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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #53178 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/53178)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Stories and Sketches, by Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Stories and Sketches
- by our best authors
-
-Author: Various
-
-Release Date: September 30, 2016 [EBook #53178]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STORIES AND SKETCHES ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chris Whitehead, Chris Curnow and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- STORIES AND SKETCHES.
-
-
-
-
- STORIES AND SKETCHES
-
- BY
-
- OUR BEST AUTHORS.
-
-
-
-
- [Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- BOSTON:
- LEE AND SHEPARD.
- 1867.
-
-
-
-
- Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1867, by
- LEE & SHEPARD,
- In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District of
- Massachusetts.
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS.
-
-
- PAGE
-
- THE SKELETON AT THE BANQUET. _Seeley Regester._ 9
-
- LET THOSE LAUGH WHO WIN. _Samuel W. Tuttle._ 37
-
- THE PROPER USE OF GRANDFATHERS. _Fitz Hugh Ludlow._ 61
-
- AT EVE. _Gertrude Brodé._ 77
-
- BROKEN IDOLS. _Richmond Wolcott._ 93
-
- DR. HUGER'S INTENTIONS. _Louise Chandler Moulton._ 105
-
- THE MAN WHOSE LIFE WAS SAVED. * * * * *. 121
-
- THE ROMANCE OF A WESTERN TRIP. _J. L. Lord._ 157
-
- THE TWO GHOSTS OF NEW LONDON TURNPIKE. _Mrs. Galpin._ 185
-
- DOWN BY THE SEA. _Hattie Tyng Griswold._ 229
-
- WHY MRS. RADNOR FAINTED. * * * * *. 249
-
- UNDER A CLOUD. _William Wirt Sikes._ 265
-
- COMING FROM THE FRONT. _Richmond Wolcott._ 281
-
- A NIGHT IN THE SEWERS. _Chas. Dawson Shanly._ 293
-
-
-
-
-THE SKELETON AT THE BANQUET.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-Dr. Graham sat in his office, his book closed on his knee, and his
-eyes fixed upon the street. There was nothing of interest to be seen.
-A light snow was falling, making the pavement dreary; but it was
-Christmas, and his thoughts had gone back to other days, as people's
-thoughts will go on anniversary occasions. He was thinking of the
-young wife he had buried three years and three months ago; of the
-great fireplace in his boyhood's home, and his mother's face lit up
-by the glow; of many things past which were pleasant; and reflecting
-sadly upon the fact that life grew duller, more commonplace, as one
-grew older. Not that he was an elderly man,--he was, in reality,
-but twenty-eight; yet, upon that Christmas day, he felt old, very
-old; his wife dead, his practice slender, his prospects far from
-promising,--even the slow-moving days daily grew heavier, soberer,
-more serious. It was a holiday, but he had not even an invitation for
-dinner, where the happiness of friends and the free flow of thought
-might lend a momentary sparkle to his own stale spirits.
-
-The doctor was not of a melancholy, despondent nature, nor did he rely
-for his pleasures upon others. He was a self-made man, and self-reliant
-to an unusual degree, as self-made men are apt to be. His tussle with
-circumstances had awakened in him a combative and resistant energy,
-which had served him well when means were scant and the rewards of
-merit few. But there is something in the festal character of Christmas
-which, by luring from the shadows of our struggle-life the boy nature
-of us, makes homeless men feel solitary; and, from being forlorn,
-the mood soon grows to one of painful unrest; all from beholding
-happiness from which we are shut out. On this gray afternoon not
-the most fascinating speculations of De Boismont and the hospital
-lectures,--not the consciousness of the originality and importance of
-his own discoveries in the field of Sensation and Nerve Force,--had any
-interest for Dr. Graham.
-
-That he had talent and a good address; that he studied and experimented
-many hours every day; that he as thoroughly understood his profession
-as was consistent with a six years' actual experience as an actual
-practitioner; that there was nothing of the quack or pretender in
-him;--all this did not prevent his rent from being high, his patients
-few, and his means limited. With no influential friends to recommend
-and introduce him, he had resolutely rented a room in a genteel
-locality up town, had dressed well, and had worn the "air" of a man
-of business, ever ready for duty; but success had not attended upon
-his efforts, and the future gave no promise of a change. Of this he
-was thinking, somewhat bitterly; for what proud soul is not stung with
-unmerited neglect? Then a deep sadness stole over him at thoughts
-of the loss which had come upon his early manhood,--a loss like
-which there is none other so abiding in strong, wise hearts. A cloud
-seemed to be sifting down and closing around him, which, with unusual
-passivity, he seemed unable or unwilling to shake off. A carriage
-obstructed his view, by passing in front of his window. It stopped;
-then the footman descended, opened the carriage-door, and turned to
-the office-bell. He was followed by his master, who awaited the answer
-to the bell, and was ushered into the practitioner's presence by the
-single waiting-servant of his modest establishment. The doctor arose
-to receive his guest, who was a man still younger than himself, with
-something of a foreign air, and dressed with a quiet richness in
-keeping with his evident wealth and position.
-
-"Dr. Graham?"
-
-The doctor bowed assent.
-
-"If you are not otherwise engaged, I would like you to go home with me,
-to see my sister, who is not well. There is no great haste about the
-matter, but if you can go now, I shall be glad to take you with me. It
-will save you a walk through the snow."
-
-"He knows," thought the doctor, "that I do not drive a carriage;" and
-that a stranger, of such ability to hire the most noted practitioners,
-should call upon him, was a source of unexpressed surprise and
-suspicion.
-
-"What do you think is the matter with your sister?" he unconcernedly
-asked, taking his overcoat from the wardrobe.
-
-"That is for you to decide. It is a case of no ordinary character--one
-which will require study." He led the way at once to the door, as if
-unwilling to delay, notwithstanding he had at first stated that no
-haste was necessary. "Step in, doctor, and I will give you an inkling
-of the case during the drive, which will occupy some fifteen or twenty
-minutes."
-
-"In the first place," continued the stranger, as they rolled away,
-"I will introduce myself to you as St. Victor Marchand, at present
-a resident of your city, but recently from the island of Madeira.
-My house is upon the Fifth Avenue, not far from Madison Square. My
-household consists only of myself and sister, with our servants. I have
-the means to remunerate you amply for any demands we may make upon your
-time or skill; and I ought to add, one reason for selecting so young
-a physician is, that I think you will be the more able and willing to
-devote more time to the case than more famous practitioners. However,
-you are not unknown to me. I have heard you well-spoken of; and I
-remember that, when you were a student in Paris, you were mentioned
-with honor by the college, for an able paper read before the open
-section upon the very subject to which I now propose to direct your
-attention,--mental disease," he added, after a moment's hesitation.
-
-"A case of insanity?" bluntly asked the doctor.
-
-"Heaven forbid! And yet I must not conceal from you that I fear it."
-
-"Give me some of the symptoms. Insanity in strong development, or
-aberration of faculties, or hallucination?"
-
-"I cannot reply. It is one and all, it seems to me. The fact is,
-doctor, I wish to introduce you to your patient simply as a friend of
-mine, so as to give you an opportunity for studying my sister's case,
-unembarrassed by any suspicion on her part. To excite her suspicions is
-to frustrate all hopes of doing anything for or with her. Can you--will
-you--do me the favor to dine with me this evening? It is now only about
-an hour to six, and if you have no other engagement, I will do my best
-to entertain you, and you can then meet my sister as her brother's
-guest. Shall it be so?"
-
-The young man's tones were almost beseeching, and his manner betrayed
-the most intense solicitude. Quite ready to accede to the request,
-from curiosity as well as from a desire to reässure the young man, Dr.
-Graham did not hesitate to say, "Willingly, sir, if it will assist in a
-professional knowledge of the object of my call."
-
-The change from the office to the home into which the physician was
-introduced was indeed grateful to the doctor's feelings. The light,
-warmth, and splendor of the rooms gave to the home an air of tropical
-sensuousness; and yet an exquisite taste seemed to preside over
-all. Though not unfamiliar with elegance, this home of the brother
-and sister wore, to the visitor, an enchanted look, as well from the
-foreign character of many of its adornments and the rare richness of
-its works of art, as from the gay, friendly, enthusiastic manner of his
-entertainer,--a manner never attained by English or Americans. Sending
-word to Miss Marchand that there would be a guest to dinner, St. Victor
-fell into a sparkling conversation, discoursing most intelligibly
-of Paris, Madeira, the East Indies, and South America, taking his
-guest from room to room to show this or that curious specimen of the
-productions or handicraft of each country. As the articles exhibited
-were rare, and many of them of scientific value, and as the young man's
-knowledge kept pace with his eloquence of discourse, Dr. Graham was
-agreeably absorbed.
-
-An hour passed rapidly. Then the steward announced dinner; but it
-was not until they were about seating themselves at table that _the
-patient_ made her appearance. It was now twilight out of doors. The
-curtains were drawn and the dining-room lit only by wax tapers, under
-whose soft radiance bloomed an abundance of flowers, mostly of exotic
-beauty and fragrance. It was evident that the young master of the house
-brought with him his early tastes.
-
-"We have an extra allowance of light and flowers, and a little feast,
-too, I believe; for neither myself nor my English steward here forget
-that this is Christmas. Don't you think it a beautiful holiday? My
-mother always kept it with plenty of wax candles and flowers."
-
-"It is a sacred day to me," answered the doctor, sadly, thinking of
-his lost wife and of the three times they had kept it together, with
-feasting and love's delights.
-
-At this moment Miss Marchand floated into the room and to her place
-at the head of the table,--a girlish creature, who gave their guest a
-smile when the brother said,--
-
-"Dr. Graham is not entirely a stranger, Edith; he was in Paris when we
-were there. You were a child, then. I was indeed glad to meet him in
-this strange city, and I mean that we shall be friends upon a visiting
-footing, if he will permit it."
-
-It was but natural for the physician to fix a piercing look upon the
-face of her whom he had been given to understand was to be his patient,
-and whose disease was of a character to command his best skill. His
-physician's eye detected no outward tokens of ill health, either of
-body or of mind. A serene brow, sweet, steady, loving eyes, cheeks rosy
-and full with maiden health, a slender though not thin figure, all
-were there before him, giving no indication even of the "nervousness"
-assumed to be so common with young ladies of this generation. Exquisite
-beauty, allied with perfect health, seemed to "blush and bloom" all
-over her; and the medical man would have chosen her, with professional
-enthusiasm, as his ideal of what a young woman _ought_ to be. Her
-pink-silk robe adapted itself to her soft form as naturally as the
-petals of a rose to its curving sweetness. Only to look upon her
-gladdened the sad heart of Dr. Graham, the wifeless and childless. He
-felt younger than he had felt for years, as thirsty grass feels under
-the influence of a June sun after a morning of showers. His spirits
-rose, and he talked well, even wittily,--betraying not only his varied
-learning as a student and his keen powers of observation as a man of
-the world, but also the gentleness and grace which, in his more active,
-worldly life, were too much put aside. It was a little festival, in
-which the dainty dishes, the fruit, and wine played but a subordinate
-part.
-
-Nothing could be more apparent than the pride and affection with which
-Mr. Marchand regarded his sister. Was there, indeed, a skeleton at this
-feast? The doctor shuddered as he asked himself the question. All his
-faculties were on the alert to deny and disprove the possibility of
-the presence of the hideous visitor. His sympathies were too keenly
-enlisted to be willing to acknowledge its existence even in the
-background of that day or the days to come to that household. Yet,
-ever and anon, in the midst of their joyousness, a strange look would
-leap from the quick, dark eyes of St. Victor, as he fixed them upon
-his sister's face, and an expression would flit across his own face
-inscrutable to the watchful physician. With a slight motion of his hand
-or head he would arrest and direct the doctor's attention, who would
-then perceive Miss Marchand's luminous glance changing into a look
-expressive of anxiety and terror, the glow of her cheeks fading into
-a pallor like that of one in a swoon. But, strange! an instant would
-change it all. The pallor, lingering but a moment, would melt away as a
-mist before the sun, and the roses would come back to the cheeks again
-in all their rosiness. The host would divert his companion's startled
-attention by gracefully pressing the viands upon his notice, or by some
-brilliant sally, so scintillating with wit or droll wisdom, as to have
-brought the smile to an anchorite's eyes.
-
-"I pray you watch her! Did you not notice that slight incoherency?" he
-remarked, in a whisper, leaning over toward the doctor.
-
-The doctor had noticed nothing but the playful badinage of a happy girl.
-
-"I am afraid her loveliness blinds my judgment. I _must_ see what there
-is in all this," he answered to himself, deprecatingly.
-
-They sat long at table. Not that any one ate to excess, though
-the pompous English steward served up one delicious dish after
-another, including the time-honored Christmas feast requisite,--the
-plum-pudding,--which was tasted and approved, not to wound the Briton's
-national and professional vanity, but sent off, but slightly shorn of
-its proportions, to grace the servants' table.
-
-The guest noticed that St. Victor partook very sparingly of food,
-although he fully enjoyed the occasion. Save tasting of the wild game
-and its condiment of real Calcutta currie, he ate nothing of the
-leading dishes or _entrées_. Neither did he drink much wine, whose
-quality was of the rarest, being of his own stock drawn from his
-father's rich store in his Madeira cellar. Of the luscious grapes and
-oranges which formed a leading feature of the dessert, he partook more
-freely, as if they cooled his tongue. That there was fever, and nervous
-excitement, in the young man's frame, was evident. Indeed, to the
-doctor's observant eye, the brother appeared more delicate, and of a
-temperament more highly nervous than his sister.
-
-The frankness, the almost childish confidence and open-heartedness
-of the young people formed one of their greatest attractions to the
-usually reticent, thoughtful physician. He felt his own impulses
-expanding under the warmth of their sunny natures until the very
-romance of his boyhood stirred again, and sprouted through the mould
-in which it lay dormant. There was nothing in their past history or
-present prospects which, seemingly, they cared to conceal, so that he
-had become possessed of a pretty fair history of their lives before
-the last course came upon the board. Both were born in the island of
-Madeira. St. Victor was twenty-four, Edith nineteen, years of age.
-Their mother was the daughter of an American merchant, long resident
-on the island; their father was a French gentleman of fortune, who
-had retired to the island for his health, had loved and won the fair
-American girl, and lived with her a life of almost visionary beauty
-and happiness. Their father had joined their grandfather in some of
-his mercantile ventures; hence those voyages to the Indies, to South
-America, to the Mediterranean in which the children were participants.
-They also had spent a couple of years in France, cultivating the
-acquaintance of their relatives there, and adding some finishing
-touches to St. Victor's education, which, having been conducted under
-his father's eye by accomplished tutors, was unusually thorough and
-varied for one so young. This fact the doctor surmised during the
-progress of the banquet, though he did not ascertain the full extent
-of the young man's accomplishments until a future day. Nor was Edith's
-education overlooked. She was in a remarkable degree fitted to be the
-companion and confidante of her brother,--sympathizing in his tastes,
-reading his books, enjoying his pastimes, and sharing his ambitions
-to their utmost. It was a beautiful blending of natures,--such as the
-world too rarely beholds,--such as our received "systems" of education
-and association _cannot_ produce.
-
-Their grandfather had been dead for several years; their father
-for three, their mother for two. "She faded rapidly after father's
-death,--drooped like a frost-blighted flower," said St. Victor. "They
-had been too happy in this world to remain long apart in the next."
-
-"You now see, doctor," the narrator of these family reminiscences at
-length said, "why Edith and myself are so unlike. My sister is her
-mother over again, fair and bright, like your New York ladies,--among
-the most beautiful women, in many respects, I have ever seen. I am
-dark and thin,--a very Frenchman in tastes, temperament, and habits."
-
-He toyed a few moments with an orange; then, again leaning toward the
-physician, he said, in that sharp whisper which once before during the
-evening he had made use of,--
-
-"I will tell you all, doctor. My father died insane. We afterwards
-learned that it was one of the inheritances of his haughty and wealthy
-family. The peace and delight which he had with his wife and children
-long delayed the terrible legacy; but it fell due at last. He died a
-maniac,--a raving maniac. _She_ does not know it. It killed her mother.
-Imagine, doctor, _imagine_, if you can, how I watch over her! how I
-pity! how I dread! O God! to think that I must detect those symptoms,
-as I have done during the last six months. I have seen the virus in
-her eyes to-night. I have not breathed a word to her of my knowledge
-and convictions; but I am as certain of it as that she sits there.
-Look at her now, doctor,--_now_!"--with a stealthy side-glance at the
-beautiful girl who, at the moment, was smiling absently over a flower
-which she had taken from its vase,--smiling only as girls can,--as if
-it interpreted something deeper than a passing thought.
-
-It is impossible to describe the strain of agony in the young man's
-voice; his sudden pallor; the sweat starting from his forehead; or to
-describe the piercing power of his eye, as he turned it from the face
-of his sister to that of his guest. Accustomed as he was to every form
-of suffering, Dr. Graham shrank from the appeal in that searching look,
-which mutely asked him if there were any hope.
-
-The clear whisper in which St. Victor had spoken aroused Edith from her
-revery; she darted a glance at both parties, so full of suspicion and
-dread, so in contrast with her natural sunny expression, that it was as
-if her face had suddenly withered, from that of a child, to the thin
-features of the careworn woman of fifty. She half rose in her chair,
-faltered, sank back, and sat gazing fixedly at the two men; yet silent
-as a statue.
-
-St. Victor was the first to recover himself. He burst into a light
-laugh,--sweet as a shower of flowers,--and, taking up a slender-necked
-decanter of pale wine, passed it to his guest, remarking,--
-
-"We are forgetting that this is Christmas night. Fill your glass,
-my friend, with _this_ wine,--the oldest and rarest of our precious
-store,--and I will fill mine. Then, we will both drink joyously to the
-health of my only darling--my one beloved--my sister."
-
-He said this so prettily, poured out the wine with such arch pleasantry
-of gesture, that the color came back to Edith's cheeks; and when the
-two men bowed to her, before drinking, she gave them a smile, steeped
-in melancholy, but very sweet, and brimming with affection. It thrilled
-Dr. Graham's veins more warmly than the priceless wine.
-
-"After our mother's death," continued St. Victor, in his natural
-voice, "we found ourselves quite alone. We had formed no great
-attachment to our relatives in France; and, as one branch of our
-father's business remained still unsettled in this country, we resolved
-to come hither. Then, too, we had a longing to behold the land which
-was our mother's. When we had arranged and closed up our affairs in
-Madeira, we sailed for France, where we spent one winter only. I
-thought"--with a tender glance at his sister--"that a sea voyage would
-do Edith good. I was not satisfied about her health; so I drew her
-away from Paris, and, last spring, we fulfilled our promise to see our
-mother's land, and came hither. I am afraid the climate here does not
-agree with her. Do you think she looks well?"
-
-The girl moved uneasily, casting a beseeching look at the speaker.
-
-"It is not I who am not strong," she said; "it is you, St. Victor. If
-your friend is a doctor, I wish he would give a little examination
-into the state of your health. You are thin and nervous; you have no
-appetite,--while he can see, at a glance, that nothing in the world
-ails _me_."
-
-Again her brother laughed; not gayly as before, but with a peculiar and
-subtle significance; while he gave the doctor another swift glance,
-saying to him in a low voice,--
-
-"I have heard that persons threatened with certain mental afflictions
-never suspect their own danger."
-
-Dr. Graham did not know if the young lady overheard this remark; he
-glanced toward her, but her eyes again were upon the flowers, which she
-was pulling to pieces. He perceived that her lips trembled; but she
-still smiled, scattering the crimson leaves over the white clothes.
-
-At this period of his novel visit,--just then and there, when St.
-Victor laughed that subtle laugh and his sister vacantly destroyed the
-red flower,--a conviction rushed into the physician's mind, or rather,
-we may say, pierced it through like a ray of light in a darkened room.
-
-Instantly all was clear to him. From that moment he was cool and
-watchful, but so pained with this sudden knowledge of the true state of
-the case that he wished himself well out of that splendid house, back
-in his own dreary office. He wished himself away, because he already
-loved these young people, and his sympathy with them was too keen to
-allow him further to enjoy himself; yet, in all his medical experience,
-he had never been so interested with a professional interest. As a
-physician, he felt a keen pleasure; as a friend, a keen pain. His
-faculties each sprang to its post, awaiting the next development of the
-scene.
-
-While Mr. Marchand was giving some order to his steward, the beautiful
-girl at his other hand leaned toward him, and also whispered
-confidentially in his ear: "Dr. Graham, if you really are my brother's
-friend, I pray you watch him closely, and tell me at some future time
-if you have any fears--any suspicions of--Oh, I implore you, sir, do
-not deceive me!"
-
-Her eyes were filled with tears, her voice choked.
-
-The thing was absurd. Its ludicrous aspect struck the listener,
-almost forcing him to laugh; while the tears, at the same time, arose
-responsive in his own eyes.
-
-A clock on the mantel chimed nine. The steward placed on the board the
-last delicacies of the feast,--Neapolitan creams and orange-water ice.
-
-"Edith chooses luscious things like creams," remarked her brother.
-"Which will you have, doctor? As for me, I prefer ices; they cool my
-warm blood, which is fierce like tropic air. Ah, this is delicious! I
-am feverish, I believe; and the scent of the orange brings back visions
-of our dear island home."
-
-He paused, as if his mind were again on the vine-clad hills of the
-"blessed isle." Then he spoke, suddenly,--
-
-"Edith, have some of this?"
-
-She smiled, shaking her head.
-
-"But you _must_. I insist. You need it. Don't you agree with me,
-doctor, that it is just what she requires?"
-
-He spoke in a rising key, with a rapid accent. Edith reached forth her
-hand, and took the little dish of orange ice. It shook like a lily in
-the wind; but she said, softly and with apparent calmness,--
-
-"Anything to please you, brother. I will choose this every day if you
-think it good for me."
-
-He gave her a satisfied look. Then there was a brief silence, which
-their guest was about to dissipate with a playful remark, when St.
-Victor turned abruptly to the steward,--
-
-"Thompson," he cried, "now bring in the skeleton!"
-
-"What, sir?" stammered the astonished servant.
-
-"Bring in the skeleton, I said. Do you not know that the Egyptians
-always crown their feasts with a death's head? Bring it in, I say, and
-place it--_there_!"
-
-Half-rising in his seat, he pointed to the vacant space behind his
-sister's chair.
-
-The man now smiled, thinking his master jested; but his expression
-grew more questioning and anxious as the bright eyes turned upon him
-glittering in anger.
-
-"Why am I not obeyed? Bring in the skeleton, I repeat, and place
-it behind my sister's chair. It is in the house; you will have no
-difficulty in finding it. It has lurked here long. I have been aware of
-its presence these many months,--always following, following my dear
-Edith,--a shadow in her steps. You see how young and fair she is; but
-it is all hollow--ashes--coffin-dust! She does not know of it; she has
-never even turned her head when it lurked behind her; but to-night she
-must make its acquaintance. It will not longer be put off. Our feast is
-nearly over. Bring it in, Thompson, and we will salute it."
-
-The steward, with a puzzled look, turned from one to another of the
-company. Miss Marchand had risen to her feet, and was regarding her
-brother with terrified eyes, stretching out her hands toward him.
-The doctor, too, arose, not in excitement, but with commingled pain
-and resolution stamped upon his features; while his gaze rested upon
-the face of St. Victor until the eyes of the young man were riveted
-and arrested by the doctor's demeanor. A flush then diffused itself
-gradually over Marchand's pale countenance; his thin nostrils quivered;
-his fingers twitched and trembled and sought his bosom, as if in search
-of something concealed there. Then he laughed once more that short,
-nervous laugh so significant to the physician's ears, and cried, in a
-high tone,--
-
-"So, Edith, you did not know that you were going mad? _I_ did. I've
-watched you night and day this long time. I have all along been afraid
-it would end as it has--on Christmas night. _That_ was the day our
-father tried to murder our mother. An anniversary, then, we have
-to-night celebrated. Ha, ha! And you didn't know the skeleton was
-awaiting admittance to the banquet!"
-
-His eyes gleamed with a light at once of delight and with malice; but
-he quietly added,--
-
-"But _I_ shall not harm you, you demented thing, you beautiful
-insanity. There! doctor, didn't I tell you to watch her--to read
-her--to comprehend the subtle thing? So full of art and duplicity!
-But look at her now--_now_! She is as mad as the serpent which has
-poisoned itself with its own fangs--mad--mad! O God! has it come to
-this? But, I knew it--knew the skeleton was her skeleton--the bones
-without her beautiful flesh. We've had enough of it now. Take it away,
-Thompson,--hurry it away!"
-
-"Appear to obey him. Pretend that you take something from the room,"
-said Dr. Graham, in an undertone, to the servant, while St. Victor's
-eyes were fixed glaring and lurid upon his trembling, agonized,
-speechless sister.
-
-The skeleton had, in truth, appeared at the Christmas feast.
-
-Laying his hand firmly upon the young man's wrist the doctor said,--
-
-"Mr. Marchand, you're not well, to-night. You are over-fatigued. Shall
-we go upstairs?"
-
-St. Victor's quickly flashing gaze was met by that clear, resolute,
-almost fierce response in the physician's eye, before which he
-hesitated, then shrank. The madman had his master before him.
-
-"You are right. I am not very well; my head aches; I'm worn out with
-this trouble about Edith, doctor. _Do_ you think it is hopeless? She
-had better come with us. I don't like to leave her alone with that
-hideous shape at her back."
-
-Obeying the gentle but firm pull upon his wrist, the brother turned
-to leave the room, looking back wistfully upon his sister. She was
-following them with clasped hands, and a face from which all youth and
-color had fled. St. Victor suddenly paused, gave a scream like the cry
-of a panther, wrenched himself quickly from the grasp upon his arm,
-and, in an instant, his teeth were buried in the white shoulder of his
-sister. But only for an instant, for almost as quickly as the madman's
-movement had been the doctor's. One terrible blow of his fist sent the
-maniac to the floor like a clod.
-
-"O doctor! why did you do it?"
-
-"To save your life, Miss Marchand."
-
-"Poor St. Victor! His fate is on him at last."
-
-Her voice was calm in its very despair. She sank down beside the
-senseless man, lifting the worn, white face to her lap and covering it
-with kisses. "I saw it,--yet I did not think it would come so soon. O
-God! be pitiful! Have I not prayed enough?"
-
-The lips of the injured man began to quiver. "We must bind him and get
-him to bed before he fully recovers," said the doctor, lifting Edith to
-her feet. "Here, Thompson, help me to carry him to his bed."
-
-When the maniac recovered consciousness fully, his ravings were
-fearful. It was the malady of frenzy in its most appalling condition.
-The extent of the mental wreck Dr. Graham had, for the last half hour
-of the feast, been trying to fathom. When he dealt that dreadful blow
-he knew the wreck was complete: reason had gone out forever with
-that panther-like shriek. All that could be done was to secure the
-maniac against injury to himself or others, and to administer such
-anti-spasmodics or anæsthetics as, in some degree, would control the
-paroxysms.
-
-Poor St. Victor! So young, so gifted, so blest with worldly goods; his
-fate was upon him, as Edith had said.
-
-From that hour he had but brief respite from torment. Not a gleam of
-sanity came from those fiery eyes; all was fierce, untamable, inhuman,
-as if the life had been one of storm and crime, instead of peace and
-purity. Did there lay upon that racking bed a proof of the natural
-depravity of the creature man, when the creature was uncontrolled by
-a reasoning, responsible will? Or, was it not rather a proof that the
-mental machine was in disorder, by a distention of the blood-vessels
-and their engorgement in the brain,--that cerebral excitement was a
-purely physical phenomenon, dependent upon simple, physical causes,
-which science some day shall define and skill shall counteract?
-
-Happily, the fire in the sufferer's brain scorched and consumed the
-sources of his life, as flames drink up the water that is powerless to
-quench them. Day by day he wasted; and, in less than a month from that
-night,--Christmas evening,--St. Victor Marchand's form was at peace in
-death.
-
-During all that time Dr. Graham never left the sufferer's bedside. Day
-and night he was there at his post, doing all that was possible to
-alleviate the pain. The skill of a physician and the love of a brother
-were exhausted in that battle with death in its most dreaded form.
-
-His care was, too, required for Miss Edith. Her life was so interwoven
-with that of her brother, that the doctor doubted if she could survive
-the shock to her sympathies and affection. When the surprise of the
-tragedy was over, on the day following the first outburst of the
-malady, she told him that for months she had feared the worst. She had
-remarked symptoms so like her father's as to excite her fears; yet,
-with the happiness of youth, the sister persuaded herself that her
-apprehensions were groundless. His sunny nature seemed proof against
-the approach of an evil so blasting; and her momentary fears were
-banished by the very mood of heightened vivacity and excitement which
-had awakened them. Having no intimate friend in whom to confide, none
-to counsel, she had borne the weight of her inward sorrow and dread
-alone.
-
-At intervals, during Christmas day, she had observed an incoherency in
-her brother's speech, and an unwonted nervousness of manner, which had
-inspired her with serious alarm. When he proposed to drive out, she
-encouraged the suggestion, hoping that the cold air might restore him
-to his usual state. Upon his return with Dr. Graham, he had seemed so
-entirely like himself, so happy, so disposed to enjoyment, that she
-once more dismissed every thought of danger, until she overheard the
-sharp whispers in which he addressed his guest.
-
-"And oh, to think," she cried, while the tears rained down her cheeks,
-"that in his love for me, his madness should take the shape of
-beholding the conditions of his own brain reflected in mine! He was so
-afraid harm would come to me,--thoughtful of me so long as even the
-shadow of sanity remained. Dear, dear St. Victor,--so good, so pure,
-so wise! Why was not I the victim, if it was fated that there must be
-one?" Then lifting her tearful eyes,--"Doctor, perhaps the poison lurks
-in my veins, too! Tell me, do you think there is danger that I, too,
-shall one day go mad?"
-
-"No, poor child, most emphatically, I do _not_. You must not permit
-such a fancy to enter your mind. As St. Victor said, you are your
-mother's image and counterpart, in temperament and mental quality,
-while he, doubtless, in all active or positive elements of constitution
-and temperament, was his father's reflex. Is it not true?"
-
-"I believe so. My dear father used, I know, to think St. Victor nearer
-to him than I could be. When together, they looked and acted very much
-alike. Poor, dear brother!" and again the tears coursed down her cheeks.
-
-The doctor was deeply moved; this grief was so inexpressibly deep as
-to stir in his heart every emotion of tenderness and sympathy it was
-possible for a gentle-souled man to feel.
-
-"I loved him," he said, gently, "before I had known him an hour. His
-nature was like a magnet, to draw love. Alas! it is sad, when the
-promise of such a life is blighted. I would have given my life for his,
-could it have averted this terrible blow from this house."
-
-A radiant, soul-full look dwelt in her tear-dimmed eyes. That this
-man--a comparative stranger--should manifest this interest in her
-brother aroused all the gratitude and affection of her warm nature.
-
-"And I love you, Dr. Graham, for loving him," she said, in the pathos
-of the language that never speaks untruthfully,--the pathos of
-irrepressible feeling. Then she added: "Do not leave us, doctor. You
-are all the friend we have here in this great city. If you leave us I
-shall, indeed, be alone."
-
-"I will remain, my dear child, so long as there is need of my services."
-
-He did not tell her, in so many words, that the case was hopeless; but
-her eye was quick to see the wasting form and the growing prostration
-which followed each paroxysm. How those two faithful attendants
-watched and waited for the end! And in the grief for the sister, the
-physician's gentleness found that road to a mutual devotion, which is
-sure to open before those who love and wait upon a common object of
-affection. The doctor and sister became, without a consciousness of
-their real feeling, mutually dependent and trusting.
-
-In less than a month, as we have written, the skeleton which came to
-the feast on Christmas night departed from the house to abide on St.
-Victor Marchand's grave.
-
-At the next meeting of the Institute, Doctor Graham gave a full account
-of the case, remarking upon the singular feature in it of the madness
-assuming an embodiment in the sanity of another. From much that Edith
-told him, as well as from his own observation and knowledge, he was
-convinced that, for months, the young man had detected every minute
-symptom and development of his disease in his sister; and had a
-physician been at hand, he could have traced the insidious progress of
-the malady in the strength of the brother's suspicions regarding his
-sister. The facts cited to the Institute touched the compassion of the
-most practice-hardened physician when Dr. Graham related the strange
-and pitying tenderness with which young Marchand had watched his
-sister, and strove to divert from her mind the madness which tainted
-his blood alone.
-
-"Alone in this great city. If you leave me, I shall be alone indeed."
-The words were like an angel's rap upon the heart's door. In his own
-great trouble,--the loss of his wife,--the physician deemed himself
-afflicted beyond his deserts; but what was his condition compared with
-that of this youthful, tender, dependent woman, whose loss isolated her
-from all others?
-
-No, not all others. After the first black cloud of her sorrow had
-drifted away, she turned to him, whose hand had sustained her, even
-when prayer had left her helpless and hopeless,--turned to him with a
-love that was more than a love, with an adoration, before which the
-physician bent, in wonder and satisfaction. He drew her to his bosom as
-something to be kept with all the truth and tenderness of an abiding
-love.
-
-The dull office has been exchanged for a home that is like a palace of
-dreams; and Edith Graham, never forgetting her great sorrow, yet became
-one of the happiest of all who ever loved.
-
-
-
-
-LET THOSE LAUGH WHO WIN.
-
-
-
-
-LET THOSE LAUGH WHO WIN.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-Mr. Pontifex Pompadour was a gentleman whose family record testified
-to his having breathed the breath of life sixty years, and yet his
-appearance bore witness to not more than forty. Appearances, however,
-though they are deceitful, result from causes more or less palpable;
-and, in this case, they could be naturally accounted for.
-
-_Ecce testem!_
-
-Mr. Pompadour's complexion was clear and transparent,--but it was not
-his own. His teeth were white and regular,--but they were artificial.
-His hair was black and glossy,--but it was dyed. His whiskers were
-ibid.,--but they were ditto. His dress was the perfection of fashion
-and taste, though rather youthful; and withal he carried himself with
-a jaunty air, and a light and springing step, smiling blandly on all
-he met, as if smiles were dollars and he were dispensing them right
-royally.
-
-He had an only son,--Augustus Fitz Clarence Pompadour,--who was
-heir-apparent to the very considerable property supposed to belong
-to the "said aforesaid." This son was twenty-three, and had graduated
-at college with some knowledge of some things, if not of some others.
-He was a modern Mithridates in his power to withstand strychnine and
-nicotine; and he had devoted much attention to that branch of geometry
-which treats of the angles of balls on a cushion. One beautiful trait
-in his character, however, was his tender affection for his father,
-which showed itself most touchingly--whenever he was in need of money.
-
-In person he was prepossessing, having light-blue eyes, dark-brown
-hair, and a drooping moustache. Nor will I allow that he was a vicious
-lad. Indolent and useless he certainly was,--an insignificant numeral
-in the great sum of humanity, but a _roué_ he certainly was not.
-The worst thing about him was his name, and that he received from a
-weak, silly novel-reading mother, who gave her life for his, and,
-with her dying breath, charged his father to pay this homage to the
-yellow-covered world in which she had lived.
-
-If there was anything wanting in the comfortable mansion, where
-the Pompadours, father and son, kept bachelor's hall, it was the
-refining and softening influence of woman. And this brings us to the
-consideration of the skeleton which abode in the closets of Pompadour
-and son.
-
-The late Mrs. Pompadour had possessed some property which she had
-retained after marriage. Before her death she made a will, leaving
-to Augustus the fee, and to his father the income of the estate. In
-case, however, Augustus should marry before his father _did_, he was
-to enter into full possession of the property. Wives, in dying, do not
-generally offer their husbands a premium for replacing them; and so
-the judges inferred that the real meaning of the testatrix would be
-arrived at by inserting the letter _e_ in the word "_did_;" thus making
-the contingency turn upon Augustus' marrying before his father _died_.
-Moreover, the lawyer who drew the will (his ancestor was limned by Æsop
-in the fable of the Ass in the lion's skin) swore positively to this
-rendering being in accordance with the wish of the deceased, and so the
-courts decided that in the event of Mr. Pompadour's marrying before his
-son, he should retain his interest during life.
-
-Now Mr. Pompadour, aside from mercenary motives, was very uxoriously
-inclined; and would doubtless have married years before, had he not set
-too high an estimate on himself.
-
-His condition of mind at the beginning of this history might be
-expressed logically somewhat as follows:--
-
-First, he must get married.
-
-Second, Augustus must _not_.
-
-And Augustus, by analogous reasoning on identical premises, _mutatis
-mutandis_, had arrived at a dual conclusion.
-
-First, he must get married.
-
-Second, his father must _not_.
-
-A vigorous system of espionage had been instituted by father and son,
-on the actions of each other. Skirmishes had been frequent; and if
-neither gained any decided advantage, neither lost. But the great
-battle of the war was yet to be fought, and it has been reserved for my
-pen to inscribe its history.
-
-In the suburban village where Mr. Pompadour resided was a handsome
-residence; and its owner, "about visiting Europe," offered it for rent.
-The house was elegant, and the grounds especially fine. They were
-flanked by two shady streets and fronted on a third. A widow lady with
-one daughter became the tenant; and, as is usual in such cases, the
-whole village called upon her,--three persons prompted by politeness,
-and three hundred by curiosity. The cards which did duty for the lady
-in returning these calls, announced her to be "Mrs. Telluria Taragon,
-_née_ Trelauney." By the same token her daughter was discovered to be
-"Miss Terpsichore Taragon."
-
-Mrs. Taragon was one of the most bewitching of widows. About forty (she
-acknowledged to thirty-three), she was the very incarnation of matronly
-beauty. She was just tall enough to be graceful, and just plump enough
-not to be unwieldy. Her eyes were black and dangerous. Her hair was
-short, and it clustered over her forehead in little ringlets,--rather
-girlish, but very becoming. Her teeth were white and natural, and she
-had a most fascinating smile, which showed her teeth in a carefully
-unstudied manner, formed a pretty dimple in her chin, and enabled her
-to look archly without apparent intention.
-
-Her daughter, Miss Terpsichore, was twenty, with a slender, graceful
-form, and a pair of rosy cheeks, before whose downy softness the old
-simile of the peach becomes wholly inadequate. She had hazel eyes,
-whose liquid depths reflected the brightest and sunniest of tempers,
-and dark brown hair, with just a suspicion of golden shimmer filtering
-through its wavy folds.
-
-Mrs. Taragon, on the bare charge, could not have escaped conviction
-as a "designing widow." She not only was on the lookout, perpetually,
-for an investment of her daughter, but she was flying continually from
-her cap a white flag of unconditional surrender to the first man bold
-enough to attack herself.
-
-Mr. Pontifex Pompadour "availed himself of an early opportunity" to
-call upon Mrs. Taragon. His fame had preceded him; and that estimable
-lady, who was in her boudoir when he was announced, gave a small
-shriek of dismay at her dishevelled appearance. However, no one need
-be alarmed at such a manifestation on the part of a "lady of fashion."
-It is indicative of perfect satisfaction with her general effect. Mrs.
-Taragon flew to her mirror to shake out another curl--and her flounces;
-smiled bewitchingly by way of rehearsal; bit her lips frantically to
-bring the blood _to_ them, and walked aimlessly about the room for a
-few moments with her hands above her head, to send the blood _out_ of
-them. Then picking up her handkerchief daintily, and going downstairs
-slowly, that her cheeks might not be too much flushed, she acquired
-sudden animation at the parlor-door, and burst into the room with
-an elaborate rustle, and a thousand apologies for having kept Mr.
-Pompadour waiting so long,--and wasn't "the day perfectly lovely?"
-
-If a conversation be interesting, or serve in any way to develop the
-plot of a story, I hold that it should be given at full length; but the
-polite nothings which were repeated at _this_ interview, came under
-neither of these heads. They served only to display Mr. Pompadour's
-false teeth, and Mrs. Taragon's real ones (and the dimple) through the
-medium of Mr. P.'s real smile and Mrs. T.'s false one.
-
-The two parted mutually pleased, and Mrs. Taragon said to herself, as
-she resumed the novel she had dropped at Mr. Pompadour's entrance, "If
-I marry _him_, I will have that set of sables, and those diamonds I saw
-at Tiffany's."
-
-Mr. Pompadour beheaded a moss rose with his cane, as he stepped
-jauntily down the walk, and remarked to his inner self, "A monstrous
-fine woman that, and I may say, without vanity, that she was struck
-with my appearance. Why, ho! who the devil's that?"
-
-The acute reader will perceive a slight incoherence in the latter
-portion of this remark. It was due to a sight which met Mr. Pompadour's
-gaze on stepping into the street from Mrs. Taragon's domain. This was
-nothing else than Augustus Fitz Clarence walking leisurely up the
-street with a young lady whom we know--but the illustrious parent did
-not--to be Miss Terpsichore Taragon.
-
-"Confound the boy!" said the old gentleman, "I wonder who he's got
-there? Just like his father, though! For I may say, without vanity,
-that I was a tremendous fellow among the girls."
-
-Augustus Fitz Clarence was not at all pleased at this chance rencontre.
-The intimacy with the charming widow, which it strongly hinted
-at, brought vividly to his mind its possible results upon his own
-prospects. And, moreover, he was conscious of a peculiar and novel
-sensation in regard to the young lady, which made him rather shamefaced
-under the paternal eye. In short, he was in love. All the symptoms were
-apparent: a rush of blood to the face, and a stammering in the speech,
-whenever proximity to the infecting object induced a spasm. He also had
-the secondary symptoms,--a sensation of the spinal cord, as if molasses
-were being poured down the back, and a general feeling "all over," such
-as little boys call "goose-flesh," and which is ordinarily occasioned
-by a ghost story, or a cold draught from an open door-way.
-
-To the writer, who stands upon the high level of the philosophic
-historian, it is evident that the same feelings warmed the gentle
-breast of Terpsichore that burned in the bosom of Augustus. To furnish
-food, however, for the unextinguishable laughter of the gods, this fact
-is never made clear to the principals themselves till the last moment.
-"And so from hour to hour we ripe and ripe ... and thereby hangs a
-tale."
-
-With the foregoing paragraph, I bridge over an "hiatus, as it were," of
-several months.
-
-Respect for truth obliges me to record the fact, that Mrs. Taragon
-regarded her daughter with that unchristian feeling called jealousy.
-But, if a heartless, she was a shrewd woman, and she meant to dispose
-of Terpsichore advantageously.
-
-There was, at this time, and I believe there is still, in the village
-of which I write, an "order of the garter," under the control of one
-Mrs. Grundy, the motto of which was: "Those are evil of whom we evil
-speak." Its evening meetings were familiarly known as the "nights of
-the sewing-circle;" and it was the duty of each member to attend to
-everybody's business but his own. An agent of this order promptly put
-Mrs. Taragon in possession of everything which had been discovered or
-invented concerning Mr. Pompadour, not forgetting to enlarge upon the
-conditions of the will. Mrs. Taragon thereupon resolved to marry Mr.
-Pompadour; for, in addition to other reasons, she confessed to herself
-that she really liked him. As may be supposed, therefore, she looked
-with much disfavor on the increasing intimacy between the young people;
-but she feared that any violent attempt to rupture it would precipitate
-the very result she would avoid. She sat, one day, in a brown study,
-regarding the subject in all its bearings, with her comely cheek
-resting upon her plump hand, and, at last, arrived at a conclusion.
-
-"I think it would not be wise," she said, consulting the mirror to see
-if her hand had left any mark upon her cheek,--"to interfere just at
-present; at any rate, not till I am _sure_ of Mr. Pompadour; but I will
-keep a close watch upon them."
-
-Not many days afterwards, a picturesque group occupied the bow-window
-of Mrs. Taragon's drawing-room. Mrs. T. herself, quite covered with an
-eruption of worsted measles, was the principal figure. At her feet,
-like Paul at Gamaliel's, sat Augustus; but, unlike Paul, he held a
-skein of worsted. Nestling on an ottoman in the recess of the window
-was Terpsichore, inventing floral phenomena in water-colors, and
-looking very bewitching.
-
-"'Twas a fair scene." As under the shade of some far-spreading oak,
-when noon holds high revel in the heavens, the gentle flock cluster in
-happy security, fearing no dire irruption of lupine enemy, so--
-
-"Mr. Pompadour," announced the servant.
-
-"The devil!" echoed Augustus Fitz Clarence.
-
-Mrs. Taragon's first impulse was to spring up and greet her visitor
-cordially. Her second, to do no such thing. Napoleon said, "An
-opportunity lost is an occasion for misfortune." Here was her
-Austerlitz or her Waterloo! With the rapidity of genius, she laid the
-plot for a little comedy of "The Jealous Lovers," to the success of
-which the actors themselves unwittingly contributed.
-
-Half rising, she acknowledged Mr. Pompadour's elaborate bow, and,
-motioning him gracefully to a seat, sank back into her chair. Then,
-pretending that the worsted was knotted, she bent her curls so near
-Augustus' face, and made a whispered remark with such a conscious air,
-that the blood rushed to that young man's face in an instant.
-
-"I saw you out riding yesterday, Mr. Pompadour," said the cheerful
-widow, pleased that her first shot had taken effect. "And what a
-_beautiful_ horse! and you ride _so_ gracefully!"
-
-"Thank you, madam," said Mr. Pompadour, stiffly; "I think I may say,
-without vanity, that I do ride tolerably well."
-
-"And you," to the son, "now your father is present, I must call you
-_Mr._ Augustus,--may I not?" she said, coaxingly. The "Mr." was
-emphasized, as if when alone she did not use it. But this was, of
-course, unintentional.
-
-Now Augustus, for some time, had endeavored to ingratiate himself with
-Mrs. Taragon, but with little success, and, therefore, he was utterly
-unable to comprehend her sudden benignity. He glanced at his father,
-and met the eyes of that individual glaring on him with the look of an
-ogre deprived of his baby lunch. He glanced at Terpsichore, but that
-young lady was absorbed with a new discovery in botany. He glanced at
-Mrs. Taragon, but she was calmly winding worsted.
-
-"Terpy, dear," said her mother, "_do_ show Mr. Pompadour some of your
-drawings. My dear little girl is _so_ devoted to art!" she exclaimed,
-enthusiastically, as the daughter rose to bring her portfolio. "Take
-care, Mr. Augustus; you know worsted is a dreadful thing to snarl."
-Augustus had involuntarily sprung up to offer his assistance, but he
-sank back in confusion.
-
-"Are you fond of engravings, Mr. Pompadour?" asked the young lady,
-sweetly.
-
-"Ah! yes! I--I think I may say without vanity,"--began Mr. Pompadour,
-but he finished silently to himself,--"D--me, I'll make her jealous!"
-Whose Austerlitz or Waterloo should it be? He put on his eye-glass to
-inspect the volume, and for a little while almost forgot his egotism in
-admiration of the beauty of nature beside him, if not of the beauties
-of art before him.
-
-Augustus was not slow in perceiving that, for some unknown reason, Mrs.
-Taragon's attention was gained, and he tried desperately to improve the
-occasion. Every once in a while, however, his eyes would wander toward
-his father, who played his part with so much skill that the bosom of
-Augustus was soon filled with burnings, and the mind of the widow with
-perplexities. The gentle heart of Terpsichore was grieved also, and
-her mind sorely puzzled at the enigmatical conduct of those about her,
-while she was somewhat annoyed at the pertinacious attentions of the
-elder P.
-
-The distinguished gentleman who wrote so graphically about the "Elbows
-of the Mincio," must confess that _our_ Quadrilateral is only second
-to that which he has helped to embalm in history. The Irishman's
-experience with the large boot and the small one, and the other pair
-similarly mismated, was here reproduced with painful reality. Some evil
-genius had scattered wormwood on the air, and asphyxia, or something
-worse, seemed likely to supervene, when the entrance of another visitor
-broke the charm, and the _téte-à-téte_, and the gentlemen fled.
-
-The thermometer of Mr. Pompadour's temper indicated boiling heat. He
-sputtered and fumed like an irascible old gentleman as he was, and
-managed to work himself into a crazy fit of jealousy, about his son
-and the too fascinating widow; and, oddly enough, this feeling thus
-aroused by the green-eyed monster, for the time being, quite eclipsed
-his mercenary muddle. So, upon poor Augustus, as the available subject,
-fell palpable and uncomfortable demonstrations of paternal displeasure.
