not natural to do so,
+ pushed out the under jaw, like a person who (to use a Southern
+ term) is _jimber_-jawed. Others carried the head on one side, drew
+ up the muscles at the outer angle of one eye, and kept the
+ nostrils distended. Others clenched the teeth, looked fierce and
+ steady, and habitually patted one foot upon the floor, as if in
+ high-spirited impatience. Some looked pensive and sad, and
+ occasionally drew long sighs. Beware of these, if you ever trade
+ in the money-market.
+
+ "The most ludicrous of all moneyed whims is a desire to make
+ others suppose that you think yourself poor. A heartless man
+ begging for sympathy is, of all kinds of affectation, the most
+ contemptible. But the most dangerous of all others, and the most
+ apt to deceive a candid and upright mind, is the affectation of
+ being unaffected. Such is the sin of those who affect bold,
+ independent, and reckless looks. If good fortune had not made
+ them brokers, bad fortune (they seem to say) might have made them
+ robbers.
+
+ "There is yet another class to describe--the sincere and the
+ honest. These are easily descried. Something like an electric
+ intelligence passes from the eye of one honest man to that of
+ another. These are usually modest, retiring, and humble. I speak
+ of real humility, which is best displayed in a respect for the
+ understanding of other men; a desire to place one's companions at
+ their ease; and a tenderness and sympathy towards the failings of
+ the bankrupt, the vicious, and the unfortunate generally.
+
+ "Not that these indications occur only on 'change; they may be
+ seen in the pulpit, at the bar, at the bedside, and behind the
+ counter. As you read my descriptions, try to produce the
+ expression upon your face; then call up some individual of your
+ acquaintance, who may have sat for such a picture--poor, indeed,
+ in its finish, but if it convey to you the idea, my ambition is
+ satisfied. This is a severe test, but I think you may muster up
+ _dramatis personae_ for all the characters.
+
+ "As I am now upon this subject, permit me to make one or two
+ general remarks.
+
+ "I have learned to hold no intimacy with those men who are harsh
+ and uncompromising towards unfortunates and criminals. These
+ feelings often arise from the identical weaknesses, or faults,
+ which drove their victims to ruin. You have, doubtless, seen two
+ slaves quarrel because one belonged to a rich and the other to a
+ poor man.
+
+ "As one well-fed dog is sure to be snarlish to a poorer
+ brother--poor human nature--this currish principle is but too true
+ when applied to us.
+
+ "There is none who appears so virtuously indignant at crime as the
+ man who is a rogue in his heart. A horse-stealer who has blundered
+ into better fortune is scandalized at his former craft; and a
+ sheep-stealer can weep in the very face of the lamb which another
+ has stolen.
+
+ "Those ladies, the purity of whose characters is most
+ questionable, are uniformly the first to cease visiting an openly
+ suspected sister.
+
+ "But I see plainly that if I go on, the subject must become too
+ revolting; at all events I must give it to you in broken doses;
+ and by the time Arthur introduces me into the human catacombs,
+ where the living are _soul_-dead, you will be ready to take
+ another view of those dark and dismal abodes, and attempt further
+ observations of humanity in its darker developments.
+
+ "A malignant disease, as Arthur thinks, has broken out in the
+ portions of the city alluded to; if so, I will remain with him.
+ This is the time to see fearful sights; and we Southerns, you
+ know, have looked the grim monster too often in the face in this
+ shape to be easily frightened from a cherished purpose.
+
+ "Damon begins to be very uneasy under these reports of sudden
+ deaths, and black infections sweeping through the air."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ V. CHEVILLERE TO B. RANDOLPH.
+
+ (In continuation.)
+
+ "New-York, 18--.
+
+ "I have seen her, Randolph, and seen her far more captivating and
+ beautiful than ever!
+
+ "Yesterday, after I had finished the former part of this letter, I
+ met, on my way down to dinner, Arthur and young Hazlehurst. The
+ latter had come expressly to invite Lamar and myself to spend the
+ evening at their house. As you may suppose, it was not refused; we
+ pressed them to go in with us, as they had not yet dined, to which
+ they finally consented.
+
+ "I find Hazlehurst an intelligent young man, but with many
+ erroneous opinions concerning the south, of which he must be
+ disabused. He imagines us to be a generous and hospitable people,
+ but in a rather semi-barbarous state.
+
+ "As this very subject occupied our attention in presence of the
+ ladies, I prefer giving you an imperfect sketch of the discourse.
+ I must not omit a table lecture of Lamar's on nicotiana, however
+ impatient you may be to hear more of a certain fair one.
+
+ "The subject of tobacco was introduced simultaneously with the
+ segars, after most of the company had retired. One having been
+ offered to young Hazlehurst, he declined it, saying that he did
+ not use tobacco in any shape.