-
-For several days Mr. Pompadour stayed away from Mrs. Taragon's, and
-that good lady began to fear lest she had overdrawn her account at the
-bank of his heart, and that further drafts would be dishonored. The
-thought of such a catastrophe was torture of the most refined quality.
-By an illogical system of reasoning, peculiar to the female mind, she
-imagined that Terpsichore was the cause of his desertion, and that
-young lady thereupon became the recipient of an amount of small spite
-and aggravated vindictiveness, which reflected great credit upon Mrs.
-Taragon's inquisitorial capabilities.
-
-She had, it must be obvious, set her heart upon having those diamonds
-from Tiffany's.
-
-At the end of a week, however, Mr. Pompadour called upon Mrs. Taragon,
-and this time he found her alone. His countenance gave proof of some
-desperate resolution. His attire was more than usually elegant. His
-hair and whiskers were a trifle blacker and glossier than ever. He had
-a rose in his button-hole, and yellow kids on his hands. Solomon, in
-all his glory, was not arrayed (I sincerely trust) like unto him! Mrs.
-Taragon rose cordially, and held out to him her plump little hand; it
-lay a moment in his, as if asking to be squeezed. Mr. Pompadour looked
-as if he would like to squeeze it, and perhaps he did.
-
-The lady's cordiality soon gave place to a timid shyness. To use a
-military phrase, she was "feigning a retreat." Mr. Pompadour waxed
-bold and advanced. The conversation skirmished awhile, the widow
-occasionally making a sally, and driving in the enemy's outposts,
-his main body meanwhile steadily approaching. The tone in which they
-conducted hostilities, however, gradually fell, and if one had been
-near enough he might have heard Mr. Pompadour remark, with a kind of
-quiet satisfaction, "For I think I may say, without vanity, I still
-possess some claim to good looks." The widow's reply was so low that
-our reporter failed to catch it, and then--military phraseology
-avaunt!--the old veteran knelt on the carpet, and surrendered at
-discretion.
-
-"Good gracious, Mr. Pompadour!" exclaimed the widow, with well-feigned
-alarm, at the same time picking a thread off her dress, "_Do_ get up,
-somebody may come in!"
-
-"Never!" said the old hero stoutly, seeing his advantage, and
-determined to have its full benefit, "at any rate, not till you promise
-to marry me!"
-
-A form passed the window. This time Mrs. Taragon was really frightened.
-"I will," she said hurriedly; "now get up, and sit down."
-
-Mr. Pompadour leaped to his feet with the agility of a boy--of sixty,
-and imprinted a kiss lovingly upon the lady's nose, there not being
-time to capture the right place on the first assault. What followed we
-will leave to the imagination of the reader.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was now October, and the trees had adorned themselves in their
-myriad dyes. The maple had put on crimson, the hickory a rich gold, and
-the oak a deep scarlet; while the pine and the hemlock "mingled with
-brighter tints the living green."
-
-To the woods one balmy day Augustus and Terpsichore went together, to
-gather leaves for wreaths and screens. Both were carelessly happy, and
-the pines echoed their merry voices as they laughed and sang. At length
-the basket, which Augustus carried, was filled with gorgeous booty,
-and they sat down upon a fallen log, while Terpsichore wove a garland
-for her hair. No wonder that in the tranquil beauty of the scene their
-noisy mirth should become hushed. No wonder that, as the sun stole
-through the branches, and like Jove of old fell in a shower of gold
-about them, upon both their hearts fell the perfect peace of love! With
-the full tide of this feeling came to Augustus the resolve to know his
-fate; for he felt that upon that answer hung his destiny.
-
-They sat in silence while he tried to teach his tongue the language
-of his heart. Then he glanced timidly at the maiden, but her head was
-drooped low over the wreath, and her cheeks reflected its crimson dye.
-
-"Miss Taragon," he said, at length, abruptly, "were you ever in love?"
-
-She started like a frightened bird. The rich blood fled to her heart,
-and left her face pallid as marble.
-
-"I--I--don't know," she stammered. "Why do you ask me such a question?"
-
-"Because," he said, "then you may know how I feel, and pity me! O
-Terpsichore!" he added passionately, "I love you with my whole soul,
-and if you will but bless me with your love, my whole life shall be
-devoted to your happiness."
-
-And so he talked on in an impetuous strain, of mingled prayer and
-protestation, which was stereotyped long before the invention of
-printing.
-
-Terpsichore's heart beat wildly. The color came and went in her cheeks,
-and she turned her head away to conceal her emotion.
-
-The wreath lay finished in her lap; and at last, with a bright smile,
-she placed it on his forehead; and, clasping his hand in both her own,
-she kissed him on the forehead. And now we might as well leave them
-alone together.
-
-Mrs. Taragon, having made sure of Mr. Pompadour, now proceeded to carry
-out her plan of throwing obstacles in the way of the young people.
-Augustus, of course, was not aware of her complete information in
-regard to his "property qualifications," and attributed her disfavor
-to personal dislike. Whatever her motives, however, her actions were
-unequivocal; and Terpsichore, especially, had a sorry time of it. So
-uncomfortable did matters become, that, upon a review of the situation,
-and an eloquent appeal from Augustus, she consented to take with him
-that irrevocable step, to which Virgil undoubtedly alluded under the
-fine figure of "Descensus Averni." In plain English, they resolved to
-run away and be married.
-
-I will not weary the reader with details of the preliminaries. They
-are unimportant to my narrative. A note, dispatched by Augustus to the
-Rev. Ebenezer Fiscuel, informed that gentleman that about half-past
-ten o'clock of an appointed evening he would be waited on by a couple
-desirous of being united in holy matrimony.
-
-Augustus arranged to have a carriage in waiting under Terpsichore's
-window about ten o'clock, and, with the aid of a ladder and the
-above-mentioned clergyman, he hoped to settle the vexed question of the
-property, and render all further opposition to their union of an _ex
-post facto_ character.
-
-The evening came, and it found Mrs. Taragon and her daughter seated
-together in the parlor. Terpsichore was crocheting a net, which, like
-Penelope's, grew very slowly. She was nervous and fidgety. Her eyes
-wandered restlessly from her mother to the door, and she started at
-the slightest sound. Mrs. Taragon seemed uncommonly suspicious and
-alert. She was reading, but had not turned a leaf for half an hour. She
-glanced furtively and continually about the room.
-
-"She has found us out," thought Terpsichore, and her heart almost
-stopped beating. With a great effort she controlled herself, and had
-recourse to stratagem.
-
-"Mother, dear," she said, dropping the net in her lap, "you look tired;
-why don't you go to bed?"
-
-"Oh, no, darling," said the widow, cheerfully, "I don't feel a bit
-weary. But your eyes look red, and I think _you_ had better retire."
-
-"No, mamma, not yet," she replied. "I want to finish this net. I have
-done so little upon it lately."
-
-A slight shade of vexation crossed the face of the widow.
-
-"If you had devoted yourself to the net," she said, spitefully, "it
-would have been finished."
-
-Terpsichore blushed guiltily. Augustus had spent more than two hours
-with her that day; and she felt a presentiment that impending wrath was
-about to descend on her devoted head.
-
-"I am sure, mother," she said, quietly, "_you_ can't complain of my
-seeing too much company."
-
-This shot told; for Mr. Pompadour had been very attentive of late.
-
-Mrs. Taragon nearly tore a leaf out of her book.
-
-"At any rate," she retorted, "my visitors are respectable."
-
-Terpsichore's lip quivered. The remark was cruel, but it roused her
-spirit.
-
-"If my company is not respectable," she said, with an incipient sob,
-"it is the fault of his bringing up."
-
-Mr. Pompadour was hit this time, right between his eyes. The widow
-blazed.
-
-"You--you--you minx," she said, angrily, "I believe you'd like to see
-me dead, and out of your way!"
-
-The remark was utterly irrelevant; but she saw it in the book, and
-thought it would be dramatic.
-
-Terpsichore burst into tears, and beat a retreat in disorder. As she
-left the room, Mrs. Taragon said to herself, with a sigh of relief,--
-
-"Well, the coast is clear for Pompadour,--and she's safe for to-night,
-any way."
-
-Which was a slight mistake.
-
-Ten o'clock came, and with it the carriage. A man glided silently
-underneath Terpsichore's window, and a ladder was reared against the
-wall. Silently the window opened, and a form descended the ladder, and
-was clasped in an equally silent embrace at the foot. Terpsichore had
-not entirely recovered her spirits, but she stifled her emotions for
-the sake of Augustus. For the same reason she did not scold him for
-rumpling her bonnet. Hurrying into the carriage, they drove rapidly
-away.
-
-As they turned the corner into the principal street, another carriage,
-going in the same direction, came up behind them at a quick trot.
-Augustus sprang to his feet, and peered out into the darkness.
-"Betrayed," was the thought which flashed through his mind, and he
-muttered an eighteen-cornered oath. Terpsichore clung to his coat with
-an energy which indirectly reflected lasting credit upon his tailor.
-
-"Put on more steam," whispered Augustus hoarsely to the driver, and
-the horses dashed onward at a break-neck pace, soon leaving the other
-carriage far behind.
-
-At the rate they were going, it took but a few minutes to reach the
-parsonage. Directing the coachman to drive round the corner and wait,
-Augustus half-led, half-carried the trembling girl into the house.
-The Rev. Fiscuel's family and one or two neighbors were assembled in
-the parlor. The ceremony was soon performed, and an earnest blessing
-invoked upon the married life of the young people. As they were
-receiving the congratulations suited to the occasion, a juvenile
-Fiscuel came in, and whispered something to his father. Mr. Fiscuel,
-with a smile, turned to Augustus, saying, "My son tells me that your
-father is coming in at the gate with a lady."
-
-The newly-married looked at each other in mute surprise. "I'll bet a
-hat," exclaimed Augustus, suddenly, "it's your mother; and they've
-come to get married!"
-
-The Rev. Ebenezer spoke eagerly: "Did you send me two messages this
-morning?"
-
-"No!" said Augustus; "of course I did not."
-
-"Then they have, verily," exclaimed the clergyman, in a tone of
-very unclerical excitement; "for I received two messages from 'Mr.
-Pompadour.' I spoke of the singularity at the time."
-
-"Can you hide us somewhere?" said Augustus, "till you've 'done' the old
-gentleman?"
-
-"Come in here," said Mrs. Fiscuel, who had her share of that leaven of
-unrighteousness which is usually called fun. As she spoke, she opened
-the drawing-room door.
-
-The Rev. Ebenezer sat down to write a certificate for Augustus; and, as
-one door closed upon the young couple, the other opened to admit the
-older one. If not in as great a hurry as their children, they seemed
-equally desirous of making assurance doubly sure. The family and the
-witnesses, who had followed Mrs. Fiscuel out of the apartment, were
-again summoned, and, for a second time that evening, the words were
-spoken which made a Pompadour and a Taragon "one bone and one flesh."
-Watching the proceedings through the crevice of the half-opened door,
-was a couple not counted among the "witnesses," and certainly not
-invited by the principals.
-
-When the ceremony was over, Augustus and Terpsichore entered the
-room. Their appearance created what "Jenkins" would call "a profound
-sensation." Mr. Pompadour looked bowie-knives and six-shooters, Mrs.
-P., darning-needles and stilettoes. Augustus was self-possessed.
-Perhaps he remembered the old saying, "Let those laugh who win."
-
-"We happened here not knowing you were coming," he said, addressing
-both; "wont you accept our congratulations."
-
-Suddenly Mrs. Pompadour _née_ Trelawney, gave a scream, and fell back
-in a chair, with symptoms of hysterics. She had caught sight of the
-_ring_ on her daughter's finger, and comprehended everything in an
-instant,--the carriage which had fled before them as they left the
-house; this "accidental" visit to the minister's; and, worse than all,
-how she had been outwitted!
-
-Terpsichore sprang forward to assist her.
-
-"Go away from me! Go away! Don't let her touch me!" she screamed,
-throwing her arms about like a wind-mill. "I wont have it! I wont! I
-wont!"
-
-Mr. Pompadour, during this outburst, showed signs of exasperation;
-apparently, however, he did not see the point, but was fast concluding
-that he had married a lunatic.
-
-Terpsichore was frightened and began to cry. Augustus, to reässure her,
-put his arm around her waist. At this, the senior Mrs. Pompadour sprang
-up, and seized her husband by the arm, so energetically that it made
-him wince. Pointing to the tell-tale ring with a gesture worthy of
-Ristori, she managed to articulate: "Don't you see it? That undutiful
-girl has married Augustus, and--and he has married _her_!"
-
-Mr. Pompadour "saw it," and uttered some words which were not a
-blessing.
-
-
-
-
-THE PROPER USE OF GRANDFATHERS.
-
-
-
-
-THE PROPER USE OF GRANDFATHERS.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-If people without grandfathers are in need of any particular solace,
-they may find it in the fact that those cumbrous contingencies of
-existence cannot be continually stuck in their faces. A wise man has
-remarked, that the moderns are pigmies standing upon the shoulders of
-giants. He would have been wiser still, had he observed how frequently
-the giants change places with the pigmies, and ride them to death like
-Old Men of the Sea. If, at sixteen, I have the dyspepsia and a tendency
-to reflect on the problems of my being, I am begged to notice that,
-at a corresponding period old Jones, of the alternate generation, was
-gambolling o'er the dewy meads, a gleesome boy. If my baby cries and
-is puny at teething-time, the oracles, with an intuitive perception
-how my grandfather behaved a hundred years before they were born, tell
-me it was not so in his day; that heaven lay about him in his infancy;
-but that none of the article exists either in that loose condition or
-otherwise for the immature human animal who breaks out of darkness
-and mystery into this day of gum-rings. If the tremendous pace at
-which the modern world is going knocks me up at forty, and compels
-me to keep my stall for a year of valetudinarianism, I am asked to
-remember what a hale old fellow the same inevitable ancestor was at
-ninety; I am inundated with his exuberance of spirits, overwhelmed
-with the statistics of his teeth; and invited in the mind's eye (in my
-own, too, if I know myself!) to take six-mile walks with him before
-breakfast unassisted by a cane. It is not a pleasant state of mind to
-be disgusted with one's forefathers, who would, probably have been
-very jolly fellows to know, and not the least in the world like the
-people who are all the time boring us about them. If there is truth in
-spiritualism, a delegation from those fine old boys will, some of these
-days, take advantage of a sitting, and rap out an indignant disclaimer
-of the bosh that is talked in their name. If my grandfather was not
-a much more unpleasant person than myself, he would scorn to be made
-a boguey of for the annoyance of his own flesh and blood. Any man of
-well-regulated mind must prefer utter oblivion among his descendants to
-such perpetuation as that of Mr. Wilfer.
-
-"Your grandpapa," retorted Mrs. Wilfer, with an awful look, and in
-an awful tone, "was what I describe him to have been, and would have
-struck any of his grandchildren to the earth who presumed to question
-it."
-
-If our ancestors could return to the earth, it is little likely
-that their first inclination would be to goody themselves over the
-excellence of their own period, or pull faces at the degeneracy of
-ours. Sleepers in ill-ventilated, or rather entirely non-ventilated
-apartments, eaters of inordinate late suppers, five-bottle men, and
-for the most part wearers of sadly unphilosophical raiment, those
-sturdy old fox-hunters would acknowledge it just cause for astonishment
-that their children have any constitutions at all. Little motive
-for self-laudation would they find in the fact, that, after drawing
-out their account with Nature to the last dime, they had taken a
-respectable first-cabin passage to the Infinite Boulogne just before
-the great Teller said "No funds," and shoved back their checks through
-the window, leaving to their children the heritage of a spotless name
-and the declaration of physiological bankruptcy.
-
-Nor would they content themselves, I fancy, with the negative ground
-of mere humility. They would have something very decided to say to the
-wiseacres, who taunt our wives in the agony of tic-doloureux with the
-statement that their grandmothers knew nothing of neuralgia. "No!"
-these generous ancients would retort, "that is the residuary legacy
-of a generation to whom we left a nervous system of worn-out fiddle
-strings." To such as talk of that woful novelty diphtheria as a crime
-of the present age, they would point out the impossibility of a race's
-throat descending to it without tenderness, a race's blood flowing to
-it without taint, from ancestors who swaddled their necks in fathoms
-of cravat, and despised the question of sewage. When I had the gout,
-and could not stand up for myself, those brave _vieilles moustaches_
-would stand up for me. "Many a fine old bin of our port," would they
-exclaim, "has been emptied down through the æons into those innocent
-toes of thine. I mind me how I smacked my lips over that very bottle
-whose broken glass now grinds around, red-hot, in the articulation
-of thy metatarsal phalanges. Dancing at thy fair great-grandmother's
-wedding, I slaked the thirst of many vigorous sarabands in that
-identical ruby nectar, which, turned by the alchemy of generations
-into acid blood, now through thy great toe distils in gouts of fiery
-torture. I danced;--thou, poor Serò-natus, dancest not, but dost pay
-the piper."
-
-Suppose that our returning ancestors regarded us in the intellectual
-and spiritual, as well as the physical aspect, they must find still
-less reason to put on airs of superiority. If, in the sphere where they
-have been lately moving, improvement goes on as fast as we believe,
-they may be expected to wonder that the theological and scholastic
-training of their own earthly day has not resulted in a present race
-of imbeciles and fetish-worshippers, or Torquemadas and madmen. With
-thankful astonishment will they revere that nature whose boundless
-elasticity and self-repair has brought bright and self-reliant, even
-though sometimes a trifle too pert and iconoclastic, Young America
-from loins burdened, through all their period of cartilage, with five
-days and a half per week of grammar-grinding, a Saturday afternoon of
-"keeping in for marks," and a seventh day which should have been the
-Lord's, but was conspicuously liker the devil's.
-
-Woman, religion, and the forefathers are all the victims of a false
-quality of reverence. The world has immemorially paid them in the
-coin of lip-service for the privilege of using their sacredness as a
-yoke. They are defrauded of their true power by the hands that waft
-them hypocritical incense; bought off the ground where their influence
-might be precious and permanent, by the compliment of a moment, or the
-ceremony of a day. We pick up the fan of the first, and shoulder her
-out of her partnership in our serious business of living. We build
-temples for the second, that she may not gad about among our shops,
-or trouble the doors of our houses. In the third, we do superstitious
-homage to a mere accident of time, and feel free to neglect the genial
-lesson of humanity which is eternal.
-
-It is impossible not to reverence our forefathers--those grand old
-fellows who, long before we rose, got up to build the fires, and shovel
-the sidewalks of this world. The amount of work which they did was
-immense; great was their poking and their pushing; their thrashing of
-arms, and their blowing of fingers. If they sometimes made a compromise
-with their job; if here and there they left the gutters uncleared, or a
-heavy drift to thaw over under the sun of modern conscience, and flood
-our streets with revolution; if they built some of their fires with
-wet wood, which unto this day smokes the parlors, or even the inmost
-bed-chambers of mankind,--let us remember how frosty the dawn was, how
-poorly made were the tools and mittens of the period. All honor to
-their work, and the will with which they went at it! But when we are
-asked to regret the rising of the sun; to despise a time of day when
-there are no more fires to build, no more walks to shovel; or, if such
-anywhere remain, when there are snow-ploughs and patent-kindling to use
-in their behoof--distinctly No!--a No as everlasting as Mr. Carlyle's,
-and spelt with as big a capital.
-
-The mistake of that great writer and minor disciple of the Belated-Owl
-school to which he belongs, naturally arises, not from the
-over-development of reverence, to which it is generally ascribed, but
-from a constitutional divorce between the poetic imagination and the
-power of analysis. The former faculty, by itself, results in impatience
-with the meaner actualities of life,--a divine impatience in great
-poets, a petulant in small ones. Lacking the latter faculty, such
-persons are in the condition of a near-sighted man placed without chart
-or compass at the helm of a free-going clipper. Making no allowance for
-the fact that the blemished and the trivial disappear with distance,
-and, ignorant of the direction in which humanity must steer, they put
-out with disgust from a shore where every old clam-shell and rotten
-wreck is as conspicuous to those, at least, who look for it as the
-orange-groved cliffs, and the fair retiring stretches of greensward,
-to voyage for some scarce descried Atlantis gemming the horizon ring
-with an empurpled roundness born of vapor, time, and space. To such,
-the future might be a noble course to lay; but that lies beyond the
-horizon, and impatience is not consistent with faith. On, then, on
-to the farthest visible,--but westward, while the grand fleet of
-humanity sails last. Into shadow which drowns the petty details of
-existence,--not toward a shore which shall be reached only by long
-buffeting and weary watching, whose noble scenery, glorious with all
-the temples and trophies of the latest age, shall bear unshamed the
-scrutiny of the full-risen sun.
-
-The application of scientific processes to the study of history has
-revealed the steady amelioration of the race. The mail of chivalric
-giants is brought out of romance's armory to the profane test of a
-vulgar trying on, and, behold, it is too small for the foot-soldier of
-to-day. Population everywhere increases, while the rates of mortality
-diminish. The average longevity of the people of London is greater,
-by something like twenty-five per cent., than it was a century ago.
-The improvement of machinery is more and more lifting the yoke of
-physical labor from the neck of man, leaving his mind freer to cope
-with the higher problems of his own nature and the universe without.
-Not as a matter of platform enthusiasm and optimist poetry, but of
-office statistics, do we know that the world is an easier and better
-place to live in, and that a man is luckier to be born into it,
-than in the day of the fathers. So much has changed, and changed for
-the better. That analysis, which the Carlylists lack, reveals still
-other changes worked by the course of time in the phenomena of the
-race,--such changes as concern the habits of society, the styles of
-literature, the systems of political economy and commercial order, the
-tenets of philosophy, the schools of art, the forms of government and
-religion. This analysis further reveals that, while all these functions
-of life are in their nature endlessly mutable, the organic man, from
-whom, under all variations, they get their _vis viva_, remains from
-age to age eternally the same. While each successive generation has
-its fresh, particular business on the earth,--something to do for
-the race, which succeeding generations will not have the time, even
-as prior generations had not the light, to do,--something which is
-wanted right away,--something for which it was sent and for which
-the whole machine-shop of time had been shaping the material to be
-worked by its special hand,--analysis discloses that the capital upon
-which every business is to be carried on undergoes neither increase
-nor diminution. There is just as much faith, just as much courage,
-just as much power in the world as there ever was. They do not show
-themselves in Runnymedes, because Runnymede has been attended to; nor
-in wondrous Abbot Sampsons, because monkery is mainly cured. They
-are not manifest in martyred Edwardses, because at this day Edwards
-could call a policeman; nor in burning Cranmers, because society has
-made a phenomenal change in her method with martyrs and shuts them
-in a refrigerator, where once she chained them to a stake. They do
-not appear in French Revolutions, because the world has grown through
-a second American Revolution, grander than the first, and a great
-representative native has plucked Liberty out of the fire without one
-scorch of license on her garments. They seek no outlet in crusade, for
-Jerusalem has been made of as little consequence as Barnegat, by the
-fulfilment of the promise,--
-
-"The hour cometh when ye shall neither in this mountain, nor yet in
-Jerusalem, worship the Father, ... when the true worshippers shall
-worship him in spirit and in truth."
-
-I have a little butcher, who is Coeur de Lion in the small. He does not
-split heads nor get imprisoned in castles, but has the same capricious
-force, the same capacity for affront-taking, the same terribleness
-of retribution, and the same power of large, frank forgiveness which
-belonged to the man who broke the skulls of the Saracens and pardoned
-his own assassin. I went to school to Frederick the Great. He did not
-take snuff nor swear in high Dutch, and it was his destiny to be at
-the head, not of an army of men, but of one hundred as unmanageable
-boys as ever played hawkey or "fought pillows" in the dormitory.
-His solution of difficulties was as prompt, his decisions were as
-inexorable, he had as irascible a temper and as admirable a faculty of
-organization as his Prussian prototype's. Calvin and Servetus discuss
-their differences at my dinner-table; the former possesses all his
-old faith in the inscrutable; the latter all his ancient tendency to
-bring everything alleged to the tribunal of science, and I may add that
-Calvin has as little doubt as ever of the propriety of having Servetus
-cooked,--only he postpones the operation, and expects to see it done
-without his help. I am acquainted with Sir Philip Sidney, the courtly
-knight and the melodious poet. The chivalry with which he jousted at
-Kenilworth and fought at Zutphen are hourly needed in the temptations
-and harassments of a broker's office, and many's the hard day through
-which it has borne him with honor. The pen which he devotes to the
-Muses is as facile as in the Arcadian time,--though the sturdy lance he
-used to set in rest is substituted by another pen, of the fat office
-type, consecrated to the back of gold certificates and the support of
-an unmediævally expensive family.
-
-Looking in all directions round the world, I find the old
-nobleness,--the primeval sublimities of love and courage, faith and
-justice, which have always kept humanity moving, and will keep it to
-the end. In no age has the quantity of this nobleness been excessive,
-but so much of it as exists is an imperishable quantity. It is a good
-interred with no man's bones; it is the indispensable preventive of the
-world's annihilation. Carlyle has been praised for the epigrammatic
-assertion that nothing can be kept without either life or salt. This
-is true, but not the whole truth; salt will keep beeves, but as for
-nations and races which have lost their savor, wherewithal shall they
-be salted? The fact that mankind survive at all is the proof that
-ages have not tainted them with putrescence. Things live only by the
-good that there is in them, and the interests to which they appeal;
-the fields which open to man, in our own day, are so much vaster and
-massier than they were in the day of our fathers, that the tax on the
-activities of the race could not be met by our capital of life if we
-had lost one particle of the good which supported them.
-
-When I look at the fathers, I recollect that courage and love, faith
-and justice, have no swallowing horizon, while all that is petty and
-base succumbs in one generation to the laws of perspective. It is
-pleasanter thus. At the grave of the old schoolmaster who flogged us,
-we remember the silver hair and the apple he gave us once,--never the
-rattan. "We had fathers after the flesh who corrected us, and we gave
-them reverence," nothing but reverence, when we leaned with tearful
-eyes over their vacant chairs. If I have ever quarrelled with my
-friend, when he can return to me no more, I make up with his memory
-by canonizing him. The tendency to do thus is among the loveliest and
-divinest things in our nature. But it is a still lovelier and diviner
-thing to anticipate the parallax of time and look upon the present with
-the same loving, teachable, and reverent eyes, which shall be bent upon
-it from the standpoint of coming generations. He to whom the beauty and
-nobleness of his own time are, throughout all that he deplores in it
-and in himself, the conspicuous objects of love and veneration,--who
-extends the allowance of the dead to the faults of the living,--from
-whom no personal disappointments can ever take away his faith in the
-abiding divinity of his kind,--need never fear that his judgment of
-the fathers will be a churlish and disrespectful one. The only object
-which such a man can have in recalling the vices and defects of older
-generations is to establish their kinship with his own, to prove his
-era's legitimacy against philosophers who find only pettiness in the
-present and grandeur in the past. If he cannot make them see the good
-side by which the modern family receives blood from the ancient, there
-shall not be any bend sinister on his escutcheon because he neglects
-to show them the bad one, though he would rather vindicate his lineage
-the other way. To him the organic unity of mankind, throughout all
-generations, is dearer than the individual reputation of any one of
-them.
-
-Having the faith of this organic unity he can look at the errors of
-the forefathers without pain. They lessen neither his love nor his
-respect for them. Who is there that would care to know king David only
-as a very respectable Jew, in a Sunday-school book, who was always
-successful, invariably pious, and passed his time wholly in playing
-hymns on a harp with a golden crown upon his head? To almost all young
-readers, and many an old one, the vindictive psalms seem a shocking
-inexplicability in the sacred canon. The philosopher, however, feels
-with the illiterate preacher, "It is a comfort to us poor erring
-mortals, my brethren, to remember that on one occasion even, David,
-beloved of the Lord, said not only, 'I am mad,' but 'I am fearfully and
-wonderfully mad?'" Not that it would be any comfort to us if that were
-all we possess of him; but we also have the record of his getting over
-it. I once knew a little boy who learned to swear out of the psalms,
-and it must be acknowledged that of good round curses there is in no
-tongue a much fuller armory. Conscientious persons, who want to damn
-their enemies without committing sin, no doubt often sit down and read
-an execratory psalm with considerable relief to their minds. Not in
-this spirit do men skilled in human nature peruse the grand rages of
-the many-sided fighting bard; not because they would cloak their errors
-with the kingly shadow of his own, do they rejoice that he exists for
-us to-day just where the rude, large simplicity of his original Hebrew
-left him, and that tame-handed biography has never been able to pumice
-him down into a demi-god. They are glad because these things prove him
-human and imitable. If his stormy soul triumphed over itself; if he
-could be beloved of the Infinite at a moment when the surges of both
-outer and inner vicissitude seemed conspiring to sweep him away, then
-we cease to hear his swearing or the clamor of his despair; and to us,
-whose modern spirits are not exempt from flood and hurricane, his grand
-voice chants only cheer down the centuries, and we know that there is
-love caring and victory waiting for us also in our struggle, since we
-are not the lonely anomalies of time.
-
-As with David so with all the men of the past,--it gives us no pain
-to find that they were not a whit nearer perfection than ourselves.
-We do not regret their superseded customs, nor wish them restored in
-the living age. He who takes them from the time of which they are
-a congruous part and seeks to import them into a day which has no
-explanatory relevance to them, so far from showing them reverence,
-is like a man who, to compel the recognition of his grandfather's
-tombstone, strips it of its moss, scrubs it with soap and sand, and
-sets it up on Broadway among signs and show-cases. Their opinions
-are not final with us, because every age brings new proofs, and
-every generation is a new court of appeal. Their business methods
-are framed upon a hypothesis which does not include the telegraph
-or the steam-engine. Where a man can persuade his correspondents to
-send their letters by the coach and their goods by the freight-wagon,
-he may adjust himself very comfortably to the good old way by which
-his grandfather made a fortune and preserved his health to a great
-age. Until he gets his mail weekly and answers it all in a batch,
-recuperating from that labor by the sale of merchandise, one box to an
-invoice, he is simply absurd to lament over the rapidity with which
-fortunes are made at this day, and eulogize the "sure and slow" process
-by which a lifetime whose sole principle was the avoiding of risks
-attained the same object. As if the whole problem of life were not how
-to secure, as quick as possible, all the material good necessary for
-living, in order to leave the kind free for all its higher functions of
-self-development and discipline. As if money were not a mere expression
-of the extent to which a man has subordinated the forces of the world
-to his own use,--a thing, therefore, which naturally comes quicker to a
-generation which has taken all the great atmospheric and imponderable
-couriers into its service!
-
-The true use of ancestors is not slavish; we do not want them for
-authority, but for solace. If my grandfather could come back, he
-certainly would be too much of a gentleman to sit down on my hat
-or put his feet on my piano; and how much less would he crush my
-convictions or trample on my opinions! He would be equally too
-much of a business-man to interfere in the responsibilities of any
-practical course I might take, when he had not looked into the
-books of the concern, taken account of its stock, or consulted the
-world's market-list for an entire generation. He would do what any
-man would be proud to have his grandfather do,--take the easiest
-and most distinguished chair at the fireside, and tell us night by
-night, the story of his life. What roars of laughter would applaud
-his recollection of jokes uttered by some playmate of his boyhood.
-They would seem so droll to us at the distance of a hundred years,
-though a contemporary might have uttered them without raising a smile
-on our faces. What mingling of tears and laughter would there be when
-he related some simple little family drama,--its pathos depending on
-incidents as slender as the death of Auld Robin Gray's cows, but like
-the wonderful song, in which those animals have part interest, going
-unerringly to the fountains of the human heart! How would we double
-up our fists, how red would we grow in the face when he told us, in
-the most unadorned, dispassionate way, about the cruel creditor who
-foreclosed a mortgage on him and turned him and our grandmother into
-the street, just after the birth of their first child, our father; and
-when he came to the passage where the kind friend steps in and says,
-"here are five hundred dollars,--pay me when you are able," how many
-girls there would be sobbing, and men violently blowing their noses!
-If we had belonged to the period of the foreclosure and been next-door
-neighbors to the mortgagor, the thing might have impressed us simply
-as the spectacle of a young couple with a baby who couldn't meet their
-quarterly payments, and were obliged to curtail their style of living.
-The thing still happens, and that is the way we look at it. But when
-grandpapa relates it, nothing in the domestic line we ever saw upon the
-stage seems half so touching. The littlest school-boy feels a roseate
-fascination hovering around the dogs that went after squirrels with
-that venerable man when he wore the roundabout of his far-off period;
-there is glamour about the mere fact that then, as now, there were
-dogs, and there were squirrels; and as the grandchild hears of the
-boughs which hung so full, the crisp leaves which crackled so frostily
-those many, many falls ago--a strange delight comes over him, and he
-seems to be going out chestnutting in the morning of the world.
-
-What we want of one, we want of all the grandfathers of the
-race,--their story. Their value is that they take the experience of
-human life, and hold it a sufficient distance from us to be judged
-in its true proportions. That experience in all ages is a solemn and
-a beautiful, a perilous, yet a glorious thing. We are too near the
-picture to appreciate it, as it appears in our own day, though all its
-grand motives are the same. We rub our noses against the nobilities
-and cannot see them. The foreground weed is more conspicuous than the
-background mountain. When the grandfathers carry it from us, and hang
-it on the wall of that calm gallery where no confusing cross-lights
-of selfish interest any longer interfere, the shadows fall into their
-proper places, the symbolisms of the piece are manifest, and above
-all minor hillocks, above all clouds of storm, unconscious of its
-earthquake struggles and its glacier scars, Human Nature stands an
-eternal unity, its peak in a clear heaven full of stars. We recognize
-that unity and all things become possible to us, for thereby even the
-commonest living is glorified.
-
-
-
-
-AT EVE.
-
-
-
-
-AT EVE.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-"It is almost time for John to come home, I guess," and the young wife
-rose from her sewing and put the tea-kettle over the bright fire on
-the clean-swept hearth. Then she pulled the table out into the middle
-of the floor, right to the spot where she knew the setting sun would
-soon shine through the latticed window; for John loved to see the light
-play upon the homely cups and saucers, and pewter spoons; he said it
-reminded him of the fairy stories, where they ate off gold dishes. She
-went about her work swiftly, but very quietly. Once there had been a
-time when the little cottage rang early and late with the sound of her
-glad voice. But then a pair of little feet crept over the floor, and a
-tiny figure had raised itself up by the very table whose cloth was now
-so smooth and unruffled by the small awkward hands.
-
-When Margery had put the golden butter, the jug of cream, and the slice
-of sweet honey on the table, she went to the door to look for John. A
-narrow path, skirted on one side by waving corn-fields, on the other
-by pastures and orchards, stretched from the cottage down to the
-broader road that led to the village. The sun was already low in the
-sky, and threw across the path the shadow of the old apple-tree that
-stood beside the house. Margery remembered how full of pink and white
-blossoms the tree had been that spring when she first came here as
-John's bride, and how they showered down like snow, while now a ripe
-apple occasionally dropped from the branches with a heavy plump.
-
-"Here comes John at last," she said in a low voice, as she saw him
-approaching from the village. He was yet a considerable distance off,
-but Margery's bright eyes discerned that he was not alone. Beside
-him walked a girl, whom Margery had known already while they were
-both children. Mary was called handsome by the village lads; but she
-was poor, and she and her father helped to do field work, on the
-neighboring farms, in the busiest seasons of the year.
-
-As she and John advanced, Margery noticed that they seemed engaged in
-earnest conversation. Then John stood still and gave her his hand. The
-girl seized it eagerly and put it to her lips, and looking up at him
-once, turned around and walked back to the village, while John hastened
-on with longer steps.
-
-Margery's lips quivered. She did not wait for John at the door, but
-turned back into the house, and was busied at the hearth when he came
-in.
-
-"Well, wify, how goes it this evening?" he asked in his cheery voice,
-which always reminded Margery of the time when he used to add, "And how
-is my little pet darlint?" and pick the baby up from the floor. The
-tones of his voice had grown almost kinder and more cheerful since, if
-that were possible, though he always gazed around the room with a vague
-kind of look, as if he half-expected to see the baby toddle up to him
-from some corner.
-
-"Thank you, John, all goes as well as usual. You are late to-night."
-
-"Yes, there was something to detain me," he said, as he took down the
-tin-basin and filled it with water, to wash his sunburnt face and
-hands. A shadow flitted over Margery's face, but it was gone again
-when they sat down to table. It was still light enough to see without
-a candle, though the golden sunbeams John loved so much had faded long
-ago. He talked cheerily of the crops, and of harvest-time, and of the
-excellent prospects for the coming winter. There was no occasion for
-Margery to say much, and she was glad of it.
-
-Then she quickly cleared the table, and John sat down by the hearth,
-lighted his pipe, and laid his evening paper across his knee to be read
-afterwards by candle-light. While Margery washed the dishes there was
-no sound in the room but the clatter of the cups and spoons, and the
-monotonous ticking of the old-fashioned clock in the corner. Margery
-sometimes glanced over at John, who sat smoking and looking into the
-fire. At last he got up, lit the candle, and, going up to Margery,
-he asked, "What's the matter, Margery? You are uncommonly silent
-to-night."
-
-She stopped in her work, and hung the towel over her arm.
-
-"John," she said, looking straight at him, with a strange light in her
-brown eyes, and her face rather pale, "I want to go home."
-
-An expression half of pain, half of astonishment, came into John's
-honest face. He too was a shade paler, and the candle trembled a little
-in his hand as he asked,--
-
-"Is the house too lonely again, Margery? You did say you wanted to go
-home for a spell, after, after--but I thought you had got contented
-again."
-
-She had turned away from him as she answered,--
-
-"Yes, John, the house is lonely again. I see the little hands on all
-the chairs, and hear the little feet crawling over the floor;" but
-there was something of coldness in her tone, very unlike the pleading
-voice in which she had once before made the same request.
-
-"Well, Margery," he went on, after a pause, going to the table and
-putting the candle upon it, "if you think it will ease your heart to go
-and see the old folks a little while, I am willing you should."
-
-He never spoke of the utter loneliness that fell upon him at the
-thought of her going away, and how to him, too, the dim room was full
-of the golden hair and the blue eyes of his child.
-
-She said nothing.
-
-"When will you come back, Margery?" he asked, after another pause.
-
-"I don't know, John."
-
-"When do you think of going?"
-
-"On Monday morning, if you can spare the horse to take me over."
-
-"I think I can, Margery; but I shall be sorry to lose my little wify so
-soon," he could not help saying, as he laid his rough hand on her hair,
-with so soft a touch that the tears started to her eyes.
-
-"I shall ask Mary to come here and keep house for you, while I am
-away," she said. "Mary is used to our ways, and can do for you very
-well."
-
-"Mary?" asked John, "I reckon she will be busy enough at harvest-time.
-I need nobody when you are gone. I can live single again," with a half
-smile; "but just as you think, Margery."
-
-Nothing more was said on the subject. Margery took up her sewing, and
-John his paper. But he did not read very attentively that evening, but
-often stopped and looked long and intently at Margery, who kept her
-eyes steadily on the busy needle that was flying to and fro in her
-fingers. It was a Saturday, and John tired with a week's hard labor.
-So the fire was raked for the night, the old clock wound up, and the
-little kitchen soon dark and silent.
-
-Next morning Margery awoke bright and early. So early indeed, that
-through the open window of the bedroom she could see the pink clouds
-floating in the sky, and felt the cool wind that always goes before the
-rising of the sun. The swallows under the roof were just waking up,
-and beginning to twitter half-dreamily. With her hands folded under
-her head, Margery lay musing for a long while. Somehow her whole life
-passed before her on this still, holy Sunday morning. She remembered
-when she used to play barefoot in the little brook or sit on warm
-summer afternoons on the straight-rowed wooden benches of the village
-school. How the years had sped by like a single day, and she was a
-grown young girl. Then John came and courted her, and then--. The sun
-had come up, and played in bright lights over the ceiling, while on the
-floor quivered the shadows of the rose-leaves from outside before the
-window. The church-bell in the village began to ring. Margery listened
-to the sounds, as they came borne on the soft breeze, across the waving
-corn-fields. She looked out at the blue sky and thought of heaven, and
-the blessed angels singing and rejoicing there. She thought of her
-child, and of John, and of herself. A mingled feeling of joy and pain,
-of calm and unrest, crept into her heart. She felt the tears rising
-to her eyes again, but she would not let them. She sprang up, dressed
-hastily, and went softly downstairs, while John slept heavily on.
-
-As Margery entered the kitchen, the cat got up from her rug, stretched
-her legs and yawned, and then came forward to be petted. On the next
-Sunday, Mary would probably be here to give pussy her milk, and stroke
-her soft, glossy back. Margery threw open the door to let in the
-beautiful fresh morning air. The dew lay sparkling on the grass and
-flowers. Down there on the road was the spot where John and Mary had
-parted last night. Margery turned away and shut the door again. Then
-she bestirred herself to get breakfast.
-
-When John came down to it, Margery thought his step sounded heavier
-than she had ever heard it before.
-
-"Will you go to church this morning, Margery?" he asked, when the
-simple meal was over.
-
-"No, John, I guess not."
-
-"Well, Margery, I am going. I will come home as soon as service is
-over; but I think it will do me good."
-
-"John, will you promise me to"----
-
-"What, Margery?"
-
-"This afternoon, after I have got ready to go, will you come once more
-with me to the--the grave?"
-
-"Yes, Margery, yes."
-
-She helped him on with his best coat, brought him the prayer-book, and
-then watched him from the window as he walked down the road with slow
-steps.
-
-Margery wondered what could be the matter with herself that morning.
-She felt so tired that her feet almost refused to carry her. A hundred
-times in her simple household duties, she paused to take breath,
-and sat down to rest so often, that John came home from church and
-to dinner, almost before it was ready. He praised the cookery; but
-the dishes were taken almost untouched off the table again, and when
-everything was cleared away, Margery said,--
-
-"I must go upstairs now, John, to get ready. I want to take some of my
-clothes with me."
-
-He sat on the doorstep, holding his pipe, which had gone out, between
-his fingers, and only nodded his head, and said nothing. Margery went
-up to the bedroom, and began to open closets and drawers, and pack
-articles of clothing into a small trunk. At last she unlocked the great
-old bureau, and took out a pile of tiny dresses and aprons, a tin cup,
-and a few bright marbles, and stowed them carefully away in the trunk.
-A pair of small, worn-out leather shoes, turned up at the toes, stood
-in the drawer yet. Should she carry both these away, too? No, she
-thought, as she brushed away the tears that had fallen upon it, one she
-had better leave John. She put it resolutely back, locked the drawer,
-and laid the key on the top of the bureau. Now there was nothing more
-to be done. She looked around the room. Yes, that was to be readied up
-a little, so that John might not miss her too much for the first day or
-two. So she polished the chairs and the bureau, and carefully dusted
-the mantlepiece, with the red and white china dog and the kneeling
-china angel that stood there. Then she herself was to be dressed; she
-had almost forgotten that altogether. She opened her trunk once more,
-and took out the dress John loved best to see her in.
-
-Several hours had slipped by while she was thus employed, and now the
-village-clock struck five. She hastened down. John still sat on the
-doorstep where she had left him.
-
-"John, dear, I did not think it was so late. It is time to go to the
-graveyard. Are you ready to come?"
-
-He looked up as if he had been dreaming, but rose and said, "Yes,
-Margery."
-
-He shut the house-door, and they turned into a path to the rear of the
-cottage. For some distance this road, too, was skirted on both sides
-by fields of ripened corn. John passed his hand thoughtlessly over the
-heavy ears, and now and then pulled one up, and swung it round in the
-air. Neither of them spoke, and for a long while there was no other
-sound but the rustle of their steps.
-
-The path at length turned aside and led to a high plateau that
-overlooked the valley, in which deep shadows were already beginning to
-fall. Blue mists crept over the foot of the mountains, while their tops
-were yet lit up by the sun. The smoke from the chimneys rose up into
-the air, and the shouts of the village children, playing on the meadow,
-faintly came up from below. There under that great oak, the only tree
-for some distance around, John had first asked Margery to be his wife.
-Involuntarily the steps of both faltered as they drew near the spot,
-but neither stopped. Margery glanced up at John; she could not see his
-face, for his head was turned, and he seemed to be attentively looking
-at something down in the valley.
-
-Another turn in the road, and the small cemetery, with the white stones
-that gleamed between the dark cypress-trees, rose up before them. In
-silence they found their way to the little grave. John seated himself,
-without a word, on a mound opposite, Margery knelt down and pulled
-some dried leaves off the rose-tree she had planted, and bound the ivy
-further up on the white marble cross. She felt that John watched her,
-but did not look up at him. Though she tried hard to keep them back,
-the tears would fill her eyes again and again, so that she could hardly
-see to pluck up the few weeds that had grown among the grass. When
-that was completed, she covered her face with her hands and tried to
-pray. She wanted to ask that John might be happy while she was away,
-and that,--but her head swam round, and she found no words. She raised
-her eyes, and glanced at John through her fingers. He sat with his back
-toward her now, but she saw that his great, strong frame trembled with
-half-suppressed sobs.
-
-"O John!" she cried, bursting into tears. She only noticed yet that he
-suddenly turned around, and then closed her eyes, as he clasped her in
-his arms. For a time she heard nothing but the sound of her own low
-weeping, and the throbbing of John's heart. Suddenly she looked up, and
-said,--
-
-"O John, dear, dear John, please, please forgive me!"
-
-"Margery," he answered, in as firm a tone as he could command, "don't
-talk so."
-
-"Oh, but, John, I did not want to go away only because the house was so
-lonely, but because,--because,"--
-
-"Because what, Margery?" he asked, astonished.
-
-"O John, because I--I thought you loved Mary better than me, because I
-saw you together so many times in the last weeks; and she kissed your
-hand last night."
-
-John's clasp about Margery relaxed, and his arms sank down by his side.
-His tears were dried now, and his earnest blue eyes fixed upon Margery
-with a dumb, half-unconscious expression of surprise and pain. She
-could not bear the look, and covered her face with her hands again.
-
-"No, Margery," he said, slowly, "I only saw Mary because,"--
-
-Margery raised her head.
-
-"John, dear John, don't talk about it! I don't believe it any more! I
-know I was a bad, foolish wife! Only love me again, and forgive me,
-dear, dear John! Oh, I don't believe it any more!" and she took his
-right hand and kissed it, as Mary had done.
-
-"Wont you forgive me, John? I will never, never go away from you," she
-pleaded, while the tears streamed down her face.
-
-He took her in his arms once more, and kissed her lips.
-
-The red evening sunlight had crept away from the little grave, and the
-dusk was fast gathering about it. Margery bent down and kissed the
-white marble cross; then they turned their steps homeward, Margery
-holding John's hand like a child.
-
-"I must unpack my clothes again to-night," she said, after a while. "I
-have all the baby's little things in my trunk, but, John, I was going
-to leave you one of the little shoes."
-
-She felt her hand clasped closer in his.
-
-"Margery," he said then, "I think I had better tell you about Mary."
-
-"John, dear John, didn't I tell you I don't believe that any more," she
-answered, with another pleading look.
-
-"No Margery, it is not that, but I guess you might help us. You never
-knew that Mary's father is getting very bad in the way of drinking.
-Since his house was burnt down, and he lost his property, he has been
-going on in that way. Mary takes it dreadful hard, and wont let the
-news get about, if she can help it. She thinks so much of you, and she
-says you used to like her father so well, that she wouldn't have you
-know for almost any money. So I promised not to tell you. She has come
-to me many and many a time, crying, and begging me to help her. She
-works as hard as she can, but her father takes all she gets; so they
-are very poor. When you saw us yesterday, I had given her money to pay
-their rent. She wants to raise money enough to take him to the Asylum,
-because there he may be cured. I promised her to get him some decent
-clothes."
-
-"O John, I will sew them. Poor Mary! and you needn't tell her who sewed
-them."
-
-"That's right, Margery!"
-
-They had reached the house by this time, and John opened the door. The
-kettle was singing over the hearth, and the bright tin pans against the
-wall shone in the firelight. On the doorstep Margery turned around,
-and, throwing her arms around John's neck, said softly,--
-
-"John, I am glad I am going to stay."
-
-When they had entered, John lit the candle, and while Margery was
-getting supper, took up yesterday's unfinished paper. He read very
-attentively this evening, but suddenly stopped, and Margery saw the
-paper tremble in his hand. Then he rose, gave it to her, and said, in a
-husky voice,--
-
-"Read that, Margery."
-
-Margery read. Then the paper dropped, and with a fresh burst of tears
-she once more threw her arms about John's neck.
-
-In one corner of the paper that lay neglected on the floor was the
-poem:--
-
- "As through the land at eve we went,
- And plucked the ripened ears,
- We fell out, my wife and I,
- Oh, we fell out, I know not why,
- And kissed again with tears.
-
- "For when we came where lies the child
- We lost in other years;
- There above the little grave,
- Oh, there above the little grave,
- We kissed again with tears."
-
-
-
-
-BROKEN IDOLS.
-
-
-
-
-BROKEN IDOLS.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-Not long since, it was my misfortune to be inveigled into attending
-one of the semi-periodical "Exhibitions" of the ---- Institute, a
-seminary for young ladies. I say it was my misfortune, because, to
-please my better half, I abandoned the joys of my fireside, my book,
-and my slippers, to stand for two hours by an open window, with a cold
-draft blowing on my back; hearing, now and then, a few words of the
-sentimental and "goody" platitudes of which the young ladies' essays
-were composed,--the reading of which was interspersed with pyrotechnic
-performances on the piano-forte, which the programme was kind enough to
-inform me were "The Soldiers' Chorus from Faust," "Duette from Norma,"
-etc. I was fortunate in having a programme to enlighten me.
-
-There was nothing remarkable about the "Exhibition," except that, in
-the dozen essays which were read, all the verses of Longfellow's "Psalm
-of Life" were quoted, and that through them all there ran a dismal
-monotone of morbid sentiment. One young lady, who had a beautiful
-healthy bloom on her cheeks and wore quite a quantity of comfortable
-and elegant clothing, uttered a very touching wail over her buried
-hopes, her vanished joys, and the mockery of this hollow-hearted
-world. She stated that all that's brightest must fade,--that "this
-world is all a fleeting show, for man's illusion given,"--that "our
-hearts, though stout and brave, still, like muffled drums, are beating
-funeral marches to the grave;" and much more of the same sort. She was
-impressed with the fact that Time is an iconoclast,--which last word
-seemed to strike her as one of the finest in the dictionary.
-
-This is very true. Time does smash our idols continually; but should we
-lament and sing dirges and make ourselves generally uncomfortable on
-that account? Because the geese that we thought swans have turned out
-to be only geese after all, should we go into mourning for our "buried
-hopes," and "vanished joys"? That we outgrow our youthful fancies is no
-more a cause for sentimental regret than that we outgrow our youthful
-jackets. For myself, I can look upon the ashes of my early loves,--and
-their name was legion,--with as few tears as I bestow upon the ragged
-remnants of my early trousers.
-
-A number of years ago my young heart's fresh affections were lavished
-upon the bright-eyed girl whose father kept a little candy-shop and
-bakery across the way, and who with her own fair hands often gave me
-striped sticks of stomach-ache for my pennies, and sometimes, when I
-was penniless, sweetened my lot with a few peppermint drops, telling
-me to pay for them when I came into my fortune. Many a time have I
-stood by the lighted window of the little shop, heedless of the bell
-that summoned me to my nightly bread and milk, watching her trip about
-among the jars of candy and barrels of nuts, tying up parcels and
-making change with a grace that seemed unsurpassable. But there was a
-red-haired, scorbutic youth who drove the baker's bread-cart, and also
-drove me to distraction. He was always flinging my youth into my face
-and asking if my mother was aware of my whereabouts. At last a grave
-suspicion forced itself upon my mind that Lizzie looked upon him with
-favor and made light of my juvenile demonstrations. Time proved that my
-suspicion was well founded; for one day a carriage stopped in front of
-the little shop, out of which sprang the scorbutic young man, clad in
-unusually fine raiment, including a gorgeous yellow vest and immaculate
-white gloves. He was followed by a solemn-looking person, who wore a
-very black coat and a very white choker. They passed through the shop
-and went up the back stairs. After a while they returned, and with
-them Lizzie, all smiles and blushes and ribbons and a bewitching pink
-bonnet. The carriage was driven away and my idol was smashed.
-
-Straightway I builded me another, which was in turn broken, and
-followed by another and another. Sometimes it was the dashing
-highwayman, whose life and brilliant exploits I furtively made myself
-acquainted with, out in the wood-house, and whose picture, in profuse
-curls, enormous jack-boots, and immense expanse of coat-flap, graced
-the yellow covers of the Claude Duval series of novels. Anon it was
-the great Napoleon seated so proudly,--in cheap lithograph,--upon the
-extreme hind-quarters of his fiery charger, and pointing with aspiring
-hand toward the snowy Alps, that I set up and worshipped.
-
-Nor was I free from relapses of the tender passion. About the time that
-my first love, Lizzie, was putting the third of her red-haired progeny
-into pantaloons, and torturing his fiery elf-locks into an unsightly
-"roach," and when I was a freshman in college, I became convinced that
-the light of my life shone from a certain window in Miss Peesley's
-boarding-school; for behind that window a comely maiden, with golden
-hair and eyes of heavenly blue, slept and studied and ate sweetmeats
-and read Moore's melodies. My heart was hers entirely, as was also
-my spare coin,--for we had specie in those days,--which I converted
-into valentines and assorted candies and "The Language of Flowers,"
-for her especial use and behoof. I worshipped her at church, as she
-sat, with a bevy of other girls, aloft in the gallery, the entrance to
-which was guarded by the ancient and incorruptible damsel who taught
-algebra in Miss Peesley's academy, and who also marshalled the young
-ladies to and from church, keeping them under her eye, and putting to
-rout any audacious youth who endeavored to walk with one of them. It
-was for her that I bought a flute, and with much difficulty so far
-mastered it as to play "Sweet Home" and "What fairy-like music,"--in
-performing which, standing in the snow under her window at midnight's
-witching hour, I caught a terrible cold, besides being threatened
-with arrest by a low-bred policeman for making an unseemly noise in
-the night-time,--as if I were a calliope. It was to bow to her that I
-neglected to split and carry in my Saturday's wood, and stood on the
-street-corner all the afternoon, for which I was soundly rated at night
-by my venerable father, who also improved the occasion by repeating his
-regular lecture upon my inattentions to study and general neglect of
-duty.
-
-So great was my infatuation that I manifested an unheard-of anxiety
-about the details of my dress. I even went so far as to attend the
-Friday evening "Receptions" at the academy, where Miss Peesley
-graciously gave the young gentlemen an opportunity to see and converse
-with the young ladies, under her own supervision. It was a dismal
-business,--sitting bolt upright in a straight-backed, hair-cushioned
-chair, under the gaze of Miss P. and her staff, smiling foolishly at
-some dreary, pointless sally of Miss Van Tuyl's, who taught rhetoric
-and was remarkably sprightly for one of her years,--crossing and
-uncrossing my legs uneasily, and endeavoring to persuade myself that I
-was "enjoying the evening." Nevertheless, I made desperate attempts to
-be happy even under these adverse circumstances.
-
-And what was my reward?
-
-There came to college a young man who was reputed to be a poet. He wore
-his hair long and parted in the middle, was addicted to broad Byronic
-collars, could take very pretty and pensive attitudes, and was an adept
-in the art of leaning his head abstractedly upon his hand. He at once
-became that terrible thing among the ladies, a lion. And he was a very
-impudent lion. Regardless of my claims and feelings, he sent to her,
-whom I had fondly called mine own, an acrostic valentine of his own
-composition, taking care that she should know from whom it came. The
-result was that I was--as we Western people would term it--"flopped!"
-
-And so another idol was smashed.
-
-Then came a reaction. I scorned the sex and sought balm for my wounded
-feelings in the worst pages of Byron.
-
-Having by this time attained the sophomoric dignity, I discovered
-that the end and aim of existence was to be _fast_,--that the divine
-significance of life consisted in drinking villanous whiskey "on the
-sly," and proclaiming the fact by eating cardamom seeds; in stealing
-gates and the clapper of the chapel bell; in devouring half-cooked
-chickens, purloined from professional coops; in hazing freshmen; in
-playing euchre for "ten cents a corner;" and in parading the streets at
-midnight, singing "Landlord, fill the flowing bowl," and vociferously
-urging some one to "rip and slap and set 'em up ag'in, all on a
-summer's day." I smoked vile Scarfalatti tobacco in a huge Dutch pipe,
-wore a blue coat with brass buttons, a shocking hat, and my trousers
-tucked into my boots,--which after my great disappointment befell
-me I ceased to black with any degree of regularity,--and regulated
-my language according to a certain slangy work called "Yale College
-Scrapes."
-
-I am inclined to look upon these youthful pranks not as unpardonable
-sins, though I freely admit their utter folly, but as the vagaries of
-immature _genius_,--if I may say so,--scorning to walk decorously,
-because other people do, struggling to throw off the fetters of
-conventionality, burning to distinguish itself in some new and
-original way, striking out from the beaten paths,--to repent of it
-afterward. For it does not take many years to teach one that the
-beaten paths are the safest; and I have often wished that I had had a
-tithe of the application and assiduity of "Old Sobriety," as we rapid
-youngsters called the Nestor of the class, who plodded on from morn
-till dewy eve and far into the night, and quietly carried off the
-honors from the brilliant geniuses, who wore flash neckties and shone
-at free-and-easys. But what thoughtless college-boy does not prefer
-worshipping at the shrine of the fast goddess to treading the straight
-and safe paths of propriety? It takes time and one or two private
-interviews with a committee of the Faculty to rid him of his delusion.
-
-I have been making these confessions to show that I, too, as well as
-the handsome and healthy young lady whose essay furnishes my text,
-have had some joys that are vanished and some hopes that are buried.
-
-But I do not therefore find that this world is a dark and dreary
-desert. I do not rail at life as a hollow mockery, nor long to lay my
-weary head upon the lap of earth. On the contrary, the longer I live
-in this world, the better I like it. It is a jolly old world, after
-all; and, though Time is an iconoclast and does smash our idols with a
-ruthless hand, it is only to purify our vision; and, as the fragments
-tumble and the dust settles, we see the true, the beautiful, and the
-joyous in life more clearly. I know that life has its disappointments
-and crosses; but I think that it is too short for sentimental
-lamentation over them. In homely phrase, "There is no use in crying
-over spilt milk." If Dame Fortune frowns, laugh her in the face, and,
-with a light heart and brave spirit, woo her again, and you will surely
-win her smile. I am as fully impressed as any one with the fact that
-this world is not our permanent abiding-place; but that is no reason
-why we should underrate, abuse, and malign it. There is such a thing
-as being too other-worldly. The grand truths and beautiful teachings
-of God's gospel do not conflict with the grandeur, the beauty, and the
-mystery of God's handiwork, the world; and we can no more afford to
-despise and dispense with the one than with the other. And it seems to
-me that we cannot better prepare for enjoying the life hereafter than
-by a healthy, hearty, rational enjoyment of the one that is here.
-
-Do not, then, O youth, sit down and grow sentimental over your
-fancied griefs. Do not waste your time in shedding weak tears over
-the fragments of your broken idols. Kick the rubbish aside, and go on
-your way, with head erect and heart open to the sweet influences of
-this bright and beautiful world, and you cannot fail to find it not a
-"Piljin's Projiss of a Wale," but
-
- "A sunshiny world, full of laughter and leisure."
-
-In worthy action and healthy enjoyment you will find a cure for all
-your imaginary woes and all your maudlin fine feelings.
-
-In two little lines lies the clue to an honorable and happy life:--
-
- "Thou shalt find, by _hearty striving_ only
- And _truly loving_, thou canst truly live."
-
-
-
-
-DR. HUGER'S INTENTION.
-
-
-
-
-DR. HUGER'S INTENTION.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-Dr. Huger was thirty years old when he deliberately resolved to be
-in love,--I cannot say "fall in love" of anything so matter-of-fact
-and well-considered. He made up his mind that marriage was a good
-thing,--that he was old enough to marry,--finally, that he _would_
-marry. Then he decided, with equal deliberation, on the qualifications
-necessary in the lady, and began to look about him to find her. She
-must be a blonde. Above all things else, he must have her gentle and
-trustful; and he believed that gentleness and trustfulness inhered in
-the blue-eyed, fair-haired type of womanhood. She must be appreciative,
-but not strong-minded,--well-bred, with a certain lady-like
-perfectness, which could not be criticised, and yet which would always
-save her from being conspicuous. Not for the world would he have any
-new-fangled woman's-rights notions about her.
-
-You might fancy it would be a somewhat difficult matter for him to
-find precisely the realization of this ideal; but here fate befriended
-him,--fate, who seemed to have taken Dr. Huger under her especial
-charge, and had been very kind to him all his life. He looked out of
-his window, after he had come to the resolution heretofore recorded,
-and saw Amy Minturn tripping across the village green.
-
-Amy was eighteen,--blonde, blue-eyed, innocent, well-bred, unpresuming,
-without ambition, and without originality. She was very lovely in her
-own quiet, tea-rose style. Her position was satisfactory; for her
-father, Judge Minturn, was a man of mark in Windham, and one of Dr.
-Huger's warmest friends. So, having decided that here was an embodiment
-of all his "must-haves," the doctor went over that evening to call
-at the Minturn mansion. Not that the call in itself was an unusual
-occurrence. He went there often; but hitherto his conversation had been
-principally directed to the judge, and to-night there was a noticeable
-change.
-
-Amy was looking her loveliest, in her diaphanous muslin robes, with
-blue ribbons at her throat, and in her soft light hair. Dr. Huger
-wondered that he had never before noticed the pearly tints of her
-complexion, the deep lustrous blue of her eyes, the dainty, flower-like
-grace of her words and ways. He talked to her, and watched the changing
-color in her cheeks, and her rippling smiles, until he began to
-think the falling in love, to which he had so deliberately addressed
-himself, the easiest and pleasantest thing in the world. She had the
-prettiest little air of propriety,--half prudish, and half coquettish.
-She received his attentions with a shy grace that was irresistibly
-tempting.
-
-He went often to Judge Minturn's after that--not _too_ often, for he
-did not wish to startle his pretty Amy by attentions too sudden or too
-overpowering; and, indeed, there was nothing in the gentle attraction
-by which she drew him to hurry him into any insane forgetfulness of his
-customary moderation. But he liked and approved her more and more. He
-made up his mind to give her a little longer time in which to become
-familiar with him, and then to ask her to be his wife.
-
-When he had reached this determination, he was sent for, one August
-day, to see a new patient,--a certain Miss Colchester. He was thinking
-about Amy as he went along,--laughing at the foolish old notion
-concerning the course of true love; for what could run any smoother, he
-asked himself, than his had? It seemed to him as simple and pretty as
-an idyl,--the "Miller's Daughter" New Englandized.
-
- "Oh, that I were beside her now!
- Oh, will she answer if I call?
- Oh, would she give me vow for vow,--
- Sweet Amy,--if I told her all?"
-
-he hummed, half unconsciously, as he walked on.
-
-Soon he came in sight of Bock Cottage, the place to which he was going,
-and began thereupon to speculate about Miss Colchester. Of course
-she was one of the summer boarders of whom Rock Cottage was full.
-He wondered whether she were young or old,--whether he should like
-her,--whether she would be good pay;--and by this time, he had rung
-the bell, and was inquiring for her of the tidy girl who answered his
-summons.
-
-He was shown into a little parlor on the first floor, and, pausing a
-moment at the door, he looked at his patient. A very beautiful woman,
-he said to himself, but just such an one as he did not like. She sat
-in a low chair, her back to the window and her face turned toward him.
-She wore a simple white-cambric wrapper. Her beauty had no external
-adornment whatever. It shone upon him startlingly and unexpectedly, as
-if you should open a closet, where you were prepared to find an old
-family portrait of some stiff Puritan grandmother, and be confronted,
-instead, by one of Murillo's Spanish women, passionate and splendid.
-For Miss Colchester was not unlike those Murillo-painted beauties. She
-had a clear, dark skin, through which the changeful color glowed as
-if her cheeks were transparent; dark, heavily-falling hair; low brow;
-great, passionate, slumbrous eyes; proud, straight features. There was
-nothing like a New-England woman about her. That was Dr. Huger's first
-thought; and she read it, either through some subtle clairvoyant power,
-or, a simpler solution, because she knew that every one, who saw her
-under these cool skies of the temperate zone, would naturally think
-that thought first. Her full, ripe lips parted in a singular smile, as
-she said,--
-
-"You are thinking that I am not of the North. You are right. I was born
-in New Orleans. I am a Creole of the Creoles. I don't like the people
-here. I sent for you because you were German, at least by descent."
-
-"How did you know it?"
-
-It was an abrupt question for a man of the doctor's habitual grave
-courtesy; but she seemed to him unique, and it was impossible to
-maintain his old equipoise in her presence. She had read his thought
-like a witch. Was there something uncanny about her?
-
-"How did I know you were German?" She smiled. "Because your name
-suggested the idea, and then I saw you in the street, and your features
-indorsed the hint your name had given me."
-
-"I am glad that anything should have made you think of me."
-
-It was one of the conventional platitudes, of which self-complacent
-men, like Dr. Huger, keep a stock on hand for their lady friends. Miss
-Colchester saw its poverty, and smiled at it, as she answered him,--
-
-"I think of every one with whom I come in contact; and I thought of
-you, especially, because I intended from the first, if there were a
-good physician here, to consult him."
-
-The doctor looked into her radiant face.
-
-"Is it possible that you are ill?"
-
-He had sat down beside her by this time, and taken her hand. It gave
-him a curious sensation as it lay quietly in his. He felt as if there
-were more life, more magnetism, in it than in any hand he had ever
-touched.
-
-"That _you_ must tell me," she said, quietly. "My heart feels
-strangely, sometimes; it beats too rapidly, I think, and sometimes very
-irregularly. I have lived too fast,--suffered and enjoyed too keenly.
-The poor machine is worn out, perhaps. I look to you to inform me
-whether I am in danger."
-
-"I must have my stethoscope. I will go for it. Are you sure you can
-bear the truth?"
-
-She smiled,--a cool smile touched with scorn.
-
-"I have not found life so sweet," she said, "that its loss will trouble
-me. I only want to know how long I am likely to have in which to do
-certain things. If you can tell me, I shall be satisfied."
-
-As Dr. Huger went home, he met Amy. Something in the sight of her
-fresh, blonde beauty, with its fulness of life and health, jarred on
-his mood. He bowed to her with a preoccupied air, and hurried on. When
-he went back to Rock Cottage, Miss Colchester was sitting just as he
-had left her. To sit long at a time in one motionless attitude was a
-peculiarity of hers. Her manner had always a singular composure, though
-her nature was impetuous.
-
-He placed over her heart the instrument he had brought, then listened a
-long time to its beating. He dreaded to tell her the story it revealed
-to him, and at last made up his mind to evade the responsibility. When
-he had come to this conclusion, he raised his head.
-
-"I do not feel willing," he said, "to pronounce an opinion. Let me send
-for a medical man who is older, who has had more experience."
-
-She raised her dark eyes, and looked full in his face.
-
-"You are afraid to tell me, after all I said? Will you not believe that
-I do not care to live? I shall send for no other physician. I look for
-the truth from your lips. You find my heart greatly enlarged?"
-
-"I told you I did not like to trust my own judgment; but that _is_ my
-opinion."
-
-"And if you are right I shall be likely to live--how long?"
-
-"Possibly for years. Probably for a few months. There is no help,--I
-mean, no cure. If you suffer much pain, that can be eased, perhaps."
-
-Miss Colchester was silent a few moments. Dr. Huger could see no change
-in her face, though he watched her closely. The color neither left
-her cheeks or deepened in them. He did not see so much as an eyelash
-quiver. At last she spoke,--
-
-"You have been truly kind, and I thank you. I believe I am glad of
-your tidings. I think I shall stay here in Windham till the last. I
-would like one autumn among these grand old woods and hills. I have
-nothing to call me away. I can do all which I have to do by letter,
-and my most faithful friend on earth is my quadroon maid who is here
-with me. She will be my nurse, if I need nursing. And you will be my
-physician,--will you not?"
-
-"I will when I can help you. At other times, may I not be your friend,
-and as such come to see you as often as I can?"
-
-"Just as often,--the oftener the better," she answered, with that
-smile which thrilled him so strangely every time he met it. "I shall
-always be glad to see you. Your visits will be a real charity; for,
-except Lisette, I am quite solitary."
-
-He understood by her manner that it was time to go, and took his leave.
-
-That night he walked over to Judge Minturn's. Amy was just as pretty as
-ever,--just as graceful and gentle and faultless in dress and manner.
-Why was it that he could not interest himself in her as heretofore?
-Had the salt lost its savor? His judgment endorsed her as it always
-had. She was precisely the kind of woman to make a man happy. That
-pure blonde beauty, with its tints of pearl and pink, was just what he
-wanted, always had wanted. Why was it that he was haunted all the time
-by eyes so different from those calm blue orbs of Amy's? He thought
-it was because his new patient's case had interested him so much in
-a medical point of view. He was tired, and he made it an excuse for
-shortening his call.
-
-He went home to sit and smoke and speculate again about Miss
-Colchester. He seemed to see her wonderful exotic face through the blue
-smoke-wreaths. Her words and ways came back to him. He had discovered
-so soon that _she_ was no gentle, yielding creature. She had power
-enough to make her conspicuous anywhere--piquant moods and manners
-of her own, which a man could find it hard to tame. He was glad,--or
-thought he was,--that such office had not fallen to his share,--that
-the woman he had resolved to marry was so unlike her; yet he could not
-banish the imperious face which haunted his fancy.
-
-The next day found him again at Rock Cottage; but he waited until
-afternoon, when all his other visits had been made. It was a warm day;
-and Miss Colchester was again in white, but in full fleecy robes, whose
-effect was very different from the simple cambric wrapper she had worn
-the day before. Ornaments of barbaric gold were in her ears, at her
-throat, and manacled her wrists. A single scarlet lily drooped low in
-her hair. She looked full of life,--strong, passionate, magnetic life.
-Was it possible that he had judged her case aright? Could death come to
-spoil this wonderful beauty in its prime?
-
-Their talk was not like that of physician and patient. It touched on
-many themes, and she illuminated each one with the quick brilliancy
-of her thought. He grew acquainted with her mind in the two hours he
-spent with her; but her history,--who she was,--whence she came,--why
-she was at Windham,--remained as mysterious as before. Her maid came in
-once or twice, and called her "Miss Pauline," and this one item of her
-first name was all that he knew about her more than he had discovered
-yesterday. He saw her,--a woman utterly different from the gentle,
-communicative, impressible, blue-eyed ideal he had always cherished,--a
-woman with whom, had she been in her full health, his reason would
-have pronounced it madness to fall in love. How much more would
-it be madness now, when he knew that she was going straight to her
-doom,--that when the summer came again, it would shine upon her grave!
-And yet it seemed as if the very hopelessness of any passion for her
-made her power over him more fatal.
-
-He went to see her day after day. He did not consciously neglect Amy
-Minturn, because he did not think about her at all. She was no more to
-him in those days than last year's roses, which had smelled so sweet
-to him in their prime. He was absorbed in Pauline Colchester--lived
-in her life. She accepted his devotion, simply because she did not
-understand it. If she had been in health, she would have known that
-this man loved her; but the knowledge of her coming fate must make all
-that impossible, she thought. So she accepted his friendship with a
-feeling of entire security; and, though she revealed to him no facts of
-her material life, admitted him to such close intimacy with her heart
-and soul as, under other circumstances, he might never have reached in
-a lifetime of acquaintance.
-
-And the nearer he drew to her the more insanely he loved her,--loved
-her, though he knew the fate which waited for her, the heart-break he
-was preparing for himself.
-
-At last he told her. He had meant to keep his secret until she died,
-but in spite of himself it came to his lips.
-
-In September it was,--one of those glorious autumn days when the year
-seems at flood-tide, full of a ripe glory, which thrills an imaginative
-temperament as does no tender verdure of spring, no bravery of summer.
-Pauline Colchester, sensitive to all such influences as few are, was
-electrified by it. Dr. Huger had never seen her so radiant, so full
-of vitality. It seemed to him impossible that she should die. If he
-had her for his own,--if he could make her happy,--could he not guard
-her from every shock or excitement, and keep her in such a charmed
-atmosphere of peace that the worn-out heart might last for many a year?
-
-It was the idlest of lover's dreams, the emptiest and most baseless of
-hopes, which he would have called any other man insane for cherishing.
-But he grasped at it eagerly, and, before he knew what he was doing, he
-had breathed out his longing at the feet of Miss Colchester.
-
-"Is it possible," she said, after a silent space, "that you could
-have loved me so well? That you would have absorbed into your own the
-poor remnant of my life, and cherished it to the end? I ought to be
-sorry for your sake; but how can I, when just such a love is what I
-have starved for all my life? I have no right to it now. I am Mrs.,
-not Miss, Colchester. I was Pauline Angereau before Ralph Colchester
-found me and married me. I had money and, I suppose, beauty; perhaps
-he coveted them both. He made me believe that he loved me with all his
-heart; and then, when I was once his wife, he began torturing me to
-death with his neglect and his cruelty. He was a bad man; and I don't
-believe there is a woman on earth strong enough to have saved him from
-himself. I bore everything, for two years, in silence. Then I found
-that it was killing me, and, in one of his frequent absences, I came
-away to die in peace. When it is all over, Lisette will write to him.
-He will have the fortune he longed for, without the encumbrance of
-which he tired so soon. You must not see me any more. Bound as I am,
-feeling what you feel, there would be sin in our meeting. And yet I
-shall die easier for knowing that, once in my life, I have been loved
-for myself alone."
-
-Then Dr. Huger rose to go. To-morrow, perhaps he could combat those
-scruples of hers; but to-day, there was no more to be said to this
-woman whom another man owned. To-morrow, he could tell better how
-nearly he could return to the quiet ways of friendship,--whether it
-would be possible for him to tend her, brother-like, to the last, as
-he had meant to do before he loved her. He took her hand a moment, and
-said, in a tone which he tried so hard to make quiet that it almost
-sounded cold,--
-
-"I must go now. I dare not stay and talk to you. I will come again
-to-morrow."
-
-"Yes, to-morrow."
-
-Her face kindled, as she spoke, with a strange light as of prophecy.
-What "to-morrow" meant to her he did not know. He turned away suddenly,
-for his heart was sore; and, as he went, he heard her say, speaking
-very low and tenderly,--
-
-"God bless you, Francis Huger."
-
-The next day he went again to Rock Cottage. He had fought his battle
-and conquered. He thought now that he could stay by her to the end,
-and speak no word, look no look, which should wrong her honor or his
-own. He asked for her at the door as usual; and they told him she had
-paid her bill that morning, and left. She had come, they said, no one
-knew from whence; and no one knew where she had gone. She had left no
-messages and given no address.
-
-Dr. Huger understood that this was something she had meant to keep
-secret from him of all others. Was he never to see her again? When she
-had said, "Yes, to-morrow," could she have meant the long to-morrow,
-when the night of death should be over? He turned away, making no sign
-of disappointment,--his sorrow dumb in his heart; and, as he went, her
-voice seemed again to follow him,--
-
-"God bless you, Francis Huger."
-
-For two months afterward, he went the round of his daily duties in
-a strange, absent, divided fashion. He neither forgot nor omitted
-anything; yet he saw as one who saw not, and heard with a hearing
-which conveyed to his inward sense no impression. _She_ was with him
-everywhere. All the time, he was living over the brief four weeks of
-their acquaintance, in which, it seemed to him, he had suffered and
-enjoyed more than in all the rest of his lifetime. Every day, every
-hour, he expected some message from her. He felt a sort of conviction
-that she would not die until he had seen her again. He thought, at
-last, that his summons to her side had come. He opened, one day, a
-letter directed in a hand with which he was not familiar. He read in
-it, with hurrying pulses, only these words:--
-
- "Madame Pauline Angereau Colchester is dead. I obey her wish in
- sending you these tidings."
-
- "LISETTE."
-
-From the letter had dropped, as he unfolded it, a long silky tress
-of dark hair. He picked it up, and it seemed to cling caressingly to
-his fingers. It was all he could ever have in this world of Pauline
-Colchester. Her "to-morrow" had come. His would come, too, by-and-by.
-What then? God alone knew whether his soul would ever find hers, when
-both should be immortal.
-
-Will he go back again some day to Amy Minturn? Who can tell? Men have
-done such things. It will depend on how weary the solitary way shall
-seem,--how much he may long for his own fireside. At any rate, he will
-never tell her the story of Pauline.
-
-
-
-
-THE MAN WHOSE LIFE WAS SAVED.
-
-
-
-
-THE MAN WHOSE LIFE WAS SAVED.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-I.
-
-On a pleasant, sunshiny afternoon of early summer, Mlle. Lisa sat
-knitting in the door-way of a white, shining house, fronting on a
-silent, remote street of a garrisoned town of France, not far distant
-from Paris. The street was narrow and badly paved with sharp, irregular
-stones, sloping gradually down to a point in the centre, which formed
-the gutter, and at night was feebly lighted by an oil-lamp suspended
-to a rope and stretched across the street at the corners. The general
-aspect of the place was not amusing, for the habitations were few
-and the passers-by fewer. Long rows of high, white-washed walls, the
-boundaries of gentlemen's gardens, garnished with broken glass and
-pots of cactus, gave a certain monotony to the Rue Arc en Ciel. The
-very blossoms of the fruit-trees and flowering-shrubs behind the
-white-washed walls, looked sleepily over their barriers, as they
-diffused the contagious languor of their odors along the silent
-white street. These drowsy influences, however, seemed in no ways to
-diminish the carolling propensities of Mlle. Lisa, or to abate in any
-particular the ardor of her knitting.
-
-Lisa Ledru was the daughter of the _proprietaire_ of No. 29,--a worthy
-woman who had toiled to sustain herself and an agreeable, sprightly
-husband, addicted to no vice save that of contented idleness, through
-many long, weary years, and had brought up her only child, Lisa, to
-a point of prettiness and usefulness, which compensated for past
-sacrifices, and promised well for the future.
-
-Madame Ledru's house had been for years the abode of _militaires_. She
-would occasionally condescend to the admission of a bourgeois, but this
-infringement of habit and inclination was but a condescension after
-all, and left her with a certain sense of degradation, when she exposed
-her stair-case, which had creaked so long under the thundering tread
-of martial heel and spur, to the mild, apologetic footstep of a man of
-peace. Mme. Ledru's principles were well-known and properly appreciated
-by the regiments in garrison, and her house never lacked inmates. Her
-reputation for discretion and adroitness, in bringing order out of the
-chaotic love affairs which perpetually entangled the impetuous sons
-of Mars, was established on the firmest basis. No lodger was ever "at
-home" to an importunate creditor, so long as madame's ample person
-could bar the passage to their entrance, and no _tête-à-tête_ of a
-tender nature was ever interrupted by the untimely appearance of a
-cherished mother or aunt, or, still worse, the jealous intrusion of a
-rival queen.
-
-The court-yard of Mme. Ledru's house presented a far more lively
-appearance than the street in which it stood. In the centre of
-the court stood a large, umbrageous tree, drooping over a stone
-watering-trough, which gave drink to the numerous horses in the
-stable-yard as well as to the chickens and barn-yard fowls, who
-cackled and prowled about in its vicinity, as they picked up their
-precarious living. At times their foraging-ground would be enriched
-by a shower of crumbs from a friendly window above, and rumor
-asserted that the gallant Colonel Victor de Villeport, hero of many
-campaigns, with the prestige of a wound or two, and a compensating
-glitter of decorations, had so far abandoned himself to the pastime
-of chicken-feeding as to invent new methods of beguiling the monotony
-of the entertainment,--such as tying morsels of bread to a string
-and dancing it distractedly before the eyes of stupid clucking hens,
-until experience had taught them in a measure how to cope with this
-unexpected phase of their trying existence. The stable-yard, extending
-to the left of the court, was gay with the bright military caps of
-orderlies, who sang snatches of vaudeville airs, as they rubbed down
-their masters' steeds, and polished up their sabres and buckles.
-
-But to return to Mlle. Lisa, who sat knitting and singing in the Porte
-Cochère of No. 29, on a warm summer afternoon. Her joyous refrain
-ceased, for a moment, as she heard the little gate opposite to the
-house, belonging to the Countess d'Hivry's garden, creak on its
-hinges, and the next instant saw protruding the round, red head of
-François, the gardener. This apparition, though not itself enchanting,
-gave Mlle. Lisa, on this occasion, the liveliest satisfaction.
-
-"Good-morning, Monsieur François," she said, with a beaming smile, as
-she glanced furtively at the bouquet of flowers which was in his hand.
-However dull might be the instincts of François in many things, they
-were keen enough where Lisa was concerned; and, recognizing at once the
-advantages of the situation, he advanced with a profusion of bows, and
-a grin of ecstasy, to deposit his tribute of flowers at the feet of his
-_adorata_.
-
-"What beautiful taste you have in flowers, Monsieur François," said
-Lisa, with a perceptible elevation of voice, and with a sidelong glance
-at the stone trough in the court-yard, whereat Ulysse, the orderly
-of Colonel de Villefort, was watering his master's horse. "Mme. la
-Contesse d'Hivry says that she could never give a dinner-party without
-you to arrange flowers for the Jardinières, and to furnish all that
-lovely fruit for dessert, which you grow in the glass-houses."
-
-"As to that," replied François, drawing himself up, and assuming an
-attitude of professional dignity, which had momentarily yielded to the
-all-absorbing power of Lisa's presence, "as to that, mademoiselle, I
-can say, without boasting, that the yellow roses and tulips of the
-Jardin du Roi would never be known for tulips and roses alongside of
-mine; though for red and white roses I will not say so much, and the
-pears--
-
-"O mademoiselle! how lovely you are with those flowers in your hair!"
-cried out the enamored gardener, once more forgetful of his life-long
-enthusiasm, the pears and roses, and only mindful of the unexpected
-form of female seduction offered to his distracted gaze. "I never knew
-that roses could be so beautiful," he added, with a genuineness which
-would have touched any being less merciless than a girl of eighteen,
-bent on piquing a more indifferent admirer into something like jealousy.
-
-"It is your roses," said Lisa, laughing, "that make me, what you call
-lovely. I don't make the roses. But what have you peeping out of
-your pocket?" she inquired, fearing that the conversation was about
-to assume a more tender character than she desired; "a note I should
-think"--
-
-"Ah, yes! I had forgotten," said poor François, with a sigh over his
-own hopeless perturbation. "It is from Mme. la Contesse to the Colonel
-de Villefort, and it was to be given without delay."
-
-"Ulysse, Ulysse," cried Lisa, gladly availing herself of this welcome
-diversion, "here is a note for you."
-
-"Do you not see, mademoiselle," said Ulysse, pettishly, not entirely
-pleased with François and his flowers, "do you not see that I am
-watering the colonel's horse? I should think, too, that the bearer of a
-note might deliver it himself."
-
-François, with a soothing sense of present preferment, was about to
-make a good-natured reply, when the colloquy was terminated by a
-sonorous voice from an upper window shouting, "Ulysse!"
-
-"_Mon colonel._"
-
-"Saddle one of my horses immediately."
-
-"Impossible to use either to-day, _mon colonel_; one limps, and I have
-taken Mars to the blacksmith's, for he cast a shoe this morning."
-
-"_Sapeisti!_ What am I to ride then? There is the horse of Monsieur le
-Baron always at our service. He is a nasty, stumbling thing, but if it
-is very pressing"--
-
-Victor de Villefort looked irresolutely out of the window, and
-twirled his blonde mustache. He was a man between thirty and forty
-perhaps, _distingué_ in manner and bearing, and gifted with a charming
-sympathetic voice.
-
-"Here is a note for you, _mon colonel_," said Lisa, glancing
-reproachfully at Ulysse, as she tripped lightly across the court-yard,
-and passing the corridor of red brick, mounted two flights of narrow
-wooden stairs to the colonel's room.
-
-"Thank you, mademoiselle," said Victor, courteously, as he took the
-note. "Ulysse shall stay with me always if you say so. Do the roses
-worn so gracefully on the left side of the head, indicate consent?"
-
-"I wear the roses for the sake of François, the gardener of Madame la
-Contesse d'Hivry, who brings them to me."
-
-"Ah! I am always allowing myself to be taken by surprise, Lisa," said
-Victor, opening his note and glancing over its contents. "I never keep
-pace with fickleness."
-
-"But is it fickleness, _mon colonel_, to like what belongs to the
-Contesse d'Hivry?" inquired Lisa, lowering her eyes with assumed
-_naïveté_.
-
-"For you, yes. I should say that it was. But I dare say, with your
-little malicious airs, mademoiselle, you mean more than that. But I
-advise you to wear roses on the right side for Ulysse, and then tell
-him that he must never leave me; and he shall not, I give you my word,"
-said Victor, gayly, taking up his hat and gloves and moving to the
-door. "What a lucky thing," he continued to himself as he descended
-the stair-case, "that the charming countess only asks for a pedestrian
-cavalier! If she had asked for a mounted escort, I should have been
-forced to have recourse to this tiresome baron here," and Victor
-brushed lightly against the door of a fellow-lodger, "to have used his
-stumbling horse, and then to have been bored for the rest of my life,
-or of his life, about helping him to the cross of the Legion of Honor."
-
-The baron in question was a retired _militaire_, who, inspired with an
-insatiable thirst for fame, was writing a military history of France.
-His chief claims to notice appeared to be the possession of a stumbling
-horse, and an overwhelming greed of decorations.
-
-As Victor mused over the consequences of an incautious acceptance of
-the baron's steed, and over the base intrigues in which a pursuit of
-the coveted cross might involve him, his brow darkened, and his step
-grew heavier.
-
-
-II.
-
-The drawing-room of the Contesse d'Hivry was a comfortable,
-social-looking apartment, though with too great abandon in the matter
-of furniture and decorations, to claim to be a model of any particular
-epoch. The well-polished floors and numerous mirrors reflected back
-the sun's rays, which sometimes penetrated through the fragrant
-vines shading the windows. Bright oriental rugs were at the feet of
-yellow damask ottomans, and the etagères and tables were covered with
-rare bronzes, costly bits of porcelain, alabaster, and goblets of
-crystal. But the appointments of the room seemed never so complete as
-when the countess herself was seated in the embrasure of one of the
-windows, as she was on this occasion, working at her embroidery or her
-aquarelles. Mathilde d'Hivry enjoyed the deserved reputation of being
-irresistibly charming. She was nothing in excess. She was not very
-young, nor very rich, nor very handsome, nor very clever. But she was
-exactly what every one desired that she should be at the moment. No
-one could precisely define why they left her presence in a complacent
-mood and in a friendly attitude towards the whole human race. Such
-being the case, however, her society was naturally sought for, and
-reluctantly abandoned. As the countess sat this afternoon, listlessly
-and idly before her aquarelles, quite disinclined for work, and
-leaning her little head with its great coils of black braids wearily
-on her hands, her eyes rested mechanically on a miniature likeness
-near her. The miniature was that of a young man, well-featured,
-well dressed, well _frisé_, and well-painted. Under the sober tint
-of the beard and hair was the suggestion of a more fiery hue,--the
-red of the ancient Gaul,--just as in the mild brown eyes lurked the
-possibility of a flash of "_furia Francese_," the savage ferocity which
-centuries of civilization and good manners have only smothered in the
-modern Frenchman, and which shows itself any day in the blouses, as
-it might in the time of Charlemagne, in spite of their surroundings
-of millinery, cookery, hair-dressing, and the art of dancing. These
-reflections, however, were not in the least the source of Mathilde's
-preoccupation. After a prolonged contemplation of the young gentleman's
-miniature, she exclaimed petulantly, "Why should my aunt and uncle
-urge me to marry again, especially Armand?" always regarding the brown
-eyes of the miniature. "He looks mild enough there on ivory. But I can
-imagine him clothed with the authority of a husband, making scenes of
-jealousy, interfering, dictating, and being quite insupportable. I like
-him too well to expose him to such temptations. We are much better
-as we are. There is De Villefort. He is more solid, and more simple
-in character, but terribly in earnest, I should say. And they say he
-will never marry. Some disappointment in the past, or some hope for
-the future will keep him as he is,--so they say, at least;" and she
-fell into another revery, which was finally interrupted by a servant
-announcing the Colonel de Villefort.
-
-"Oh! I am so glad that you could come to-day," said the countess,
-resuming her wonted gayety. "Do you share my wish for a stroll in the
-park this afternoon, whilst the band is playing?"
-
-"I always share your wishes, dear countess, and am too happy when I may
-share your pleasures."
-
-"That is almost a compliment, I should say, and you think yourself
-incapable of paying one. Why do you never pay compliments?"
-
-"I will tell you, if you will, in return, tell me why the portrait of
-Monsieur Armand is always so near your favorite seat."
-
-"The reason is, I suppose," said the countess, laughing, "that I am so
-used to it, that I am quite unconscious whether it is there or not."
-
-"Then I will tell you why I rarely pay you compliments,--because I like
-you too well."
-
-"So you can only compliment those whom you dislike?"
-
-"On the contrary, those to whom I am indifferent."
-
-"But Colonel de Villefort," exclaimed the countess, gravely tying on
-her white bonnet before the mirror and observing, with satisfaction,
-that the soft white lace brought out the lustre of her rich hair and
-her clear gray eyes, "do you know that public opinion decides that you
-will never marry?"
-
-"Public opinion, perhaps, is wise enough to decide, because I never
-have married, that I never shall," replied De Villefort, offering his
-arm to the countess as they passed through the door.
-
-"There is certainly a reason for such a supposition in your case,--for
-you have had inducements to marry." The colonel was grave and
-thoughtful, and, for a few moments, they walked on in silence until the
-sound of music roused him from a revery which Mathilde cared not to
-disturb. "We are in the park now," he said, at last, "and almost in the
-midst of 'public opinion,'" he added laughing; "but, after the music,
-if you are not too tired for a stroll in the Jardin du Roi, I will tell
-you some incidents of my early life, and you shall judge whether I can
-marry."
-
-"Oh! thank you," said the countess, eagerly and gratefully, more with
-her eyes than her voice, for the latter was quite lost in a blast of
-Roland à Roncevaux from the trumpets of one of the imperial bands.
-The afternoon being warm, the band was ranged in a circle under the
-protecting shade of the great, careless old trees; but the sun's rays
-penetrated here and there through their branches, throwing a golden
-light on the curls of rosy children frolicking on the green grass,
-casting an aureole of glory around the heads of gray-haired old men,
-and glittering in the epaulets of flighty young officers. There were
-knots of people grouped about in every direction,--French girls,
-by the side of their chaperons, immersed in needle-work; imperious
-English misses staring haughtily at the officers; ladies of opulent
-financial circles, in striking toilets of the last mode, fresh from
-Paris, and a few relics of the "_Ancienne Noblesse_," plainly attired,
-and looking curiously and, perhaps, disdainfully from their small
-exclusive _coterie_, at all this bourgeois splendor. Old women with
-weather-beaten, parchment faces, under neat frilled caps, were possibly
-retrieving, in their old age, the errors of a stormy youth, by carrying
-on the "_Service des chaises_." Others were plying a brisk trade among
-the children by the sale of cakes, plaisirs, and parlor balloons.
-
-Joining a group of acquaintances, Victor fastidiously placed Mathilde's
-chair in a position sheltered from inconvenient sunlight, in proper
-proximity to the music, and where no dust could tarnish the hem of
-her floating immaculate robe. In these commonplace "_petits soins_,"
-common enough in the life of any woman of society, Mathilde recognized
-a spirit of sincere devotion and protecting affection, which gave
-her, at the same time, a thrill of joy, and an undefined sense of
-apprehension and lingering regret. The Contesse d'Hivry passed, in the
-world's estimation, as a model of happiness, and, in one sense, she
-was happy. Gifted with health, a kindly, joyous nature, a due share of
-worldly advantages, and an easy philosophy which enabled her to accept
-cheerfully all daily cares and petty vexations, she was to be envied.
-But she had, as we all have, her own particular demon, who was fond
-of drawing aside a dark, impenetrable curtain, and showing her, in a
-vision of exceeding loveliness, the might-have-beens, and the might-be,
-of this deceptive life, and just as she would rush forward to seize on
-these delicious illusions, they would straightway vanish, leaving her
-to stare once more hopelessly at the same dark, impenetrable curtain.
-As the countess looked out beyond the great trees at the velvet sward
-of the Tapis Vert, at the orange-shrubs in their green boxes, at the
-rows of antique statues on their solitary perches, leading to the great
-fountain, and then the broad massive steps leading at last to the
-distant château, she wondered whether the little demon of "_le grand
-Monarque_," who had cooked in his majesty's behalf so many pleasant
-scenes, had ever the audacity to drop, unbidden, the dark curtain
-before his royal eyes. Whatever had been done, or left undone, in the
-case of "_le grand Monarque_," the demon had conjured up spectacles for
-some of his successors, which had not been so pleasant. It had not been
-the fate of all to look from their bed of state, with dying eyes, on
-the finer alleys, the shining lake, and the peaceful grandeur of the
-royal grounds. The curtain had been drawn once for a sleeping queen,
-and had revealed so dreadful a picture, that she had fled from her bed
-at midnight to escape it. The demon, wearied with the eternal scene of
-the marquis and marquise, in powder and high heels, bowing and mincing
-before their Great King, had chosen to vary his pleasures by calling up
-the old forgotten Gaul, with his red beard and his ferocious eye, to
-storm and rage at the château gates.
-
-Mathilde had wandered so far away with her demon and his pictures, that
-she was astonished, in turning her eyes, to find Victor gazing at her
-with a look of troubled inquiry. The music had changed its character,
-and the triumphal strains of Roland à Roncevaux had given place to a
-plaintive melody of the Favorita, and Mathilde, glad to know her secret
-thoughts thus interrogated by Victor, threw them aside and became once
-more the gay and talkative Contesse d'Hivry.
-
-"How gay you are now," said Victor, addressing the countess, just
-as the last strains of the Favorita had died away, "when I am quite
-the reverse. I never can listen to that duo without feeling its
-meaning,--from association, perhaps; for it is connected with a happy
-and still painful part of my life. Shall we walk now?" said Victor, as
-the countess made her adieus to her friends, and, taking his arm, they
-sauntered away to the Jardin du Roi.
-
-"You sang that duo once," said Mathilde, half-inquiringly, "and I know
-more than you think of your past life, for I will tell you with whom?"
-
-"You knew her, then?" asked Victor.
-
-"Yes, I knew Pauline D'Arblay, slightly, but I have never seen her
-since her marriage, as Pauline Dusantoy."
-
-"She is quite unchanged, at least she was when I last saw her, some
-years ago, and I think that she can never change," said Victor,
-enthusiastically. "She must always be beautiful, as she is good, and
-her native purity, I believe, must always resist the attacks of the
-world, and leave her unscathed from contamination."
-
-"Where is she now?" asked the countess, after a few moments of silence;
-for in proportion to the warmth evinced by Victor in recalling these
-memories of the past, his companion was chilled into quiet reflections.
-
-"In Algiers, I suppose," replied Victor, "where her husband, General
-Dusantoy, has been for years past."
-
-"My enthusiasm for Pauline is only surpassed by my affection and
-reverence for her husband. I have known Dusantoy and have loved him
-from my earliest childhood, and have received from him more proofs of
-undeviating friendship and unwearied devotion than I can ever repay.
-He has saved my life, too, though he unwittingly took from me, what
-I believed at that time to be all that made life desirable," said
-Victor sadly, as they approached the palings of the Jardin Du Roi,
-through which the red and yellow roses and peonies, confident in their
-gorgeousness, were nodding their heads insolently at the _gens d'arme_,
-who paced listlessly before the gate. The verbenas and pansies, equally
-brilliant but less flaunting, were dotted about in compact groups in
-the parterres and on the lawn. The statue, surmounting the column in
-the centre of the lawn, blackened and defaced by the wear and tear of
-years, looked down grimly from its pedestal, as if to impose silence
-on all beneath. So that the jardin, in its absolute repose, found
-little favor in the eyes of children and nurses, who respectively chose
-for their gambols and their flirtations some more joyous and expansive
-locality. Its sole occupants on this occasion were an elderly priest,
-too much absorbed in his breviary to be conscious of the rustling of
-Mathilde's dress as she passed him, together with a pensive soldier,
-who possibly sought diversion from the pangs of unrequited affection
-by tracing with a penknife, on the stone bench which he occupied, an
-accurate outline of his sword.
-
-"You knew Pauline d'Arblay as a child," said the countess to Victor, as
-they seated themselves on a bench at the extremity of the lawn.