+
+ "'Not use tobacco! not smoke!' said Lamar; 'why, sir, you have yet
+ to experience one of the most calm, delightful, and soothing
+ pleasures of which human nerves are sensible.'
+
+ "'I have always understood,' said the other, 'that the stimulus
+ leaves one far more miserable than if he had not applied it.'
+
+ "'Then you labour under some mistake,' said Lamar; 'and if you
+ will permit, and your doctorships will forbear laughter, I will
+ explain to you the effects of a fine segar upon my system, and
+ "suit the action to the word."
+
+ "'When a man takes a genuine, dappled Havana segar in his mouth,
+ places his legs upon a hair cushioned chair, his head thrown back
+ on that upon which he sits, or against the wall; his arms folded
+ upon his chest,--the following phenomena occur:
+
+ "'_First stage._ He becomes heroic and chivalrous, or perhaps
+ eloquent; if the last, and thinks himself alone, you will see him
+ wave his hand in the most graceful and captivating style of
+ oratory. His eye is the soul of imaginary eloquence, his features
+ are all swelled out until they seem grand--gloomy--and profound;
+ his nostrils pant and show their red lining, like a fiery and
+ blooded steed. He rolls out thick volumes of smoke, and puffs it
+ from him like a forty-two-pounder. He draws down his feet, and
+ raises his head and looks after it, as if victory or conviction
+ had been hurled upon its clouds. Perhaps some one laughs at him,
+ as you laugh now at me.
+
+ "'He replaces his legs, leans back his head again; the _second
+ stage_ is come; he smiles, perhaps, at the laurels just won; he
+ closes his eyes, delightful visions of green meadows and lawns,
+ fragrant flowers, meandering streams, limpid brooks, beautiful
+ nymphs, twilight amid tall and venerable trees, and lengthening
+ shadows, flit before his imagination. His face now is towards the
+ heavens; his features are calm and serene; he wafts the smoke
+ gently upward in long continued columns, and wreaths, and
+ garlands; his hands fall by his side--the diminished stump falls
+ from his hand.
+
+ "'And now, in the _third stage_, he is in a revery. A servant
+ touches him three times, and tells him a gentleman wants to see
+ him; he kicks his shins; servant retreats. Eyes being still
+ closed, he draws a long sigh or two, but full, pleasant, and
+ satisfactory. Servant returns; shakes him by the shoulder; he
+ jumps up and throws an empty bottle at his head, as I do this one,
+ at that grinning fellow there (making a mock effort), and then the
+ trance is over.
+
+ "'Now where are the bad effects, except upon Cato's shins, if he
+ should happen to be the man?'
+
+ "We all applauded Lamar for his treat, with three hearty cheers,
+ in a small way.
+
+ "I am sorry to see a little sly, stealthy, unmentionable coldness
+ arising between Lamar and Arthur. I first discovered it in little
+ acts of what the world calls politeness, but which I call
+ formality, towards each other. They are unconscious of it, as yet,
+ for it seems to have sprung up by irresistible mutual repulsion
+ between them: deep seated self appears to have warned each of a
+ dangerous rival in the other. These are little secret
+ selfishnesses of the soul, which lie deep, dark, and still,
+ running in an unseen current, far below the soundings of the
+ self-searching consciousness. How mysterious is the mind of man!
+ We may draw up the flood-gates, and let loose the dammed-up waters
+ in order to find some secret at the bottom; but the flood rolls
+ by, and the secret still lies buried as profoundly as before. At
+ some future day, when the thunder and the storms shall come, these
+ secrets may, perhaps, be washed up to the surface, like wonders of
+ the deep, when least expected!
+
+ "At about eight o'clock, Lamar and I sallied out to find Mrs.
+ Hazlehurst's house in Broadway; amid music from clarionet, violin,
+ and kent bugle. These were stationed in the balconies of the
+ different museums. Carriages were just setting down their company
+ at the old Park Theatre. Little blind and lame boys sat about the
+ iron railing at St. Paul's church, grinding hand-organs, and
+ making music little better than so many grindstones--all for a
+ miserable pittance which they collect in the shape of pennies,
+ perhaps to the amount of a dozen a day.
+
+ "Negroes were screaming 'ice-cream' at the top of their lungs,
+ though it is now becoming cold in the evenings and mornings. At
+ every corner some old huckster sang out 'Hot corn! hot corn!'
+ though the regular season of 'roasting-ears,' has long since
+ passed by. Little tables of fruit, cakes, and spruce-beer were
+ strewed along the walks and under the awnings, which often remain
+ extended during the night.
+
+ "We at length found the house, and entered with palpitating
+ hearts. I had a sort of presentiment that I was to meet Miss St.
+ Clair, from what the lively Isabel had said.
+
+ "When we entered the saloon she was nowhere to be seen! my
+ disappointment was no doubt visible, for I saw an arch smile upon
+ Isabel's countenance, and, I must say, a very singular one upon
+ that of her brother. The idea first struck me that he is either
+ now, or has been, a suitor of the absent lady! Was there a lurking
+ jealousy at the bottom of my own heart, at the very time that I
+ was fishing up green monsters from Lamar's mental pandemonium?
+ Randolph, Oh! the human heart is deceitful above all things; and
+ it oftener deceives ourselves than others. We have radiated rays
+ of light for our mental vision outwards which we may extend _ad
+ infinitum_, but once turn our observations inwards, and it is like
+ inverting the telescope.
+
+ "We were presented to the lady of the mansion immediately upon our
+ entrance. She is benignant and bland, yet aristocratic withal. She
+ discovers a warm heart towards the South, probably from an idea of
+ a kindred aristocratic feeling in us. The two are, however, very
+ different in their developments. It is necessary here to have many
+ more bulwarks between this class and those below them than is
+ needful with us; as there is here a regular gradation in the
+ divisions of society. The end of one and the beginning of the next
+ are so merged, that it would be impossible to separate them
+ without these barriers. What are they? you would ask. They consist
+ in little formalities,--rigid adherence to fashion in its higher
+ flights,--exhibition of European and Oriental luxuries, et cetera,
+ et cetera.
+
+ "We were presented to the company in general; most of the
+ fashionable ladies were sitting or standing around a fine-toned
+ upright piano-forte, at which two of the party were executing, in
+ a very finished style of fashionable elegance, some of Rossini's
+ compositions, accompanied by a gentleman on the flute. And in good
+ truth, they produced scientific and fashionable music; but,
+ Randolph, it was not to my taste. You know that I have cultivated
+ music as a science, from my earliest youth; that I am an
+ enthusiast here, and not altogether a bungler in my own execution.
+ I have now discovered either that I lack taste, or that the
+ fashionable world is therein deficient. You shall decide between
+ us at another time.
+
+ "Lamar very soon contrived (how, heaven only knows) to throw me
+ completely in the shade; but the first evidence I had of it was
+ his sitting bolt upright between the gay Isabel and her mother. He
+ had already betrayed them into laughter,--not fashionable
+ laughter, for I saw the old lady wiping the tears from her eyes.
+ It is almost impossible for any one to adhere long to conventional
+ forms, when he is of the party,--so manly, generous, and sincere
+ is he. My chagrin at not finding myself situated equally to my
+ heart's content did not escape him, and he perhaps discovered my
+ awkwardness, for he attempted to draw me into a discussion
+ concerning the provincial rivalry of the North and South. I evaded
+ his friendly hand, but soon the younger lady renewed the attack.
+
+ "'Come, Mr. Chevillere, you will tell us what peculiarities you
+ have observed, as existing between the northern and southern
+ ladies as to polish,--fashion,--education,--any thing! This
+ gentleman is so wonderfully free from prejudices and rivalry, that
+ he declares the instant he beholds a beautiful woman, he forgets
+ that she has a local habitation upon earth. You, sir, I hope, are
+ not so catholic an admirer of beauty?'
+
+ "'I too, madam, am always disarmed of local prejudices when I see
+ a beautiful northern lady; but that is not what you wish me to
+ answer. If I understood you right, I suppose you wish to know
+ whether any peculiarity in fashion, habits, or manners strikes us
+ at first sight disagreeably.'
+
+ "'Precisely. Your general opinion of us.'
+
+ "'I am glad to be able to say, then, that with regard to this city
+ I am a perfect enthusiast. Every thing is arranged as I would have
+ it. Nature appears to be the criterion here in matters of taste;
+ utility and improvement seem to prompt the efforts of your men of
+ talents, and that delightful politeness to prevail, which consists
+ in placing all well-meaning persons at their ease, without useless
+ conventional forms.'
+
+ "I hate this formal speech-making, Randolph, across a room _at_
+ people, so I thought I would be myself at once. I therefore
+ continued my remarks for the remainder of the evening rather more
+ in a nonchalant way, and as an introduction to a more free and
+ easy tone to the company. I asked Lamar to repeat his lecture of
+ the day, on smoking. Hazlehurst, as soon as he heard the subject
+ mentioned, began to describe it to a party of young ladies who
+ stood round the piano. Their curiosity was excited immediately;
+ and though Lamar frowned at me, the ladies entreated until he was
+ forced to comply.