-
-"Yes, we were brought up together,--that is, our families were very
-intimate. She was the only child of her parents, and I was the youngest
-of a large family; but as my brothers and sisters were much older than
-myself, and Pauline was nearer my age, we were always together, and,
-until I was sent to college, she was my constant playmate."
-
-"You must regard her as a sister, then," said Mathilde. "Remembrances
-of childish intimacy and souvenirs of soiled pinafores and soiled
-faces, I should think, would always be destructive of romance."
-
-"It might be so, if the transformation of later years did not suggest
-other sentiments,--sentiments which, unhappily for us, were only
-understood when too late for our mutual happiness. I had scarcely seen
-Pauline since our days of hide-and-seek in the château grounds, until
-I finished my course at St. Cyr, and returned a sub-lieutenant, to
-find that Pauline, the child of the pinafore, as you say, had expanded
-into a lovely and lovable girl. At that age, however, I believe that
-few can experience a serious passion. Curiosity and inexperience of
-life prevent concentration on any one object, and make us incapable of
-estimating things at their proper value. At college, too, I had formed
-a romantic friendship for one of my classmates,--Dusantoy,--and the
-ardor of this sentiment occupied me entirely, to the exclusion of all
-others. Dusantoy had a rich uncle, who had purchased a large estate in
-the vicinity of our châteaux. He came to visit his uncle, but passed
-his time naturally with me. Pauline shared our walks and our drives.
-We read to her as she embroidered or sewed, and she sang to us in the
-summer twilight. We were very gay and _insouciant_ in those days,
-little dreaming that our innocent affection would give place to a mad
-passion, that would one day separate us eternally, and fill our lives
-with unsatisfied longings. It was not until some time after, that a
-winter passed by us both in the gay world of Paris revealed to me the
-nature of my love for Pauline. A jealous fear took possession of me.
-Seeing her the object of universal homage and admiration induced me
-to declare my love. She had already discarded wealthy and brilliant
-suitors; and for my sake. But, alas! I was the cadet of the family,
-with only a good name, my sword, _et voila tout_! Pauline's mamma was
-more prudent than her daughter and myself. Circumstances favored her,
-and separated us. I was ordered to Africa, and Pauline returned to
-the château; but we parted hopefully and confidently, vowing eternal
-constancy. When we next met, she was the wife of another man, and that
-man was my best friend, Dusantoy."
-
-"_Mon pauvre ami_," said Mathilde, almost inaudibly, and her hand
-unconsciously rested on his. He pressed it to his lips, and they were
-both silent. Victor's wound was deep as ever; but the poignancy of
-such a grief is already much diminished when the consoling voice of
-another woman and the pressure of her hand can soothe for an instant
-the anguish of the past.
-
-"You know, dear Mathilde," continued Victor, "the history of
-Pauline's misfortunes,--the sudden death of her parents, her father's
-embarrassments and insolvency, and how on his death-bed he implored
-his only child to save the honor of his name by accepting the hand
-of a man in every way worthy of her, and who, at his uncle's recent
-death, had come into possession of an immense fortune, a portion of a
-Conte d'Arblay's forfeited estate. I was in Africa when the news came
-to me that Pauline was affianced to Dusantoy. But I heard it without
-a murmur; for I heard it from Dusantoy's own lips. He had been sent
-to Algiers on an important mission, and came to confide in me in all
-the rapture and ecstasy of his love. Nothing makes one so selfish
-and inconsiderate as an absorbing happiness. Besides, poor Dusantoy
-believed my love for Pauline to be purely fraternal. In my grief and
-despair, I believed once that I must tell him that he was robbing me
-of my sole treasure and hope in life; but, fortunately for him,--for
-us both, perhaps, for I should never have ceased to repent such an
-act of cowardice,--I was seized with brain fever, and for some time
-my life was despaired of. Meanwhile, Dusantoy, with characteristic
-devotion, postponed his return to France and to Pauline, that he might
-watch over me; and to his untiring assiduity and unceasing care I
-undoubtedly owe my recovery. But that is not all. Another accident
-befell me, which would unquestionably have proved fatal to my existence
-had not the skill and courage of Dusantoy again interposed to save me.
-At the beginning of my convalescence, when I was first able to walk a
-few steps in the open air, I was one day pacing the court-yard of the
-house where I lodged, when a low, suppressed roar struck my ear, and
-turning my head, I saw that a large lion had entered the open door-way,
-and was standing within a few paces of me. My first emotion was not
-that of terror,--not the same which I see on your face at this moment,
-_chère contesse_" said Victor, laughing; "for I recognized the animal
-as a tame, well-conducted lion belonging to a gentleman living in the
-outskirts of the city, and was about to approach him, when the sight of
-blood trickling from a wound in his side, and the menacing look of his
-eye, warned me to retreat. Escape by the outer door was impossible, as
-well as entrance to the house, for the lion barred the passage which
-led to both doors; but I thought of a gate leading to a side street,
-which was now my only means of flight. With feeble, tottering steps
-I had gained this point, and in another instant should have made my
-escape; but, by a singular fatality, the gate was bolted. I had neither
-strength to force it nor agility to scale the wall. The lion, irritated
-by his wound, and excited, as I found afterwards, by previous pursuit,
-followed me with another ominous roar and a look of hostility far from
-encouraging to one in my position.
-
-"Of all that followed I have but a confused idea. I was weak and
-ill,--my brain reeled; but I remember that, as the lion was about to
-spring, a violent blow made him turn with a snarl of rage, and spring
-towards a new adversary,--Dusantoy,--who stood, gun in hand, in the
-centre of the court-yard. Then the report of a fire-arm, and I can
-recall nothing further. Dusantoy was an admirable shot, took cool aim,
-and hit the lion in the heart. Pauline and I fancied that we felt the
-recoil of the weapon in our own hearts for many a long day afterwards.
-But perhaps it was mere fancy," said Victor, lightly, as he watched the
-cheek of the countess growing paler as he spoke.
-
-"To end my long story," continued Victor, "after these experiences I
-took a voyage to reëstablish my health; and, when I returned, I spent
-a week in the same house with General Dusantoy and his wife. It was
-heroic on my part; but I could stay no longer, and I have never seen
-them since. And now you understand, _chère contesse_, why I have never
-married."
-
-"I understand for the past? Yes," said Mathilde, rising from her seat;
-"but the future"--her sentence terminated in a shrug.
-
-The last rays of sunlight were gilding the head of the statue on the
-lawn; the priest had closed his book, and, with the swift, noiseless
-tread of his order, had glided from the garden; the melancholy soldier
-had girded his sword about him, after leaving its dimensions gracefully
-reproduced on the bench where he sat, and had followed the priest; the
-evening air was damp and chill, and Victor drew Mathilde's shawl around
-her with tender care.
-
-"You are tired, dear Mathilde," said Victor. "You are pale; I have
-wearied you with my long stories, _Appuyez vous bien sur moi_," and he
-drew her arm through his, as they turned their steps homeward.
-
-"You have made me so happy to-day!" said Victor, as they approached
-the house of the countess. "Will you give me some souvenir of this
-afternoon,--the ribbon that you wear?"
-
-"We will make an exchange then," said Mathilde, laughingly, as she
-handed the ribbon. "I will give a ribbon for the flowers in your
-button-hole; and we will see who is most true to their colors."
-
-A passionate pressure of the hand and a lingering kiss on Mathilde's
-primrose gloves were the only reply, and they parted. The delicate odor
-of the primrose gloves lingered with Victor, as he sauntered homeward
-in the dim twilight. The earnest, almost appealing, look of Mathilde,
-as he parted from her, haunted him.
-
-"Could I ever forget and be happy?" he asked of himself. The very idea
-seemed to him an unpardonable infidelity,--a culpable forgetfulness of
-past memories, which lowered him in his own estimation. At the corner
-of the Rue Arc en Ciel he encountered Mlle. Lisa, hanging contentedly
-on the arm of Ulysse. Poor François and his flowers were forgotten at
-that moment, and Lisa had abandoned herself to the delights of allaying
-a jealousy successfully roused in the heart of the gallant Ulysse by
-her recent tactics.
-
-"_Mon colonel_," said Ulysse, "a lady has called twice to see you in
-your absence. The last time she waited a long while in your room, and
-finally left a note, which she said was important and must be handed to
-you at once."
-
-"A lady! Who can it be? My venerable maiden aunt, I suppose," said
-Victor, shrugging his shoulders, "who has lost her vicious, snarling
-poodle,--a wretched brute that always bites my legs, when I dare to
-venture them in my aunt's snuff-colored saloon, and that I am expected
-to find for her now, by virtue of my name of Villefort."
-
-"The lady is young, handsome, and in widow's weeds," said Ulysse, half
-in reply to his colonel's muttered soliloquy, as he ran before him and
-vanished into the court-yard of No. 29, in search of the note.
-
-The twilight deepened and thickened on the silent little street. The
-oil lamp, hanging from the rope at the corner, was lighted, but its
-feeble rays only penetrated a short distance, leaving the rest wrapt
-in mystery and gloom, and the gate opening from the Contesse d'Hivry's
-garden, François' portal of happiness, through which he passed into the
-blissful presence of his Lisa, was scarcely discernible. The evening
-was clear and fine, however, the stars were beginning to glimmer in the
-sky, and a faint band of light in the east was growing every moment
-into glistening silver, under the rays of the coming moon.
-
-After parting with Victor, Mathilde entered the _salon_, and, throwing
-herself languidly into a chair, recalled with feminine minuteness the
-events and conversation of the afternoon, until oppressed with the
-light and warmth of the house, she sought refuge in the cool air of the
-_balcon_, and, leaning on the balustrade, looked dreamily through the
-honeysuckle vines at the parterres and lawn beyond. The meditations of
-the countess, however, were not exclusively romantic, in spite of the
-languid grace of her attitude, and the poetic abstraction of her gaze.
-She was fortifying herself against an attack of imprudent tenderness,
-by sternly picturing to herself all the practical disadvantages of
-a marriage of inclination. Could she incur the lasting displeasure
-of her aunt and uncle by marrying any one save her cousin Armand?
-Could she sacrifice the half of her fortune, which was the penalty of
-such a caprice of the heart, and sink into comparative poverty? The
-souvenir of a single phrase, however, in the tender inflection of a
-manly voice,--"_Appuyez vous bien sur moi_," was ever present to her
-memory quickening the beatings of her heart, and bringing the warm
-blood to her cheeks. The moon had risen, pouring a flood of silver
-light over François' roses, and the pots of cactus on the garden-wall.
-The countess strolled into the garden, and, fancying that she heard a
-whispered conversation proceeding from the little gate leading into the
-Rue Arc en Ciel, she turned her footsteps in that direction.
-
-"Is that you, Lisa?" asked the countess, rightly suspecting that the
-muslin dress, fluttering in the moonlight, could belong to none other
-than the daughter of the worthy Mme. Ledru, and that she was about to
-surprise a _tête-à-tête_ between the coquettish Lisa, and her gardener,
-the enamored François.
-
-"Yes, madame," said Lisa, "can I be of any service?"
-
-The countess shared poor François' partiality for Lisa. Her bright
-eyes and shining hair were pleasant to look at, and her quick wit
-and cheerful voice made her a nice companion, and then she enjoyed
-the inestimable privilege of living in the same house with Victor de
-Villefort. Perhaps some bit of intelligence concerning him would escape
-her,--whatever it might be, Mathilde knew that it would be of thrilling
-interest to her. If there was to be a morning-parade the following
-day, Mathilde would go to the _Terrain de Manoeuvre_, to see her hero
-"_en grande tenue_," in the staff of the General.
-
-"What a beautiful moonlight, Lisa! Will you walk with me towards the
-lake? Fetch my shawl first from the house."
-
-"Here it is, madame," said Lisa, quite breathless, as she returned with
-the shawl, and wrapped it around Mathilde. François unbarred the gate
-and they stepped into the street.
-
-"I should like to know, madame, what has befallen the Colonel de
-Villefort this evening," said Lisa, divining with tact the role she was
-destined to play.
-
-"What has happened?" asked Mathilde, with ill-feigned unconcern.
-
-"We cannot imagine, madame. But this afternoon, during the absence of
-Colonel de Villefort, a lady in deep mourning, young and handsome,
-called to see him. Finding that he was not at home, she left a note
-for him, and when the colonel read it, he was wild with excitement,
-and called to Ulysse for his horse. The horse was lame, and not fit
-for use, and the colonel swore, for the first time, I think since he
-has been in our house. That is saying a great deal for a _militaire_,
-madame. Ulysse has never seen the lady before. The colonel never
-receives any lady but his aunt the Marquise de Villefort, and that is
-also saying a great deal for a _militaire_,--is it not, madame?"
-
-"Well, did he get a horse?" asked Mathilde, with a severity which
-astonished Lisa, in the unconsciousness of her childish babble.
-
-"Yes, madame; there is the horse of a queer baron, who lives with us,
-who often puts his horse at the disposal of Monsieur le Colonel. The
-horse stumbles too, but the colonel mounted him and rode off in furious
-haste."
-
-"Who can she be?" asked the countess with an anxiety impossible to
-repress. "Did he take this direction when he rode away?"
-
-"Yes, madame, he rode toward the lake. But take care, take care,
-madame!" shrieked Lisa, as the furious clatter of a horse's hoofs on
-the pavement warned her of danger. They had barely time to take refuge
-in an open door-way, before a riderless horse dashed past them.
-
-"'Tis the baron's horse,--and the colonel, madame. _Mon Dieu! Mon
-Dieu!_ What has become of him? Let me run for Ulysse."
-
-"And I will go on to the lake," said the countess; "perhaps."
-
-"Not alone, madame," exclaimed Lisa.
-
-But the countess had already disappeared under the shadow of the
-houses, and Lisa, equally fleet of foot, vanished in the opposite
-direction, in search of Ulysse. Mathilde hurried on,--whither she knew
-not. A blind instinct stronger than reason warned her that delay would
-be fatal, and that the life, grown to be so precious in her eyes, was
-awaiting her coming, flickering and failing, perhaps, as it hovered
-near death, which was for her to avert. She redoubled her pace, and
-flew through the silent street, where she had passed but a few hours
-before leaning on Victor's arm. She saw the lake before her, calm and
-silvery. There was a hill to descend, and at the foot, by the side of
-the lake, was a loose pile of stones. She sprang forward to pick up
-something in the road. It was a riding-whip which she knew well and had
-handled a hundred times. For an instant she was motionless, her head
-swam, and her eyes closed to shut out the sight of a prostrate form,
-lying at her feet so still and calm in the white moonlight. She knew
-that, too. She knew well the blonde hair stained with blood, trickling
-from a wound near the temple; and with a wild cry for help, Mathilde
-raised the head, half-buried in mud and water, and gazed despairingly
-at the closed eyes and rigid features of Victor de Villefort.
-
-
-III.
-
-The autumn days had come again, and the sun shone on heaps of dried
-brown leaves, which went whirling about in the Rue Arc en Ciel, with
-every gust of wind. Mlle. Lisa was in her accustomed seat in the
-door-way, No. 29, with shining hair and rosy cheeks, absorbed in the
-customary knitting, but still capable of casting sly glances in the
-direction whence François or Ulysse might finally appear. She was not
-fated to languish long in solitude, for the faithful François, never
-sufficiently confident of his personal attractions to present himself
-empty-handed before the object of his admiration, was soon standing by
-her side, fortified with a propitiatory offering of grapes.
-
-"O François," exclaimed Lisa, "how glad I am to see you! Has Mme. la
-Contesse really gone?"
-
-"Yes, she has gone," replied François. "Monsieur Armand and the aunt of
-madame have accompanied her. But you should have seen her pale face,
-all covered with tears. It would have made you weep, too, Mlle. Lisa,
-for it made me. Just think, mademoiselle, she never once tasted of the
-grapes that I picked for her this morning, and placed so neatly in a
-little basket."
-
-And poor François groaned audibly over this conclusive proof of the
-countess's changed and melancholy condition.
-
-"Ah, poor madame, she has been so ill! But why did she go, then?" asked
-Lisa.
-
-"Monsieur Armand and her aunt told her that she would never get well
-here, and that she needed change of air, and so they hurried her
-away,--only giving her time to write a few lines to your colonel, whose
-life is not worth saving, if he cannot love Mme. la Contesse. Here is
-the packet for Colonel de Villefort."
-
-"Yes, it was very brave and good of madame," said Lisa, "to find
-the colonel, and to pull his head out of the water. He must have
-suffocated, so says the doctor, if madame had not found him when
-she did. But there is some mystery about the handsome lady in deep
-mourning. I know who she is. She is the widow of General Dusantoy, who
-lately died in Algiers; and she came every day to inquire for Colonel
-de Villefort, when he was not expected to live; but since he is better,
-I have seen no more of her."
-
-"Well, I will say again," said François, "that if your colonel finds
-the lady handsomer and better than Mme. la Contesse, then madame had
-better left his head in the water."
-
-Whilst Victor and his affairs were thus discussed below-stairs with
-the intelligence and fairness usually developed in such discussions,
-he sat in his room above, pale and thin, the shadow of his former
-self,--twisting his blonde mustache, and gazing moodily through the
-window at distant hills, all brown and yellow with autumn leaves
-and autumn sunlight. His meditations were far from cheerful. People
-were perpetually saving his life. Here was a new dilemma: Pauline
-free once more,--free and true to her early love. Happiness once
-more in his grasp; but Mathilde--was not his honor half-engaged, as
-were his feelings a few weeks since? Could he so readily forget all
-that had passed between them, and all that he owed her? Could he
-repay the debt of his life by vapid excuses or by cold desertion? He
-gazed mechanically at colored prints of Abelard and Heloise, hanging
-side by side on the wall, and hoped that inspiration, or at least
-consolation, might descend on him from these victims of unhappy
-passion. But in Abelard's face he looked in vain for anything beyond
-conceited pedantry, and Heloise was too much absorbed in her own mighty
-resignation to trouble herself concerning the woes of others. A tap at
-the door roused him at last from this unprofitable contemplation, and
-in reply to his "_entrez_," the bright face of Mlle. Lisa appeared at
-the open door.
-
-"_Bon jour_, monsieur; here is a letter from Mme. la Contesse d'Hivry,
-who has gone this morning with her aunt and Monsieur Armand," and Lisa
-paused to notice the effect of her abrupt announcement.
-
-"Gone!" said Victor, with unfeigned astonishment. "Where has she gone?"
-
-But Lisa observed that the hand of the colonel, as he opened the
-packet, was, in spite of recent illness, ominously steady, and that the
-surprise naturally occasioned by the news of the countess's departure
-was quite unmingled with the grief and despair which mademoiselle had
-kindly hoped to evoke. If she had dared, however, to remain until the
-opening of the packet, her curiosity and interest would have been
-rewarded by observing Victor's start of pained surprise as a faded
-flower fell from the open letter, and his sigh of genuine regret as
-the memory of the last happy day passed with Mathilde d'Hivry came to
-him in full force, effacing, for the moment, all trace of his recent
-reflections, and investing the image of Mathilde with all the poetical
-charm of an unattainable dream of happiness. She was no longer an
-obstacle in the fulfilment of his life-long hopes,--hopes persistently
-cherished, yet cruelly baffled. He looked wistfully at the faded
-flower as he crushed it in his hand, and recalled their last parting,
-and though the souvenirs of the day--the flower from his button-hole,
-and the ribbon which she had worn--had been lightly exchanged and
-laughingly given, he knew well that the worthless relic, which he now
-crumbled into dust and threw from the window, would have been tenderly
-kept and treasured in good faith, had his destiny so willed it. Victor
-turned sadly to the letter which lay before him, in Mathilde's delicate
-writing. It began cheerfully enough, however, as her letters were wont
-to do.
-
-"I cannot leave you, dear Victor, without a word of parting, and I fear
-that a personal interview between invalids, like ourselves, might not
-conduce to our mutual recovery. In my own case, absolute change of air
-and scene are ordered, together with perfect quiet and rest. The one is
-easily gained by going to Italy; but do we ever attain the other? or
-would we attain it, if we could? When we next meet, for we must meet
-some day, _mon ami_, we shall know, by looking in each other's eyes,
-how obedient we have been to our physician's advice, and how great
-has been its efficacy. The climate of Paris will heal in your case,
-dear Victor, all that time has left unhealed, and I shall prepare for
-your coming, by making a visit of explanations as well as of adieus.
-Lest you find this enigmatical, I must explain, that certain rumors
-concerning us, so rife in our little town, have reached the ears of
-one who daily awaits you in Paris. I shall see Pauline Dusantoy, and
-dissipate all doubts, by announcing my immediate departure for Italy. I
-send you a faded rose-bud, which you may remember in all its freshness,
-and which I have no heart to throw away. But you know how jealous
-Armand is. Adieu, dear Victor, my hope in the future is, that the life
-which I have just seen trembling on the brink of eternity, may be
-crowned with full and perfect happiness. Adieu."
-
- * * * * *
-
-Colonel de Villefort was still weak and easily moved, and a choking
-sensation in the throat made him quite uncomfortable, as he placed
-carefully in a little drawer the letter which he had just read. He was
-still haunted by a wistful look of soft and winning eyes, and he seemed
-to hear the whispered adieu of a silvery voice, whose pure tones had so
-often charmed and soothed him. Is the adieu eternal? he asked himself.
-I think not, for I want no nobler and truer friend for my Pauline
-than the Contesse d'Hivry, and Pauline will hold sacred as myself the
-debt of gratitude due to the woman who has saved my life. But the
-idea of marrying Monsieur Armand! To be sure he is handsome, rich,
-well-connected, and has a certain charm in conversation, but quite
-incapable of appreciating so noble a being as Mathilde; and then what
-want of taste on her part! Victor's impatience was changing rapidly
-into indignation, at the thought of the Contesse d'Hivry presuming to
-marry, or trying to be happy, when another knock at the door changed
-the current of his thoughts. This time it was Ulysse and not Lisa
-who was the bearer of a letter, covered with armorial bearings, and
-addressed with many flourishes to Colonel de Villefort.
-
-"What does the German baron want now?" said Victor, with an impatient
-shrug as he glanced at the writing, "after breaking my neck with his
-wretched brute of a horse? He sends many compliments of congratulation
-to Monsieur le Colonel for his rapid recovery after the deplorable
-accident, etc., etc., etc. And as he understands that Monsieur le
-Colonel contemplates a visit to Paris, the moment that his health
-permits, may Monsieur le Baron hope for his gracious intercession
-in his behalf, that he may at last receive the reward of merit, the
-much-desired cross of the Legion of Honor. Just as I supposed," said
-Victor, laughing. "It would save me much trouble and mental agony to
-give him mine, only I remember that Pauline has a weakness for these
-baubles."
-
-"_Mon colonel_, may I say a word?" asked Ulysse, awkwardly, turning the
-door-knob to keep himself in countenance. "Mlle. Lisa"--
-
-"Is that the word, my good Ulysse?" said Victor, waiting in vain for
-Ulysse to complete his sentence. "I understand that you should think
-it the only word worth uttering, and I think you quite right. There is
-only poor François, who may object to have his heart broken. Lisa is a
-nice girl, and I have promised her that you should not leave me."
-
-"Thank you, _Mon colonel_," said Ulysse, glowing with exultation and
-triumphant pride.
-
-"Now pack my portmanteau. I shall go to Paris to-morrow in the early
-train."
-
-
-
-
-THE ROMANCE OF A WESTERN TRIP.
-
-
-
-
-THE ROMANCE OF A WESTERN TRIP.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-The two following letters, received by me in the year 1852, will
-explain themselves.
-
- "MY DEAR W----: When I left you at the depot in Boston, and was
- whirled away westward, I knew not from what point I should address
- you. I promised you, on the last evening that we passed together, that
- from time to time I would, for your delectation, give you an account
- of any adventure I might chance to meet with in my wanderings; as,
- also, to try my hand at pen-and-ink sketches of men and manners.
-
- "Could you appreciate my surroundings, you would give me credit for
- a truthful adherence to my word. As to where I am at this present
- writing, I cannot say. In order to understand why I make so strange
- a statement, I must begin my story some weeks back, and narrate an
- incident that befell me, and led to the penning of this epistle.
-
- "The month of May, in our northern climate, needs no laudation as to
- its charms; and, after a sojourn of many years in your crowded city,
- I was fully prepared to appreciate all the beauty of this spring-time
- among the wilds of Michigan. Therefore, after leaving Detroit for
- the interior, I soon found (as the days were growing much warmer)
- that it would be wisdom for me to discard most of the luggage with
- which I had encumbered myself; as, by so doing, I could, as it were,
- cut loose from dependence upon vehicles of all descriptions; and,
- when my desires pointed that way, or a necessity arose, I could make
- use of those powers of locomotion with which nature has endowed me.
- Therefore, at the termination of the stage-route at H----, I selected
- a few indispensable articles, and, transferring them to a knapsack,
- sent back my trunk to an acquaintance at Detroit, with a request to
- hold it subject to my order, and prepared myself for rough travelling
- in the interior, or, as a New Englander would denominate it, 'the
- backwoods.'
-
- "At the country tavern, in which I abode as a guest from Saturday
- until Monday, I made inquiries of the landlord as to the route I
- was to take, and the nature of the roads between H---- and the town
- of N----, which I desired to visit. My host, a shrewd, bright-eyed
- little man of forty, and a former resident of New Hampshire, lowered
- his brows, and assumed a dubious look as he listened to me; and, on
- my asking for an explanation of this change of countenance, informed
- me that, had I money of any amount about my person, I had better look
- to the availability of my pistols, and pay particular attention to
- the company I might fall in with; for, within the past two years,
- a number of travellers had been relieved of their possessions, and
- two of them murdered on the roads I should be under the necessity of
- passing over. The country being sparsely settled, the officers of the
- law had been unable to trace the perpetrators of these acts of felony.
- I listened to these details with much uneasiness, for, on leaving
- Boston, I had, by an acquaintance, been intrusted with a package of
- three hundred dollars, to deliver to Judge Perry, of N----, to meet
- some payments becoming due on a purchase of pine lands; in addition,
- I had upon my person some means of my own, the loss of which would
- indeed be a calamity of a serious nature, as I was too far away from
- friends to avail myself of their good services. I assumed an air of
- ease, however, which I was far from feeling, and left my loquacious
- friend, laughing defiance at all the dangers of the way. I had been
- unable to obtain a conveyance at anything like a reasonable rate;
- therefore, as the weather was so charming, had determined to undertake
- the journey of seventy miles on foot, trusting to obtain a ride from
- such travellers I might chance now and then to meet going westward.
- For two days, I pressed cheerfully forward, being kindly welcomed to
- a supper and bed in the cabin of the settlers. The roads were rough,
- and at places illy defined, and I was often at fault as to my route;
- this, and want of practice as a pedestrian, made my progress slow.
- As the evening of the third day drew near, I judged I must still be
- some twenty or twenty-five miles from my destination. I was ascending
- a hill over the worst road that I had yet encountered. The dwarf pine
- clothed the whole declivity, and rendered the approaching night more
- gloomy than it would have been in the more open country. I was greatly
- fatigued from my long day's walk, and, coming to a large boulder that
- had evidently rolled from the higher ground above, I seated myself
- to gain strength, and lifted my hat to let the wind cool my heated
- forehead. Down, far away to my right, I could hear the gurgling and
- splashing of a torrent, while the sough of the breeze among the pines
- made a weird music that added somewhat to a depression that had been,
- for the last hour, gradually stealing over me. The romantic visions
- I had formerly entertained of nature in her solitary moments had
- all departed, and I longed for the companionship of man. Some five
- miles back, I had been at fault as to my route; but, trusting to good
- fortune, had taken the road I was now upon. As I sat meditating, I all
- at once recollected that I had been cautioned, by a man of whom I had
- inquired, against taking the way that led to the hills; for, by so
- doing, I should go astray. Undecided as to whether it would be better
- to retrace my steps, or go on, in hopes of finding a lodging for the
- night, I had arisen, and was hesitating which way I should turn, when
- I heard the tramp of horses' hoofs, and down, from the higher ground
- on my left, rode two men.
-
- "The obscurity had become so great while I had lingered, that I could
- form but an indefinite idea as to their characteristics. The foremost,
- mounted on a dark-bay horse, was slightly built, and evidently young.
- His felt hat was so slouched over his face that all I could note was,
- that he wore beard and mustache long, both of intense blackness.
-
- "His companion was a much more powerful man, and sat upon the
- roan mare he bestrode in a careless manner; his face, also, was
- hidden by an equal amount of hair, and, in addition, warm as was
- the weather, his neck was muffled in a large woollen comforter. My
- presence evidently took them by surprise, for they abruptly checked
- their horses, and the younger man pulled sharply upon the bridle,
- half-turning his steed, and seemed about to retrace the way he had
- come, without greeting me. He, however, recovered his self-possession,
- and with a 'Good-evening, stranger,' continued on until he was at my
- side. I was truly thankful at this encounter, for I felt my doubts as
- to my movements would now be solved. In a few words, I stated that
- I had wandered from the road I should have taken, and asked their
- assistance to set me right. The younger man seemed to labor under
- restraint, and spoke but little; the other, however, offered to show
- me the way, and stated they were going in the direction I desired to
- pursue. They spoke in a manner and used language that convinced me
- they were men of superior culture from those one might expect to
- meet in the wild and sparsely settled district in which I was now
- travelling.
-
- "'We have no time to spare, if we would get out of these pine-lands
- and beyond the river-ford before the darkness becomes troublesome,'
- said the larger man, as he urged his horse to a quick walk along the
- road up the hill. 'You had best follow me, while my companion can
- bring up the rear.'
-
- "Without hesitation, I acted upon his suggestion, as I was anxious to
- reach a place of rest. 'You should consider yourself highly honored
- to be so escorted and guarded from the dangers of the road,' said
- my guide, as he half-turned in his saddle, with what I then thought
- a jocular, but have since recalled as a sinister, laugh. 'Have you
- any valuable property about you, that you can feel grateful for the
- convoy?' Without a thought of the wisdom of silence on this point, I
- answered: 'More than I should care or can afford to lose, for I am
- a thousand miles from home, and among strangers.' The next moment
- I felt as if I could have bitten out my tongue for its imprudence;
- for flashing upon me came the remembrance of the landlord's tales
- of robbery and violence. We had turned from the main road to the
- right, into a narrower track, and were descending the hill toward
- the river, as I judged; for each moment the noise of its waters were
- more audible. In a brief time after my last remark, I felt that the
- horseman behind me was pressing closer than was needful, and I partly
- stepped from the path, intending to let him pass; for I instinctively
- felt I would rather have them both in front. As I did so, I almost
- unconsciously placed my hand upon my revolver. The younger man stooped
- from his saddle as he came abreast of me, and, speaking in a cold,
- hard tone, exclaimed, 'My good fellow, we will take charge of your
- watch and money.' He leaned forward as he spoke, as if to grasp my
- collar. At the same moment he who rode in front leaped to the ground,
- and turned toward me. I saw my danger in an instant, and, quickly
- drawing my pistol, fired at the head of my nearest foe. The flash
- of the powder gave me a more distinct view of his face than I had
- yet had. As he recoiled from me, I noticed a peculiar droop of the
- left eyelid, and heard the expression, 'My God, I am hit!' At the
- same moment a crushing blow descended upon my skull, and a thousand
- stars seemed falling around me, and all was blackness. My return to
- consciousness was occasioned by a sudden contact with cold water, and
- I awoke to find myself struggling in the midst of a rushing torrent.
- Instinctively I grasped at a support, comprehending my situation in
- an instant. I had been hurled by my assailants into the stream we had
- been approaching, and they undoubtedly supposed that I was beyond
- the chance of recovery. The moon was not yet up, and I could discern
- nothing except the general outlines of the banks of the stream, which,
- rising high on each side, showed me I was at the bottom of a ravine.
- It was many minutes ere my efforts were crowned with any degree of
- success; at last, as I was hurled along, my hands came in contact
- with the drooping bough of a tree, and, weak as I was from the blow
- I had received and the benumbing effect of my immersion in the icy
- current, the principle of self-preservation enabled me to put forth
- almost superhuman strength, and to retain my hold on this anchor of
- hope.
-
- "After many abortive attempts, I succeeded in dragging myself up, as
- it were out of the jaws of death, upon the rocks which composed the
- banks of the stream. As soon as I felt I was safe from the danger of
- a watery grave, my strength left me, and I fell back almost utterly
- devoid of life. My head felt as if a thousand triphammers were at
- work upon it; a deadly sickness came over me, and I found that I was
- relapsing into insensibility. By a great effort, however, I overcame
- this lethargy, and crawled on my hands and knees up over the piled-up
- rocks and bare roots of trees, until I found myself upon the soft moss
- and dead leaves beyond. Here I lay for a long time, slowly recovering.
- On an examination of my person, I found my watch and purse gone, as
- well as the money-belt containing the three hundred dollars in gold
- with which I had been intrusted. But what I felt to be a more severe
- loss than all else was a valuable diamond ring, that had once been
- my dead mother's, and given to me by her in her last illness. Some
- hundred and fifty dollars in bank-bills and a letter of introduction
- to Judge P----, placed two days before in one of my boots, had escaped
- the search of the highwaymen. None of my bones were broken; but a
- frightful swelling upon my head proved the force of the blow dealt
- me, evidently from the loaded handle of a riding-whip. The pain was
- intense, and, not knowing how serious might be the injury I had
- received, I determined to seek some shelter while I was yet able to do
- so. I cannot describe the agony I endured in the next three or four
- hours. Though weak and suffering, I succeeded in finding by accident
- a narrow by-path, or trail, leading through the forest, and continued
- on, shivering with cold, and frequently obliged to throw myself upon
- the ground, in order to gain strength and rally my wandering senses.
- The moon came up, and my knowledge of the time of its rising proved
- to me that I must have been insensible and in the hands of the two
- ruffians for at least two hours. I was now in a level country once
- more, having left the hills behind me, and, as the moon rose higher in
- the heavens, I could distinguish my surroundings without difficulty.
- I stumbled along the path I was treading, faint and ill, and at last,
- as I began to think I could go no further, came to a clearing, and,
- at my left, beheld a rough log-house among the charred stumps of the
- trees. I reached the door, and, after many efforts, awakened the
- sleepy inmates. A good-natured face greeted my sight, as a bushy head
- was protruded from a narrow window at my right, and a kindly voice
- asked, 'What is wanted?' Each instant growing fainter, I was hardly
- able to articulate; and, before I could explain my position, I sank
- insensible upon the threshold. When I say that it is almost three
- weeks since that occurrence, and that from then until now I have
- not been in the open air, you will understand how desperate was the
- illness that followed. My honest host and his good wife have watched
- over me as if I had been a son instead of a stranger; and to their
- tender nursing I owe my recovery, for no physician has seen me. Far
- away from any settlement, upon one of the least frequented cross-roads
- in the wild section in which they dwell, sometimes weeks would elapse
- without a wayfarer passing their humble abode. Now, once more, I am
- able to arise and sit in the sunshine; and I hope soon to be in a
- condition to seek out the authors of my sufferings. As I have lain on
- my bed, too weak to move, I have thought much, and, strange as it may
- appear, I feel an innate conviction that I shall not only discover the
- two men who endeavored to murder me, but that I shall also recover
- the property I have lost. The reason that I entertain this opinion is
- this: The very fact of my long insensibility after the blow upon my
- head, and the subsequent disposal of my body by casting it into the
- mountain torrent, all go to confirm me in my belief that they thought
- me dead. Consequently, having no fear of my reappearance, they will
- not seek to conceal themselves, or seek refuge from detection by
- flight. The old lady (whom I have found a great gossip), I presume,
- thinks it a 'God-send' my being here; for she can now give vent to her
- loquacity; and, were it not that this letter was already frightfully
- long, I would quote some of her decidedly original remarks for your
- entertainment. I accounted for the plight I was in by stating that I
- had missed my footing in the darkness, and fallen into the stream,
- striking my head upon a projecting rock as I descended. At night when
- my host has returned from his labor, I have gleaned from him a full
- description of the country for miles around, and find that I can reach
- N---- in a day's ride, and that it is one of the most noteworthy
- places this side of Detroit. As soon as I dare, I shall proceed there,
- and my next letter will undoubtedly be mailed from that point. I shall
- not tell you that I wish I had remained in Boston; for to do so would
- be useless and foolish. I am now desirous of going forward to the
- accomplishment of the object I first had in view when I left you, but
- shall remain, however, in this part of the country, both to regain my
- health and strength, and to seek out and punish my assailants." #/
- /# "MY DEAR W----: When I finished my last epistle, I little thought
- I should allow six weeks to elapse before I again took up the thread
- of my story; but, my mind and time have been so fully occupied, that
- I must crave your indulgence. It is now the latter part of July, and
- as you know, at this season of the year one does not feel disposed to
- be loquacious. That you may fully comprehend my position, however, I
- must be somewhat more minute in my descriptions than I could wish to
- be. The sun was near its setting on as lovely a day as I have ever
- seen, when I approached the house of which I am still an inmate. The
- kind-hearted man who had given me shelter and care during my illness,
- brought me to the village of N----, and seemed to regret parting
- from me. I walked up the pretty street towards a large, white house
- standing upon an eminence at its termination, which had been pointed
- out to me as the residence of Judge Perry. As I paused at a gate
- leading into the finely-kept grounds, I could, without an effort of
- the imagination, fancy that I was once more in dear New England, for
- all evidence of newness seemed to have been obliterated. I turned
- and looked back upon the scene; the cottages quietly nestling amid
- a multitude of shade-trees, now clothed in their loveliest garments
- of green; far away the encircling hills, and, a little to my left, a
- pretty stream creeping down the valley, its waters turned to molten
- silver by the glance of the sinking sun. While lost in revery I
- had not noticed the approach of an elderly gentleman, who now came
- forward, and placed his hand upon the latch of the gate at which I
- was standing, at the same time greeting me with the remark of 'A
- delightful ending to as beautiful a day as one need wish for.' I
- responded, eulogizing both the weather and scenery. Whilst speaking, I
- took cognizance of my companion, and felt sure, from the descriptions
- I had received, that I was addressing the owner of the residence;
- and he, in answer to my inquiry, answered in the affirmative, and
- said, 'You are Mr. James H---, I presume. I have been expecting you
- for some time, having received a letter from my friend in Boston,
- advising me of your intention of visiting me. I heartily welcome you,
- and trust that on further acquaintance we shall be mutually pleased
- with each other; but I am keeping you here at the gate, when I should
- show you truer hospitality by inviting you within.' I accepted his
- courtesy and was soon in a pleasant bed-chamber, where I made such
- a toilet as my limited means afforded. As I descended the stairs in
- response to the summons of the supper-bell, I felt the awkwardness
- of my position; placed as I was, without a suitable wardrobe, in a
- family of such evident social standing. Trusting soon to remedy this
- deficiency, I entered a large apartment at the left, and found my
- entertainer ready to lead me to the supper-room. I made some excuses
- as to my appearance, which he turned off with a jest, and, opening
- a door, ushered me to the well-spread table. As we came forward, a
- young lady arose from beside an open window, where she had evidently
- been awaiting us, and I was introduced to my entertainer's only
- daughter. You have frequently bantered me on my stoical indifference
- to female beauty. And now, when I tell you that she whose hand I
- took was one of the most lovely of women, you will not have occasion
- to make allowance for undue enthusiasm. I shall not here attempt to
- describe her, further than to say, she was a blonde, with glorious
- eyes and a wonderful wealth of hair. Her voice was music itself,
- and her every movement denoted the grace of a well-bred lady. As
- we seated ourselves at the table, I regained my self-possession,
- which had been disturbed at this unexpected vision of loveliness. We
- chatted cheerfully as we partook of the tea and toast, and I soon
- felt as if with friends of long standing. When the repast ended, the
- daughter lovingly placed her hand on her father's arm to detain him,
- and my eyes encountered upon it a jewelled ring that flashed like a
- thing of life in the lamplight. Could I be dreaming? For an instant
- my brain whirled and I grew giddy, for I had discovered that which
- I so much prized, and had lost,--the last gift of my dead mother.
- This ring, from the peculiarity of its construction, and the antique
- setting of the stones, I could not mistake, and yet I could in no
- wise account for what I saw. One glance at that lovely face, whose
- every line spoke of innocence, was enough to drive away all suspicions
- as to her complicity with the men who had sought my life. I cannot
- detail to you the incidents of that evening; for, short as has been
- the time since, I have forgotten them. I was as one in a maze, and
- talked mechanically, and only awoke to a recollection of what courtesy
- demanded, when Judge Perry remarked 'that as I was evidently much
- fatigued, and not yet in my usual health, they would allow me to
- retire.' I sat at my chamber window gazing out on the moonlit valley
- until long after midnight, but I could illy appreciate the beauty of
- the scene. I was seeking to arrange some plan of action by which I
- might trace up this first clew to a discovery I now felt most certain.
- At last, wearied with fruitless thought, I determined to await the
- course of events, and to trust to time for additional light.
-
- "The next few days were agreeably occupied in forming a more intimate
- acquaintance with Helen Perry and her father. I put forth what powers
- of pleasing nature has endowed me with, and my success seemed complete.
- Ere long I was on such terms of friendship with them as I desired;
- and then I learned from Helen that she had lost her mother many years
- before,--soon after their emigration from Eastern New York to their
- present home. I had thus far passed the time each day until two or
- three o'clock with the judge in his office, after which I wandered
- with Helen in the tasteful grounds surrounding her home, or upon the
- low-lying hills beyond. Her education had not been neglected, and her
- reading had been extensive. Thus we could converse upon the merits of
- the literature of the day, and in such topics discovered we had kindred
- tastes. She was ever frank and cheerful; and, short as had been our
- acquaintance, my heart was beginning to beat faster at her approach,
- and each morning, as I awoke, I looked eagerly forward to the hour that
- would find her disengaged from household duties, and with leisure to
- devote to me.
-
- "Once or twice the judge spoke of an absent friend, a Doctor Wentworth,
- in a manner which caused me some uneasiness; for, as he did so, he
- cast upon Helen a good-natured, sly glance that meant much, and always
- produced a blush upon her sweet face. It was after dinner on Tuesday,
- that we came out upon the lawn to inspect a rose-bush, which Helen
- wished transplanted, when her father remarked,--
-
- "'By the way, my dear, I received a letter from Edward this morning,
- and he tells me he shall be here to-day; so, as in duty bound, and like
- an ardent lover, I presume he will at once fly to you. I should advise
- that you forego your accustomed ramble, and remain at home to welcome
- him. I have no doubt our guest will be pleased for one day to escape
- the task of following you as an escort.'
-
- "By the terrible sinking of my heart that these words occasioned, I
- knew in an instant that I loved her; and, half-glancing at her as I
- turned away (with difficulty hiding my emotion), thought I saw the
- bright flush upon her animated face dying away, and a deadly pallor
- taking its place. I dared not remain and listen to her reply, and
- therefore wandered on past the summerhouse in which I had passed so
- many pleasant hours with her, until my steps were stayed upon the
- bank of the stream whose waters had now no music to my ears. I had
- heretofore been unconscious of the hopes that had gained access to my
- heart. Day by day I had, as it were, allowed my purposes to slumber.
- Her charms had bound me a willing captive, and all unwittingly I had
- cast aside thoughts of the future, and forgotten that the life of
- inaction in which I was indulging could not last. I had found ample joy
- and occupation in watching the play of her expressive features, and in
- listening to the words that came from her lips. After my first few
- hours of astonishment and wonder at the discovery of my stolen ring
- upon her hand, I had ceased, even when alone, to dwell upon the mystery
- connected with it. Now I was brought back to a remembrance of all I had
- vowed to do as I lay ill and suffering in the rude log cabin of the
- settler. It was long before my calmness returned, and my heart ceased
- to beat wildly. The afternoon had waned as I turned back towards the
- house and friends I had so abruptly left. It was in a more collected
- frame of mind that I ascended the steps, and entered the parlor. I am
- sure that, on encountering those there assembled, not the quiver of a
- muscle betrayed the agitation I felt. Helen was half-reclining upon
- a sofa, and leaning upon its back was the form of a tall and rather
- slightly-built man. She started up as I entered. Could it be that a
- brighter light beamed in her eyes as they encountered mine? I knew not,
- for the judge, who was seated near, was prompt to rise also, and said,--
-
- "'Mr. Palmer, we are glad of your return. Both Helen and myself were
- beginning to fear you had been spirited away. Allow me to make you
- acquainted with Doctor Wentworth. Doctor Wentworth, Mr. Palmer, our
- guest. I trust that you will learn to value the hour that brings you
- together.'
-
- "I looked the physician full in the face, as I took his hand. The sun,
- streaming in through the western windows, fell full upon his features,
- bringing out every line in a marvellous manner, and distinctly exposing
- their play, as he acknowledged my greeting. The countenance was one to
- attract the attention, and yet not pleasant to look upon. His forehead
- was high and fair; hair and mustache black as night, chin smoothly
- shaven and dimpled, and yet the eye repelled me. As I looked at him,
- I had an unaccountable impression that we had met before, but I could
- not tell where, or why it seemed as if the circumstances attending
- it had been of a disagreeable nature. As, after the first words of
- conversational politeness, he turned to Helen, I had a few moments
- for reflection, and suddenly flashed upon me the recollection of the
- scene in the wood,--the man leaning from his horse to grasp my collar,
- the tones of his voice, the momentary glance I had of his face as I
- fired my pistol at him, and the peculiar droop of his right eye that I
- had noticed. Could it be possible? Had I gained one more clew to the
- mystery? Was the man before me the would-be assassin? No! no! I was mad
- to indulge such a thought. This physician, the friend of Judge Perry,
- a gentleman, and evidently, from the judge's own words, the accepted
- suitor of his daughter, could be no vulgar highwayman; and yet, as
- he maintained a brisk conversation with Helen, and allowed me full
- opportunity for close observation, the more convinced did I become that
- he was the man. As she raised her hand, I saw the gleam of the diamond
- upon it. At last the chain of evidence for me was complete. What so
- natural as that her lover should present this to her? I thanked God
- that I was to be made the instrument by which she was to be rescued
- from such a marriage. I forgot my own private desire for vengeance.
- My love for her--this beautiful and innocent girl--was of so true a
- nature, that every other consideration was subordinate to the one for
- the furtherance of her welfare. By a powerful effort I controlled my
- feelings, and assumed an air of ease that I could not feel.
-
- "The doctor was all animation, and talked at a rapid rate, while I
- thought I had never seen Helen so dull. 'By the way, doctor,' remarked
- the judge, after we had left the tea-table and entered the parlor,
- 'have you recovered from the accident you met with a few weeks ago?
- Pistol-shots are anything but pleasant reminders, and you had a narrow
- escape.' I was gazing directly at him while the judge spoke, and for an
- instant, even as a summer breeze would ruffle a placid lake, a frown
- gathered upon his brow, and was gone. 'I am as well as I could wish
- to be,' was the answer, 'and have almost forgotten the occurrence.'
- Pleading a dull headache, I retired to my chamber at an early hour.
- I wished to be alone, that I might take counsel with myself as to
- the course I ought to pursue, in order to bring this scoundrel and
- his associate to justice. The longer I dwelt upon the matter, the
- more convinced I became that my proper course was to make the judge
- my confidant. He was of years' experience and discretion, and also
- a deeply interested party, through his daughter's connection with
- Wentworth.
-
- "I slept but little that night, and was in the grounds, when my host
- came out for a stroll in the morning air. I knew that it would yet be
- an hour before the breakfast-bell would ring; therefore, after speaking
- of the beauties of the morning, I took his arm as if for a promenade,
- and said, 'If you can spare me some thirty or forty minutes, and will
- come where we can by no possibility be overheard, I will tell you
- what I know is of vast importance to you.' He looked surprised, but
- acceded to my request at once, recommending the arbor already in view
- as a desirable place for private conversation. We seated ourselves,
- and, with but few preliminary remarks, I gave him a full account of my
- adventures since leaving Detroit. He did not once interrupt me; but, as
- I proceeded, his face became more and more ashen, until, as I concluded
- by denouncing the doctor as one of my assailants, it was as white as
- that of a corpse.
-
- "For a minute after I had ceased speaking he remained silent; then,
- drawing a long breath, he seemed to regain command over himself, and
- said: 'I can but believe all that you have told me, for there are many
- circumstances, with which you are evidently unacquainted, that go to
- corroborate your story. Can you remember the day of the month upon
- which your murder was attempted?'
-
- "'The twenty-second,' I replied.