+
+ "He set the room in a perfect roar of laughter, and then a
+ delightful confusion prevailed. Lamar did not repeat exactly the
+ same things which he had treated us with at the dinner-table, but
+ he preserved the stages, dwelling a much shorter time on the
+ heroic, and much longer on the two latter.
+
+ "He introduced a heroine into his shades and bowers, and painted
+ Isabel as he saw her at the Springs; so, at least, I suspect from
+ a certain mantling of the colour into her cheeks.
+
+ "'Then,' said he, speaking of the third stage, 'his hands fall by
+ his side, his eyes are closed, he sighs profoundly, but
+ comfortably and _somnolently_; perhaps he is married; his wife
+ steals gently up and kisses him. 'My dear, the milliner's bill has
+ come.'--'O _dam_ the miller!' In a short time she returns--'My
+ dear, my pin money is out: come now, you are not asleep, I know:
+ and that is not all--the carriage wants painting; the house wants
+ repairs; the children want toys; servants want wages.' He rolls
+ his head over on one shoulder, opens his eyes, and fixes them in a
+ deliberate stare, as I do now, upon Miss Isabel.' This last idea
+ became either too sentimental or too ludicrous for Lamar; and he
+ jumped up in an unsuppressed fit of laughter. You know Lamar,
+ therefore I need not tell you that this is a very imperfect sketch
+ of the manner in which he acted the ludicrous and careless, but
+ _hen-pecked_, husband. I do not wonder that he laughed, when he
+ looked at Isabel, for her face was indescribably arch and
+ sanctimonious.
+
+ "Hilarity and glee seemed now to be the order of the evening with
+ all except poor Arthur. I thought that Lamar would actually sow
+ the seeds of a future quarrel, while discussing something
+ relating to the West. How introduced I do not know, unless Lamar
+ was talking of Damon. However, Arthur stated one fact which
+ surprised us all, and of which we had been all equally ignorant.
+ He stated that Kentucky had one more college than any other State
+ in the Union; half as many as all New-England; and more than North
+ Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, and Alabama, united.
+
+ "While these things were going on, I heard a gentle and scarcely
+ perceptible step behind me, on the carpet; and seeing the other
+ gentlemen rise, I mechanically rose also--to be electrified by the
+ vision of Miss St. Clair. She was pale and trembling, but far more
+ beautiful than I had ever seen her. It was not the beauty of the
+ waxen figure, or the picture; it was the beauty of feeling,
+ sensibility, and tenderness. You have seen that little plant which
+ shrinks at the rude touch of man, Randolph; that should be her
+ emblem.
+
+ "She glided into a rather darkened recess of the room, near where
+ I stood, and seated herself alone, as if to be out of the reach of
+ observation; yet by some means I was seated by her side, almost as
+ dumb as a statue. I even longed for more of Lamar's delineations,
+ if for nothing else but to see her smile again, and light up those
+ features which nature evidently made to smile. Her hair was still
+ parted over the forehead in the Grecian manner; a single ringlet
+ stole down behind her ear. Her dress was simplicity itself,
+ exceedingly plain and tasteful.
+
+ "I need not tell Miss St. Clair how much gratified I am at again
+ meeting her in a circle composed almost entirely of my friends and
+ my friends' friends; but, if I have been rightly informed, we are
+ more indebted to accident than to any benevolent designs on her
+ part for this meeting.
+
+ "'A strange accident indeed, my being here. Not less so than your
+ own. But _you_ are not a believer in accidents.'
+
+ "How beautiful a little act sometimes appears, Randolph, when it
+ sits upon the countenance of one so artless by nature that you can
+ see all the machinery which she imagines is so completely hidden,
+ as a child often hides its eyes and vainly supposes itself unseen.
+ This _ruse_, intended to draw me into some argument about
+ accidents, and to avoid the real case at issue, really amused me;
+ I was willing, however, to follow her lead for a time.
+ 'Accidents,' said I, 'seem to us, at first sight, to be without
+ the usual train of cause and effect; but, if they were all placed
+ in my hands, I think I could govern the destinies of the world, so
+ long as I could control my own destiny.'
+
+ "'I do not understand you, sir,' said she, with the simplest
+ cunning imaginable; feigning deep interest, though her countenance
+ would not join in the plot.
+
+ "'The condition,' I continued, 'and the present circumstances of
+ every individual now in this room might be traced back to some
+ accident which has happened--to the person, his father, or his
+ grandfather; the death of one friend, the marriage of another, may
+ affect the destinies of the persons themselves and all connected
+ with them.'
+
+ "Ah, Randolph! there was a tender chord touched. Did you ever see
+ a person shot through and through? The countenance expresses a
+ whole age of misery in an instant. The soul is conscious of it
+ before the body. One will even ask whether he is shot--while his
+ countenance proclaims death more forcibly than a hundred tongues
+ could utter it. There is a writhing, convulsive, retreating
+ misery; part of which I saw I had inflicted upon this gentle
+ being. This mystery must be solved. The system on which she is
+ treated by those around her is false.
+
+ "You have, perhaps, seen a whole family after the death of one of
+ its members, religiously observe profound silence on the subject.
+ Should any one rudely or even gently mention the deceased, all are
+ instantly horrified. Each fears that the feelings of all the rest
+ have been shocked. At this moment, a calm and judicious friend,
+ when the ice is once broken, may cure all this amiable weakness by
+ steadily and tenderly persevering. I was determined to try the
+ experiment in this case. A bold measure, when you consider the
+ person and the circumstances.
+
+ "'Miss St. Clair,' said I, after she had recovered her composure;
+ 'allow me to ask whether your family is related to that of General
+ St. Clair?'
+
+ "'I believe not,' she composedly answered.
+
+ "'Has your father been long dead?'
+
+ "'Not a very long time: and the loss is the greater, as I have
+ never known the value of a brother or a sister.'
+
+ "'You do not seem to labour under the usual disadvantages of
+ step-daughters.'
+
+ "'Never was step-father more devoted and affectionate than mine,
+ in his own peculiar way; and with that I am quite contented.'
+
+ "Now, Randolph, you know that impertinence had no share in
+ dictating these questions, but could impertinence have gone
+ farther? what ramification could I next attempt? Here was nearly
+ the whole genealogical tree, but farther down there was no hope of
+ touching the true branch.
+
+ "Her own gentle heart alone remained to be suspected. How could I
+ suspect it, Randolph? so young, so pure, so gentle, so beautiful!
+ Alas! that is but a poor protection against suitors. Besides, she
+ is said to be rich. Must the question be asked? I resolved upon
+ it! Was I not justifiable in doing so? Am I not an avowed suitor?
+ at least have I not shown myself ready to become so? The
+ opportunity was good; the company were all engaged in little
+ coteries around the saloon. My previous questions seemed rather to
+ have tranquillized her than otherwise; it was a trying moment!
+ but no other step could be gained until this obstacle was
+ surmounted. I therefore proceeded to make one or two anxious
+ inquiries, critical as it regards my happiness, but which a lover
+ cannot confide even to the ear of Randolph.
+
+ "My object was to know whether I had aught to fear from rivalry.
+ Her lips moved, but no sound issued from them. I resumed; 'Believe
+ me, that this pain would not have been inflicted, if my supposed
+ relation to yourself had not imboldened me to ask whether any
+ other man were so happy as to render me miserable.'
+
+ "'I see no impropriety in answering your question, though it can
+ avail nothing; my _affections_ are now as they have always
+ been--disengaged.'
+
+ "These words were wafted along the vestibule of my ear, like some
+ gentle breathings of magic; you have heard the soft vibrations of
+ the Aeolian harp, as a gentle summer breeze bore them along the
+ air, redolent of the rich perfumes of summer flowers, and attuned
+ to the wild music of songsters without.
+
+ "Sweeter, far sweeter, was her voice; a silvery voice is at all
+ times the organ of the heart, but when it dies away in a thrilling
+ whisper from the profoundness of the internal struggle, the ardent
+ sympathy of the hearer is involuntary. Tragedians understand this
+ language of the heart, insomuch that custom has now established
+ the imitation, in deep-toned pathos.
+
+ "She placed emphasis on the word _affections_; why was this,
+ unless her hand is engaged without them? This idea flashed upon me
+ with electric force; you can well imagine how suddenly it broke
+ asunder the links of the delicious revery of which I have
+ attempted to give you a glimpse. Another more painful question
+ than any of the former now became absolutely necessary;
+ consequently I resumed: 'I think that I know Miss St. Clair
+ sufficiently well to presume with a good deal of certainty that
+ her hand is not pledged where her heart cannot accompany it?'
+
+ "'My hand, sir, is like my affections.'
+
+ "Her head now hung down a little, and her eye sought the carpet;
+ my own expressive glances, sanguine as they perhaps had
+ occasionally been, were themselves much softened and humbled; but
+ again I summoned my scattered thoughts to the charge.
+
+ "'Will Miss St. Clair grant me an interview on the morrow, or some
+ other day more convenient to herself?'
+
+ "The words had hardly escaped my mouth, when Isabel stood before
+ us. Lamar was soon by her side. I also arose.
+
+ "'My dear Frances,' said she, taking my seat, and locking her hand
+ where I would have given kingdoms to have had mine; 'we are
+ talking of making up a little equestrian party to the Passaic
+ Falls. Will you be of the company? Pray join us, like a dear girl;
+ it is only fifteen miles.'