-
- "'And on the twenty-fourth,' he said, 'Dr. Wentworth returned home
- after an absence of some days, in charge of Hugh Chapin, an intimate
- friend of his. He could with difficulty sit upon his horse, and was
- apparently suffering severely. He stated that he had been injured by
- the accidental discharge of his pistol, but that, as the ball had
- only inflicted a flesh-wound in the shoulder, it would soon heal. The
- explanation was plausible, and no one doubted his word.'
-
- "'Was there any mark upon the ring by which you could identify it?'
-
- "'On the inner-side, below the centre-stone,' I answered, 'was the
- letter P, in Roman characters, and above it was some fine scroll-work,
- and close observation would show the name of Susie, in minute
- lettering, amidst it; any one gazing upon it in an ordinary manner
- would fail to perceive it. My mother's maiden name was Susan Palmer,
- and this ring was presented to her by my father previous to their
- marriage. I feel sure that an inspection will prove my description to
- be true, although I have not seen the jewel since I lost it except upon
- your daughter's hand.'
-
- "'I am satisfied,' said my companion; 'I have seen the initial P, as
- you describe it, but as it corresponded with my Helen's family name,
- I thought it intended for it. I can readily identify the larger of
- the two men, and the one who inflicted the blow that nearly cost your
- life, in the person of a resident of a farm-house some three miles from
- us, one Hugh Chapin, a bachelor and the almost inseparable companion
- of Dr. Wentworth. I have never been pleased with this intimacy, for I
- have felt an aversion to this man from my first knowledge of him. As
- I could give no reason for it, I have said little to Wentworth on the
- subject. They came here about the same time, four years ago, and Dr.
- W., displaying considerable skill in his profession, soon acquired a
- good practice, and has enjoyed the confidence of the community. This
- Chapin purchased the house and farm he now occupies soon after his
- arrival, and has always seemed to have the command of money, although I
- learn that he is but an indifferent farmer, and often absent from home
- for weeks together. I employed Dr. W. in a severe illness I had some
- two years ago, and after I recovered he was much at my house, and Helen
- saw much of him. He proposed for her hand, and at first she seemed
- inclined to reject his suit, but, thinking the match a desirable one, I
- persuaded her not to do so. I have since often fancied that perhaps I
- did wrong in thus using my influence, as she has since their betrothal
- seemed loth to accord him the privileges of an accepted lover. His
- profession has often called him away, but I now see it may have
- frequently afforded an excuse for an absence in which were performed
- deeds too dark even to contemplate. The sheriff of our county is a
- brave, shrewd man, and I will lay the facts of this case before him,
- and we will devise the best means of bringing these men to justice.
- I need not point out to you the wisdom of silence; we have cunning
- knaves to deal with, and must use care, so they may gain no clew to
- our intentions. Knowing that you had been intrusted with three hundred
- dollars to pay into my hands, I have wondered at your silence on the
- subject; but your explanation has made all plain at last. It will be
- difficult to dissemble in the presence of this scoundrel, Wentworth,
- I know; yet for a brief time we must submit to the infliction of his
- presence, and allow him to visit Helen as heretofore.'
-
- "When we returned to the house, my heart was lighter than it had been
- since my arrival at N----. I will pass over the record of the next
- few days, for nothing of importance took place. The judge and myself
- held frequent consultations with the sheriff in my host's office;
- care being taken that these meetings should attract no attention.
- The doctor was occupied with his patients, as the warm weather was
- developing disease. Once only had his confederate, Hugh Chapin, made
- his appearance in the village. I had seen him as he rode up the street
- to the door of Dr. Wentworth's office, where dismounting, and securing
- his horse, he entered. I would have given much to have been a private
- spectator of their interview, but only remained book in hand in my
- seat at the window. You may be sure I comprehended nothing printed
- upon the page before me. Not many minutes elapsed after Chapin came
- forth and rode away, ere the sheriff dropped in upon us. The moment he
- made his appearance, I saw, by the twinkle in his eye, he had pleasant
- intelligence to communicate. Glancing around to see that we were alone,
- he cast himself into a chair, giving vent to a gratified chuckle. 'We
- have them at last,' said he, 'thanks to the intelligence of the boy
- the doctor employs to wait upon him, and whom I frightened and bribed
- into playing the spy. A nice plot of robbery has just been concocted
- by the two worthies closeted up yonder. Old Seth Jones to-day received
- a payment upon the farm he sold Thompson, and will take it to Pollard
- whose place he has purchased; having to travel some twenty miles of
- bad road, it will be dark before he can reach his destination, and
- Chapin and Wentworth are intent upon relieving him of his money; the
- rocky gully between Harrison's and Thompson's is the point selected for
- operations; and I, with my men, shall take care to be there in time to
- have a hand in the game.'
-
- "That was an anxious evening for me. I sat with Helen and her father
- until after ten, and, despite the efforts we all made, the conversation
- languished. I saw she felt a weight upon her that she could not cast
- off. As I gazed upon her face, while she bent over some feminine
- employment, I could perceive the great change that had been wrought
- in her in the few weeks I had known her. She had grown thin and pale,
- and a look of suffering had taken the place of one of cheerfulness. I
- asked myself if it could be that I had awakened her love, and that she
- had discovered this fact and allowed her betrothment to Wentworth to
- eat like a canker at her heart. I felt an almost irresistible desire to
- tell her how dear she was to me, and that if she returned my affection,
- all would be well with us. By a powerful effort, however, I choked back
- the words that trembled on my lips, and retired to my chamber, where
- I alternately paced the floor and sat by the open window until near
- morning. The night was intensely dark, and I could distinguish only
- the outline of the trees upon the lawn. It was three o'clock, and a
- faint streak of light began to illumine the eastern horizon, when I at
- last heard the tramp of horses upon the bridge that crossed the stream
- down the valley. I could control my impatience no longer, and, opening
- my door, descended the stairs with rapid feet, but the judge fully
- dressed was before me in the hall, proving that he, too, like myself,
- had impatiently awaited news of the result of the sheriff's ambuscade.
- We hurried down the street, and, in the dull light of the dawning day,
- met a party of six men having Hugh Chapin in charge. He was securely
- bound, and riding upon a horse in the midst of his captors. I noted the
- absence of Wentworth at once, and felt the most bitter disappointment,
- but soon learned the occasion of it. In an attempt to escape, he had
- been shot through the head, and was then lying dead at a farm-house
- near the scene of action.
-
- "I can now condense into a few sentences what more I have to relate. On
- being confronted with me, Chapin made a full confession of his own and
- Wentworth's crime. It was he who struck me upon the head as I fired at
- his companion, and, after binding up Wentworth's wound, he robbed and
- then conveyed me to a lonely part of the stream and cast me in; my long
- insensibility had cheated them into the belief of my death.
-
- "Helen made no pretext of regret at the awful judgment that had
- overtaken her betrothed; on the contrary, her face now wears an
- expression of repose which the dullest observer could not fail to
- perceive. Need I add that I had a long conversation with her last
- night during which she acknowledged her affection for me, and promised
- to be my wife provided her father sanctioned our wishes. The judge has
- since listened to my petition with a pleased smile, and answered that
- in due time we should be made happy.
-
- "When our nuptials are performed, then will end my western trip and its
- attending romance."
-
-
-
-
-THE TWO GHOSTS OF NEW LONDON TURNPIKE.
-
-
-
-
-THE TWO GHOSTS
-
-OF
-
-NEW LONDON TURNPIKE.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-There is a certain ancient and time-honored institution, which,
-in the advancement of recent discoveries and the march of modern
-improvements, seems destined soon to pass from the use, and then, in
-natural sequence, from the memories of mankind. For even the highest
-type of civilization is prone to ingratitude, and drops all thoughts
-of its best agencies as soon as it has outlived its absolute need of
-them. Towards this Lethean current, whose lazy waters glide so silently
-and yet so resistlessly along the borders of the Past, gradually
-undermining and crumbling away the ancient landmarks and the venerable
-institutions known and loved of the former generations, the whale-ships
-are already drifting.
-
-For year by year, as they set sail with their hardy crews, every
-succeeding voyage took them nearer to the court of the Ice King, the
-chill of his breath grew deadlier, and the invasion of his dominions
-more desperate. But, lo! when Jack Tar was almost at his wit's end,
-a cry arose upon the prairie, and the disciples of commerce dropped
-their harpoons and left their nets to follow the guidance of the new
-revelation. Jets of oleaginous wealth sprang and spirted, and blessed
-was he whose dish was right-side-up in this new rain of pecuniary
-porridge. Instead of the old launchings and weighings of anchors,
-came the embarkation of all sorts and sizes of solid and fancy craft
-on the inviting sea of speculation, and men ran hither and thither,
-outrivalling the tales of the bygone voyagers, by stories of vast
-fortunes made in a day, and of shipwrecks as sad as any on the ocean.
-And so, in place of dingy casks and creaking cordage and watery perils,
-there sprang up the reign of pipes and drills, and for the laden ships,
-black and oozy with their slippery cargo, we began to have long trains
-of bright blue tanks speeding over all our western railways; and the
-whaling vessels, with their smooth, tapering sides, and blowsy crews,
-and complicated mysteries of rigging, seem already like forsaken hulks,
-hopelessly stranded upon the shores of antiquity.
-
-But all this belongs to the Present, and any such prophecy uttered in
-the days with which our story has to do would have been regarded as the
-wildest of ravings. For then the whale-ship was a reality and a power,
-the terror of all mothers of wayward boys, and the general resort of
-reckless runaways and prodigals. The thought that it could ever be
-superseded by any undiscovered agency had not yet made its way into the
-heads of even the sage prognosticators who studied the prophets and the
-apocalypse, and were able to dispose of all the beasts and dragons,
-and to assign them appropriate places in the future, with the utmost
-certainty and satisfaction.
-
-It is certain that no such forebodings startled the complacency of two
-young men who sat, in the gathering twilight of a mild spring evening,
-on a fragment of drift-wood in a little cove of New London harbor, with
-the waves sweeping up almost to their feet, and the western sky still
-flushed with the departing glory of sunset.
-
-They were a stout, bronzed, muscular couple, loosely clad in the common
-sailor-suits of the period, and both with the shrewd, resolute cast of
-countenance that distinguished the irrepressible Yankee then no less
-than now. The darker of the two was the more attractive, for he had
-the jolly twinkling eye, and gayly infectious air that goes with the
-high animal temperament, and always carries a bracing tonic with it
-like the sea-breeze. Wherever John Avery came, all the evil spirits of
-dulness and mopes and blues, that conspire so fearfully for the misery
-of mankind, had to give way, and one burst of his spontaneous merriment
-would exorcise the whole uncanny troop. John was a born sailor, with
-all the dashing frankness, and generous, hearty temper characteristic
-of the class, and not deficient in the faculty for getting into scrapes
-that is also an invariable endowment of his prototypes.
-
-The other was a less open face, sharper in its outlines, and with
-more angles than curves. Had it been less kindly, it might have been
-the face of a rascal, and yet an artist could easily have idealized
-it into that of a hero. For all these variations and contrasts of
-characteristic expression, that have such influence among us, are,
-after all, wonderfully slight affairs, and a few touches either way,
-upon the vast majority of faces, would give a seraph or a demon at the
-shortest notice. The bright, plump countenance of Jack was an open
-book, known and read of all men, while that of his cousin Philo was a
-study far more perplexing, and in the end less satisfactory. But the
-conversation of the two was sufficiently plain.
-
-"Sails on Thursday, does she, Phil?" said the cheerful voice of John
-as his practised eye sought out a certain ship from among the crowd of
-vessels in the harbor.
-
-"All hands aboard at nine o'clock's the order," replied Philo, taking
-off his cap, and turning his face to the wind.
-
-"And the Sally Ann don't sail till Saturday. I say Phil, old fellow, I
-wish we were going together," cried John with one of his bursts.
-
-"It's better as 'tis," said Philo, thoughtfully. "There's a better
-chance for one of us to come back, you know, than if we were in the
-same ship."
-
-"'_Come back._' Why, of course we shall come back,--that is, I
-hope so, both of us. That wasn't what I meant. I'd like you for a
-shipmate,--that's all," was the eager response.
-
-"Yes,--I understand," answered Philo. "We shan't both come home, _of
-course_; but there's hopes for both of us, and a pretty strong chance
-for one of us at least."
-
-And then a seriousness fell upon the cousins, and for many minutes they
-sat and watched the tide creeping up to them like the lapping, hungry
-tongue of some slow monster, thinking such thoughts as will sometimes
-come unbidden to the heart of youth, and become more and more intrusive
-and importunate as we grow older.
-
-These boys were offshoots of a sturdy Puritan stock, and the pluck
-and backbone of their ancestry suffered no degeneracy in them. John
-had been an orphan from infancy, and had grown up in an atmosphere
-of loving kindness and tender mercy under the auspices of his Aunt
-Betsy,--Philo's mother. She it was, who, in view of his orphanage,
-had winked at his boyish misdemeanors, indulged his naturally gay
-disposition in every way that her strict and somewhat barren orthodoxy
-allowed, and when his sea-going propensities could no longer be
-controlled by the mild influences of her molasses gingerbread and sweet
-cider, she had made him a liberal outfit of flannel shirts and blue
-mixed hose, and, tucking a Bible into the corner of his chest, bade him
-God-speed on his first voyage.
-
-It was with some surprise that she saw him come back from a three
-months' cruise, with no more serious damage than a scar across his
-forehead; but still she felt reproached at the sight of it, and on
-Jack's next start rectified her previous neglect, by sending Philo
-along with him in the capacity of mentor and protector,--an office
-which she, in the devotion of her heart, would most joyfully have
-undertaken herself if the art and practice of navigation could have
-been adapted so as to admit of the services of an elderly lady. But
-becoming convinced of the utter impracticability of this plan, she
-wisely settled herself down to be comfortable with tea-drinking and
-knitting-work, with great confidence in Philo's sobriety and force of
-character, as applied to preserve her darling Jack from harm; for Aunt
-Betsy, like many other excellent people, was not free from favoritism,
-and her adopted son was the child of her affections, while Philo had
-the secondary place, and was expected to consider it his highest
-happiness to fiddle for Jack's dancing, and otherwise to hold the
-candle in a general way for the benefit and pleasure of that superior
-being. Had Jack been less jolly and generous, or Philo less amiable and
-forbearing, this maternal arrangement would have been a fruitful source
-of jealousy and contention; but the two natures were so fortunately
-balanced that even the one-sided weight of Aunt Betsy's partiality
-worked no such derangement of the family peace, as might have been
-supposed. The boys had made three short voyages together, and were now
-about shipping for their first long absence in different vessels only
-because Philo's superior education and business aptitude qualified him
-for the position of supercargo, which had been offered him on board the
-Skylark.
-
-Philo was already developing the great Yankee trait of penny-catching,
-for even then he had saved quite a pretty sum out of the very moderate
-pay of a foremast man in those times, and this, in addition to his
-patrimonial inheritance of a few hundred dollars, made a nice nest-egg
-for the fortune that he hoped to realize in late life. Jack, too, had
-his property interest, for he had just come to man's estate in the
-eye of the law, and his little property, carefully hoarded, and with
-its due interest had been, only the day previous, paid into his hands
-in good gold, accompanied by much sound advice and the warmest good
-wishes from his benignant guardian, 'Squire Tupper, who, thanks to
-Aunt Betsy's interposition had found him the most dutiful and least
-troublesome of wards.
-
-Philo renewed the conversation by inquiring whether Jack had thought
-of any particular mode of investment, and stating his own intention
-of purchasing an interest in the Skylark, if on his return it should
-appear advisable. But the former topic appeared to push itself uneasily
-uppermost, and he soon came abruptly back to it,--
-
-"I shall do that thing if I live to see home again; and, if anything
-should happen that I don't, I want my money to go to you, Jack, except
-half the income, and that I want to have settled on mother as long as
-she lives."
-
-"You'd better say all the income, and the principal too, for that
-matter, Phil," cried the hearty Jack, with a little break in his voice
-at the last words.
-
-"No," replied the cousin, soberly. "There's enough besides to keep the
-old lady comfortable as long as she lives, and more would only worry
-her. If she gets something to show that I didn't forget her, it'll be
-better than if she had it all to take care of; and she'll be just as
-well suited to have it go to you."
-
-"But think of my getting what Aunt Betsy ought to have," remonstrated
-Jack, sturdily.
-
-"It's best," said Philo.
-
-"And to hear you talk as if you was bound straight for Davy Jones'
-locker," pursued Jack.
-
-"I shan't go any straighter for talking about it, as I know of,"
-answered Philo, looking steadily towards the dim horizon as if his fate
-lay somewhere between the water and the sky.
-
-"Well, then," shouted the impulsive Jack, "if it must be so, I'm glad
-I can match you at the other end of the same rope. You're as likely to
-come home as I am, and, if I'm never heard from, all I've got shall go
-to you."
-
-"Then we'd better make our wills in form, if that's your wish," said
-Philo, rising from the log.
-
-"We'll make all fast to-morrow," remarked Jack, cheerfully; "though it
-makes one feel queer to be doing such business at our age."
-
-"It can't hurt anything; and we're no more likely to meet with bad luck
-for having things in ship-shape," replied Philo, as they walked up
-towards the little town, whose twinkling lights winked like fireflies
-out of the darkness.
-
-"Let's do it to-night, and have it over," exclaimed Jack, who found
-an unpleasant creeping sensation gaining upon him as he dwelt on the
-subject.
-
-"Well," said Philo.
-
-The cousins turned into the main street of the village, now a busy
-mart of business, but in those days broad and grassy, with a row of
-respectable gambrel-roofed houses, each with its liberal garden at
-the side. Pre-eminent in respectability was the abode of 'Squire
-Tupper, with its large, clean yard, small, patchwork-looking windows,
-and ponderous brass knocker, which disclosed the terrific head of
-some nondescript animal in most menacing attitude. Upon this brazen
-effigy Jack sounded a vigorous rap, since 'Squire Tupper was the prime
-magnate and authority of the small town, in all matters requiring legal
-adjustment; and any well-instructed resident would as soon have thought
-of having a funeral without the minister as of making a will without
-the advice of the 'squire.
-
-The summons was answered by a pretty blonde girl, dressed in the nicest
-of blue stuff gowns, the whitest of muslin tuckers, and with her
-pretty feet displayed to advantage by fine clocked stockings and neat
-morocco shoes. All these little matters and her dainty air gave her the
-appearance of a petted kitten, or, rather, of some small, ornamental
-image, made of cream candy, and kept in a Chinese doll-house.
-
-She turned rosy at sight of Jack, who came instantly out of his solemn
-mood, and, in the frank, saucy way habitual to him, swung his arm
-around the neat waist, and, spite of some tiny remonstrances and vain
-struggles, planted a big sailor kiss right in the centre of the demure
-mouth. All this was natural enough; for, besides being the 'squire's
-ward and connected in that sort of cousinhood which extends to the
-forty-ninth degree of consanguinity, Jack had now regularly "kept
-company" with Molly for several months, and all his Sunday nights on
-shore were piously devoted to "settin' up" with her in the prim, sanded
-best parlor, where it is not to be supposed that he abstained totally
-from such "refreshment" as Mr. Sam Weller was accustomed to indulge
-when opportunity offered.
-
-But his demonstrativeness served to discompose Molly's ladyhood on this
-occasion; and the presence of Philo with his business-like face added
-so much scandal that she disengaged herself as quickly as possible from
-Jack's audacious grasp, and, with such dignity as a white kitten might
-assume in the presence of two intrusive pups, ushered them into the
-family "keepin'-room," and withdrew, as if she wished it understood
-that she washed her hands of them and their kind from that time forth.
-But Jack slipped out after her, and probably made peace; for they
-returned together,--he very brisk and shining, and she blushing like
-Aurora.
-
-Philo, however, meant business, and said as much in plain terms, that
-set Miss Molly into a perfect maze of conjecture as she went to call
-the 'squire. Her only solution of the mystery was that Jack had now
-come for the momentous _pop_, toward which events had been tending;
-and that Philo had accompanied him in the character of second. She
-felt a little piqued that she had not been able to bring him to the
-point herself; but then it was certainly very straightforward in him
-to come right to her father in that way; and so the little lady rushed
-out to the wood-pile in a perfect flutter of delicious perplexity, and
-imparted the fact that the two young men had called _on business_, with
-such decided emphasis that the 'squire immediately took the cue, and
-prepared himself to be especially benignant and paternal.
-
-Relieved of Molly's inspiring presence, Jack felt all the solemnity
-of the affair returning upon him, and, as is usual with these strong,
-mercurial natures, it loomed before him more and more grim and ghastly,
-till, by the time that the 'squire made his appearance, he had become
-almost persuaded that his last hour was really approaching. This state
-of mind imparted to his countenance an expression of such touching
-melancholy as made the old gentleman take him for the most despairing
-of lovers, and wrought upon his sympathies amazingly.
-
-'Squire Tupper was the embodiment of magisterial dignity, owlish
-wisdom, and universal benevolence. With a fine, showy person that was
-in itself the guaranty of unimpeachable respectability, he had gone on
-in life, and come to hold the position of an oracle; not on account
-of anything he ever said, but because of a general way that he had of
-looking as if he could on all occasions say a great deal if he chose,
-which is a sure way to attain the distinction of being considered
-remarkably well-informed, though it is one that is greatly neglected
-of late years. The world laughs at witty people, and despises them;
-and 'Squire Tupper was a bright example of the truth that it takes a
-thoroughly dull man to be profoundly respected.
-
-He now saluted the cousins with grave urbanity, and deliberately placed
-his stately form in the arm-chair, taking a fresh cut of tobacco as
-a preliminary to business. If Molly had enough of mother Eve about
-her to cause her to peep and listen behind the door, we don't know
-as it concerns us. We don't say she did; but would be slow to take
-the responsibility of declaring that she didn't. Young ladies, who
-may chance to peruse this veracious history, are at liberty to decide
-this point according to their own estimate of the temptation, and the
-average feminine power of resistance.
-
-Jack plunged desperately into the middle of the subject, and then tried
-to swim out toward the introduction.
-
-"We thought we'd stop in, sir, this evening, as we've made up our minds
-to do a certain thing; and it seemed as if we--I mean I--felt as if I
-should like to have it done, and over with."
-
-"I see, I see," replied the 'squire, with the utmost consideration for
-Jack's embarrassment, and the delicate nature of his errand. "You've
-spoken to Molly about it, I suppose?" he added, encouragingly.
-
-"Why, no. Didn't think it was worth while, as you was at home,"
-answered Jack.
-
-"Ah, I see! Jes' so, jes' so! Very thoughtful in you, Jack,--very,
-indeed." The 'squire paused, and took a pinch of snuff, nodding his
-satisfaction, and proceeded: "It's highly gratifying to me, Jack, to
-see you so thoughtful as to come to me first on this business; though
-it isn't what all young men would do. I'm glad to see that you respect
-the parental relation, and respect my feelings, though you've no
-parents of your own; still you've had an excellent bringing up by your
-Aunt Betsy, and I've tried, in my humble way, to do what I could."
-(Graceful self-abasement was one of the 'squire's strong points.)
-"And now I say you've acted just right, because I am better capable
-of judging what is for Molly's good than she can be herself; and, of
-course, I'm the person to be first consulted; and it's most creditable
-and gratifying"--
-
-"Why, it isn't about Molly, at all!" cried Jack in bewilderment.
-
-O happy, doting pride of fatherhood! What a falling off was there, and
-what blankness, followed by confusion, overspread 'Squire Tupper's
-countenance, as the nature of his blunder and its extreme awkwardness
-became apparent to his puzzled faculties.
-
-"No--no--certainly not--not in the least!" gasped he, catching after
-his dignity, as a man drowning grasps at straws.
-
-"We came to see if you could attend to making out our wills, this
-evening," said Philo.
-
-The 'squire looked from one to the other with such dazed incredulity
-that both the young men applied themselves to explanations which
-brought his senses back into the world of facts.
-
-"Yes, yes, certainly,--very creditable and prudent in you to wish to
-make things all snug before you go. Excellent idea; though you're both
-rather youngish to be doing such business. Still it's highly gratifying
-to see you take it up in this way,--certainly,--just let me get the
-materials." And the 'squire plunged with great eagerness into the
-subject, briskly opening an old-fashioned secretary, and setting out
-upon the table a heavy stone inkstand, a sand-box, some large sheets
-of paper, and a bunch of quills; and then, being quite restored to his
-accustomed equilibrium, begged them in the most impressive magisterial
-manner, to state their wishes, and commenced making his pen, while
-Philo explained the subject-matter of the conversation previously
-recorded.
-
-"I see, I see!" said the 'squire, deliberately, when he had elaborated
-the point of the quill, and tried it repeatedly on his thumb-nail. And,
-without further ado, he drew his chair to the table, and headed the
-page in a large, round hand: "_The Last Will and Testament of Philo
-Avery_;" following it up with the regular formula for such cases made
-and provided.
-
-"_In the name of God, Amen._
-
-"I, Philo Avery, of the town of New London and state of Connecticut,
-being of sound mind and memory, and considering the uncertainty of this
-frail and transitory life, do, therefore, make, advise, publish, and
-declare this to be my last will and testament," etc.
-
-Scratch--scratch, went the 'squire's pen, interrupted only by
-occasional dips into the ink, while the two testators sat and looked
-on in unwinking silence, and the tall candles flared and sputtered
-as their sooty wicks dropped down into the tallow. Hardly had this
-happened when Molly tripped shyly into the room, bringing a pair of
-silver snuffers on a little tray, and with one dexterous nip relieved
-each smoking luminary of its incumbrance, at the same moment casting
-her demure eyes upon the page which her father was now covering with
-sand. If she was not ignorant of the old gentleman's palpable blunder
-(and remember the narrator takes no responsibility on that point), she
-was certainly very innocent and unconscious, and, as Jack looked at
-her, he anathematized his own stupidity in not taking the opportunity
-which the 'squire had so temptingly opened for him, and determined that
-he would rectify the omission speedily.
-
-Meanwhile, the quill travelled over another broad page, and the
-documents were ready for the signatures. And then it was necessary
-that Molly and the hired-man should be called in as witnesses, and the
-former made very wide eyes of wonderment (little budget of deceit!)
-when she learned the nature of the papers, and wrote her name in a
-tiny, cramped hand, with many little quirks like the legs of spiders,
-and this was supplemented by the laborious autograph of Silas Plumb,
-the teamster, a young man of limited education and bushy hair.
-
-And when all this was done, the cousins exchanged the wills, and
-tucked them into their respective side-pockets, feeling greatly
-relieved, and the 'squire, after receiving his fee in a benevolent,
-deprecating manner, as if it was quite a trial to his feelings, but
-must be undergone as a duty, brought out some excellent port wine, and
-pledged them both in liberal glasses, with wishes for their prosperous
-voyage and safe return. And at the mention of this sorrowful topic,
-poor Molly's spirits suffered such charming timid depression, and
-were affected to such a degree that when Philo took leave, it was
-necessary for Jack to lag behind, and finally allow him to go away
-alone, since nothing else would serve to restore the languishing damsel
-to comparative cheerfulness. At this interval of time, and without
-the advantage of being an eye-witness, it would be a vain attempt for
-anybody to undertake a minute account of how, standing in the low
-"stoop," with its little round posts like drumsticks, and huge tubs of
-thrifty, rough-leaved plants, Molly made herself perfectly irresistible
-with her shy regrets, and how, when her grief and apprehension at
-once welled up from her heart to her face, in the midst of bashful
-palpitations and broken sobs, her proud little head wilted weakly
-over on Jack's shoulder, and she begged him not to go sail-ail-ailing
-away, and be drownd-ed-ed--and have that horrid old will-ill-ill for
-his sole memento. Neither would it be easy to portray how Jack soothed
-and petted, with all the little endearments that are such delightful
-realities for the moment, but so silly and absurd to remember, and
-finally, when nothing else would answer, committed himself past all
-remedy, as what man could help doing, with such a dainty little figure
-leaning close, and the sweetest of mournful faces buried in his collar.
-And then, there were more tears and kisses, and at the end a long,
-quiet talk of all that should be realized when that one voyage was
-over, and he should be ready to resign his sea-faring life.
-
-At last Jack tore himself away from all these enchantments, and
-rushed home for a couple of hours of delicious dreamy tumbling about
-in bed before daylight, which seemed to come much sooner than he had
-calculated, and aroused him to complete his preparations for departure.
-
-Everybody knows what a queer, altered aspect certain actions and
-feelings take after one night, and the dawning of the clear, practical
-light of the next day. Ideas that have seemed most urgent and actual
-will at such times appear extremely unreal and visionary, and be
-quite eclipsed in interest by the trifles that come in between and
-demand immediate attention. Jack found it so, in the hurry and bustle
-of the next day, what with the preparations for sailing, and all the
-little matters that such a start involves. The doings of the previous
-night seemed quite distant and foreign to his own personality; and it
-needed the big-folded document, with its formal phraseology and crisp
-rattle, to convince him that the acts of the evening before had not
-been a rather memorable dream. Once, in the course of the day, he
-took out the will, read it hastily over, and then tucked it away in a
-little brass-bound box, that answered for him the same purpose that a
-Herring's Patent does for prudent young men of the present day.
-
-But however it might be about the wills, and the chances that the Great
-Reaper should overtake either of the cousins before the return-voyage,
-Molly was a present and delightful reality; and that very evening Jack
-made her another visit, justified 'Squire Tupper's presumption of the
-former occasion, and amid Molly's tears and kisses, and big sighs and
-little sobs, wished most heartily that the Sally Ann had made her
-cruise, and that the future programme was ready to be carried into
-effect. But then, he might be lucky enough to pay for waiting; and if
-anything should happen to Philo in the interval,--of course, he hoped
-there wouldn't, poor fellow; but accidents will happen, and if anything
-so sad should occur, why, then he would be in a position to keep Molly
-in the style she deserved and was accustomed to; and to buy out a share
-in some nice little craft, that should bring home to them treasures as
-rich, after their kind, as those that the ships of Tarshish brought to
-King Solomon. But all this was mere conjecture, and Jack renounced it
-with a feeling of reproach for having indulged it even for a moment.
-
-The next day the Skylark sailed, Philo starting away from the old
-house with his chest on a wheelbarrow, and leaving Aunt Betsy on the
-doorstep, with her lips pressed very tight, and all the grim fatalism
-of her religious faith making stern struggle against the natural
-motherly instincts of her heart. For she did love Philo; and even the
-reflection that he wasn't going to wait upon Jack, according to his
-established usage, was lost in genuine grief for his departure.
-
-Jack rowed out to the ship with him; and it would be doing both an
-injustice to ask whether the cordial regrets of their separation were
-mingled with any remembrance on the part of either, that in case they
-should never meet again, one of them would be a few hundred dollars
-richer for the death of the other.
-
- * * * * *
-
-On the morning of May 5th, 1805, the Sally Ann sailed out of New London
-harbor. On the evening of September 12th, 1808, she dropped anchor in
-the very spot which she had left three years and four months before.
-
-The first object, aside from the familiar shore, that met Jack's
-recognition, as they sailed up the bay, was the ship Skylark, arrived
-just six weeks previously, and the first man he saw, as he stepped on
-land, was his Cousin Philo. There could hardly have been a more cordial
-greeting than that which the bystanders witnessed; and yet a close
-look into the heart of each might have disclosed a shade of something
-strangely inconsistent with the outward semblance of happiness that
-both wore.
-
-For three years is a long time for some thoughts and impulses to
-mature in, and day after day out at sea, with only the monotony of
-the ever-undulating waves, and the easily exhausted resources of
-variety to be found on shipboard, give great opportunity for brooding,
-and such speculations as come naturally to people who are idle and
-isolated. Seeds of the devil's planting possess a peculiarly vital
-and fructifying property and are sure to come to maturity sooner or
-later. One can easily imagine the thoughts that might have come to
-these two young men in the long, solitary watches, come perhaps like
-suggestions from the world outside, wafted on the wings of the wind,
-or caught up in chance hints and scraps of sailor talk, but coming
-nevertheless straight from the God of mammon, and, with their slow
-canker working a steady and sure corruption. And yet, neither had
-probably ever allowed these thoughts to take any such positive form as
-to be capable of recognition. They were always, even in the moments of
-their strongest domination, veiled in some perfectly innocent mental
-expression, such as _if_ anything should happen, or _supposing_ such
-an affliction,--meditations which the most sensitive conscience could
-not possibly challenge, but which had a way of creeping in upon the
-minds of these two far oftener than they would have done, but for the
-existence of the wills.
-
-Philo had an inborn love of lucre that was strong enough to give spice
-and fascination to these ponderings of possibilities, while Jack was
-constantly under the stimulus of his fondness for Molly, and desire to
-make a handsome provision for her. And by these means, this indefinite
-_if_, acknowledged at first only as a remote and dreaded contingency,
-gradually took to itself substance, and began to figure in the plans
-and projects of each as if it were almost a positive certainty. Always,
-however, with the proviso that it was a very sad possibility, to be
-devoutly deplored and hoped against, but still accepted and treated
-as an actuality. And such an effectual devil-trap did this _if_
-prove to be, that this meeting of the two cousins was, in the hidden
-consciousness of each, in the nature of an unexpected shock that made a
-sudden scattering of many schemes and purposes, all based, to a great
-extent upon that wicked and fallacious _if_. And while all this was
-lurking under the demonstrative warmth and gladness of their greeting,
-probably no greater surprise nor horror could have befallen either
-than to have had the veil of his self-deception for one moment lifted,
-and to have had a single glimpse at the truth within him, or a single
-intimation of the lives that they two should lead through the next half
-century under the evil consciousness of that ever impending _if_.
-
-But nothing of this supernatural character befell them, and after a few
-warm greetings among the crowd on the pier, Jack hastened toward the
-town. There were some changes in the familiar streets; buildings newly
-built or altered, signs changed, and a barber's pole freshly painted.
-All these he observed carefully as he walked on. When he came in sight
-of 'Squire Tupper's, the radiant, blushing face of Molly disclosed
-itself for an instant at the window, and speedily reappeared in a
-flutter of delicious expectancy at the half-open door, for the news
-of the arrival was already all over town. She gave a series of little
-screams as Jack, with such a big black beard, and so very brown, came
-up and saluted her with a strong bearish hug and a general smell of
-whale-oil.
-
-For Jack was considerably altered by reason of a certain manly
-reticence that seemed to have grown on with his whiskers, in place
-of the old boyish dash and frankness. Molly had become steady and
-womanly, too, and now saw with vast pride the dignified way in which
-Jack deported himself, how he met the 'squire's gracious welcome with
-equal ease and affability, and talked of his voyage and its adventures
-in such a quiet, modest way as showed him to be every inch a hero. And
-when, after a short stay, he spoke of Aunt Betsy, and would not prolong
-her waiting, Molly was quite resigned to let him go, contenting herself
-with dwelling upon his improved looks, and indulging in charming little
-maidenly reveries that centred in the anticipated joys and splendors
-of a certain day which she had settled in her own mind as not far
-distant.--Alas, Molly! Indulge your reveries, poor girl. Dream on,
-and let your dreams be sweet. Play over and over in anticipation your
-pretty little drama of white dresses and bridesmaids and wedding-cake,
-and make it all as gay as possible, for little else shall you have by
-way of reward for your many months of constancy to Jack Avery, save
-his occasional attentions and the satisfaction of being for years the
-wonder and mystery of all the gossips in town. Yes; for years. It may
-as well be said now as any other time. The day when Molly's dreams
-should be realized withdrew itself from time to time, and at length
-took up its permanent position in the distant horizon of uncertainty.
-"Colts grew horses, beards turned gray," but Molly Tupper was not
-merged in Molly Avery, and there were no prospects of that consummation
-more than had appeared for the last--well--we wont say how many years.
-For tender and devoted as Jack was for a long time, there was a change
-in him, that brought something of constraint and reserve between them,
-and, with all her delicate feminine tact, she could never lead him
-into any direct avowal of his wishes on the subject. And since Molly
-was the very paragon of maidenly modesty and trusting devotion, she
-came to indulge the conviction that Jack knew best, and had some wise
-though inscrutable reason for delaying matters. And in time, even
-those indefatigables, the village gossips, wearied of wondering and
-surmising, at their perennial tea-parties, and the whole thing settled
-down into a discouraging calm.
-
-And yet Jack had no design of doing an injustice. He was really fond
-of Molly, and fully intended to marry her. But for that ever-present
-_if_, and the complications it involved, the event would have taken
-place in due time. His reflections sometimes took a very painful turn,
-as he pondered the subject. Here was this beautiful, affectionate girl,
-to whom he had long been pledged, waiting his time with all the truth
-and constancy of her loving nature. And here he was, living a dreary
-and almost hopeless bachelor life, and standing in the way of any
-advantageous match which might be otherwise open for her acceptance.
-But, in case of his marriage, the will arrangement must be broken up,
-and he should have the mortification of making that suggestion to
-Philo; which seemed an almost impossible thing to do, for not a word
-with reference to it had ever passed the lips of either since the
-night when the agreement was made, and both had come to regard it with
-something like a superstitious dread, as a theme whose discussion might
-portend some fatal result.
-
-And then, again, thought Jack, life was such an uncertainty, and a few
-months of waiting might make a vast difference. Suppose, in his foolish
-haste, he should throw up the will arrangement, and marry Molly, and
-it should turn out, after all, that a little delay would have improved
-their condition so much. Though life insurance was still unknown, and
-its cool calculations and scientific averages would have been then
-regarded as the extreme of impiety, and its risks as a wicked tempting
-of Providence, Jack had made out in his own mind a tolerably accurate
-table of averages, which showed quite conclusively against his cousin's
-chances for longevity. It is hardly to be supposed that Philo had
-neglected the same satisfactory proceeding, or that his results were
-very different.
-
-And thus this corrupting temptation, that is the root of all evil, had
-crept upon these two noble young hearts distorting and defiling them
-with its slow taint. And even now, either of them might truthfully have
-questioned,--
-
- "What shall I be at fifty,
- If nature keeps me alive,
- If life is so cold and bitter,
- When I am but twenty-five?"
-
-It would be too dreary a task to follow them year by year. Let us make
-leaps and take glimpses at them by intervals.
-
-
-_Twenty-five._ What we have seen.
-
-
-_Thirty._ Aunt Betsy, weak and childish for many months, has gone to
-her long home, with a final admonition to Philo that he must make Jack
-the object of his best watch and care for the entire period of his
-natural life.
-
-Molly is still pretty, though a little thin and with a perceptible
-sharpening of the elbows. Her color is not quite so high, nor her
-figure so plump. She keeps house for the 'squire, with devotion and
-good management that are the admiration of the town; continues to love
-and trust in Jack with unabated fervor, though some young women, whom
-she remembers to have held in her arms when they were babies in long
-clothes, are long since married and have babies of their own. Still
-she receives the sometime visits of her laggard lover with the same
-grace and sweetness, confident that it will all come right in time; has
-dropped the old familiar "Jack" for "John" or "Mr. Avery," which is a
-hint that we ought to do so, too.
-
-That unfathomable individual has been for some time a partner in a
-grocery establishment, carrying on a good business, and realizing
-fair profits; devotes much of his leisure to revising the imaginary
-insurance table, and has brought it down considerably closer; maintains
-a great regard for his Cousin Philo, and has much affectionate
-solicitude for his health; gives occasionally to various benevolent
-objects; is extremely regular in all his habits, and is generally
-regarded as a very nice young man, who has turned out much better than
-was expected of him.
-
-Philo has purchased a farm in an adjoining town, and is improving it
-with great care; is considered rather "near" in his dealings, and is
-generally quite distant and reserved. Suspicions are entertained that
-he has been disappointed in love, though nobody pretends to know the
-particulars; always takes a great interest in his Cousin John, whom
-he suspects of a tendency to dropsy. John, on his part, thinks Philo
-consumptive.
-
-
-_Thirty-five._ No great variation.
-
-Both the farmer and the grocery-man are moderately prosperous; though
-neither ventures much into speculation, because each is mindful of
-possibilities in the future that will give great additional advantages.
-The insurance table has been reduced to one of the exact sciences.
-
-Molly, poor girl, has faded a shade or two. She still keeps house, and
-raises an annual crop of old-maid pinks and pathetic-looking pansies,
-together with sage and rosemary and sweet marjoram, which she dries
-and puts in her closets and drawers, in order that their delicate,
-homelike fragrance may keep out the moths and pervade her apparel.
-But, as she moves so briskly and cheerfully about her little tasks, or
-bends over some bit of sewing or other ladycraft, grave doubts intrude
-themselves; and, if she were one whit less patient and self-forgetful,
-she would sometimes throw aside all these little occupations, and,
-like Jephthah's daughter, bewail her virginity. And, as she sits on
-Sunday mornings in church, alone in the pew except the 'squire,--now
-an old man who takes incredible quantities of snuff and drops the
-hymn-book,--as she sits thus, and watches the happy matrons, no older
-than she, coming in one by one, with their manly husbands and groups
-of rosy children, there comes up, sometimes, a great rising in her
-throat, which she is fain to subdue by taking bits of her own preserved
-flag-root, which she carries always in her pocket. Or, when she sees
-some pretty bride arrayed in the customary fineries, she sighs a
-little, as the thought that she has lost her best bloom comes uneasily
-to the surface; and then she sometimes looks timidly around to see if
-Mr. Avery has come to church. But Mr. Avery isn't often there; the
-insurance table takes up a good deal of his attention on Sundays.
-
-Molly has long ceased to dream about the white dresses and
-orange-blossoms. She would be glad, indeed, to make sure of a plain
-dark silk and only two kinds of cake; and of late even her hopes of
-these have become empty and melancholy as a last-year's birds-nest.
-Yet she clings still to the shadow of her old coquette girlhood, and
-rejuvenates herself with a new bonnet every spring, with as much
-seeming cheerfulness and confidence as if she were fifteen instead of
-thirty-five.
-
-
-_Forty._ Decided changes.
-
-'Squire Tupper rests in a grave marked by the most upright and
-respectable of tombstones. And then all the chattering tongues, that
-had before wagged themselves weary with gossip and conjecture, took a
-renewed impetus, and it was settled in all quarters that Molly would
-now be married as speedily as the proprieties of mourning would permit.
-And John himself, it would seem, thought as much; for, without any
-undue haste, he did make some motions looking that way. He bought a
-new gig, and took Molly out to ride several times, besides sitting
-very regularly in her pew at church. And, having thus evinced the
-earnestness of his intentions, he made himself spruce one Sabbath
-evening, and proceeded to call on her, with the express design of
-asking her to fix the long-deferred day.
-
-But what was his surprise on finding, as he came upon the stoop where
-he and Molly had so often exchanged vows of eternal fidelity (which
-had, indeed, been tolerably tested), the best parlor gayly alight as
-in the days of his early courtship, and to hear a male voice in very
-animated conversation with Molly.
-
-Curiosity and pride alike forbade him to retreat; but how was his
-surprise intensified to dismay when Molly, looking remarkably bright
-and young, ushered him into the presence of Mr. Niles, a most
-respectable gentleman resident in town, whose wife had been now three
-months dead. He was as smiling and interesting as Molly. And presently
-that outrageous damsel spoke up in the easiest way in the world,--
-
-"You dropped in just the right time, _Cousin_ John, for now you shall
-be the first one to be invited to our wedding. It is to come off a week
-from next Wednesday in the evening. We have just settled the time, and
-I shall have to stir around pretty lively to get ready."
-
-It was all true, and there was no help for it. John Avery had presumed
-a trifle too much upon the elastic quality of Molly's love for him, and
-now, at the eleventh hour, her seraphic patience had given way, and let
-him most decidedly and disgracefully down. When her father was dead and
-she left in loneliness, and John still delayed to make direct provision
-for altering the state of things, Molly felt that she had passed the
-limit of forbearance, and with a sudden dash of spirit, in which she
-seemed to concentrate all the unspoken pain and suppressed sense of
-wrong that had struggled in her heart through all these years past, she
-actually set her cap for this forlorn widower with six children, caught
-him, rushed him through a violent courtship, evoked from his stricken
-heart an ardent and desperate declaration, accepted, and married him,
-all in the space of eight weeks.
-
-And this was John's first intimation. Will any woman blame her if she
-_had_ been a little studious to conceal the preliminaries from him,
-till it should be time to acquaint him with the result, or if she
-wasn't especially tender of his nervous sensibilities in making her
-disclosure?
-
-But he was bidden to the wedding, and must needs go,--which he did,
-looking very glum, and kissing the bride with far less gusto than
-he had done in former times. But it was a very festive occasion,
-notwithstanding, for the bridegroom appeared in a blue coat with brass
-buttons, and his hair was greased to preternatural glossiness, while
-all the six children stood in a row, their stature being graduated
-like a flight of steps, and the cake was all that Molly had ever
-pictured it in the wildest flight of her imagination. And Molly herself
-in a perfect cloud of gauze and blaze of blushes renewed her youth
-prodigiously.
-
-It was all over, and John Avery walked slowly homeward with a
-glimmering consciousness that the things of this life in general were
-rather shaky and uncertain,--indulging even a brief doubt as to the
-reliability of his system of averages.
-
-
-_Fifty._ Both of our old bachelors are beginning to grow gray and
-morose. Philo stoops considerably, but is otherwise in excellent
-physical preservation; reads all the medical books about abstinence and
-frugality as the means of promoting long life, and practises rigidly
-upon their principles. John is equally tough and temperate. Neither
-shows the least sign of giving out for fifty years to come. Both have
-increased in substance and have the reputation of being "forehanded."
-The insurance table has been reduced to the very last fraction; but,
-spite of its scientific accuracy, seems to be one of those rules that
-are proved by their exceptions.
-
-Mrs. Niles is the most devoted of wives, the perfection of
-step-mothers, and rejoices, besides, in a chubby little boy of her own.
-All the seven are united in neglecting no opportunity to rise up and
-call her blessed.
-
-
-_Sixty._ Ditto--only more so.
-
-
-_Seventy._ The Ghosts?
-
-
-Yes, indulgent reader, your patience hath had its perfect work, if it
-hath brought you through all these preceding pages, in order that you
-may witness this _denouement_ scene, in which the ghosts appear, with
-such real and startling semblance in the eyes of some of our actors,
-that, in comparison, the fifth act of a sensation drama would have
-seemed mild as milk.
-
-It is to see these supernatural visitants that we have brought you all
-this long road. Let them show themselves but once, and we will then be
-content, nay glad, to drop our curtain, retire from the footlights,
-and whisk our actors back to the serene shades of private life. Grant
-us, for a little time, the gifts of conjurers and "meejums." Let our
-Asmodeus take you in charge, and show you things that are beyond the
-range of mere mortal perception. Ubiquity shall be yours while you
-journey into the land of spirits, and the name of the mischievous
-wizard and terrible practical joker who conducts you thither shall be
-Jack Niles.
-
-For we omitted to mention, in its appropriate connection, that when
-Molly found herself laid under the responsibility of naming her boy,
-she was debarred from bestowing on him that of his father, since it
-had been previously appropriated among the six, and her artistic
-sense revolted from starting the poor, helpless innocent out in the
-world under the honored designation of Zophar Tupper, which his
-grandfather had borne with such eminent respectability. And so, being
-influenced by the tender grace of motherhood, and desirous of showing
-her kind feeling towards the man whom she had once so loved and had
-now so freely forgiven, she felt that she could do it in no more
-expressive way than by calling her baby John Avery. The compliment was
-appreciated, and there may still be seen, among the family treasures of
-the Niles tribe, a silver cup, of punchy form and curious workmanship,
-marked with the inscription "J. A. N. from J. A."
-
-Jack the second grew up a tolerably correct copy of the boyhood of
-his namesake. He was gifted with the same gayety of temperament, and
-facility for getting into scrapes. It had happened more than once that
-heedless pranks of his had been leniently looked upon, and concealed
-or remedied by the considerate care of John the elder, who, spite of
-all the miserable warping and drying up of all his kindlier sympathies
-under the influence of that ever-impending possibility, still seemed
-to find a congenial satisfaction in the society of this frank, jolly
-youth, whose presence brought with it such an echo of his own once
-careless, joyous life.
-
-But, spite of warnings and admonitions, Jack was still a sad boy, and
-his favorite mode of working off his surplus activity was in devising
-and executing practical jokes. His invention and audacity reached their
-culmination in a most unprincipled scheme against the two venerable
-Avery cousins.