+
+ "The lady addressed shook her head gravely. Isabel arose, and
+ turning to me, 'I leave the case in your hands, sir, and you are a
+ poor diplomatist for a southern, if you do not succeed in
+ persuading her to go.'
+
+ "I was much alarmed to hear many ladies calling for shawls and
+ bonnets. I was not long, therefore, in urging the case, for it was
+ emphatically _my_ case.
+
+ "'I cannot go,' said she; 'in the first place, I have not been on
+ horseback since my boarding-school days; and in the next place, I
+ could not undergo the fatigue.'
+
+ "'But if all these objections could be obviated?' I eagerly
+ inquired.
+
+ "'Then I should certainly be pleased to go, and still more pleased
+ to gratify others by going.'
+
+ "To make the story a short one, as my letter has already become
+ too long, she finally consented that I should drive her in a
+ cabriolet, provided her father, who was not present, thought it
+ proper for her to go.
+
+ "I reported progress to Isabel, who looked sly and arch; her
+ brother was as solemn as a tombstone. I do not say this in
+ triumph, Randolph, for God knows I have little cause as yet. I
+ merely state the fact in all plainness and honesty, that you may
+ have the whole case before you.
+
+ "'This augurs well for you, Mr. Chevillere,' whispered the lively
+ girl.
+
+ "'I am not so certain of that,' said I.
+
+ "Finally, we agreed to go, 'weather permitting,' as they say at
+ country sales, on the day after to-morrow.
+
+ "I did not urge this interview any farther, for a reason which you
+ will easily perceive. What has become of you? I write two pages to
+ your one now. Is the North more prolific than the South in
+ incidents?
+
+ "Your Friend and Chum,
+
+ "V. CHEVILLERE."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+
+ V. CHEVILLERE TO B. RANDOLPH.
+
+ "New-York, 18--.
+
+ "DEAR FRIEND,
+
+ "Certainly I must be one of the most unfortunate fellows that ever
+ lived. And none the less so because the bitter strokes come upon
+ me in the midst of apparent prosperity; but before I tell you of
+ one disappointment, I must tell you of the things which preceded
+ it, in the order of their occurrence.
+
+ "On the evening after the assemblage of our little party at
+ Hazlehurst's, Lamar, Damon, and myself went to the Italian Opera;
+ and to please Lamar no less than Damon, we took seats in the pit.
+
+ "The assemblage was brilliant beyond any thing I have seen, in the
+ two lower tiers of boxes. All the fashion, and wealth, and beauty
+ of this fair city seemed to be assembled around us, with their gay
+ plumage and foreign head-attire, and opera-glasses. As a shading
+ to this gay picture, there were the gentlemen, with enormous
+ whiskers and mustaches curling sentimentally and greasily over
+ the upper lip; their teeth glistening through the bristles,
+ ghastly as Peale's mummy itself.
+
+ "The passion for hairy visages is a singular characteristic of
+ this phrenological age. Large and frizzled locks puffed out on
+ each side of the head to hide the absence of development are
+ easily enough accounted for; but this supererogatory disfiguration
+ of ugly faces is altogether unaccountable on the same principles.
+
+ "'I'll be dad shamed if it ain't all cowardice, and I hate to see
+ it practised,' said Damon.
+
+ "There is, perhaps, more truth in this remark than you would at
+ first suppose. No man is so desirous to appear fierce, courageous,
+ and even piratical as he that is a dastard in his heart. Indeed
+ most men are fond of making a parade of those qualifications with
+ which they are least endowed by nature.
+
+ "There is one bewhiskered class, however, from whom we ought to
+ expect better things; I mean young and thoughtless men, who are
+ led away by fashion; many of whom have rubbed through the walls,
+ if not through the studies, of college; and whose taste ought to
+ have been more refined by associating with gentlemen, however
+ great their stolidity or idleness.
+
+ "Finally, as to whiskers, I have seen most of the American naval
+ and military heroes; and I cannot now recall a single one of them
+ who ever wore remarkable whiskers, or bristles on the upper lip.
+ Nor have I ever seen a polished southern gentleman remarkable for
+ either. There is one fact which, if generally known, would root
+ out the evil at its source; and that is, that men who flourish
+ large whiskers are very apt to become _bald_!
+
+ "'O! corn-stalks and jews-harps!' said Damon, after worrying on
+ his seat during the performance of the overture by the orchestra;
+ 'will they tune their banjoes all night, and never get to playin?'
+
+ "'That is called fine Italian music,' said Lamar.
+
+ "'Yes! yes!' replied he, 'there's 'four-and-twenty fiddlers' sure
+ enough! but I rather suspicion that it would puzzle some of our
+ Kentuck gals to dance a reel to that music. O my grandmother! what
+ jaunty heels they would have to sling after such elbow-greese as
+ that. But you are stuffing me with soft corn--I see you are by
+ your laughing. They know better than to pass that for music; no,
+ no, catch a weasel asleep!'