-
-Philo was now as sour, dry, and wizened an old man as dwelt in the
-state of Connecticut, and those bleak hills and stony slopes do not
-seem to produce very ripe and mellow old age. But Philo was known as an
-especially hard and grasping old sinner, living a sort of dog's life,
-all by himself, and too stingy to open his eyes wide. And it befell
-once that he and his strange, barren mode of life were touched upon in
-the evening talk of the Niles family, and then the mother, with her
-old, modest sprightliness, went over the story of the two wills made
-so long ago, and which must, in the natural course of human events,
-soon come into effect. She had grown to be an old woman, this blessed
-mother, but none of the loving ones, to whom her presence had been a
-joy and consolation for so many years, ever thought of her gray hairs
-or caps or spectacles, except as the emblems of more abundant peace and
-benediction.
-
-She tells her story now,--about the early days of the two old men,
-whose withered faces, and bent forms, and eager, acquisitive eyes are
-so familiar to them all,--and as she proceeds, Jack lapses from lively
-attention to a mood of profound reflection, which is always a bad sign
-for somebody.
-
-In the evening twilight of the next day, a thin, yellow-haired lad,
-mounted on a large, bony, sorrel horse, presented himself with an
-appearance of great haste and urgency before the door of Philo Avery's
-hermetic dwelling. After a vigorous though fruitless knocking, he made
-his way to the rear of the small, dismal brown house, and spied an aged
-figure advancing from an adjacent piece of woods, bending under the
-weight of a large heap of brush.
-
-"Be you Philo Avery?"
-
-"Yes," answered the ancient, with evident suspicion.
-
-"Then I've got a letter for you," said the thin youth, and, thrusting
-it forth, sprang upon his high horse and clattered away down the road.
-
-A letter! Philo stood and watched the messenger till he disappeared
-from sight, filled with a vague sense that something strange was
-about to break upon him. A letter sent to him was in itself a strange
-occurrence. Who could write to him? and for what? Could it indeed
-be the one thing so long looked for? and, if it were, how sudden!
-Tremulous with excitement, he trotted into the house, and, after many
-minutes of agitated fumbling, succeeded in lighting a candle. Then he
-held the letter close and tried to examine the address, for Philo was
-a victim to that unaccountable oddity, to which the greater portion of
-human nature is prone, of making a close and critical scrutiny of any
-unexpected or mysterious letter, before opening it for the conclusive
-knowledge of its contents. But everything looks misty before his eyes,
-and, after much squinting and peering, it occurs to him that he has
-forgotten his spectacles. And at last, after more delay and fumbling,
-he comes to the subject matter, very brief but comprehensive:--
-
-"John Avery died last night. Funeral at ten o'clock to-morrow morning."
-
-No date, no signature; but what of that? Over and over Philo read the
-two lines, before his mind could really grasp the intelligence they
-conveyed. It would have made a striking picture,--that withered, bent
-figure, in its coarse, well-worn clothes, stooping in the dim, lonely
-room, and the hungry eyes devouring that bit of news. It had happened
-at last, this thing for which he has waited almost half a century. How
-many hundred times he had imagined his own feelings when it should
-come to him, and how different it all was! The old man sinks into a
-chair and gives himself up to revery. And sitting thus, there come
-stealing upon him remembrances of long past scenes. He thinks of the
-time when he and John were boys together, and of all his mother's love
-and care of both; of the parting on the deck of the Skylark, and their
-long voyage. And then came the slow-moving panorama of all the dull,
-dreary, barren years that dragged their slow length onward between his
-present self and all these boyish memories. The hours pass unnoted as
-the poor old man goes through the successive stages of his retrospect,
-and finally arouses himself with a start when the candle, that has been
-burning dim and flickering, gives a dying glare and goes out in the
-socket. And then he arises, cramped and stiff, and creeps trembling
-to bed as the cocks are crowing for midnight. But the newly-made heir
-cannot sleep. Haunting images visit him, as the Furies surrounded
-Orestes. At length he rises and seeks the repository of his valuables.
-He takes out the will, and though he has known it, every word by heart,
-for a whole generation's lifetime, he reads it mechanically over.
-How strange the lines look, and the name of _Zophar Tupper_, written
-with the old magisterial flourish! Here, too, are the signatures of
-the witnesses, and he finds himself wondering why John never married
-Molly after all, and, even now, does not dream that he himself was the
-obstacle, by his disagreeable persistency in living; for our mortality
-is the last and severest lesson that we learn in life.
-
-Philo wonders if it is not almost daylight, and looks out at the east
-window for the first streak of dawn; reflects that he must start early,
-for it is nine miles to the town, and his old horse is not over-active.
-He will have to dress up, too, for the funeral. How strange! To pass
-away the time, he begins to get out his clothes and lay them ready.
-From the depths of a great red chest he brings up a pair of good, new
-pantaloons, that he has not worn for ten years, and then a coat to
-match, and a fine shirt with a ruffled bosom, that Aunt Betsy made for
-him while she was still young enough to do such things. And, lastly, he
-bethinks himself of a pair of black linen gloves that he bought on the
-occasion of the good woman's funeral, and from the darkest corner of
-the chest he fishes them up. A little dingy and rotten they are, to be
-sure, but still in wonderful preservation, though they give way in two
-or three spots when he puts them carefully on.
-
-In these little occupations he wears away the hours till the darkness
-begins to grow gray, and as soon as he can see sufficiently he goes to
-the pasture and leads his astonished old horse to the door. Then comes
-the terrible process of shaving;--and what spectacle is more forlorn
-than that of an old bachelor trying to shave a long, stiff beard by
-a weak light and with cold water? Even this is at length achieved;
-and then, after much brushing and other unaccustomed elaborations of
-toilet, he places the will carefully in his pocket, and, drawing on
-the rusty gloves, takes a final survey of himself before starting. The
-mouldy little mirror reflects a thin, yellow face dried into long,
-fine wrinkles, straggling gray locks, and watery, pale-blue eyes. The
-old-fashioned clothes make the thin, stooping figure more awkward and
-spindling, and a high, tight cravat completes the scarecrow effect
-of the whole. Still Philo has done his best, and is satisfied, as
-he mounts his ancient steed, that he presents the very likeness of
-respectable sorrow.
-
-And jogging decorously onward, as becomes his dismal errand, he ponders
-how different this morning is from all the other mornings of his life.
-In the silver-gray dawn there come back all the strange sentiments that
-had arisen out of the surprise and excitement of the previous midnight.
-A thick mist creeps up from a little stream that runs by the road-side,
-and its damp, clinging chill seems to strike through and saturate his
-very vitals. It occurs to him that the road is very lonely, and the few
-scattered farm-houses very dreary and inhospitable-looking, for it is a
-cloudy morning, and people are not yet stirring.
-
-All the influences and associations of the hour are dreary and
-funereal. He tries to fix his mind upon the inheritance into which he
-is about to step, but no bright, alluring visions rise at his call, and
-his thoughts are either perpetually recurring to the early memories
-that so affected him the night before, or else to the suggestion of his
-own form lying stiff and cold for burial in the place of his cousin's.
-All the well-known landmarks of the familiar way start into new and
-strange aspects; and he recoils in affright from an old guideboard that
-has stood in exactly the same place for forty years, but now appears
-like some spectral gallows that spreads its arms in ghostly invitation.
-He twists and pinches himself as he rides along, to be assured that he
-is in the world of realities; but the night's experiences have unstrung
-his aged nerves, and mind and body quiver helplessly alike.
-
-And now, from the brow of a little eminence, he perceives a gig slowly
-advancing from below, and, as it nears him, he becomes conscious of a
-great familiarity in its appearance. It is certainly very like the one
-that John bought so long ago, before Molly was married, and which he
-has used ever since. Curiously, too, it is drawn by a white horse, and
-John has had a white horse for ages past. This is indeed a coincidence.
-The thing comes noiselessly nearer. Oh, horror of horrors! It is John's
-own self,--his form,--his features,--his old brown hat,--John indeed,
-but deadly pale, and with wide, wild eyes fixed in a terrible stony
-gaze. No natural look, no nod of recognition, but only that hideous,
-glassy stare as he comes silently along, riding up out of the white fog.
-
-Philo can neither move nor cry out. He would turn and escape, but his
-stiffened hand refuses to draw the rein, and his horse has become, like
-himself, rigid and motionless.
-
-Prayers, oaths, and invocations rush, in a confused huddle, through his
-bewildered brain, as he sits and gazes, unable to remove his eyes from
-that horrid sight, and while he is vainly seeking to frame his lips to
-some sort of utterance, the wraith itself breaks the silence.
-
-"Philo." The tone is broken and distant.
-
-Trembling and choked, he tries to answer. The blood rushes to his face
-and almost blinds him, and he stammers out,--
-
-"John Avery,--aren't you dead?"
-
-"Are you?" asks the wraith.
-
-"I--I--I don't know," says Philo, and he didn't.
-
-The ghost rises, steps down from the gig, and extends his hand. It is
-very cold and clammy, but still a sound, fleshly hand, though quite
-hard and shrunken from its early proportions.
-
-"Thank God!" shouts Philo Avery.
-
-"_Thank God!_" responds John Avery, fervently.
-
-"How came you here?" asks Philo, still a little incredulous as to the
-real mortality of his companion.
-
-"On my way to attend your funeral," says John.
-
-"Why, no,--that can't be,--I'm going to yours."
-
-"Heavens!" exclaims John.
-
-"I guess it's a hoax," suggests Philo.
-
-John takes out a letter and reads aloud: "_Philo Avery died last night.
-Funeral at ten o'clock to-morrow morning._"
-
-"Just like mine, except the name," says Philo. "So you thought I was a
-ghost."
-
-"Didn't know what else you could be. You looked queer enough for one,"
-replied John.
-
-"Well, I've lived long enough to see ghosts, but this is the first of
-that kind of gentry that ever showed themselves to me," cried Philo,
-in his high, cracked voice, and actually convulsed with laughter. John
-joined in, and the two ghosts made the whole region alive.
-
-"It must have been somebody that knew about the wills," said John, when
-they had grown calm.
-
-"Yes," replied Philo; "and what cursed things they have been?"
-
-"Cursed--for both of us," said John.
-
-"Have you got it along with you?"
-
-"Yes, of course,--have you?" answered John, reddening faintly.
-
-"Why, yes,--and here it goes," cried Philo, with sudden energy, pulling
-it out, and shredding it in strips. John was not to be outdone. With
-equal eagerness he pulled his out, and, in a few seconds, both the
-wills were fluttering in fragments among the elderberry bushes by the
-road-side.
-
-"What a contemptible old screw I've been!" exclaimed John,
-penitentially, as the insurance table came into his mind.
-
-"No worse than I," said Philo, thinking of all his drudging, grovelling
-years.
-
-"Why, do you know I've wished you dead," burst out John.
-
-"Well, suppose you have,--I've done the same by you," answered Philo.
-
-"May God forgive us both."
-
-"_Amen_," said Philo, solemnly.
-
-"And help us in the future," continued John.
-
-"Amen again," said Philo.
-
-The muffled clatter of a horse's hoofs sounded through the fog, and
-presently the twinkling face of Jack Niles beamed upon the ghostly
-couple. Looking with well simulated astonishment on the group, the
-empty gig, and his venerable namesake standing in the middle of the
-road, Jack paused and begged to know what was the trouble, and whether
-he could be of service.
-
-"I believe it was you," said Philo, looking at the mischievous lad with
-sudden prescience.
-
-"I know 'twas," said John.
-
-And though Jack never owned it, that was a conviction that never
-departed from the minds of the two, and when they died, long after, he
-found himself bound by substantial reasons to remember the Two Ghosts
-of New London Turnpike.
-
-
-
-
-DOWN BY THE SEA.
-
-
-
-
-DOWN BY THE SEA.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-There is a lonely old house situated close down by the sea, in one
-of the most secluded yet lonely nooks, not far from one of the most
-noted resorts on the seaboard; an old gray stone house, showing the
-marks of the many wild storms which have beat upon it in all the long
-years which have passed over it; a house whose bareness and desolation
-are enlivened but little by the heavy-trailing ivy which creeps over
-a portion of it and in which many wild birds build their nests. Old
-as it is, it seems never to have been finished,--rather to have been
-left without any of the last touches which complete a building, and to
-have thus stood for many years, with the wild winds and storms of the
-coast beating against it. Here and there a shutter is torn from its
-hinges, and lies where it fell under the window. The point is entirely
-gone from cornice and colonnade, and the floor of the latter, which
-had never been painted, is old and worm-eaten. The grounds about it
-are an intricate tangle of brushwood. Flowering shrubs, which had been
-planted here and there, have grown up into wild and unshapely trees.
-Rose-bushes and wild vines choke up the paths, and the gates and fences
-are broken and dilapidated. There is one path, which leads down to
-the beach, which has been kept open, and has, apparently, been often
-trodden; but apart from this there seems to be but little sign of life
-around the old gray house. There is, indeed, one red-curtained window
-upon the side which looks out to sea, and here a bright light is always
-burning at night, and all night, and the sailors have learned to watch
-for it as for a signal; and the place is known to them as the Lone-Star
-House. Let us watch around the house, and perhaps it will have a story
-to tell,--such places often do have, lonely and deserted as they seem;
-stories often full enough of human love and heart-break. "It looks as
-though it might be haunted," say the gay parties who ride by it from
-the fashionable resort a few miles away. Yes, and there is no doubt but
-what it is.
-
- "All houses wherein men have lived and died
- Are haunted houses. Through the open doors
- Phantoms unseen upon their errands glide
- With feet that make no noise upon the floors."
-
-It is growing sunset now, and the sky is blossoming most gloriously
-with many-colored clouds, as out of the door of the old house a woman
-glides and takes the beaten path to the beach. A great rough and
-shaggy dog follows her, and the two together walk thoughtfully along.
-They go down where the great waves are tumbling and tossing upon the
-rocks, and pace rapidly up and down the shore, looking far out over
-the green waters with their fleecy crowns of foam. She is a woman of
-middle-age, verging near upon forty, one would say, tall, and straight
-as an arrow, with large, unfathomable gray eyes and a massive coronal
-of glossy hair, streaked here and there with gray. She wears a cheap,
-dark dress; but she has a handsome scarlet shawl around her shoulders,
-of the most superb tint of which you can conceive; and she looks like a
-woman who would love rich and gorgeous coloring; and, indeed, it is one
-of her passions. In draperies, in articles of dress where such colors
-are admissible, and more than all in flowers and leaves, she loves the
-deepest and richest tints. Every night the sunset is a revelation to
-her. She studies the gorgeous castles and cathedrals of gold, which are
-builded in the western heavens with a glory which the temple of Solomon
-could never attain; and she watches, from her little turret window up
-in the old gray house yonder, every morning for the rising of the great
-high-priest in his garments resplendent. There was, indeed, something
-warm and rich and tropical in her blood, albeit it sprung from the cold
-New England fount. She reminded one, as much as anything, of
-
- "The wondrous valley hidden in the depths of Gloucester woods
- Full of plants which love the summer blooms of warmer latitudes,
- Where the Arctic birch is broided by the tropic's flowery vines,
- And the silver-starred magnolia lights the twilight of the pines."
-
-She walks upon the beach till the sunset has burned low in the red
-west, and then takes the path back to the house. When about half-way
-across the garden, she turns off a little from the main path, and,
-putting back the bushes with her hands, makes her way for a few paces
-and stops at a little grave,--a child's grave,--tufted thick with
-purple pansies, sprinkled with white daisies. She sits down for a
-moment beside it, plucks one or two spires of grass which have sprung
-up among the flowers, then hurriedly leaves it, calling her dog after
-her, and going into the house, where the light soon shines in the
-seaward-looking window. The woman's name is Agnes Wayland, and here she
-has lived alone for now nearly twenty years,--alone, except once in
-a while of a summer she takes a quiet boarder or two, who see little
-of her and know less, and of whom she esteems it a great pleasure to
-be well rid, when the autumnal equinox comes on. Winter and summer,
-in storm and sleet, rain and shine, she stays shut in the dim old
-house all day, and emerges only towards evening for her walk upon the
-beach, and her peep at the little grave, with its coverlet of pansies
-in summer and its white drapery of snow in winter. Upon the night of
-which I have been writing, she made her way back, as I have said,
-into her own room,--a room where her prevailing tastes could quickly
-be discovered. A peculiar depth and brilliancy of coloring pervaded
-everything; carpet and curtains were of the same vivid crimson, and the
-large bay-window filled with plants was gorgeous as a festal-room of
-the fairies. Everything was old and much worn, and had a look of old
-but not faded splendor. A few books occupied a cabinet in one corner,
-and a piano, which was always locked, stood in another. An easy-chair
-was drawn up to a little stand, near the window, and upon it lay an
-open Bible. This was the place where she sat and read hour by hour
-and day by day, always from the Bible, only varying her occupation by
-weary hours over intricate and elaborate pieces of fancy-work,--more
-beautiful and marvellous than such pieces of work ever were made
-before, but always things which required only mechanical kind of
-ingenuity, and needed genius and taste only in the coloring,--and these
-she sold at the nearest town, and so earned her daily bread. After she
-had taken her accustomed seat this evening, she was startled by a ring
-at the door,--a sound so unusual that she trembled like a leaf as she
-took the lamp and started to answer the summons. She had got half-way
-down the stairs, when she stopped, and called lightly to the dog,
-who was beside her in a moment, and together they opened the door. A
-grave-looking elderly gentleman stood there, who inquired if he had the
-honor of addressing Mrs. Wayland.
-
-"That is my name, sir," she answered, not opening the door or bidding
-him enter.
-
-"And mine is Ashly, madam. I am a clergyman, living in Boston, and
-I am seeking a quiet place, near the sea, in which to spend the
-summer. I have been told in the village yonder that you sometimes
-receive a boarder, and I think your place will just suit me. I have
-recommendations, if you wish."
-
-But Mrs. Wayland did not need them. She was too good a judge of
-character, despite her long seclusion, not to see at a glance that he
-was what he asserted, and that, if she must have boarders at all, he
-was just what she wanted. So she invited him in, without relaxing a
-particle in the coldness of her demeanor, and, giving him a seat in a
-cheerless-looking and scantily-furnished dining-room, told him in as
-few words as possible what she would do for him and for how much she
-would do it,--a straightforwardness which raised her very highly in
-the reverend doctor's estimation, although she designed, if she had a
-design in the matter, quite a contrary effect. She had sometimes had
-some trouble in keeping her boarders at a sufficient distance to suit
-her, and she had found it necessary upon their first arrival to have it
-distinctly understood that they were to expect no sort of companionship
-from her; that she gave them a room and their board, such as it was,
-and she never took any pains to make it good or attractive, and that
-that was all she wanted of them. But Dr. Ashly had a great horror of
-a bustling and gossipy landlady, and thought he had found a perfect
-treasure; and when she had shown him the room he could have, if he
-liked, he eagerly agreed to take it, and said if she had no objection
-he would take possession forthwith, and not go back to the village till
-morning. To this she assented indifferently, and soon left him alone,
-calling the one house-maid to get him some supper, and, retiring to
-her own room, was soon buried in her accustomed thoughts, and scarcely
-aware of his existence. And as landlady and lodger were equally pleased
-to let each other alone, there was little intercourse between them for
-several weeks. But one night, when the doctor had been for a long walk
-on the beach, he saw, as he was returning, Mrs. Wayland, in her usual
-evening exercise, pacing up and down the beach, and was struck by her
-appearance as she walked thus, and stood still for a time observing
-her, and followed her at last, at a little distance, while she made her
-visit to the child's grave. His kind heart was very much touched by the
-sight, and he determined to talk with her and give her his sympathy
-and friendship, if she needed them. So he gathered some of the pansies
-off from the grave, and, holding them in his hand, went into tea. Mrs.
-Wayland had laid aside her shawl and was already seated at the table.
-They usually had little conversation at these times, and that of the
-most commonplace character. This evening, as he came through the door
-and she caught sight of the flowers in his hand, she exclaimed, in a
-quick, excited way, "You have been to my grave!"
-
-She spoke as though he had intruded upon her most sacred privacy, and
-he answered, apologetically, "Yes, I have visited the little grave in
-the garden. I hope I have not intruded. I have a little grave in the
-churchyard at home, and such spots are very sacred to me."
-
-Agnes Wayland was a lady, and she would not have been guilty of a
-rudeness for the world, so she hastened to reply,--
-
-"Oh, no, sir, you have not been guilty of intrusion, but you are the
-first one who has ever visited my grave, and I have watched it so
-fondly for so many years that I almost felt jealous that any other eyes
-should ever look upon it."
-
-"And I have not only looked upon it," said the minister, very softly
-and benignantly, "but I have dropped a tear upon it."
-
-"That is something that I have never done."
-
-"Then I pity you with all my heart, my friend. If I had not been able
-to weep over my child's grave, I think my heart would have broken."
-
-"Mine, sir, was broken before the child died," and, as she said this,
-she arose hastily and left the room.
-
-The minister was much interested and full of sympathy for this lonely
-woman, whose lot was so isolated, and as he lay that night and listened
-to the deep, hollow roar of the sea, he thought of the great deeps of
-the human heart, and the fierce passions which were ever tossing it,
-and of the great calm of death.
-
-A few days after he ventured as delicately as he could to return to the
-subject, by referring to the little girl he had lost, and of how her
-mother had followed her, but a short time before, to the better land.
-
-"You seem very cheerful, sir," said Agnes Wayland, in a quick,
-impetuous way, "and yet you have had trouble, it seems."
-
-"Yes, madam, I have had some very severe and dreadful trials; but I am
-very happy and hopeful in spite of them all, for I know that now they
-will soon be ended, and that I shall recover all that I have lost when
-I reach the heavenly land."
-
-"How do you know that? I don't know it. When I buried my only child
-down in the garden there, I thought I had lost him forever. That was
-why, in my stony grief, no tear ever fell upon his grave. I have been
-trying these fifteen years to believe what you say you believe; but
-it has no consolation for me. God took my child away from me in my
-bitterest need, and he took him forever. Was it a good God who did
-that?"
-
-Her voice was cold and rigid, and a pallor as of death was upon her
-face as she paused for a reply.
-
-"A good God, madam! and whom he loveth he chasteneth!"
-
-"No, indeed, sir, I don't believe that. He didn't love me, and I didn't
-love him, and I don't love him now,--hate him, rather. He has tried me
-too sorely."
-
-"My dear friend, you know not what you say. I beseech you, do not
-blaspheme your God."
-
-"I have only said, sir, for once, what I have been thinking all these
-dreadful years. When I buried my child down there, I did not believe in
-any God for years. I thought some vile and fiendish Fate was pursuing
-me. Then you ministers were always saying to me, 'Pray;' and I prayed.
-They said to me 'Study the word of God;' and I studied it. It has been
-my only study for fifteen years, and it has brought me no consolation
-yet."
-
-"But you have found God in it,--have you not? You do not deny a God?"
-
-"I have found a God in it certainly, but only a God who has separated
-me eternally from all I love."
-
-"My dear friend, I assure you, you have not yet found the true God, if
-you believe this."
-
-"I have found I verily believe the God of the Bible, and he has said
-the wicked shall go away into everlasting punishment; and I am the most
-wicked of all God's creatures."
-
-Here Mrs. Wayland left him again standing upon the colonnade, and
-hurried rapidly from him down the path which led to the sea. Her
-conversation had revived in her heart all the strong passions which
-slumbered there, and which she usually held in close repression. As
-she paced wildly up and down the beach, feeling in her nearness to
-the sea a sort of comfort as though the great ocean were her friend,
-she thought over her whole lonely life. She thought of her happy and
-brilliant youth, of its gayeties, its triumphs, and its great hopes;
-she beheld herself the petted darling of a joyous circle of companions
-and friends. She thought of her journeys in distant lands, whither a
-loving father had taken her, and of all the delights of those years
-when they had wandered through all the sunny climes of southern Europe,
-and so away on to the Orient, where she had trodden with pilgrim feet
-all the sacred places of that Holy Land. It was there she had first
-met her husband; and she dwelt with fondness upon every little incident
-which memory recalled of her intercourse with him there, and of how
-they had sailed together upon their return to their native land. It was
-then she had learned to love the ocean. In those long days, when they
-were out upon the trackless deep, they had learned together the sweet
-mystery of loving. Night after night they had paced the deck together,
-gazing out upon the moonlighted expanse, and watching the breakers rise
-and fall. The long voyage had been a season of enchantment. It had
-passed into her being, and become a part of her inmost life forever.
-She had one of those natures to whom such things come but once in a
-lifetime. When they had reached home, they had been married, and, after
-a year or two of pleasant married life, they had built the old gray
-house of which I have told you, designing to pass their summers down
-there within hearing of the grand, eternal anthem of the sea. How well
-she remembered the hurry they were in to get down here,--so great a
-hurry that they could not stop to have the house entirely finished, and
-so in early May they had furnished two or three rooms, and lived here
-in a wild trance of what seems to her now, as she looks back upon it,
-perfect bliss. Here they wandered up and down the beach together hand
-in hand for hours and beheld the waters glowing in the early tints of
-sunrise, and reflecting the gorgeous splendors of sunset, and rippling
-and shimmering in the bewildering moonlight. Then she thinks of how
-gayeties began up at the village yonder, and how they began to see
-much company and to mingle in all the excitements of watering-place
-life. Here they had met the beautiful syren who had stolen her husband
-from her. With what angry hate she dwells upon the soft, bewildering
-beauty of that woman,--her rounded, dimpled form, her golden hair,
-and the languishing blueness of the dreamy eyes! She seemed in all
-her bewitching beauty, to the eye of Agnes Wayland, more hateful and
-hideous than a fiend. She had fascinated Mortimer Wayland almost from
-their first meeting. Of a dreamy, sensuous temperament, and a weak
-will, and with no great power of principle at his back, the artful and
-wicked woman had ensnared him with her wiles, and in the meshes of her
-charms he had forgotten the grand and queenly wife, who to every eye
-was so infinitely the superior of one for whom he was deserting her,
-and the little year-old baby, who was just learning to lisp "father" to
-him as he fondled him.
-
-Of the wild tempest which tossed her soul at this time she dreaded to
-think even now. It had been so near to madness that it was a terror
-to her yet. But pride had always been one of her ruling passions,
-and, instead of pleading with him with a woman's tenderness, as some
-might have done, she had treated him with coldness and disdain, and
-with reproachful scorn had goaded him on to take the last step in the
-dreadful drama.
-
-He had deserted her, and with the blue-eyed woman had sailed for a
-distant land. Never since that time, now nearly twenty years, had
-she left, except for her lonely walks, the old gray house. She shut
-herself up like a hermit, and with wild and bitter grief cursed herself
-and her God. Down into the deepest gloom of despair she went, where
-never a single ray of heavenly light and comfort reached her. Her
-child, indeed, she had left; but although she loved him with all the
-concentrated passion of her nature, he seemed little comfort to her.
-She brooded continually upon the darkness of her fate, and upon the
-fathomless depths of despair into which she was sinking.
-
-Then the child died, and her last human interest went; and she made
-its little grave in the tangled garden, and every year covered it
-thick with flowers. But in her heart no white blossom of hope had ever
-sprung up, no purple pansy of royal magnanimity and forgiveness had yet
-blossomed there. And this night, after so many years, she was living
-it all over again with tragic interest, and no softened feelings of
-relenting or forgiveness entered her stern heart.
-
-"He is very happy," she thought to herself as she wended her way back
-and stood by her little grave; "he is very happy, for he can stand
-by his child's bed and weep; and so could I, if I had his hope. O my
-darling, my darling, darling boy!" and she stooped down, and threw her
-arms caressingly over the little mound.
-
-"Oh, if God would only, only let me meet you once more! O my God, why
-cannot I forgive and be forgiven?"
-
-"My sister," said the kind old man, coming up and hearing her last
-words; and feeling how vain it would be to reason or expostulate with
-this woman,--"let us pray;" and, almost before she knew it, they were
-kneeling by the little one's grave; and before the old minister had
-concluded his simple but touching prayer, the woman, whose heart had
-been stone for so many years, was weeping, weeping with passionate sobs
-like a little child; and when he had concluded, she arose, and without
-a word made her way into the house, and soon the red light shone in the
-little window.
-
-Somehow after this a more gentle feeling crept into the heart of Mrs.
-Wayland. A softer light came into her eye, and a more gentle tremor
-was in her voice as she addressed the old minister, who saw that she
-was touched, but was too wise to meddle farther than was absolutely
-necessary with the good work which he was sure was going on.
-
-It was not many weeks from the evening of which I have spoken, when, as
-she was returning from her evening walk, she beheld a scene of bustle
-around the door of her house; a carriage was driving away, and a trunk
-stood upon the steps, while some figures seemed just entering the door
-whom she could not distinguish in the gathering darkness. "Dr. Ashly
-has some friends come," she thought, with a feeling of impatience;
-"what shall I do with them?" and she walked quickly to the house. As
-she turned into the cheerless dining-room,--the only room which was
-ever used below,--she saw, stretched upon a couch, the figure of a man
-propped up by pillows, which seemed to have been hastily brought, and
-looking pallid and wan. She walked quickly forward, but when she had
-reached the middle of the room, she stopped like one transfixed, and,
-with wild eyes full of eagerness and something like joy, looked about
-her.
-
-"Mortimer Wayland!" she exclaimed at last, grasping the table for
-support. "Why come you here?"
-
-"I have come home to die, Agnes. I could not die anywhere else; I have
-been for years trying to do so,--but God would not let me. I was forced
-to come and seek your forgiveness, and God will not take me until I
-have it; yet I dare not ask you to grant it; it is too much!" At this
-the sick man shut his eyes wearily, and said no more.
-
-"Forgive us our sins as we forgive those who trespass against us,"
-solemnly said the voice of the old minister, who was sitting near the
-couch upon which the man lay.
-
-"Oh, sir, you cannot know what it is for me to ask of her. Most wrongs
-may be forgiven; but mine against her is so great that she cannot
-forgive me, I am sure, unless God helps her. I have been suffering for
-it these twenty years,--trying to expiate it; but I have failed. I have
-suffered, I have struggled, I have almost died many times, sir; but I
-could not atone for my sin, and God could not forgive it, nor can she."
-
-Then the minister's voice was heard again, and it said, "Sister,
-remember the little child's grave in the garden, and forgive and be
-forgiven."
-
-Then Mrs. Wayland, who had stood like a statue all this time, rushed
-forward, and, kneeling by the couch poured forth her whole heart in a
-torrent of passionate words,--
-
-"O my husband, my darling, my only love, forgive me for my coldness and
-my scorn! forgive me for not helping you to withstand temptation,--I,
-who was always the stronger! It was I who drove you away, and for it
-I have suffered and agonized all these years. I have been so hard, so
-wicked and cruel, so unpitying and unforgiving, that I have had no rest
-or peace night or day. It is so blessed to feel that I forgive you! so
-joyful to think that you will forgive me,--that God will forgive us
-both!" and the woman laid her head upon his breast, and rained upon his
-lips a thousand passionate kisses.
-
-Then Dr. Ashly would have left them; but the woman called him back.
-
-"Share in our great joy, dear friend," she said; "for, had it not
-been for you, this would never have been. A few weeks ago I should
-never have received him whom I loved even as I had always loved, but
-whom my pride would have banished from my door in the face of all his
-pleadings; but you have softened my heart, and to you we owe this
-joyful hour. And now you must help me," she continued, with a woman's
-thoughtful care, "to carry him to my own room upstairs, which is the
-only comfortable room I have; and there I can nurse him up, and soon
-have him well again."
-
-And so he was carried up to the room where she had sat alone so many
-years, and was soon as comfortable as womanly care could make him.
-
-"How natural it all looks here!" he said, glancing around the room.
-"It is just as it used to be,--isn't it, darling? And I remember it so
-well,--furnished, to suit you, in crimson, which you still like, as I
-see by your shawl."
-
-"Yes," she said, with a little blush; "I have always worn it for your
-sake. You used to say it was just the color to suit me, and I have worn
-it all these years."
-
-"Darling," said he, looking all about the room, "I see no traces of any
-one but yourself here. Where is our child,--our little baby boy?"
-
-Agnes Wayland went softly up to him, and put her arms around his neck,
-as she said,--
-
-"I thought, a few weeks ago, that he was down in the garden under a bed
-of pansies; but now I know he is in heaven, where you and I will soon
-join him."
-
-
-
-
-WHY MRS. RADNOR FAINTED.
-
-
-
-
-WHY MRS. RADNOR FAINTED.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-You have seen hazel eyes,--have you not? I don't mean the quiet
-nut-brown ones, you meet every day, but _bona fide_ hazel eyes,
-opaline in their wonderful changes,--that make you wonder, when you
-turn away from them, what color they will have assumed when you next
-look into their depths; for such eyes have depths, sometimes glowing
-emerald-like, with a steady, lambent flame, now gleaming with a soft
-lustre like pearls, or melted into sapphires by tears.
-
-Such eyes had Mrs. Radnor,--cold, beautiful woman that she was;
-insensible, I was about to say, only I remember her fainting at sight
-of a pond-lily. How well I recollect the day! There was a party of us
-passing the midsummer at the old Richmond farm, a few miles from ----;
-Mr. and Mrs. Ferdinand Radnor among the rest. The latter, a haughty
-statuesque woman, with nothing save her wonderful eyes to indicate
-anything approaching a heart,--lovely as a dream, yet with beauty
-that repelled even in its fascination. Such hair, too, as she had,
-rolling in golden ripples down to her slender feet;--fine as silk, it
-was brown in the shade, but glowed and intensified in the light till it
-seemed as if a thousand stray sunbeams were imprisoned in the radiant
-mass. We always called her the "Princess with the golden locks." You
-remember her in the fairy tale,--do you not? That one, I mean, whose
-hair was the wonder and admiration of the whole world, and whose lovers
-delighted to bind themselves with fetters so exquisite; yet when they
-strove playfully to throw them off, they found themselves with gyves
-and manacles of steel, under which they were powerless.
-
-Mr. Radnor was urbane and gentlemanly; but, possessing only half a
-soul, he divided the interest of that equally between admiring his own
-person and annoying Mrs. Radnor by his attentions.
-
-It was a sultry July day, and we were all of us on the rose-terrace
-back of the house, some dozing,--I pretending to read, though all the
-time watching the "Princess" furtively from the shelter of my book.
-
-She had a pile of cushions spread with a scarlet shawl, and, like an
-Eastern beauty, lay languidly upon them. Her dress of palest blue was
-open at the throat, and her hands toyed listlessly with the heavy cord
-that confined her waist. There was a blush-rose tint on her usually
-pale cheek, and her hair, half escaped from its little net, lay like
-flecks of gold on the scarlet cover. I think I never saw repose, utter
-and perfect, before.
-
- "Down through her limbs a drooping languor crept,
- Her head a little bent, and on her mouth
- A doubtful smile dwelt like a clouded moon
- In a still water."
-
-Suddenly the charmed silence was broken, for round the corner of the
-house came Mr. Radnor, with his arms filled with superb water-lilies,
-which he threw in a fragrant shower over his wife. He was saluted with
-exclamations of wonder and delight, and while he was replying, I had
-leisure to observe his wife.
-
-The change was frightful: an ashen pallor had spread itself over her
-face, she was panting violently for breath, and, at the same time,
-attempting to clasp both hands before her eyes. I cried aloud and
-sprang towards her,--but it was too late.
-
-Mrs. Radnor had fainted!
-
-At the same time, Anne Richmond threw herself upon her knees beside
-her, and, hastily gathering the snowy flowers from her dress and bosom,
-where they had fallen, thrust them into Mr. Radnor's arms, saying
-hurriedly, as she did so,--
-
-"Pray, pray, take them away, sir, or your wife will die."
-
-He obeyed blankly, and together Anne and I applied the usual
-restoratives, and, after some minutes, were rewarded by a faint color
-in her lips, then a quivering of the mouth, and I heard her murmur
-faintly,--"I saw him again, Anne. Oh, those dreadful flowers!"
-
-Then her eyes opened,--those wonderful eyes, that were then almost
-startling in their blackness. She looked wildly round her for a
-single second, and, catching sight of me, was herself again,--haughty,
-self-sustained as before, even though lying helpless as a child on Anne
-Richmond's arms.
-
-And, after all, pride is better for a fainting woman than all the sal
-volatile in the world, thought I, receiving her languidly uttered
-thanks, and retreating.
-
-We saw no more of Mrs. Radnor that day. Her husband talked loudly
-of the extreme heat; and no one but the two who had observed the
-expression of her face when the perfume of the lilies first met her
-senses, knew anything to the contrary. As for me, I was restless and
-unquiet. There had been from the first a nameless something about Mrs.
-Radnor which had excited my deepest interest, and now my imagination
-was busy. One thing the painful scene of the morning had convinced me
-of, and that was, that some time in the past she had been quickened
-into life by the breath of love, and the flowers had played a terrible
-part in overwhelming her with memories possibly long buried in the
-deepest recesses of her heart; for--I acknowledged it--Mrs. Radnor had
-a heart. I never doubted it from the moment in which her face changed
-from its quiet repose into that torturing expression of fear that it
-wore when she fainted.
-
-"Anne," I said that evening to Miss Richmond, as I drew her into my
-chamber after the party had separated for the night, "tell me something
-of Mrs. Radnor. I am sure you are in some way concerned in her past."
-
-"Yes," she answered, with a little, fluttering sigh; "there is one page
-of her life that no one living has ever read but myself. Perhaps I do
-wrong in consenting to turn it for you; but it may be a warning to you,
-child. To-morrow we will go down to the lake together, and I will tell
-you what has changed Mrs. Radnor, from the brightest, sunniest girl
-that ever lived, to the breathing statue that she has been for ten
-years."
-
-She sighed again, as she kissed my cheek, and then I heard her
-footsteps die away in the long corridor.
-
-My room was in the second story, and directly over those occupied by
-the Radnors, which opened on a balcony leading down by a little flight
-of steps to the lawn.
-
-The night was sultry and still. All the usual bustle and stir of
-retiring had ceased, and, extinguishing my candle, I curled myself on
-the broad window-seat, watching the stars that seemed to smile in the
-hazy atmosphere. It was late,--nearly midnight, I think; and I drank
-with delight the heavy fragrance which that hour always seems to draw
-from the heliotrope, great masses of which grew under my windows. I do
-not know how long I sat there. Waking dreams, such as flit lightly in
-the tender stillness of summer nights, wooed me with delicious repose.
-I fancied myself beneath Eastern skies, and the faint stir of a bird
-in a neighboring tree seemed to me the pluming of a bulbul's wing;
-and through the gilded lattice of the harem two starry eyes--and they
-were Mrs. Radnor's--glittered and gleamed. The soft running of a brook
-through the grounds was the lapping of waves against Venice stones. I
-heard the twinkle of a guitar, and, framed by carved, gray stone work,
-her rippling golden hair stirred in the night-breeze.
-
-Then everything faded, and I slept a moment or an hour,--I cannot say
-which, so softly had the hours passed in softest sandals,--and it was
-with a start that I sat upright and heard, with a keen thrill of fear,
-a faint click, as of a drawn bolt, and immediately the distant bell of
-St. Michael's pealing out.
-
-One--two; and with the dying of the second stroke there was a rustling
-sound beneath my window, and then a shuddering whisper,--"My God! my
-God! have mercy upon me!"
-
-Shrouded by a half-closed blind, I peered out, and, kneeling on the
-balcony below, I saw a white figure illuminated by the strange, weird
-light of a waning moon. The face was uplifted, and the expression might
-have been that worn by Maria Therese in the solitude of her chamber
-when the Archduchess Josepha died.
-
-I drew back,--it seemed like profanity for any but the God to whom
-she appealed to witness her despair,--for it was Mrs. Radnor. I heard
-a long, deep-drawn sigh, a footstep, and then the silky tones of her
-husband.
-
-"My love,--why will you? The dew is very heavy." Then a stir and the
-sound of a closing door.
-
-I shivered in the ghostly light that had crept into my window, and,
-softly closing my blinds, I laid down to sleep if I could.
-
-The first person I saw, on entering the breakfast-room the next
-morning, was Mrs. Radnor, pale as the muslin wrapper she wore, but as
-coldly self-contained as usual. I felt the passionate sympathy, which
-had taken firm hold on me since the scenes of the previous night,
-almost vanish before her languidly uttered replies to my inquiries for
-her health. It was only in watching the drooping corners of her rarely
-beautiful mouth and the violet circles beneath the wonderful eyes, that
-I could connect the haughty being before me with the utterer of the
-despairing cry of the night before.
-
-The day wore on slowly enough to me, and it was only when the
-lengthened shadows on the terrace, and Miss Richmond, equipped for her
-walk, greeted my eyes, that my impatience subsided.
-
-The path led us through a shady grove of pines, that sighed mournfully
-as one passed through them, then across a sloping interval made green
-by recent rains, and so down through a fringe of alders to a little
-seat close by the margin of a charming lake on which myriads of
-water-lilies were closing their cups of incense.
-
-"Sit here," said Anne, pointing to a place at her side.
-
-"It is not always pleasant to think or speak of the past," she began,
-after a few moments' silence, "although day by day its scenes and
-actors appear to us. There are some memories in every heart that thrill
-us with grief unutterable, and when you know that one person in the
-story which I shall tell you was dear to me as my own soul, you will
-not wonder if my lip falters or I fail to dwell on the more painful
-portions of it."
-
-Then for the first time I was aware of another unwritten heart-history,
-and knew why the soft lips and eyes of the woman beside me had so often
-uttered their fatal no.
-
-"Ten years ago," she said, "our house was full of guests, and among
-them was Eleanor Orne,--the most perfectly beautiful girl I ever
-beheld. Fancy Mrs. Radnor, younger by as many years, with a bewildering
-smile ever ready to play around the lovely mouth, with expressions as
-rapidly following themselves in her eyes as clouds on an April day, and
-you can form a faint idea of her loveliness.
-
-"There was also a young student of divinity, with an eye as clear as a
-star and a soul pure as prayer itself. Proud and calm he was; but it
-was a noble pride that clothed him as with a garment, and a gracious
-calmness resulting from a vaulting intellect, subdued and chastened by
-firmest faith.
-
-"He had been fond of me in a way, but from the night that Eleanor came
-floating down the long piazza, attired in some diaphanous gray that
-streamed around her like mist, I knew how it would be. I marked, with
-one great heart-throb, the perfect delight that flashed in his dark
-eyes as they rested upon her face and form.
-
-"After that they were always together. In the mornings he was reading
-to her as she worked; on afternoons, rocking together in the little
-boat on the lake; and then, in the purple twilight, singing dreamy
-German music, of which they were both passionately fond.
-
-"I soon knew that James Alexander loved her. I read it in every glance,
-in every tone. But Eleanor? I was not sure. Watch her as narrowly as I
-would, I could not see that the rose in her cheek became a deeper pink
-when he approached, or that her eyes were raised more tenderly to him
-than to a dozen others who sought her smiles.
-
-"There had been rumors of Eleanor's engagement and approaching
-marriage, which had drifted to me from her city home; but, when I saw
-her day by day allowing him to become more attached to her,--for she
-could not fail to perceive it all,--I rejected the rumor, and with it
-the impulse which had prompted me to repeat it to James, that he might,
-if not already too late, be upon his guard.
-
-"At last the end came. I dozed one day on a sofa in an inner room,
-and watched with delicious delight my dream of fair woman that a
-dark-velvet lounging-chair brought out in clear relief. Eleanor sat
-there, with downcast eyes and clasped hands. Suddenly a step, hurried
-and joyous in its very lightness, sounded in the hall; the door opened
-and closed again, and Alexander stood before her with an open letter in
-his hand.
-
-"'See,' he said, speaking rapidly, 'it has come at last, and I may
-speak. It is a call to one of the largest parishes in your own city,
-and I may say, what you must have known for weeks past, that I love
-you, Eleanor, deeply, devotedly; that I want you. My darling, tell me
-that you are not indifferent to me,--that you will be my wife.'
-
-"It was too late for me to move; and something--perhaps it was a kind
-of dull despair--kept me motionless, with eyes riveted upon the group.
-
-"'Speak to me, Eleanor,' he said, more eagerly, bending over her as he
-spoke.
-
-"I saw her face flush, and an almost imperceptible shrinking from him,
-that made him quickly draw back.
-
-"'Speak, Miss Orne,--Eleanor, I implore you.'
-
-"'Oh, why have you said this to me?' she answered, faintly. 'I cannot
-hear you, Mr. Alexander. I am to be married next month.'
-
-"I saw him reel for an instant as one would under a heavy blow, and
-heard a deep sigh--almost a groan--burst from him; then a silence so
-long and so profound that I could hear my heart beat. At last he spoke,
-in a voice husky and changed,--
-
-"'Forgive me. I did not mean to offend; but God knows what a mercy it
-would have been if I could have known this before. I may touch your
-hand once,--may I not? And you will look up into my face? No, not that!
-Grant me this, at least then, before our long parting.' And he bent and
-kissed one of the sunny curls that streamed over the chair. Then I saw
-him raise one hand over her as in benediction, and, in another moment,
-he was gone. I looked at Eleanor. She had risen from her seat, and
-moved a step or two towards the door.
-
-"'O James, James, I love you!' she said, piteously; and then I had just
-time to break her fall.
-
- * * * * *
-
-"An hour later, I met him on the doorstep. 'I am glad to have seen
-you,' he said slowly, 'and to thank you for your kindness; for I am
-going away. You will be good to _her_, Anne, for my sake,--will you
-not?'
-
-"He turned from me, and passed down the walk. I watched him until a
-sharp turn hid him from my sight. I never saw him afterwards alive.
-
-"The next day it rained, and the next; and it was not until the third
-day that Eleanor and I took our usual walk. As we left the house, she
-suggested that we shape our way towards the lake. Agreeing, we walked
-on slowly, and I tried to make James Alexander the subject of our talk.
-At first she evaded me; and, when at last she found my persistence was
-not in any other way to be turned aside, said,--
-
-"'It is an unpleasant subject to me, dear Anne. I fear I have much to
-blame myself for. _I_ suffer enough; for, in rejecting his love, I shut
-my eyes on a life that would have been a continual delight, to open
-them on one from which my very soul shrinks abhorrently, and yet to
-which I am solemnly pledged.'
-
-"'But it may not yet be too late,' I said, eagerly; for God knows I
-loved James Alexander with no selfish love.
-
-"'Yes, it is too late,' she replied mournfully. 'I shall never allude
-to it again, Anne; but I tell you now, that I do not and can never
-love Mr. Radnor; but there are family reasons that make the sacrifice
-of my hand a necessity. I never realized, until within the last few
-weeks, that it _was_ such a sacrifice. I have been so happy, that I
-dared not break the spell by telling him the truth. And somehow the
-future seemed very far; and I did not dream that this summer would ever
-end.'
-
-"Then there was silence between us for a space. At last she spoke
-again,--
-
-"'I hope he will not suffer long. Tell him some time, Anne, what I have
-told you. He will not quite hate me, perhaps, then, if he knows that
-I was not drawing him on to gratify a foolish coquetry, but loved and
-suffered like himself.'
-
-"I was about to reply, but she laid her hand on my mouth.
-
-"'No,' she said. 'Let the subject go now forever. And no one will dream
-by-and-by how fair a love lies buried beneath my laces and jewels; or
-that, in the life of the noted man that he will one day surely become,
-is a romance that belongs to a dead past. It will all be the same a
-century hence. What does it matter after all?'
-
-"But her words ended with a sigh that contrasted strangely with the
-forced lightness of her tone.
-
-"Just then we came out of the grove, and could see far off the little
-waves of the lake dancing in the morning sunlight. I paused a moment
-to pick some late wild flowers, while Eleanor walked on quickly and
-disappeared among the alders that fringed the lake. I was following her
-slowly, when suddenly I heard one wild, thrilling cry, and then my name
-three times repeated. I flew almost down to the water, and there I saw
-Eleanor unconscious; and, close to the shore, among the lilies,--white
-and pure as their own petals,--a face upturned to the sky, swaying
-gently with the motion of the water. I need not tell you whose." Anne
-faltered.
-
-"Do not go on," I said, with my own eyes and voice full of tears.
-
-She raised her head quickly.
-
-"I had schooled myself to it, dear, before I came, and I must finish. I
-am telling you of another's life, not mine.
-
-"Then there was a brain fever for Eleanor, that no one believed she
-would ever rally from, in which she was either unconscious, or else
-singing snatches of German songs, with a pathos that was heart-rending.
-
-"It was remarkable that neither to her mother nor to any one who
-watched over her did her words ever betray anything that could connect
-her illness with anything more than the bare horror of the discovery
-she made. She was married the next spring; and when I saw her, a month
-afterward, I should never, save for merest outline and coloring of
-beauty, have recognized her. Until last night, the past has never been
-alluded to by either of us. Then she confessed to me, that during the
-last ten years her life has been haunted by a perpetual remorse. The
-sun has set, dear, we will go home."
-
-It was dusk when we crossed the pine grove, and the branches of the
-trees seemed, to my quickened imagination, to be singing a sad refrain
-to the story I had heard. We walked slowly,--Anne with head uplifted
-and a serene look upon her fair face that made me realize the refiner's
-work.
-
-As we drew near the house there came forth a rolling symphony from the
-parlor organ, and then a voice that I had never heard before, in the
-_Agnus Dei_ of the Twelfth Mass.
-
-We paused, and Anne said quietly,--"She has never sung since he died
-until now."
-
-We waited until the pure, pathetic tones had died away. Silence and the
-spirit of the hour was upon us. Overhead the large, calm stars hung
-low and bright. A gleam of light in Mrs. Radnor's rooms flashed for an
-instant, and disappeared; and a white figure came out upon the balcony
-of her apartment.
-
-"Kyrie Eleison," said Anne, in a hushed voice. "Let us go in."
-
-
-
-
-UNDER A CLOUD.
-
-
-
-
-UNDER A CLOUD.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-One bitter cold day in January, four years ago, I had occasion to wait
-for a street-car in Chicago, on one of those aside lines where the
-cars pass but once in every ten or fifteen minutes. There was a German
-lager-bier saloon close by, and I entered it for shelter. As I stood
-by the stove, enjoying the grateful warmth, I observed near me a young
-man, in very seedy apparel, engaged in reading the _Staats-Zeitung_.
-Something in the air of the young man awakened my curiosity, and led
-me to address him. Although reading a German newspaper, he was not
-a German in appearance, and I put to him the question, "_Sind Sie
-Deutsch?_" by way of experiment.
-
-"No, sir," he replied, "I am not German, but I speak and read the
-language."
-
-I drew a chair near him, as he laid aside the newspaper, with the air
-of one willing to enter into conversation.
-
-"Where did you pick up your German?" I asked.
-
-"I picked it up," said the young man, with an air of some pride in the
-statement, "where I picked up my Latin and Greek,--at college."
-
-At this I ran my eye over him curiously. He had not the appearance of a
-scholar.
-
-"You look surprised," said he. "Despite my present appearance, and the
-place you find me in, I am a graduate; but at present, I am under a
-cloud."
-
-"So I should imagine."
-
-I also imagined that the young man was probably shiftless, and no doubt
-addicted to liquor; but I did not say so. As if he read my thoughts, he
-spoke again:
-
-"People are always ready to think ill of a seedy man, I suppose.
-Probably you think me a good-for-nothing, and would give me some
-valuable advice about hanging around beer-saloons; but the fact is, I
-am an employé of this establishment."
-
-He spoke with a bitter irony, that ill-concealed a sort of shame in the
-confession.
-
-"May I ask in what capacity?" said I.
-
-"You may, sir; and I may answer or not, I suppose. I think I will
-decline to answer. As I said, I am under a cloud. I am not proud of my
-employment, but I do what I do because I can't do better, and idleness
-is synonymous with hunger and cold for me and mine."
-
-"You are married, then?"
-
-"Yes, sir,"--with sudden reserve.
-
-"Don't be offended at my inquisitiveness," said I. "I spoke to you
-first out of mere curiosity, it is true; but I speak now out of
-interest in you. If I could help you, I would. There is my card."
-
-He took it with a respectful inclination of the head.
-
-"I've heard of you," said he, as he glanced at the name. "I can't give
-you my card, sir, because I don't own such a thing." He smiled. "My
-name is Brock St. John."
-
-"I hear the car coming," said I. "I'll see you again, Mr. St. John. I
-don't set up for a philanthropist; but I like to do a good turn when I
-can. Good-morning."
-
-And I went my own way.
-
-Henry Kingsley,--or rather a character of his creation,--in one of his
-novels, remarks that he suspects there is some of the poetical faculty
-about him, because he is accustomed to walk out of nights when anything
-goes wrong.
-
-This is also my case.
-
-To "fetch a walk" about the streets, late in the evening, has long been
-a favorite antidote for trouble with me. When the night is stormy, the
-value of this remedy for fretting cares is tenfold increased. There is
-an exhilarating sense of power in overcoming the opposing forces of the
-elements, and breasting along at a brisk pace against a furious storm
-of sleet or rain. As Leigh Hunt said, you have a feeling of respect
-for your legs under such circumstances; you admire their toughness as
-they propel you along in the teeth of the storm. As your blood begins
-to warm up, and to whirl through your veins with an exhilaration beside
-which that of wine is tame and effeminate, the "blues" that have been
-gibing you vanish like magic. Always, after such a bout, I return home
-and "sleep like a top," no matter what discomforts or sorrows have been
-running their sleep-dispelling race through my head before starting out.
-
-On the night of the day that I met St. John I started out about eleven
-o'clock for such a walk. The winds were holding high carnival that
-night, and a fierce storm of mingled hail and rain swept through the
-almost deserted streets. I forged along (as the sailors say), with my
-head down, block after block, fighting the forces of nature, with the
-same pleasure that Victor Hugo's hero felt, no doubt, in like effort.
-True, my fight was to his as a cock-fight is to an encounter of lions;
-but the limit of power is the limit of delight in overcoming in any
-case. The boy who declaims "the Roman Soldier" at school to the rapture
-of his gaping audience is as happy in his achievement as the tragedian
-who thrills a theatreful. Gilliatt conquered storms, and so did I; he
-was on the high seas, and I was in the streets of Chicago.
-
-Sounds of music and dancing fell on my ear. They came from the
-beer-saloon of the morning. Curiosity impelled me to enter.
-
-The air was reeking with tobacco-smoke and the fumes of lager-bier. The
-seats about the half-dozen tables were crowded with Teutonic guzzlers;
-and, at the lower part of the room there was a cleared space where a
-half-dozen couples were whirling in a waltz with that thorough abandon
-which characterizes your German in his national dance. On a slightly
-raised platform against the wall was a band composed of a violin, a
-clarionet, and a trombone.
-
-The violinist was my acquaintance of the morning.
-
-He caught sight of me as I elbowed my way toward the dancing-floor, and
-blushed violently. Then an expression of angry pride settled on his
-countenance, and he continued his playing with stolid indifference to
-my gaze.
-
-When the dance was over (and St. John kept up the music till the
-surprised Teutons who played the wind-instruments were sheer worn-out
-with their prolonged exertions), I went up to the young man, and shook
-hands with him.
-
-"At work, eh?" I remarked, with a miserable effort to seem cheerful and
-easy.
-
-"Yes, sir. You have found me out. You know now how I keep the wolf from
-my door."
-
-"Yes, Mr. St. John; and I do not forget that it _is_ to keep the wolf
-from your door. Still, I hope you are thoroughly misplaced here,--I
-_hope_ you are!"
-
-He grasped my hand with a quick, strong pressure.
-
-"I must prove to you that I am, that's all," said he; "come to--to
-where I live, to-morrow, and let me tell you the whole story."
-
-He took my pencil and wrote the address in my note-book.
-
-"To-morrow afternoon," said I, "I will call."
-
-The next day I found my way to the wretched tenement house in North
-Clark street, where St. John lived, and climbed three pair of stairs
-to the door of his room. I rapped, and the young man opened the door.
-
-I have seen a good deal of poverty in my day, and I was prepared to
-find it here, as I did. But I was not prepared for the sight of such
-a beautiful young face as that which met my gaze here, and to the
-possessor of which St. John introduced me as his wife. She seemed like
-some little girl that was lost. The unmistakable air of the true lady
-showed itself in every detail of her dress and manner,--in the small,
-white collar at the neck of the calico dress, in the smooth-banded hair
-that matched the brown eyes, in the quiet demeanor that told of natural
-and unconscious self-respect. It showed itself, too, in the perfect
-neatness of the room, in which there was a cheerful, homelike air,
-despite the poor and barren nature of its furnishings. The room was
-kitchen and bedroom, dining-room and sitting-room, in one; but the bed
-was smooth and clean, and the little cooking-stove was without spot.
-
-Mrs. St. John was engaged in the unpoetic occupation of mending her
-husband's only coat. He was in his shirt-sleeves.
-
-"Aggie expected to get the coat done before our guest came," said St.
-John, with a smile. "If you are at all particular, I'll put it on with
-the needle sticking in it, and she can finish it after you are gone.
-But I am accustomed to sitting in my shirt-sleeves."
-
-"So am I," was my reply; and, accordingly, I pulled off my own coat,
-and sat in my shirt-sleeves, too. In the act, my cigar-case fell out of
-my pocket.
-
-"Light a cigar, sir, if you like," said St. John, with a brisk
-assumption of the airs of a genial host; "my wife don't allow me to
-smoke, but my guests always do. She is fond of cigars, is Aggie."
-
-The little wife looked up with a demure and childlike air.
-
-"He never offers to smoke, sir," said she, "because"--
-
-"Because I can't afford it," put in St. John. "I was a great smoker in
-college; but those were my wild days. Thank you."
-
-The last remark was in acknowledgment of an offered cigar. We were soon
-puffing great cloud-wreaths toward the ceiling, and an air of restraint
-that had rested on us at first, despite our efforts to avoid it, was
-speedily vanished. Cigars are social.
-
-"And now, sir," said St. John, "you shall hear the story I promised
-you. I hope it wont bore you."
-
-"If it does I'll cry out," said I.
-
-The little wife laughed quietly.
-
-"I graduated; I married; I came to Chicago," began St. John,
-sententiously.
-
-"_Veni, vidi, vici_," said I.
-
-"Quite the contrary; I _was_ conquered. I had that idea which young men
-from the east, just out of college, are apt to have, that in this great
-western city there was a comparative lack of intellectual culture, and
-that a man of my education must speedily and easily get into a position
-of prominence, where my talents would earn me a fine living. But I very
-soon found where my mistake lay. I had not been bred to work,--real,
-practical, marketable work,--either mental or physical. The professions
-were open to me, as to any other beginner,--nothing more. I could not
-step out of college into a lucrative practice at the bar; but I could
-enter a law-office, and study. So of the other professions. If I had
-any one idea more prominent than another, it was that I could secure
-an editorial situation at once on one of the newspapers here. I was
-surprised to find that there was absolutely no demand for such services
-as I had to offer.
-
-"'Do you know anything about the newspaper business?' was the first
-question put to me, by the first publisher to whom I made application.
-
-"That was the very last question that I had expected to have asked of
-me. Of course I imagined myself competent, or I should not have applied
-for editorial employment; but I knew the publisher meant, Had I had
-actual experience on the press? I felt so sure of myself that I was
-tempted to answer him 'Yes,' but the fact is I was never brought up
-with such a reverence for the truth, as to always keep at a respectful
-distance from it; so I told him I had not, but I could quickly learn.
-
-"'We are in no need of students,' said he; 'and, even if we took you to
-teach you, your pay would not settle your washing-bill.'
-
-"One editor was good enough to let me try my hand at writing a
-political article. I sat down in his sanctum and went to work. At the
-end of two hours I handed him what I had written, quite confident that
-I had settled the question of utility. It was an essay that would have
-brought me honor at college. He read it and smiled.
-
-"'I don't want to hurt your feelings at all," said he, 'but you have
-been two hours about a piece of work that a ready writer would knock
-off in half an hour, and now it is done it is good for nothing.
-You make the mistake so many have made before you, that an editor
-does not need to be bred to his business. _My_ alma mater was a
-printing-office,' said he, proudly, 'and I crept up the ladder round
-by round. When I commenced editorial labor, I dropped type-setting, at
-which I earned two dollars a day, to handle the reporter's pencil at
-seven dollars a week. If you think you could do anything as a reporter,
-I'll show you our Mr. Pyke, the local editor.'
-
-"Mr. Pyke was a rough one.
-
-"'Posted around town,' said he.
-
-"I told him I was a new-comer.
-
-"'Know short-hand?'
-
-"'No, sir.'
-
-"'What line are you strongest in?'
-
-"What line?' said I, not exactly understanding.
-
-"'Yes, what line? Speeches, fancy-work, police, sensations, picking up
-items around town--or what?'
-
-"'I really don't know,' said I; 'I've never had any experience,
-practically, in the newspaper business.'
-
-"At this Mr. Pyke turned round on me with a queer look in his face.
-
-"'Oh, that's it,' said he; 'you want to work at a trade you haven't
-served an apprenticeship to. There! it's the old story. If you'll go up
-in the composing-room, they'll give you a stick and put you to setting
-type, I reckon. You better try it. Go and ask for our foreman, Mr.
-Buckingham, and tell him I sent you,--will you? Why, you couldn't tell
-where the _e_ box is!'
-
-"The man's manner was not so rude as his language, sir. He seemed
-perfectly good-natured, and was scribbling away with a lead-pencil all
-the while he was talking, much as if he were a writing-machine."
-
-"Doubtless he is, to a great degree," said I; "that is just where the
-apprenticeship does its work. I know Pyke, and I've seen him write a
-column of city matter, carrying on conversations with half-a-dozen
-different people who dropped in during the time, without interrupting
-him at all. But I don't mean to interrupt _you_; go on, please."
-
-"Well, sir," St. John continued, "before I had thoroughly learned
-the lesson that I finally learned so well, I was almost literally
-penniless. Such had been my high confidence in the easy and prosperous
-path before me in Chicago, that when I came here I took board at a
-first-class hotel, with my wife. I had very little money, and one day
-I waked up to the consciousness that I had less than five dollars
-remaining of that little, and still no work. Two hideous gulfs yawned
-before me,--starvation and debt. My horror of the one is scarcely
-greater than my horror of the other. Debt converted my father from
-a well-to-do man into a bankrupt, and my mother, who owns the little
-that is left of our old homestead in Massachusetts, was and is in no
-condition to help me. I would beg in the streets, sir, before I would
-look to my poor mother for help, after the long years of self-denial
-she practised to get me through college. My wife is an orphan. You may
-judge the color my future was taking on. I left the Tremont House,
-and, falling at once from the highest to the lowest style of living in
-apartments, came _here_. I had no confidence left, now, in that future
-which had before seemed, so foolish and inexperienced was I, a broad
-and flowery path for talent and education to tread. I never intend to
-whine over anything in this world if I can help it, but I can assure
-you this was a pretty dark old world to Brock St. John about that
-time. The prospect of earning a dollar a day would have cheered me
-wonderfully. I cared more on account of Aggie than myself, of course.
-A man can bear ups and downs, kicks, cold shoulders, and an empty
-stomach, if he is alone; but the thought that I have dragged _her_ down
-to this is almost unbearable at times."
-
-"You have _not_ dragged me, Brock," spoke up the little wife; "I came
-of my own accord!"
-
-"That you did, Aggie," said the husband, his eyes moistening; "I am
-slandering you. But to go on: The day after we moved in here, and set
-up house-keeping in careful preparation for the cold winter coming (I
-had to pawn clothing to get these poor goods," he added, looking about
-the room with a smile), "the German musician, who lives next door,
-came in to ask us if his practising on a trombone annoyed us. We were
-so hungry for a friendly face just then, that we would have let the
-good-natured German blow his trombone through our transom-window after
-that exhibition of fellow-feeling. That afternoon, I dropped in to see
-him, in continuance of the acquaintance. There was a violin hanging on
-the wall, and I took it down and played a tune on it.
-
-"That was my introduction to my first situation in Chicago. Stumm
-got me my place at the beer-saloon; and so, through the knowledge of
-an art which has always been to me nothing more than an amusement, I
-get enough to live, in this time when all the hard-earned culture,
-which cost me so much labor, fails me utterly. I am thankful for this,
-heartily thankful; but I don't need to tell you sir, how it galls me to
-do this work,--to sit three or four hours of every evening in a dense
-and vulgar atmosphere, fiddling for my daily bread. No wonder I am
-seedy; no wonder I get to look like a loafer, listless, without pride,
-spite of Aggie's wifely care. If I knew an honest trade, I should be
-a happy man. I would gladly barter my knowledge of Latin, Greek, and
-German for the knowledge of type-setting."
-
-"So that you could prove to Pyke that you know the _e_ box from the _x_
-box?" queried I.
-
-He laughed.
-
-"But you talk the words of bitterness when you talk in that way, St.
-John. You can barter your knowledge of German for _cash_, and keep it
-too. Have you ever sought for pupils!"
-
-"Only a little. I have no acquaintances, you know. My only way to get
-pupils was to advertise, of course. I tried it three days, and got not
-a solitary reply. There are scores of teachers advertising. It seemed
-useless for me to waste money in that way."
-
-"Well," said I, "I think I can set you in a way of getting up a class.
-My own German is very rusty, and I will be pupil number one. Then I
-know of two or three friends who want to study the language. I think we
-can get you up a class among us."
-
-He made me no protestation of gratitude,--such protestations are
-usually humbug,--but I saw his gladness in his face.
-
-The little wife sat squeezing her fingers for joy.
-
-Before a month had passed, St. John had a large class in German, and
-bade adieu to fiddling. He proved an excellent teacher. Long before I
-left Chicago to resume my residence in this city, he had got nicely
-out from under his cloud, and was living in a snug house in the West
-Division.
-
-There was a little baby playing on the floor at his house last summer
-when I called to see him, on my way to Lake Superior. That baby bears
-my name, I am proud to say.
-
-
-
-
-COMING FROM THE FRONT.
-
-
-
-
-COMING FROM THE FRONT.
-
-[Illustration]
-
- "HEAD-QUARTERS. DEP'T AND ARMY OF THE TENNESSEE.
- "_East Point, Georgia, September 22, 1864._
-
- "SPECIAL ORDERS.
- "No. 214.
-
- [EXTRACT.]
-
- * * * * *
-
- "XI Having tendered his resignation, the following-named officer is
- honorably discharged from the military service of the United States,
- with condition that he shall receive no final payments until he
- satisfies the Pay Department that he is not indebted to the
- Government.
-
- "1st Lieut. ---- ----, Ills. Vol. Inf'try.
- "By order of Maj. Gen'l O. O. Howard.
- "(Signed) W. T. CLARK, _Ass't Adj't Gen'l._"
-
-
-Think of that! After forty-one months of hard-tack and hard marching,
-interspersed with enough fighting to satisfy the stomach of an ordinary
-man; after so long an experience of the beautiful uncertainty of army
-life; after polluting, with the invading heel of my brogan, the sacred
-soil of several of our erring sister States; after passing many breezy
-and rainy nights under the dubious shelter of shelter-tents; after
-sitting through long and weary days in the furnace-heat of narrow
-and dirty trenches;--after all this, I am at last permitted to bid
-farewell to "the front," to go home and doff the honorable blue for the
-more sober garb of the "cit," and drop into my wonted insignificance.
-That little "extract" has a sweeter perfume for me than any triple
-extract for the handkerchief ever elaborated by the renowned M.
-Lubin. It is fragrant with thoughts of home and loved ones far away
-in the Northland, of starry nights and starry eyes, of fluttering
-fans and floating drapery, of morning naps unbroken by the strident
-_ra-tata-ta-ta_ of the bugle. I grow quite sentimental over it,
-notwithstanding the unpleasant condition with which it is qualified,
-and which involves such a fearful amount of writing and figuring on
-mysterious close-ruled blanks, and so much affidavit-making and other
-swearing,--especially at the blundering clerks in the departments at
-Washington.
-
-But this troubles me little now. Time enough to attend to it after I
-get home. That is all I can think of,--_home_, and how to get there.
-
-How I should get there, and whether or not I ever would get there, were
-questions not easily solved. It is the purpose of this sketch to show
-some of the beauties of travelling on railroads that are under military
-control, and especially to set forth the writer's experience in going
-from Atlanta to Nashville.
-
-It was a terribly hot morning when I reached the depot at Atlanta,
-amid a cloud of dust and a maze of wagons and mules and commissary
-stores and frantic teamsters. I threw my valise into the nearest car
-and hastened to the Provost Marshal's office for my pass. There was an
-anxious crowd already in waiting: resigned officers and officers on
-leave; jolly, ragged privates on furlough, eager to see their wives and
-babies; sutlers and "sheap-cloding" men; flaring demireps, seeking new
-fields; mouldy citizens in clothes of antique cut, fawning abjectly
-and addressing every clerk and orderly as "kernel;" dejected darkies,
-shoved aside by everybody, with no "civil rights bill" to help them.
-While I was waiting for my turn, the train kept me constantly worried
-by pulling up and backing down and threatening to leave. At last I
-found an opportunity to exhibit my "Extract," and, after reading it
-as slowly and carefully as if it had been a dispatch in cipher, the
-Provost Marshal very deliberately wrote a pass, read it over two or
-three times, and then, looking at every one in the room but me, asked
-"Who's this for?" as if I had not been standing at his elbow with my
-hand held out for half an hour.
-
-I left the official premises in a highly exasperated state of mind.
-In the mean time the train had been plunging backward and forward in
-a wild and aimless way, and I was unable to find the car my valise
-was in. After much wear and tear of muscle and temper and trousers,
-in climbing over boxes and bales of hay, I discovered it, and found
-that it had been taken possession of by a crowd of roystering blades
-on furlough, whose canteens were full and fragrant, and in whose talk
-and manner appeared the signs of a boisterous night ahead, with the
-possibility of a fight or two by way of special diversion. As I was
-no longer in "the military service of the United States," I was, of
-course, a peaceable citizen, so I took my quarters in a more peaceful
-car. It was a cattle-car and not remarkably clean; but the company was
-good, and through the lattice-work around the upper part of the car one
-could get a view of the surrounding country; though looking through it
-gave one a sensation very much like being in a guard-house.
-
-"Will we never get off?" was the question asked dozens of times,--asked
-of nobody in particular, and answered by a chorus of incoherent growls
-from everybody in general, while some humorous young man suggested
-that if any one wanted to get off, he'd better do it before the train
-started.
-
-"Now we're off!"
-
-"No we're not," said the humorous young man, "but it's more'n likely we
-will be before we get to Chattanooga."
-
-This was not particularly encouraging to timid travellers, in a country
-abounding in guerrilleroes, and where accident insurance companies were
-unknown.
-
-Between Atlanta and Marietta we passed line after line of defensive
-works, protected by _abattis_ and _chevaux-de-frise_,--feed-racks, I
-heard a bronzed veteran of rural antecedents call them,--built by the
-rebels at night, only to be abandoned on the next night to the great
-Flanker. While they wrought line upon line, Sherman and his boys in
-blue gave them precept upon precept, here a little and there a great
-deal. All this rugged country is historic ground. The tall, tufted
-pine-trees stand as monuments of the unrecorded dead, and every knoll
-and tangled ravine bears witness to a bravery and heroic endurance that
-has never been surpassed.
-
-Leaving Marietta,--deserted by its inhabitants and turned into an
-immense hospital,--we approached Kenesaw, so lately crowned with cannon
-and alive with gray coats, now basking in the afternoon sunlight, as
-quiet and harmless as a good-natured giant taking his after-dinner
-nap. We approached it from the inside, to gain which side the compact
-columns of Logan and Stanley and Davis hurled themselves against its
-rugged front so fearlessly, but, alas, so fruitlessly, on that terrible
-27th of June.
-
-Farther on we came to Alatoona Pass, taken at first without a struggle,
-but afterward baptized in blood and made glorious by a successful
-defence against immense odds.
-
-It was sunset when we reached Kingston,--a straggling row of
-dilapidated shanties. As the train was to stop some time, I started
-out in search of supper. There was no hotel, so I had to depend upon
-sutlers, or peripatetic venders of pies. I entered one sutler's store,
-and found a few fly-specked red handkerchiefs and some suspenders.
-Another contained nothing but combs and shoe-blacking. Turning away
-mournfully, I espied an aged colored man limping up the street with
-a basket on his arm. I rushed madly at him, and, finding that he
-had apple-pies, was soon the happy possessor of a brace of them. I
-congratulated myself and gratefully sat down upon a stone to eat,
-and--well, _such pies_! It was utterly impossible to tell what the
-crust was made of. In taste and toughness it resembled a dirty piece of
-towel. The interior--"the bowels of the thing," as some one inelegantly
-called it,--consisted of a few slices of uncooked immature apple and a
-great many flies cooked whole. The cooks were altogether too liberal
-with their flies. I am not particularly well versed in the culinary art
-myself, but I venture boldly to say that the flies that were in those
-two pies would have sufficed, if judiciously distributed, to season two
-dozen pies with the same proportion of apple in them.
-
-And of such was my supper at Kingston. The whistle sounded, and we
-got aboard and were off for Chattanooga. Night fell peacefully upon
-Kingston and its dirty peddlers of unwholesome pies, as a curve in the
-road hid it and them from our reproachful gaze.
-
-As the darkness increased, and we went dashing at break-neck speed
-over a road that had had little or no care bestowed upon it since
-the opening of the campaign, I thought of the humorous young man's
-remark, and of how unpleasant and inconvenient it would be to have
-this long train thrown off and its contents, as Meister Karl hath it,
-"pepperboxically distributed" in the adjacent ditch.
-
-And then to have one of Wheeler's men take advantage of a fellow, as
-he lay there with a broken leg, and rob him of the few dollars he
-had borrowed to go home on! Well, we had been taking our chances for
-the last three years, and it was no new thing to take them now. With
-this comforting reflection, I sat down on my valise, and, wrapped
-in my great-coat, awaited the coming of "the balmy." It was rather
-unsatisfactory waiting. Something in my head kept going rattlety-bang,
-jerkety-jerk, bumpety-bump, in unison with the noise of the cars; and
-when I did get into a doze, I was harassed by the dim shadow of a
-fear that we were about to leave the track and go end-over-end down
-an embankment. At last weariness overcame me, and I slept soundly,
-half-lying on the dirty floor, half-leaning on my valise, coiled up
-in one of those attitudes in which only an old campaigner can sleep
-at all; I woke amid an unearthly whizzing of steam, to find the train
-standing still, and myself mysteriously entangled with various arms
-and legs that didn't belong to me. I extricated myself and looked out.
-Through the thick darkness of the early morning there glared upon me
-the light of what seemed to be innumerable fierce, unwinking eyes.
-I began to think that I had taken the wrong train and brought up in
-the lower regions; but a little reflection and rubbing of the eyes
-disclosed to me that we had reached Chattanooga in safety, and that
-those fierce eyes were the head-lights of the locomotives that had
-arrived during the night, and were now blowing off their superfluous
-steam in that wild, unearthly manner. As soon as it was daylight
-I inquired about trains going North, and learned that there was no
-telling when a train would go, as Forrest was said to be in the
-neighborhood of the road. So there was nothing to do but to go to the
-Crutchfield House and wait. Alas for the man whose purse is slim, under
-any circumstances! Alas and alas for him if he was obliged to wait
-in Chattanooga at Crutchfield prices! It was a dollar that he had to
-pay for each scanty meal, a dollar for the use of a densely populated
-bed, and a dollar must be deposited with the clerk to secure the
-return of the little towel he wiped his face on. Besides the pecuniary
-depletion that he suffered, he was bored to death with weary waiting,
-with nothing to do and nowhere to go. Chattanooga was far from being
-a cheerful place, especially in the rainy season, when nothing was
-visible out of doors except the lonesome sentinels pacing their beats
-in dripping ponchos, and with guns tucked under their arms, and here
-and there a team of steaming mules, struggling to draw a creaking,
-lumbering wagon through the detestable clay.
-
-For amusement, there was a billiard-room, where one had to wait eight
-hours for a chance to play. If he failed to see any fun in this,
-he could step into another room, and squander his currency for,
-and bemuddle his brains with, a sloppy sort of beverage that the
-gentlemanly proprietor would assure him was good, new beer. I would
-rather take his word than his beer. At night, if his tastes ran that
-way, for a small outlay one could witness what was called a dramatic
-exhibition, but which was really more anatomical than dramatic.
-
-In this enlivening village, an ever-increasing crowd of us was
-compelled to wait for five long days. Resigned officers were far from
-being resigned, and officers on leave were vexed and impatient because
-it was impossible to leave.
-
-At length the joyful news spread that a train would leave for Nashville
-at two o'clock in the afternoon. I rushed to the depot, and was just
-fairly aboard a car, when some one, more forcibly than politely, told
-me to "git out o' that car." As he spoke as a man who had authority,
-and knew it, I got out, and learned that I was on the wrong train, and
-in a fair way to have been carried to Knoxville. I forgave the man his
-abruptness of speech, and went in search of the right train. Catching a
-glimpse of Capt. S., whom I knew to be going North, in one of the cars,
-I got in without farther question; and soon a fearful jerk, that piled
-us like dead-wood in one end of the car, started us towards Nashville.
-Rattling along at the usual reckless rate, we found ourselves, soon
-after dark, at Stevenson, Alabama. Here we were to stay all night;
-for the managers of affairs still had the fear of Forrest before
-their eyes, and dared not run trains at night. It was raining, and
-the darkness of Erebus covered the face of the earth. Notwithstanding
-this, Capt. S. and myself plunged out into the night, determined to get
-something to eat, or perish in the attempt. After wandering blindly for
-a while,--tumbling into ditches, and falling over boxes and barrels,
-that turned up where they were least expected,--we finally brought up
-among the ropes of the tent of a sutler. We entered, and found the
-proprietor dozing over a dime novel. We were sorry to disturb him
-in his literary pursuits; but we were hungry, and had to be fed. We
-eagerly demanded various articles of food, which he sleepily informed
-us he hadn't got. Questioning him closely as to the edible part of his
-stock in trade, we learned that it consisted of some Boston crackers
-and a little cheese. We filled our haversacks with these, regardless of
-expense. Having bought so generously, the proprietor became generous
-in turn, and, bringing forth a square black bottle, proffered it to us
-with the remark: "You'll find that a leetle the best gin this side o'
-Louisville. Take hold!" The captain took hold; but the silent, though
-expressive comment, that was written on his countenance when he let
-go, induced me to decline with thanks. A decent regard for the man's
-feelings prevented any audible expression; but, as soon as we were out
-of the tent, the captain solemnly assured me that he was poisoned, and
-that he would utter his last words when he got comfortably fixed in
-the car. Getting back to the car was almost as perilous an undertaking
-as finding the sutler's store; but, fortunately, we were guided by
-the voice of Capt. W. crying, in heart-rending tones, "Lost child!
-lost child!" Capt S. interrupted one of his most pathetic cries by
-striking him in the pit of the stomach with a loaded haversack, and
-demanding to be helped aboard. Once more snugly ensconced in our car,
-we proceeded to sup right royally on our crackers and cheese. S. forgot
-all about his last words until some time near the middle of the night,
-when he woke me to say that he had concluded to postpone them till
-he got home, where he could have them published in the county paper.
-Barring this interruption, I slept soundly all night, having more room
-than on the trip from Atlanta, and not having the thunder of a running
-train sounding in my ears.
-
-At breakfast-time we drew out the fragmentary remainder of our last
-night's repast, and were about to take our morning meal, when we
-discovered that both crackers and cheese had a singularly animated
-appearance. Symptoms of internal commotion manifested themselves in all
-of us except S., who thought that, as the gin had not killed him, he
-was proof against anything. His stoic composure acted soothingly upon
-the rest of us, and we concluded that it was too late to feel bad, and
-consoled each other by repeating the little rhyme,--
-
- "What can't be cured
- Must be endured."
-
-By eight o'clock the fog lifted, and we started on our journey
-northward. Wild and contradictory stories were afloat in regard to
-the whereabouts and doings of the terrible, ubiquitous Forrest.
-Revolvers were brought out and capped and primed afresh, and watches
-and rings were hidden in what were deemed inaccessible parts of the
-clothing. There was considerable anxiety in regard to the bridges over
-Elk and Duck rivers, and when we had passed them both safely, the
-train quickened its speed, every one breathed more freely, and the
-belligerent men put away their fire-arms.
-
-We hastened on without accident and with decreasing fear, though the
-_débris_ of broken and burned cars that lined the road-side, suggesting
-some unpleasant reflections, and at the close of the day entered the
-picket lines at Nashville, and were safe.
-
-Then came a foot-race, from the depot to the hotel, for a prize
-that nobody won, for all the hotels in the city were already full
-from cellar to garret. Capt. S. and I sat down upon the cold, hard
-curb-stone and mingled our weary groans, while W., more plucky and
-better acquainted with the city, went in search of a boarding-house.
-Having returned, with the cheering intelligence that he had found beds
-and supper, we followed him gladly, and, after eating a supper, the
-quantity of which I would not like to confess, retired to our rooms,
-and were soon--to use the captain's elegant language--"wrapped in that
-dreamless, refreshing slumber that only descends upon the pillow of the
-innocent and beautiful."
-
-
-
-
-A NIGHT IN THE SEWERS.
-
-
-
-
-A NIGHT IN THE SEWERS.
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-Perhaps some of my fair readers will consider me a disagreeable person
-for telling them something I know about kid gloves. Perhaps they will
-not believe me when I tell them that in Paris and elsewhere there
-exists--or did exist not very long ago--an extensive trade in the
-skins of common rats, and that these skins, when dressed and dyed,
-are converted into those delicate coverings for the hands, commonly
-called "kid" gloves, and supposed to be manufactured from the hides of
-immature goats.
-
-I was acquainted with a dog-dealer in Paris, a Dane, whose name was
-Beck. To him I went one day, bent upon obtaining a terrier dog of good
-intellect and agreeable manners, who should be a companion to me in
-my "lodgings for single gentlemen," and whose gambols might serve to
-amuse me in my lighter hours, when, after work, I would make little
-pedestrian excursions in the neighborhood, for the sake of exercise
-and air. Beck's kennel was comprised in a small yard, at the back of a
-rickety house; and, when I entered it, persuasion was hardly needed
-to induce me to stand as near the centre of the enclosure as possible,
-in order to keep at chain's length from what the French call _boule
-dogues_, several of which ill-looking canines formed a portion of
-Beck's stock in trade.
-
-"Here," said Mr. Beck, in reply to a question of mine and in pretty
-good English, "here in this box I have a small dog of a kind quite
-fashionable now. They call him a Skye terrier, and I have given him the
-name of 'Dane,' because he comes from far north, like myself, and has
-long yellow hair."
-
-"With these words, Mr. Beck laid hold of a chain, and drawing it
-sharply, jerked out from among some straw a creature made up,
-apparently, of tow and wire, with a pair of eyes like black beads
-glittering through the shocks of hair that fell over its head. The
-animal seemed cowed, and I did not think much of him at first sight.
-
-"He has had bad usage," said Mr. Beck; "first time I saw him was
-yesterday, when he burst in at my backdoor, with a horseshoe fastened
-to his tail. There, you see I have nailed the shoe over the door of his
-box. He will be a lucky bargain for whoever buys him, you may depend
-upon that."
-
-"Good upon rats?" asked I.
-
-"Know nothing about him," replied Mr. Beck, honestly; "never saw him
-before yesterday. They all take the water kindly though, these Skyes
-do, and if you want to try him at rats, I can put you in the way of
-it."
-
-Somehow I took to the ragged little beast, and so I paid Mr. Beck
-sixty francs for him, and ten more for the little wooden kennel with
-the horseshoe nailed upon it. I have a great regard for horseshoes
-as insurers of luck; because once, when I had picked up one on the
-road, and carried it home in my pocket, I found a letter on my table,
-informing me that I had come in for a small legacy, through the death
-of an aged kinswoman whom I had never seen.
-
-What with good treatment and diet, the frequent bath and the free use
-of the comb, it was not many days before master Dane became a very
-presentable dog, and had quite recovered his pluck and spirits. He
-bullied, and banished forever to the house-top, a large tortoiseshell
-cat, that had hitherto commanded the garrison, and I thought, one day,
-that I should like to try him at rats. So out I sallied with him in
-search of Mr. Beck, who had promised to put me in the way of getting
-some sport of the kind.
-
-That versatile gentleman was not in his kennel when I called, but his
-wife told me that I would find him in the "skinnery" attached to the
-establishment; and, asking me to follow her, she ushered me into a
-long, low apartment, lighted with a row of circular windows. The odor
-of the place was very pungent and disagreeable. There were several
-wooden tanks ranged along one wall of the room, and, on lines stretched
-along by the windows, a number of small skins were hung to dry. Mr.
-Beck, assisted by a couple of tan-colored boys, was busily engaged in
-stirring the contents of the tanks. A dead rat on the floor immediately
-engaged the attention of Dane, who seized it in his teeth, shook it
-savagely for a moment, and then pitched it away from him, apparently in
-disgust at finding it already dead.
-
-"What do you make of the rat-skins?" inquired I, after I had looked on
-for a while.
-
-"Money," rejoined Mr. Beck, curtly; "but the man I dress them for makes
-them into gloves,--ladies' gloves, of the primest quality."
-
-"Ladies have rats about them in more ways than one, then," said I.
-"Where do you get the raw material?"
-
-"The rat-hunters supply me. Their hunting-grounds lie all under the
-streets of Paris. Would you like to have a day in the sewers with your
-terrier? Simonet will be here in a few minutes, and you can go the
-rounds with him if you will."
-
-Just what I wanted, and so I sat upon a bench and waited, and presently
-a man came in. He was a low-sized, squat fellow of about forty,
-with heavy, round shoulders, and bowed legs; and his head and face
-were almost entirely covered with a thatch of tangled red hair, out
-from which there peered a couple of greenish eyes of very sinister
-expression. He had a leathern sack slung over his shoulder, and carried
-in his hand a long wand of birch, brushy, with the twigs left upon it
-at one end.
-
-"On the rounds, eh, Simonet?" said Mr. Beck, addressing this
-agreeable-looking gentleman; "well, here's a monsieur who would like
-to go with you. He wants to try his terrier at the rats. You can make
-your own bargain with him."
-
-Then looking at me, he continued,--
-
-"Better leave your coat with my old woman, who'll give you a clean
-_blouse_ instead."
-
-Madame took my coat, and gave me a strong _blouse_ and a somewhat
-greasy cap; and in this guise I went forth with Simonet, who
-immediately plunged into the thick of the city slums. After having gone
-some distance, we entered a dismal and dirty office, in which a man,
-turning over some piles of documents, after a few whispered words with
-my guide, handed him a bunch of heavy keys, and we again went out into
-the streets. Entering a paved court-yard, a declivity led us down to
-a sort of tunnel, the entrance to which was barred by a heavy, grated
-door, which Simonet opened with one of the keys, locking it again as
-soon as we had got in.
-
-"We are in one of the main sewers now, monsieur," said he, in a
-squeaky, rat-like voice; "you must be careful to keep close by me, and
-not stray away into any of the branches."
-
-It was pitch dark, as I looked before me into the tunnel,--dark, and
-awful, and silent, but for the gliding, oozing sound of slowly-flowing
-water. Simonet produced a lantern, which he lit, and I could see by the
-dim light thrown from it that we were in a vast stone passage, through
-the centre of which there ran a dark, deep stream. Between the wall
-and the stream on either side there was a broad pathway, or ledge, and
-along this the rat-hunter motioned me to follow him. Soon we reached a
-turn in the tunnel, and here Simonet, after searching about upon the
-wall for a moment, found a rusty nail in it, upon which he hung his
-lantern. Then producing a couple of torches from his sack, he lighted
-them, and handed one to me.
-
-"There is a birch wattle hid away somewhere here," said he,--"ah,
-yes!--here it is, take it monsieur, and use it just as you shall see me
-do when we get among the rats. Keep close to me, else you may get lost
-in the drains."
-
-Dane grew very excited, now, and ran ahead of us a good way, and
-presently we heard a great rushing and squeaking, and the suppressed
-snarling of the little dog as he worried the rats. Then we saw many
-rats running hither and thither, some of them so scared by the light
-of the torches, as they came near us, that they leaped into the water,
-while others ran up the wall, from which we quickly knocked them with
-our wattles. Simonet did not put them into his bag, but left them where
-they fell, saying that his custom was to pick them up on his way back.
-
-The dog behaved wonderfully well, fighting and shaking the rats that
-fell in his way with great fierceness and pluck. At last, when we had
-killed about a hundred of them, we thought it time to rest. Simonet
-produced a short, black pipe, and, as I was filling mine, he cast a
-wistful look at my tobacco-pouch, thinking, probably, that the article
-contained in it must be of a quality superior to that of the cheap
-stuff smoked by him; so I poured half the contents of it into his hand,
-and he filled his pipe from it, with a grin of satisfaction on his ugly
-face.
-
-"It will soon be time for us to turn back," said he, after a while;
-"the best place for rats is a little way further on, and it will be too
-late to try it if we don't go forward now."
-
-On we went, slashing right and left at the rats, most of which, I
-noticed, were of a very black color here, as if belonging to a peculiar
-colony that existed in this part of the tunnel. As we rounded a corner,
-however, a very large white rat ran past us, and disappeared down
-a cross-gallery that led away to the left. Wishing to secure this
-animal as a trophy, I hallooed the terrier upon its tracks, and was
-about following the chase, when Simonet laid his hand upon my arm, and
-whispered, in a tone of entreaty,--
-
-"Don't risk your life, monsieur! He who follows the white rat of
-the sewer is likely never to find his way back alive. There's a
-blight about the creature, and old stories are afloat of how it has
-led rat-hunters away into dangerous parts of the sewers, like a
-jack-o'-lantern, and then set upon them with a number of its kind, and
-picked their bones clean!"
-
-Breaking away from the fellow, with a jerk that knocked the pipe out
-of his hand, and sent it spinning into the black water below, I ran
-down the by-sewer after the terrier, whose whimper, as though he
-were yet in full chase, I could hear at a good distance ahead of me.
-When I came up with him, which I did only after having taken several
-turns, he seemed at fault, head up and tail down, and gazing, with a
-very puzzled expression up at the vaulted roof. There was no white rat
-to be seen, nor could I detect any aperture in the walls, into which
-the creature could have made its escape. Then a sort of superstitious
-fear fell upon me, as I thought of Simonet's warning, and, with a word
-of encouragement to the dog, I hastened to retrace my steps, shouting
-loudly every now and then, so as to let the rat-hunter know of my
-whereabouts. But no responsive halloo came to my call. Not a sound was
-to be heard but the hollow beat of my footsteps on the damp, mouldy
-path, and the squeaking, here and there, of the rats, as we disturbed
-them from their feast on some garbage fished up by them from the slimy
-bed of the drain. Excited at the position in which I found myself,
-I now began to make reckless _détours_ hither and thither, until,
-thoroughly exhausted by my exertions, I leaned my back against the
-wall, and tried to remember such marks as might have been observed by
-me in the tunnel since I had parted from Simonet. The only marks of
-the wayside that I could recall, however, were the dead rats left by
-us upon the ledge as we passed, and of these I had seen none while I
-was trying to retrace my steps. Arguing from this, and from the fact
-that Simonet did not respond to my shouts, which I continued to utter
-at intervals, I began to feel an extremely unpleasant nervous shiver
-creeping over me, suggestive of all the horrors about which I had ever
-read or dreamed. The little dog lay cowering at my feet, as if he,
-too, were somewhat dejected at the prospect of being eaten alive by
-avenging rats; and, to crown the situation, just as I had nerved myself
-for another effort to recover the lost clue, my torch went out with a
-malignant flicker, and I found myself in black darkness!
-
-Sinking down at the foot of the wall, I now gave myself up for lost.
-Even had the torch not been quite burnt out, I had no means of
-relighting it, having used my last match when we stopped to smoke, just
-before I broke away from my guide. I think I must have become somewhat
-delirious now; for I have a faint recollection of wild songs chanted,
-and of yells that made the vaulted roof ring again. Then a heavy sleep
-must have fallen upon me, which probably lasted for several hours; and
-then I awoke to a dim consciousness of horror, as I began to realize
-the terrible situation into which I had brought myself by my reckless
-folly. My dog was still nestling close to me; and it may have been
-to his presence, perhaps, that I owed the fact of my not having been
-mangled by rats during my sleep. Rising with difficulty to my feet,
-for I was stiff from lying so long upon the damp, cold ground, I once
-more tried to shout; but my voice was utterly gone, from my previous
-exertion of it, and I could not raise it above a whisper. Then, in
-sheer desperation, I dragged myself along the wall, feeling the way
-with my hands, and had not gone many paces when I felt an angle in the
-masonry, on rounding which a ray of hope dawned upon me, as I discerned
-a faint light, far, far away, at the end of what seemed to be all but,
-an endless shaft of darkness. The prospect of escape infused new vigor
-into my weary limbs, and I kept steering onward for the light, which
-grew larger and larger as I approached it. At last I got near enough
-to see that it came through a small _grille_, or iron door, which
-terminated the branch of the sewer in which I was. When I reached the
-grating, I saw that it looked out upon the river, between which and
-it, however, there lay a deep indentation, or channel, of some fifty
-or sixty yards in length. It was gray morning, and I could see boats
-and steamers and ships, passing and repassing upon the river. Surely
-deliverance was now at hand! but how was I to make my situation known?
-My voice, as I have said, was utterly gone, and I had barely strength
-left to wave my pocket-handkerchief from the grating. There I stood
-for hours,--a prisoner looking wistfully through the bars of a dungeon
-to which no wayfarer came. I had sunk down at the foot of the grating,
-from mere exhaustion, when the whining of my little dog attracted me,
-and I gave him a caressing pat. He licked my face and whined again,
-as much as to say, "Can't I be of some use to you?" This brought a
-bright idea to my mind. Tearing a leaf from my note-book, I wrote the
-following words upon it, with pencil:--
-
- "I have lost my way in the sewers. You will find me at the grating
- just opposite a large buoy marked X. Come quickly."
-
-Placing this inside my india-rubber tobacco-pouch, I bound it tightly,
-with a strip from my pocket-handkerchief, to Dane's collar; and then,
-taking the little fellow gently in my arms, and speaking a word or two
-of dog-talk to him, I dropped him from the grating into the stream
-below, which was running out fast enough to prevent him from trying to
-return; nor was it long before I had the satisfaction of seeing him
-swimming boldly out toward the river, as if he knew perfectly well what
-he was about. I had no fears but that somebody in a boat would pick
-him up before he was exhausted, because this kind of dog can live for
-a great while in the water. Yet he was gone for a long, long time,--at
-least, it seemed a long time to me,--and I saw the distant boats
-passing and repassing, and the steamers and the ships, and heard the
-cheery voices of the mariners, as I held on there by the iron grating,
-half-dead. At last a boat, pulled by two men and steered by a third,
-shot up into the channel; and the boatmen raised a joyful shout as I
-waved my handkerchief to them from my prison-bars. The steersman held
-my little dog upon his knee; but the faithful animal broke away from
-him when he saw me, and would have jumped overboard in his eagerness to
-reach me had he not been caught by one of the men.
-
-When the boat had come quite close under the grating, I saw that it
-was manned by men of the river guard. They told me that one of their
-number had gone round to report the matter to the proper authorities,
-and that assistance would quickly be at hand, and one of them, standing
-on the thwarts of the boat, reached up to me a flask of brandy and a
-biscuit, after having partaken of which I felt sufficiently revived to
-be very thankful for my escape from a horrible death. In less than an
-hour keys were brought by an officer connected with the sewers, and I
-was released from my disagreeable position, much to the joy of Dane,
-who covered me with caresses after his honest doggy fashion; nor,
-half-starved as the little animal must have been, would he touch a
-morsel of biscuit until after he had seen me safe in the boat.
-
-The next thing to be done was to make a search for Simonet, who had not
-made his appearance in the upper regions since we entered the sewers.
-Men were sent after him, and he was found in a half-stupefied condition
-just where I had left him, among the dead rats. He could give little or
-no account of himself, save that his torch had gone out, just as he was
-about starting in search of me, and that a stupor came over him, then,
-and he sat down and fell asleep. This was all accounted for afterwards.
-Having lost his pipe, as I have said, he sought to assuage his craving
-for stimulants by chewing--or rather eating--quantities of the tobacco
-with which I had furnished him, and this proved, on examination, to
-have been taken by me, in mistake, from a jar in which opium had been
-copiously mixed with the milder narcotic for experimental purposes.
-Probably the little I had smoked of it in my pipe had somewhat affected
-me; and Simonet averred that he thought it must have been the smell of
-it that saved us from being eaten by the rats. A few franc pieces, a
-new pipe, and a reasonable stock of the best tobacco, made a happy man
-of that rare old gutter-snipe; but nothing could induce him to make any
-further reference to the white rat, at the very mention of which he
-would scowl horribly, and retire, as it were, behind the mass of red
-hair with which his face was fringed.