+
+ "The opera now commenced, and I must own that I saw more of Damon
+ than I did of the play. He was struck dumb with astonishment;
+ seemed scarcely to believe his own senses, but looking round the
+ house after an unusual silence, and seeing the audience serious
+ and apparently attentive, he burst into a cachinnation.
+
+ "'Well,' said he, with a long breath, 'I wish I may be tetotally
+ smashed in a cider-mill, if that don't out-Cherokee old Kentuck;
+ why that ain't a chaw-tobacco better nor Cherokee! Just wait a
+ minute, and they'll raise the whoop, it's likely; and if they do,
+ if I don't give them a touch of Kentuck pipes that'll make them
+ think somebody's busted their biler. Look! some of the men have
+ got rings in their ears too; and leather skinned. Now I'm snagged
+ if I was to meet that feller in a Mississip cane-brake, and my
+ rifle on my arm, if I wouldn't be apt to let the wind through his
+ whistle cross-ways.'
+
+ "'Not if he was to speak to you, and tell you he was a Christian
+ like yourself?'
+
+ "'Speak to me! he would do a devilish sight better to play dummy:
+ for sure as he spoke, I should let fly at him, because I wouldn't
+ know but he belonged to some of those far away tribes of
+ Black-feet, or the likes of that.'
+
+ "'But you do not really think that they look and speak any thing
+ like the western savages, Damon?' said I.
+
+ "'I'm smashed if I don't bet that I can put blankets and leggins
+ on the whole tribe, and pass them through the Cherokee nation for
+ friendly Black-feet.'
+
+ "The incomparable Prima Donna (as she is called here) now made her
+ first appearance; her voice is exquisite, Randolph, and her
+ execution beyond the conception of an unsophisticated student.
+
+ "The music is pleasing to the ear, and may touch an Italian heart,
+ but it found no response from mine. I tell this to you in all
+ sincerity and confidence, but it would lower a man, I fear, to
+ say so in the fashionable circles.
+
+ "'Well, Damon, would the Italian ladies pass for squaws?'
+
+ "'No, no; they are better than the men, and they are right pretty
+ too, if they didn't talk such outlandish gibberish; but that dark
+ skinn'd man there, I swear Pete Ironsides would kick him if he was
+ to go in my stable; for he hates an Injin, as I do an allegator;
+ poor Pete! I reckon he thinks I'm skulped.'
+
+ "'Pete is well cared for, I will guaranty,' said Lamar, very
+ pathetically.
+
+ "'Look! look!' exclaimed Damon; 'what's that under the green
+ umbrella there, at the front of the stage among the lights?'
+
+ "'That is the prompter, to put them right when they go wrong.'
+
+ "'Yes, yes! I see, I see!' continued he; 'he gives them a wink
+ every now and then.'
+
+ "In the operas it is very frequently the case that one of the
+ subordinate characters comes to the front of the stage after the
+ principals have made their exit, and explains what rare sport is
+ coming.
+
+ "'What does that fellow slip out here every now and then like a
+ dropped stitch for?'
+
+ "We explained to him the meaning of it, as well as we understood
+ it ourselves.
+
+ "'Ay, ay! I see it now; he is the Nota Bene!'
+
+ "We found great difficulty in getting Damon to understand, with
+ his shrewd natural view of things, that an opera was nothing more
+ than a common play; the parts being sung, instead of spoken.
+
+ "'Now I wish my head may be knocked into a cocked-hat, if a man
+ had told this to me of the Yorkers in old Kentuck, if I wouldn't
+ have thought he was spinnin long yarns; there is no sense in it,
+ nor there's no fun in it, as they all take it up there in the
+ pews; if so moutbe now that they were all of my way of thinking,
+ and would only join in a _leetle_ touch of the warwhoop, why we
+ might show them fellers a little of the real Cherokee, that I
+ rather suspicion they haven't seen.'
+
+ "'Why, what would you do, Damon?'
+
+ "'_Jist_ set them four-and-twenty fiddlers to playin of something
+ like Christian reels; hand the gals down on the floor; then I
+ reckon there would be a little sort of a regular hand-round!
+ Confound their jimmy simequivers, and their supple elbows! Smash
+ me, if they don't think the whole cream of the ball lies in
+ rattlin the bones of their elbows. Give me your long sweeping bow
+ hands, that saws the music right in under your ribs, and sets your
+ legs to dancin, whether they will or not. Do you think them
+ fellers ever made anybody feel in the humour for a hand-round?'
+
+ "'I can't say that I think they ever did.'
+
+ "'No, nor they never will! they may set people's teeth on a wire
+ edge, or make their flesh crawl, or set them into an ague fit with
+ their shakin, and grindin, and squawkin. And now I think of it,
+ the whole business sounds more like grinding ramrods in an
+ armory, than any thing I ever come across; there's the squeakin of
+ the wheels, that would go for them goose guzzles them fellers are
+ pipin on. The ramrods on the grindstones will go for the
+ fiddles,--only I don't see any fire flyin out of the catgut, but
+ I've been watchin sharp for it some time. Then there's the old
+ leather bellows groanin and gruntin away, jist like those two
+ fellers seesawin there, on them two big-bellied fiddles, and the
+ leather bands flappin every time they come round, keeps the time
+ for the whole concern.'
+
+ "'Well, have you seen any fire yet?' after a long pause.
+
+ "'Yes, plenty of it! they make it fly out of my eyes, if they
+ don't out of the catguts; confound them, I say, they keep me all
+ the time drawin down first one eye and then another, first one
+ corner of my mouth and then another, jist as if a horse was on a
+ dead strain, and you were bowing your neck and stickin your leg
+ straight in the ground, and then strainin with all your might as
+ if you could help him; but this is worse! a confounded sight
+ worse! for every now and then all the fiddlers and trumpeters
+ comes rattlin down their tinklin quivers, like a four-horse load
+ of china, goin to the devil down a steep hill at the rate of ten
+ knots an hour; and then it all dies away agin, as if horses,
+ wagon, and chinaware had all gone over a bank as high as a church
+ steeple. Then! I begin to draw a long breath agin, and feel a
+ little comfortable. But here's a dyin away sound! hop and come
+ agin, rising and whooping, until the whole team's going full tilt,
+ pull dick, pull devil, here they go again! old Nick take the
+ hindmost. See their elbows now, how they move out and in, out and
+ in, like spinning jinnies. And see that feller that sets at the
+ top of the mob, on the high chair in the middle, how his head
+ goes. See how he looks at that book before him, as if that stuff
+ could be put down there in black and white.'
+
+ "'It _is_ all down there, Damon.'
+
+ "'Come, come, now, strangers, you have stuffed me enough! I can't
+ swallow that exactly neither! All the lawyers in Philadelphia
+ couldn't write down half the wriggle-ma-rees one of them chaps has
+ made since I set here! Smash my apple-cart, if I wouldn't like
+ jist to see a goosequill goin at the rate of one of them elbows.
+ Ink would fly like mud at a scrub-race, and when it was done it
+ would look like my copy-book used to do at school; more stops than
+ words.'
+
+ "'But you keep your eye on the orchestra all the while; why not
+ look on the stage?'
+
+ "'I do, I do; and that puzzles me the blamedest,--how they all
+ come out square at the stops, fiddlers and all. Every now and then
+ they seem to git into a fair race, and one feller's eye is poppin
+ out of his head, and the veins on the woman's neck is ready to
+ burst, and the fiddlers and the pipers and the trumpeters are all
+ puffin and blowin, like our Kentuck jockeys at a pony
+ sweepstakes; and then all at once, jist as there begins to be a
+ little sport, to see who has the wind and the bottom, their heads
+ begin to move first one side and then the other all so kind, and
+ ready to make a draw game of it, blabbering all the time; till the
+ trumpeter sees they're pretty well blown, then he begins to come
+ down a little with his toot! toot! toot! That's to call all hands
+ off, you see, and they slip down as easy and as quiet as if it had
+ all been in fun. Then they all clear out but one, and he watches
+ his chance till they're all gone. Then he comes here to the front,
+ and flaps his wings and crows over them, as if he had done some
+ great things, if we hadn't been here to show fair play.'
+
+ "I am sure, Randolph, that I give you but a poor idea of the
+ reality, but you must supply the deficiencies by your imagination.
+ Damon talked incessantly, and I enjoyed it far more than I could
+ have done the opera, even if I had been a perfect Italian scholar.
+ I find that I must defer the account of our disappointment till
+ another time, when I will tell you some matters of interest.
+
+ "Truly yours,
+
+ "V. CHEVILLERE."
+
+
+END OF VOL. I.
+
+
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's note:
+
+ Alternate, archaic, and inconsistent spelling of some words have
+ been retained.
+
+ Punctuation has been made consistent including the use of
+ quotation marks.
+
+ page 36: "faintin" changed to "faintin'" (a faintin' spell).
+
+ page 57: "ear" changed to "dear" (Believe me, dear lady,).
+
+ page 114: "doggrel" changed to "doggerel" so as to be consistent
+ with other places this word is used (and singing doggerel to the
+ music).
+
+
+
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