-
-As for me, I believe more in horseshoes than ever, since the adventure
-narrated above. I had a small one made in silver, for Dane; and this
-the faithful animal wore suspended from his collar as a charm until he
-went the way of all dogs, full of honors and of years.
-
-
-
-
-TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE:
-
-Obvious printer errors have been corrected. Otherwise, the author's
-original spelling, punctuation and hyphenation have been left intact.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Stories and Sketches, by Various
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-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Stories and Sketches, by Various
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-Title: Stories and Sketches
- by our best authors
-
-Author: Various
-
-Release Date: September 30, 2016 [EBook #53178]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STORIES AND SKETCHES ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Chris Whitehead, Chris Curnow and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;">
-<img class="border" style="margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em;" src="images/cover-image.jpg" id="coverpage" width="500" height="659" alt="Cover for Stories and Sketches" />
-<div class="transnote covernote">
-<p class="center" style="margin-top: 1em; margin-bottom: 1em;">The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-<h1 style="margin-top: 8em; margin-bottom: 8em;">STORIES AND SKETCHES.</h1>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 415px;">
-<img src="images/image2.jpg" width="415" height="604" alt="Stories and Sketches" />
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-
-
-<p class="center" style="margin-top: 8em; margin-bottom: 8em;">Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1867, by<br />
-LEE &amp; SHEPARD,<br />
-In the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District of Massachusetts.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-
-<h2 style="margin-top: 3em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;">CONTENTS.</h2>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;">
-<img src="images/image1.jpg" width="100" height="18" alt="fancy line" />
-</div>
-
-<table class="centered" border="0" cellpadding="5" style="max-width: 65%;" summary="CONTENTS">
-<tr><td class="title"></td> <td class="author"></td> <td class="page">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;PAGE</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="title"><a href="#The_Skeleton_at_the_Banquet"><span class="smcap">The Skeleton at the Banquet.</span></a></td> <td class="author"><i>Seeley Regester.</i></td> <td class="page">9</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="title"><a href="#Let_those_Laugh_who_Win"><span class="smcap">Let those Laugh who Win.</span></a></td> <td class="author"><i>Samuel W. Tuttle.</i></td> <td class="page">37</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="title"><a href="#The_Proper_use_of_Grandfathers"><span class="smcap">The Proper use of Grandfathers.</span></a></td> <td class="author"><i>Fitz Hugh Ludlow.</i></td> <td class="page">61</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="title"><a href="#At_Eve"><span class="smcap">At Eve.</span></a></td> <td class="author"><i>Gertrude Brodé.</i></td> <td class="page">77</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="title"><a href="#Broken_Idols"><span class="smcap">Broken Idols.</span></a></td> <td class="author"><i>Richmond Wolcott.</i></td> <td class="page">93</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="title"><a href="#Dr_Hugers_Intention"><span class="smcap">Dr. Huger's Intention.</span></a></td> <td class="author"><i>Louise Chandler Moulton.</i></td> <td class="page">105</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="title"><a href="#The_Man_whose_Life_was_Saved"><span class="smcap">The Man whose Life was Saved.</span></a></td> <td class="author">&#42;&#42;&#42;&#42;&#42;.</td> <td class="page">121</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="title"><a href="#The_Romance_of_a_Western_Trip"><span class="smcap">The Romance of a Western Trip.</span></a></td> <td class="author"><i>J. L. Lord.</i></td> <td class="page">157</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="title"><a href="#The_two_ghosts"><span class="smcap">The Two Ghosts of New London Turnpike.</span></a></td> <td class="author"><i>Mrs. Galpin.</i></td> <td class="page">185</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="title"><a href="#Down_by_the_Sea"><span class="smcap">Down by the Sea.</span></a></td> <td class="author"><i>Hattie Tyng Griswold.</i></td> <td class="page">229</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="title"><a href="#Why_Mrs_Radnor_Fainted"><span class="smcap">Why Mrs. Radnor Fainted.</span></a></td> <td class="author">&#42;&#42;&#42;&#42;&#42;.</td> <td class="page">249</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="title"><a href="#Under_a_Cloud"><span class="smcap">Under a Cloud.</span></a></td> <td class="author"><i>William Wirt Sikes.</i></td> <td class="page">265</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="title"><a href="#Coming_from_the_Front"><span class="smcap">Coming from the Front.</span></a></td> <td class="author"><i>Richmond Wolcott.</i></td> <td class="page">281</td></tr>
-<tr><td class="title"><a href="#A_Night_in_the_Sewers"><span class="smcap">A Night in the Sewers.</span></a></td> <td class="author"><i>Chas. Dawson Shanly.</i></td> <td class="page">293</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[9]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2 style="margin-top: 3em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;"><a name="The_Skeleton_at_the_Banquet" id="The_Skeleton_at_the_Banquet"><span class="smcap">The Skeleton at the Banquet.</span></a></h2>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;">
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-<div><img class="dropcap" src="images/dropcap-d.jpg"
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-</div><p><span class="dropletter">D</span>R. GRAHAM sat in his office, his book closed
-on his knee, and his eyes fixed upon the street.
-There was nothing of interest to be seen. A
-light snow was falling, making the pavement
-dreary; but it was Christmas, and his thoughts
-had gone back to other days, as people's thoughts will
-go on anniversary occasions. He was thinking of the
-young wife he had buried three years and three months
-ago; of the great fireplace in his boyhood's home, and
-his mother's face lit up by the glow; of many things
-past which were pleasant; and reflecting sadly upon the
-fact that life grew duller, more commonplace, as one
-grew older. Not that he was an elderly man,&mdash;he was,
-in reality, but twenty-eight; yet, upon that Christmas
-day, he felt old, very old; his wife dead, his practice
-slender, his prospects far from promising,&mdash;even the
-slow-moving days daily grew heavier, soberer, more
-serious. It was a holiday, but he had not even an invitation
-for dinner, where the happiness of friends and the
-free flow of thought might lend a momentary sparkle to
-his own stale spirits.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[10]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The doctor was not of a melancholy, despondent
-nature, nor did he rely for his pleasures upon others.
-He was a self-made man, and self-reliant to an unusual
-degree, as self-made men are apt to be. His tussle with
-circumstances had awakened in him a combative and
-resistant energy, which had served him well when
-means were scant and the rewards of merit few. But
-there is something in the festal character of Christmas
-which, by luring from the shadows of our struggle-life
-the boy nature of us, makes homeless men feel solitary;
-and, from being forlorn, the mood soon grows to one of
-painful unrest; all from beholding happiness from
-which we are shut out. On this gray afternoon not the
-most fascinating speculations of De Boismont and the
-hospital lectures,&mdash;not the consciousness of the originality
-and importance of his own discoveries in the field
-of Sensation and Nerve Force,&mdash;had any interest for
-Dr. Graham.</p>
-
-<p>That he had talent and a good address; that he studied
-and experimented many hours every day; that he as
-thoroughly understood his profession as was consistent
-with a six years' actual experience as an actual practitioner;
-that there was nothing of the quack or pretender
-in him;&mdash;all this did not prevent his rent from being high,
-his patients few, and his means limited. With no influential
-friends to recommend and introduce him, he had
-resolutely rented a room in a genteel locality up town,
-had dressed well, and had worn the "air" of a man of
-business, ever ready for duty; but success had not<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[11]</a></span>
-attended upon his efforts, and the future gave no promise
-of a change. Of this he was thinking, somewhat
-bitterly; for what proud soul is not stung with unmerited
-neglect? Then a deep sadness stole over him
-at thoughts of the loss which had come upon his early
-manhood,&mdash;a loss like which there is none other so
-abiding in strong, wise hearts. A cloud seemed to be
-sifting down and closing around him, which, with unusual
-passivity, he seemed unable or unwilling to shake
-off. A carriage obstructed his view, by passing in front
-of his window. It stopped; then the footman descended,
-opened the carriage-door, and turned to the
-office-bell. He was followed by his master, who awaited
-the answer to the bell, and was ushered into the practitioner's
-presence by the single waiting-servant of his
-modest establishment. The doctor arose to receive his
-guest, who was a man still younger than himself, with
-something of a foreign air, and dressed with a quiet
-richness in keeping with his evident wealth and position.</p>
-
-<p>"Dr. Graham?"</p>
-
-<p>The doctor bowed assent.</p>
-
-<p>"If you are not otherwise engaged, I would like you
-to go home with me, to see my sister, who is not well.
-There is no great haste about the matter, but if you can
-go now, I shall be glad to take you with me. It will
-save you a walk through the snow."</p>
-
-<p>"He knows," thought the doctor, "that I do not
-drive a carriage;" and that a stranger, of such ability
-to hire the most noted practitioners, should call upon<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[12]</a></span>
-him, was a source of unexpressed surprise and suspicion.</p>
-
-<p>"What do you think is the matter with your sister?"
-he unconcernedly asked, taking his overcoat from the
-wardrobe.</p>
-
-<p>"That is for you to decide. It is a case of no ordinary
-character&mdash;one which will require study." He
-led the way at once to the door, as if unwilling to delay,
-notwithstanding he had at first stated that no haste was
-necessary. "Step in, doctor, and I will give you an
-inkling of the case during the drive, which will occupy
-some fifteen or twenty minutes."</p>
-
-<p>"In the first place," continued the stranger, as they
-rolled away, "I will introduce myself to you as St.
-Victor Marchand, at present a resident of your city, but
-recently from the island of Madeira. My house is upon
-the Fifth Avenue, not far from Madison Square. My
-household consists only of myself and sister, with our
-servants. I have the means to remunerate you amply
-for any demands we may make upon your time or skill;
-and I ought to add, one reason for selecting so young a
-physician is, that I think you will be the more able
-and willing to devote more time to the case than more
-famous practitioners. However, you are not unknown
-to me. I have heard you well-spoken of; and I remember
-that, when you were a student in Paris, you were
-mentioned with honor by the college, for an able paper
-read before the open section upon the very subject to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[13]</a></span>
-which I now propose to direct your attention,&mdash;mental
-disease," he added, after a moment's hesitation.</p>
-
-<p>"A case of insanity?" bluntly asked the doctor.</p>
-
-<p>"Heaven forbid! And yet I must not conceal from
-you that I fear it."</p>
-
-<p>"Give me some of the symptoms. Insanity in strong
-development, or aberration of faculties, or hallucination?"</p>
-
-<p>"I cannot reply. It is one and all, it seems to me.
-The fact is, doctor, I wish to introduce you to your
-patient simply as a friend of mine, so as to give you an
-opportunity for studying my sister's case, unembarrassed
-by any suspicion on her part. To excite her suspicions
-is to frustrate all hopes of doing anything for or with
-her. Can you&mdash;will you&mdash;do me the favor to dine with
-me this evening? It is now only about an hour to six,
-and if you have no other engagement, I will do my best
-to entertain you, and you can then meet my sister as
-her brother's guest. Shall it be so?"</p>
-
-<p>The young man's tones were almost beseeching, and
-his manner betrayed the most intense solicitude. Quite
-ready to accede to the request, from curiosity as well as
-from a desire to reässure the young man, Dr. Graham
-did not hesitate to say, "Willingly, sir, if it will assist
-in a professional knowledge of the object of my call."</p>
-
-<p>The change from the office to the home into which
-the physician was introduced was indeed grateful to
-the doctor's feelings. The light, warmth, and splendor
-of the rooms gave to the home an air of tropical sensuousness;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[14]</a></span>
-and yet an exquisite taste seemed to preside
-over all. Though not unfamiliar with elegance, this
-home of the brother and sister wore, to the visitor, an
-enchanted look, as well from the foreign character of
-many of its adornments and the rare richness of its
-works of art, as from the gay, friendly, enthusiastic
-manner of his entertainer,&mdash;a manner never attained
-by English or Americans. Sending word to Miss Marchand
-that there would be a guest to dinner, St. Victor
-fell into a sparkling conversation, discoursing most intelligibly
-of Paris, Madeira, the East Indies, and South
-America, taking his guest from room to room to show
-this or that curious specimen of the productions or
-handicraft of each country. As the articles exhibited
-were rare, and many of them of scientific value, and as
-the young man's knowledge kept pace with his eloquence
-of discourse, Dr. Graham was agreeably absorbed.</p>
-
-<p>An hour passed rapidly. Then the steward announced
-dinner; but it was not until they were about seating
-themselves at table that <i>the patient</i> made her appearance.
-It was now twilight out of doors. The curtains were
-drawn and the dining-room lit only by wax tapers,
-under whose soft radiance bloomed an abundance of
-flowers, mostly of exotic beauty and fragrance. It was
-evident that the young master of the house brought
-with him his early tastes.</p>
-
-<p>"We have an extra allowance of light and flowers, and
-a little feast, too, I believe; for neither myself nor my
-English steward here forget that this is Christmas.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[15]</a></span>
-Don't you think it a beautiful holiday? My mother
-always kept it with plenty of wax candles and flowers."</p>
-
-<p>"It is a sacred day to me," answered the doctor, sadly,
-thinking of his lost wife and of the three times they
-had kept it together, with feasting and love's delights.</p>
-
-<p>At this moment Miss Marchand floated into the room
-and to her place at the head of the table,&mdash;a girlish
-creature, who gave their guest a smile when the brother
-said,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Dr. Graham is not entirely a stranger, Edith; he
-was in Paris when we were there. You were a child,
-then. I was indeed glad to meet him in this strange
-city, and I mean that we shall be friends upon a visiting
-footing, if he will permit it."</p>
-
-<p>It was but natural for the physician to fix a piercing
-look upon the face of her whom he had been given to
-understand was to be his patient, and whose disease was
-of a character to command his best skill. His physician's
-eye detected no outward tokens of ill health, either
-of body or of mind. A serene brow, sweet, steady, loving
-eyes, cheeks rosy and full with maiden health, a
-slender though not thin figure, all were there before
-him, giving no indication even of the "nervousness"
-assumed to be so common with young ladies of this
-generation. Exquisite beauty, allied with perfect health,
-seemed to "blush and bloom" all over her; and the
-medical man would have chosen her, with professional
-enthusiasm, as his ideal of what a young woman <i>ought</i>
-to be. Her pink-silk robe adapted itself to her soft<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[16]</a></span>
-form as naturally as the petals of a rose to its curving
-sweetness. Only to look upon her gladdened the sad
-heart of Dr. Graham, the wifeless and childless. He
-felt younger than he had felt for years, as thirsty grass
-feels under the influence of a June sun after a morning
-of showers. His spirits rose, and he talked well, even
-wittily,&mdash;betraying not only his varied learning as a
-student and his keen powers of observation as a man of
-the world, but also the gentleness and grace which, in
-his more active, worldly life, were too much put aside.
-It was a little festival, in which the dainty dishes, the
-fruit, and wine played but a subordinate part.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing could be more apparent than the pride and
-affection with which Mr. Marchand regarded his sister.
-Was there, indeed, a skeleton at this feast? The doctor
-shuddered as he asked himself the question. All his
-faculties were on the alert to deny and disprove the possibility
-of the presence of the hideous visitor. His sympathies
-were too keenly enlisted to be willing to
-acknowledge its existence even in the background of
-that day or the days to come to that household. Yet,
-ever and anon, in the midst of their joyousness, a
-strange look would leap from the quick, dark eyes of
-St. Victor, as he fixed them upon his sister's face, and
-an expression would flit across his own face inscrutable
-to the watchful physician. With a slight motion of his
-hand or head he would arrest and direct the doctor's
-attention, who would then perceive Miss Marchand's luminous
-glance changing into a look expressive of anxiety<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[17]</a></span>
-and terror, the glow of her cheeks fading into a pallor
-like that of one in a swoon. But, strange! an instant
-would change it all. The pallor, lingering but a moment,
-would melt away as a mist before the sun, and the
-roses would come back to the cheeks again in all their
-rosiness. The host would divert his companion's startled
-attention by gracefully pressing the viands upon his
-notice, or by some brilliant sally, so scintillating with wit
-or droll wisdom, as to have brought the smile to an anchorite's
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>"I pray you watch her! Did you not notice that
-slight incoherency?" he remarked, in a whisper, leaning
-over toward the doctor.</p>
-
-<p>The doctor had noticed nothing but the playful badinage
-of a happy girl.</p>
-
-<p>"I am afraid her loveliness blinds my judgment. I
-<i>must</i> see what there is in all this," he answered to himself,
-deprecatingly.</p>
-
-<p>They sat long at table. Not that any one ate to excess,
-though the pompous English steward served up
-one delicious dish after another, including the time-honored
-Christmas feast requisite,&mdash;the plum-pudding,&mdash;which
-was tasted and approved, not to wound the
-Briton's national and professional vanity, but sent off,
-but slightly shorn of its proportions, to grace the servants'
-table.</p>
-
-<p>The guest noticed that St. Victor partook very sparingly
-of food, although he fully enjoyed the occasion.
-Save tasting of the wild game and its condiment of real<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[18]</a></span>
-Calcutta currie, he ate nothing of the leading dishes or
-<i>entrées</i>. Neither did he drink much wine, whose quality
-was of the rarest, being of his own stock drawn from
-his father's rich store in his Madeira cellar. Of the luscious
-grapes and oranges which formed a leading feature
-of the dessert, he partook more freely, as if they cooled
-his tongue. That there was fever, and nervous excitement,
-in the young man's frame, was evident. Indeed,
-to the doctor's observant eye, the brother appeared more
-delicate, and of a temperament more highly nervous
-than his sister.</p>
-
-<p>The frankness, the almost childish confidence and
-open-heartedness of the young people formed one of
-their greatest attractions to the usually reticent, thoughtful
-physician. He felt his own impulses expanding under
-the warmth of their sunny natures until the very
-romance of his boyhood stirred again, and sprouted
-through the mould in which it lay dormant. There was
-nothing in their past history or present prospects which,
-seemingly, they cared to conceal, so that he had become
-possessed of a pretty fair history of their lives before
-the last course came upon the board. Both were born
-in the island of Madeira. St. Victor was twenty-four,
-Edith nineteen, years of age. Their mother was the
-daughter of an American merchant, long resident on the
-island; their father was a French gentleman of fortune,
-who had retired to the island for his health, had loved
-and won the fair American girl, and lived with her a
-life of almost visionary beauty and happiness. Their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[19]</a></span>
-father had joined their grandfather in some of his mercantile
-ventures; hence those voyages to the Indies, to
-South America, to the Mediterranean in which the
-children were participants. They also had spent a couple
-of years in France, cultivating the acquaintance of their
-relatives there, and adding some finishing touches to St.
-Victor's education, which, having been conducted under
-his father's eye by accomplished tutors, was unusually
-thorough and varied for one so young. This fact the
-doctor surmised during the progress of the banquet,
-though he did not ascertain the full extent of the young
-man's accomplishments until a future day. Nor was
-Edith's education overlooked. She was in a remarkable
-degree fitted to be the companion and confidante of her
-brother,&mdash;sympathizing in his tastes, reading his books,
-enjoying his pastimes, and sharing his ambitions to their
-utmost. It was a beautiful blending of natures,&mdash;such
-as the world too rarely beholds,&mdash;such as our received
-"systems" of education and association <i>cannot</i> produce.</p>
-
-<p>Their grandfather had been dead for several years;
-their father for three, their mother for two. "She faded
-rapidly after father's death,&mdash;drooped like a frost-blighted
-flower," said St. Victor. "They had been too
-happy in this world to remain long apart in the next."</p>
-
-<p>"You now see, doctor," the narrator of these family
-reminiscences at length said, "why Edith and myself are
-so unlike. My sister is her mother over again, fair
-and bright, like your New York ladies,&mdash;among the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[20]</a></span>
-most beautiful women, in many respects, I have ever
-seen. I am dark and thin,&mdash;a very Frenchman in tastes,
-temperament, and habits."</p>
-
-<p>He toyed a few moments with an orange; then, again
-leaning toward the physician, he said, in that sharp
-whisper which once before during the evening he had
-made use of,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I will tell you all, doctor. My father died insane.
-We afterwards learned that it was one of the inheritances
-of his haughty and wealthy family. The peace and delight
-which he had with his wife and children long delayed
-the terrible legacy; but it fell due at last. He
-died a maniac,&mdash;a raving maniac. <i>She</i> does not know
-it. It killed her mother. Imagine, doctor, <i>imagine</i>, if
-you can, how I watch over her! how I pity! how I
-dread! O God! to think that I must detect those symptoms,
-as I have done during the last six months. I have
-seen the virus in her eyes to-night. I have not breathed
-a word to her of my knowledge and convictions; but I
-am as certain of it as that she sits there. Look at her
-now, doctor,&mdash;<i>now</i>!"&mdash;with a stealthy side-glance
-at the beautiful girl who, at the moment, was smiling
-absently over a flower which she had taken from its
-vase,&mdash;smiling only as girls can,&mdash;as if it interpreted
-something deeper than a passing thought.</p>
-
-<p>It is impossible to describe the strain of agony in the
-young man's voice; his sudden pallor; the sweat starting
-from his forehead; or to describe the piercing power
-of his eye, as he turned it from the face of his sister to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[21]</a></span>
-that of his guest. Accustomed as he was to every form
-of suffering, Dr. Graham shrank from the appeal in that
-searching look, which mutely asked him if there were
-any hope.</p>
-
-<p>The clear whisper in which St. Victor had spoken
-aroused Edith from her revery; she darted a glance at
-both parties, so full of suspicion and dread, so in contrast
-with her natural sunny expression, that it was as
-if her face had suddenly withered, from that of a child,
-to the thin features of the careworn woman of fifty. She
-half rose in her chair, faltered, sank back, and sat gazing
-fixedly at the two men; yet silent as a statue.</p>
-
-<p>St. Victor was the first to recover himself. He burst
-into a light laugh,&mdash;sweet as a shower of flowers,&mdash;and,
-taking up a slender-necked decanter of pale wine, passed
-it to his guest, remarking,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"We are forgetting that this is Christmas night. Fill
-your glass, my friend, with <i>this</i> wine,&mdash;the oldest and
-rarest of our precious store,&mdash;and I will fill mine.
-Then, we will both drink joyously to the health of my
-only darling&mdash;my one beloved&mdash;my sister."</p>
-
-<p>He said this so prettily, poured out the wine with such
-arch pleasantry of gesture, that the color came back to
-Edith's cheeks; and when the two men bowed to her,
-before drinking, she gave them a smile, steeped in melancholy,
-but very sweet, and brimming with affection.
-It thrilled Dr. Graham's veins more warmly than the
-priceless wine.</p>
-
-<p>"After our mother's death," continued St. Victor, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[22]</a></span>
-his natural voice, "we found ourselves quite alone. We
-had formed no great attachment to our relatives in
-France; and, as one branch of our father's business remained
-still unsettled in this country, we resolved to
-come hither. Then, too, we had a longing to behold the
-land which was our mother's. When we had arranged
-and closed up our affairs in Madeira, we sailed for
-France, where we spent one winter only. I thought"&mdash;with
-a tender glance at his sister&mdash;"that a sea voyage
-would do Edith good. I was not satisfied about her
-health; so I drew her away from Paris, and, last spring,
-we fulfilled our promise to see our mother's land, and
-came hither. I am afraid the climate here does not
-agree with her. Do you think she looks well?"</p>
-
-<p>The girl moved uneasily, casting a beseeching look at
-the speaker.</p>
-
-<p>"It is not I who am not strong," she said; "it is you,
-St. Victor. If your friend is a doctor, I wish he would
-give a little examination into the state of your health.
-You are thin and nervous; you have no appetite,&mdash;while
-he can see, at a glance, that nothing in the world
-ails <i>me</i>."</p>
-
-<p>Again her brother laughed; not gayly as before, but
-with a peculiar and subtle significance; while he gave
-the doctor another swift glance, saying to him in a low
-voice,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I have heard that persons threatened with certain
-mental afflictions never suspect their own danger."</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Graham did not know if the young lady overheard<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[23]</a></span>
-this remark; he glanced toward her, but her eyes again
-were upon the flowers, which she was pulling to pieces.
-He perceived that her lips trembled; but she still smiled,
-scattering the crimson leaves over the white clothes.</p>
-
-<p>At this period of his novel visit,&mdash;just then and there,
-when St. Victor laughed that subtle laugh and his sister
-vacantly destroyed the red flower,&mdash;a conviction rushed
-into the physician's mind, or rather, we may say, pierced
-it through like a ray of light in a darkened room.</p>
-
-<p>Instantly all was clear to him. From that moment
-he was cool and watchful, but so pained with this sudden
-knowledge of the true state of the case that he
-wished himself well out of that splendid house, back in
-his own dreary office. He wished himself away, because
-he already loved these young people, and his sympathy
-with them was too keen to allow him further to enjoy
-himself; yet, in all his medical experience, he had never
-been so interested with a professional interest. As a
-physician, he felt a keen pleasure; as a friend, a keen
-pain. His faculties each sprang to its post, awaiting
-the next development of the scene.</p>
-
-<p>While Mr. Marchand was giving some order to his
-steward, the beautiful girl at his other hand leaned toward
-him, and also whispered confidentially in his ear:
-"Dr. Graham, if you really are my brother's friend, I
-pray you watch him closely, and tell me at some future
-time if you have any fears&mdash;any suspicions of&mdash;Oh,
-I implore you, sir, do not deceive me!"</p>
-
-<p>Her eyes were filled with tears, her voice choked.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[24]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The thing was absurd. Its ludicrous aspect struck
-the listener, almost forcing him to laugh; while the
-tears, at the same time, arose responsive in his own
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p>A clock on the mantel chimed nine. The steward
-placed on the board the last delicacies of the feast,&mdash;Neapolitan
-creams and orange-water ice.</p>
-
-<p>"Edith chooses luscious things like creams," remarked
-her brother. "Which will you have, doctor? As for
-me, I prefer ices; they cool my warm blood, which is
-fierce like tropic air. Ah, this is delicious! I am feverish,
-I believe; and the scent of the orange brings
-back visions of our dear island home."</p>
-
-<p>He paused, as if his mind were again on the vine-clad
-hills of the "blessed isle." Then he spoke, suddenly,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Edith, have some of this?"</p>
-
-<p>She smiled, shaking her head.</p>
-
-<p>"But you <i>must</i>. I insist. You need it. Don't you
-agree with me, doctor, that it is just what she requires?"</p>
-
-<p>He spoke in a rising key, with a rapid accent. Edith
-reached forth her hand, and took the little dish of
-orange ice. It shook like a lily in the wind; but she
-said, softly and with apparent calmness,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Anything to please you, brother. I will choose
-this every day if you think it good for me."</p>
-
-<p>He gave her a satisfied look. Then there was a brief
-silence, which their guest was about to dissipate with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[25]</a></span>
-a playful remark, when St. Victor turned abruptly to
-the steward,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Thompson," he cried, "now bring in the skeleton!"</p>
-
-<p>"What, sir?" stammered the astonished servant.</p>
-
-<p>"Bring in the skeleton, I said. Do you not know
-that the Egyptians always crown their feasts with a
-death's head? Bring it in, I say, and place it&mdash;<i>there</i>!"</p>
-
-<p>Half-rising in his seat, he pointed to the vacant space
-behind his sister's chair.</p>
-
-<p>The man now smiled, thinking his master jested; but
-his expression grew more questioning and anxious as
-the bright eyes turned upon him glittering in anger.</p>
-
-<p>"Why am I not obeyed? Bring in the skeleton,
-I repeat, and place it behind my sister's chair. It is in
-the house; you will have no difficulty in finding it. It
-has lurked here long. I have been aware of its presence
-these many months,&mdash;always following, following my
-dear Edith,&mdash;a shadow in her steps. You see how
-young and fair she is; but it is all hollow&mdash;ashes&mdash;coffin-dust!
-She does not know of it; she has never even
-turned her head when it lurked behind her; but to-night
-she must make its acquaintance. It will not longer be
-put off. Our feast is nearly over. Bring it in, Thompson,
-and we will salute it."</p>
-
-<p>The steward, with a puzzled look, turned from one to
-another of the company. Miss Marchand had risen to
-her feet, and was regarding her brother with terrified
-eyes, stretching out her hands toward him. The doctor,
-too, arose, not in excitement, but with commingled pain<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[26]</a></span>
-and resolution stamped upon his features; while his
-gaze rested upon the face of St. Victor until the eyes of
-the young man were riveted and arrested by the doctor's
-demeanor. A flush then diffused itself gradually
-over Marchand's pale countenance; his thin nostrils
-quivered; his fingers twitched and trembled and sought
-his bosom, as if in search of something concealed there.
-Then he laughed once more that short, nervous laugh so
-significant to the physician's ears, and cried, in a high
-tone,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"So, Edith, you did not know that you were going
-mad? <i>I</i> did. I've watched you night and day this long
-time. I have all along been afraid it would end as it
-has&mdash;on Christmas night. <i>That</i> was the day our father
-tried to murder our mother. An anniversary, then, we
-have to-night celebrated. Ha, ha! And you didn't
-know the skeleton was awaiting admittance to the banquet!"</p>
-
-<p>His eyes gleamed with a light at once of delight and
-with malice; but he quietly added,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"But <i>I</i> shall not harm you, you demented thing, you
-beautiful insanity. There! doctor, didn't I tell you to
-watch her&mdash;to read her&mdash;to comprehend the subtle
-thing? So full of art and duplicity! But look at her
-now&mdash;<i>now</i>! She is as mad as the serpent which has
-poisoned itself with its own fangs&mdash;mad&mdash;mad! O
-God! has it come to this? But, I knew it&mdash;knew the
-skeleton was her skeleton&mdash;the bones without her beautiful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</a></span>
-flesh. We've had enough of it now. Take it
-away, Thompson,&mdash;hurry it away!"</p>
-
-<p>"Appear to obey him. Pretend that you take something
-from the room," said Dr. Graham, in an undertone,
-to the servant, while St. Victor's eyes were fixed
-glaring and lurid upon his trembling, agonized, speechless
-sister.</p>
-
-<p>The skeleton had, in truth, appeared at the Christmas
-feast.</p>
-
-<p>Laying his hand firmly upon the young man's wrist
-the doctor said,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Mr. Marchand, you're not well, to-night. You are
-over-fatigued. Shall we go upstairs?"</p>
-
-<p>St. Victor's quickly flashing gaze was met by that
-clear, resolute, almost fierce response in the physician's
-eye, before which he hesitated, then shrank. The madman
-had his master before him.</p>
-
-<p>"You are right. I am not very well; my head aches;
-I'm worn out with this trouble about Edith, doctor.
-<i>Do</i> you think it is hopeless? She had better come with
-us. I don't like to leave her alone with that hideous
-shape at her back."</p>
-
-<p>Obeying the gentle but firm pull upon his wrist, the
-brother turned to leave the room, looking back wistfully
-upon his sister. She was following them with clasped
-hands, and a face from which all youth and color had
-fled. St. Victor suddenly paused, gave a scream like the
-cry of a panther, wrenched himself quickly from the
-grasp upon his arm, and, in an instant, his teeth were<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</a></span>
-buried in the white shoulder of his sister. But only for
-an instant, for almost as quickly as the madman's movement
-had been the doctor's. One terrible blow of his
-fist sent the maniac to the floor like a clod.</p>
-
-<p>"O doctor! why did you do it?"</p>
-
-<p>"To save your life, Miss Marchand."</p>
-
-<p>"Poor St. Victor! His fate is on him at last."</p>
-
-<p>Her voice was calm in its very despair. She sank
-down beside the senseless man, lifting the worn, white
-face to her lap and covering it with kisses. "I saw it,&mdash;yet
-I did not think it would come so soon. O God!
-be pitiful! Have I not prayed enough?"</p>
-
-<p>The lips of the injured man began to quiver. "We
-must bind him and get him to bed before he fully recovers,"
-said the doctor, lifting Edith to her feet.
-"Here, Thompson, help me to carry him to his
-bed."</p>
-
-<p>When the maniac recovered consciousness fully, his
-ravings were fearful. It was the malady of frenzy in
-its most appalling condition. The extent of the mental
-wreck Dr. Graham had, for the last half hour of the
-feast, been trying to fathom. When he dealt that dreadful
-blow he knew the wreck was complete: reason had
-gone out forever with that panther-like shriek. All
-that could be done was to secure the maniac against
-injury to himself or others, and to administer such
-anti-spasmodics or anæsthetics as, in some degree,
-would control the paroxysms.</p>
-
-<p>Poor St. Victor! So young, so gifted, so blest with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</a></span>
-worldly goods; his fate was upon him, as Edith had
-said.</p>
-
-<p>From that hour he had but brief respite from torment.
-Not a gleam of sanity came from those fiery
-eyes; all was fierce, untamable, inhuman, as if the life
-had been one of storm and crime, instead of peace and
-purity. Did there lay upon that racking bed a proof of
-the natural depravity of the creature man, when the
-creature was uncontrolled by a reasoning, responsible
-will? Or, was it not rather a proof that the mental
-machine was in disorder, by a distention of the blood-vessels
-and their engorgement in the brain,&mdash;that cerebral
-excitement was a purely physical phenomenon, dependent
-upon simple, physical causes, which science
-some day shall define and skill shall counteract?</p>
-
-<p>Happily, the fire in the sufferer's brain scorched and
-consumed the sources of his life, as flames drink up the
-water that is powerless to quench them. Day by day
-he wasted; and, in less than a month from that night,&mdash;Christmas
-evening,&mdash;St. Victor Marchand's form was
-at peace in death.</p>
-
-<p>During all that time Dr. Graham never left the sufferer's
-bedside. Day and night he was there at his post,
-doing all that was possible to alleviate the pain. The
-skill of a physician and the love of a brother were exhausted
-in that battle with death in its most dreaded
-form.</p>
-
-<p>His care was, too, required for Miss Edith. Her life
-was so interwoven with that of her brother, that the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</a></span>
-doctor doubted if she could survive the shock to her
-sympathies and affection. When the surprise of the
-tragedy was over, on the day following the first outburst
-of the malady, she told him that for months she
-had feared the worst. She had remarked symptoms so
-like her father's as to excite her fears; yet, with the
-happiness of youth, the sister persuaded herself that her
-apprehensions were groundless. His sunny nature
-seemed proof against the approach of an evil so
-blasting; and her momentary fears were banished by
-the very mood of heightened vivacity and excitement
-which had awakened them. Having no intimate friend
-in whom to confide, none to counsel, she had borne the
-weight of her inward sorrow and dread alone.</p>
-
-<p>At intervals, during Christmas day, she had observed
-an incoherency in her brother's speech, and an unwonted
-nervousness of manner, which had inspired her with serious
-alarm. When he proposed to drive out, she encouraged
-the suggestion, hoping that the cold air might restore
-him to his usual state. Upon his return with Dr.
-Graham, he had seemed so entirely like himself, so happy,
-so disposed to enjoyment, that she once more dismissed
-every thought of danger, until she overheard the
-sharp whispers in which he addressed his guest.</p>
-
-<p>"And oh, to think," she cried, while the tears rained
-down her cheeks, "that in his love for me, his madness
-should take the shape of beholding the conditions of his
-own brain reflected in mine! He was so afraid harm
-would come to me,&mdash;thoughtful of me so long as even<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</a></span>
-the shadow of sanity remained. Dear, dear St. Victor,&mdash;so
-good, so pure, so wise! Why was not I the victim,
-if it was fated that there must be one?" Then lifting
-her tearful eyes,&mdash;"Doctor, perhaps the poison lurks
-in my veins, too! Tell me, do you think there is danger
-that I, too, shall one day go mad?"</p>
-
-<p>"No, poor child, most emphatically, I do <i>not</i>. You
-must not permit such a fancy to enter your mind. As
-St. Victor said, you are your mother's image and counterpart,
-in temperament and mental quality, while he,
-doubtless, in all active or positive elements of constitution
-and temperament, was his father's reflex. Is it not
-true?"</p>
-
-<p>"I believe so. My dear father used, I know, to think
-St. Victor nearer to him than I could be. When together,
-they looked and acted very much alike. Poor, dear
-brother!" and again the tears coursed down her cheeks.</p>
-
-<p>The doctor was deeply moved; this grief was so inexpressibly
-deep as to stir in his heart every emotion of
-tenderness and sympathy it was possible for a gentle-souled
-man to feel.</p>
-
-<p>"I loved him," he said, gently, "before I had known
-him an hour. His nature was like a magnet, to draw
-love. Alas! it is sad, when the promise of such a life is
-blighted. I would have given my life for his, could it
-have averted this terrible blow from this house."</p>
-
-<p>A radiant, soul-full look dwelt in her tear-dimmed eyes.
-That this man&mdash;a comparative stranger&mdash;should manifest
-this interest in her brother aroused all the gratitude
-and affection of her warm nature.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"And I love you, Dr. Graham, for loving him," she
-said, in the pathos of the language that never speaks untruthfully,&mdash;the
-pathos of irrepressible feeling. Then
-she added: "Do not leave us, doctor. You are all the
-friend we have here in this great city. If you leave us
-I shall, indeed, be alone."</p>
-
-<p>"I will remain, my dear child, so long as there is need
-of my services."</p>
-
-<p>He did not tell her, in so many words, that the case
-was hopeless; but her eye was quick to see the wasting
-form and the growing prostration which followed each
-paroxysm. How those two faithful attendants watched
-and waited for the end! And in the grief for the sister,
-the physician's gentleness found that road to a mutual
-devotion, which is sure to open before those who love
-and wait upon a common object of affection. The doctor
-and sister became, without a consciousness of their
-real feeling, mutually dependent and trusting.</p>
-
-<p>In less than a month, as we have written, the skeleton
-which came to the feast on Christmas night departed
-from the house to abide on St. Victor Marchand's
-grave.</p>
-
-<p>At the next meeting of the Institute, Doctor Graham
-gave a full account of the case, remarking upon the singular
-feature in it of the madness assuming an embodiment
-in the sanity of another. From much that Edith
-told him, as well as from his own observation and knowledge,
-he was convinced that, for months, the young man
-had detected every minute symptom and development<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</a></span>
-of his disease in his sister; and had a physician been at
-hand, he could have traced the insidious progress of the
-malady in the strength of the brother's suspicions regarding
-his sister. The facts cited to the Institute
-touched the compassion of the most practice-hardened
-physician when Dr. Graham related the strange and
-pitying tenderness with which young Marchand had
-watched his sister, and strove to divert from her mind
-the madness which tainted his blood alone.</p>
-
-<p>"Alone in this great city. If you leave me, I shall be
-alone indeed." The words were like an angel's rap upon
-the heart's door. In his own great trouble,&mdash;the loss
-of his wife,&mdash;the physician deemed himself afflicted beyond
-his deserts; but what was his condition compared
-with that of this youthful, tender, dependent woman,
-whose loss isolated her from all others?</p>
-
-<p>No, not all others. After the first black cloud of
-her sorrow had drifted away, she turned to him, whose
-hand had sustained her, even when prayer had left her
-helpless and hopeless,&mdash;turned to him with a love
-that was more than a love, with an adoration, before
-which the physician bent, in wonder and satisfaction.
-He drew her to his bosom as something to be kept with
-all the truth and tenderness of an abiding love.</p>
-
-<p>The dull office has been exchanged for a home that is
-like a palace of dreams; and Edith Graham, never forgetting
-her great sorrow, yet became one of the happiest
-of all who ever loved.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[35]</a></span></p>
-
-<h1 style="margin-top: 8em; margin-bottom: 8em;">LET THOSE LAUGH WHO WIN.</h1>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[37]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 style="margin-top: 3em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;"><a name="Let_those_Laugh_who_Win" id="Let_those_Laugh_who_Win"><span class="smcap">Let those Laugh who Win.</span></a></h2>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;">
-<img style="margin-bottom: 1.5em;" src="images/image1.jpg" width="100" height="18" alt="fancy line" />
-</div>
-
-<div><img class="dropcap" src="images/dropcap-m.jpg"
-width="61" height="84" alt="m" />
-</div><p><span class="dropletter">M</span>R. PONTIFEX POMPADOUR was a gentleman
-whose family record testified to his having
-breathed the breath of life sixty years, and yet
-his appearance bore witness to not more than
-forty. Appearances, however, though they are
-deceitful, result from causes more or less palpable; and,
-in this case, they could be naturally accounted for.</p>
-
-<p><i>Ecce testem!</i></p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pompadour's complexion was clear and transparent,&mdash;but
-it was not his own. His teeth were white
-and regular,&mdash;but they were artificial. His hair was
-black and glossy,&mdash;but it was dyed. His whiskers were
-ibid.,&mdash;but they were ditto. His dress was the perfection
-of fashion and taste, though rather youthful; and
-withal he carried himself with a jaunty air, and a light
-and springing step, smiling blandly on all he met, as if
-smiles were dollars and he were dispensing them right
-royally.</p>
-
-<p>He had an only son,&mdash;Augustus Fitz Clarence Pompadour,&mdash;who
-was heir-apparent to the very considerable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[38]</a></span>
-property supposed to belong to the "said aforesaid."
-This son was twenty-three, and had graduated at college
-with some knowledge of some things, if not of some
-others. He was a modern Mithridates in his power to
-withstand strychnine and nicotine; and he had devoted
-much attention to that branch of geometry which treats
-of the angles of balls on a cushion. One beautiful trait
-in his character, however, was his tender affection for
-his father, which showed itself most touchingly&mdash;whenever
-he was in need of money.</p>
-
-<p>In person he was prepossessing, having light-blue
-eyes, dark-brown hair, and a drooping moustache. Nor
-will I allow that he was a vicious lad. Indolent and
-useless he certainly was,&mdash;an insignificant numeral in
-the great sum of humanity, but a <i>roué</i> he certainly was
-not. The worst thing about him was his name, and
-that he received from a weak, silly novel-reading mother,
-who gave her life for his, and, with her dying breath,
-charged his father to pay this homage to the yellow-covered
-world in which she had lived.</p>
-
-<p>If there was anything wanting in the comfortable
-mansion, where the Pompadours, father and son, kept
-bachelor's hall, it was the refining and softening influence
-of woman. And this brings us to the consideration
-of the skeleton which abode in the closets of Pompadour
-and son.</p>
-
-<p>The late Mrs. Pompadour had possessed some property
-which she had retained after marriage. Before her
-death she made a will, leaving to Augustus the fee, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[39]</a></span>
-to his father the income of the estate. In case, however,
-Augustus should marry before his father <i>did</i>, he
-was to enter into full possession of the property. Wives,
-in dying, do not generally offer their husbands a premium
-for replacing them; and so the judges inferred that the
-real meaning of the testatrix would be arrived at by inserting
-the letter <i>e</i> in the word "<i>did</i>;" thus making the
-contingency turn upon Augustus' marrying before his
-father <i>died</i>. Moreover, the lawyer who drew the will
-(his ancestor was limned by Æsop in the fable of the
-Ass in the lion's skin) swore positively to this rendering
-being in accordance with the wish of the deceased,
-and so the courts decided that in the event of Mr. Pompadour's
-marrying before his son, he should retain his
-interest during life.</p>
-
-<p>Now Mr. Pompadour, aside from mercenary motives,
-was very uxoriously inclined; and would doubtless have
-married years before, had he not set too high an estimate
-on himself.</p>
-
-<p>His condition of mind at the beginning of this history
-might be expressed logically somewhat as follows:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>First, he must get married.</p>
-
-<p>Second, Augustus must <i>not</i>.</p>
-
-<p>And Augustus, by analogous reasoning on identical
-premises, <i>mutatis mutandis</i>, had arrived at a dual conclusion.</p>
-
-<p>First, he must get married.</p>
-
-<p>Second, his father must <i>not</i>.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[40]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>A vigorous system of espionage had been instituted
-by father and son, on the actions of each other. Skirmishes
-had been frequent; and if neither gained any decided
-advantage, neither lost. But the great battle of
-the war was yet to be fought, and it has been reserved
-for my pen to inscribe its history.</p>
-
-<p>In the suburban village where Mr. Pompadour resided
-was a handsome residence; and its owner, "about visiting
-Europe," offered it for rent. The house was elegant,
-and the grounds especially fine. They were flanked by
-two shady streets and fronted on a third. A widow
-lady with one daughter became the tenant; and, as is
-usual in such cases, the whole village called upon her,&mdash;three
-persons prompted by politeness, and three hundred
-by curiosity. The cards which did duty for the
-lady in returning these calls, announced her to be "Mrs.
-Telluria Taragon, <i>née</i> Trelauney." By the same token
-her daughter was discovered to be "Miss Terpsichore
-Taragon."</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Taragon was one of the most bewitching of widows.
-About forty (she acknowledged to thirty-three),
-she was the very incarnation of matronly beauty. She
-was just tall enough to be graceful, and just plump
-enough not to be unwieldy. Her eyes were black and
-dangerous. Her hair was short, and it clustered over
-her forehead in little ringlets,&mdash;rather girlish, but very
-becoming. Her teeth were white and natural, and she
-had a most fascinating smile, which showed her teeth in
-a carefully unstudied manner, formed a pretty dimple<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[41]</a></span>
-in her chin, and enabled her to look archly without
-apparent intention.</p>
-
-<p>Her daughter, Miss Terpsichore, was twenty, with a
-slender, graceful form, and a pair of rosy cheeks, before
-whose downy softness the old simile of the peach becomes
-wholly inadequate. She had hazel eyes, whose
-liquid depths reflected the brightest and sunniest of
-tempers, and dark brown hair, with just a suspicion
-of golden shimmer filtering through its wavy folds.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Taragon, on the bare charge, could not have
-escaped conviction as a "designing widow." She not
-only was on the lookout, perpetually, for an investment
-of her daughter, but she was flying continually from her
-cap a white flag of unconditional surrender to the first
-man bold enough to attack herself.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pontifex Pompadour "availed himself of an early
-opportunity" to call upon Mrs. Taragon. His fame
-had preceded him; and that estimable lady, who was in
-her boudoir when he was announced, gave a small
-shriek of dismay at her dishevelled appearance. However,
-no one need be alarmed at such a manifestation on
-the part of a "lady of fashion." It is indicative of perfect
-satisfaction with her general effect. Mrs. Taragon
-flew to her mirror to shake out another curl&mdash;and her
-flounces; smiled bewitchingly by way of rehearsal; bit
-her lips frantically to bring the blood <i>to</i> them, and
-walked aimlessly about the room for a few moments
-with her hands above her head, to send the blood <i>out</i> of
-them. Then picking up her handkerchief daintily, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[42]</a></span>
-going downstairs slowly, that her cheeks might not be
-too much flushed, she acquired sudden animation at the
-parlor-door, and burst into the room with an elaborate
-rustle, and a thousand apologies for having kept Mr.
-Pompadour waiting so long,&mdash;and wasn't "the day perfectly
-lovely?"</p>
-
-<p>If a conversation be interesting, or serve in any way
-to develop the plot of a story, I hold that it should be
-given at full length; but the polite nothings which were
-repeated at <i>this</i> interview, came under neither of these
-heads. They served only to display Mr. Pompadour's
-false teeth, and Mrs. Taragon's real ones (and the dimple)
-through the medium of Mr. P.'s real smile and Mrs.
-T.'s false one.</p>
-
-<p>The two parted mutually pleased, and Mrs. Taragon
-said to herself, as she resumed the novel she had dropped
-at Mr. Pompadour's entrance, "If I marry <i>him</i>, I will
-have that set of sables, and those diamonds I saw at
-Tiffany's."</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pompadour beheaded a moss rose with his cane,
-as he stepped jauntily down the walk, and remarked to
-his inner self, "A monstrous fine woman that, and I
-may say, without vanity, that she was struck with my
-appearance. Why, ho! who the devil's that?"</p>
-
-<p>The acute reader will perceive a slight incoherence in
-the latter portion of this remark. It was due to a sight
-which met Mr. Pompadour's gaze on stepping into the
-street from Mrs. Taragon's domain. This was nothing
-else than Augustus Fitz Clarence walking leisurely up<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[43]</a></span>
-the street with a young lady whom we know&mdash;but the
-illustrious parent did not&mdash;to be Miss Terpsichore Taragon.</p>
-
-<p>"Confound the boy!" said the old gentleman, "I
-wonder who he's got there? Just like his father,
-though! For I may say, without vanity, that I was a
-tremendous fellow among the girls."</p>
-
-<p>Augustus Fitz Clarence was not at all pleased at this
-chance rencontre. The intimacy with the charming
-widow, which it strongly hinted at, brought vividly to
-his mind its possible results upon his own prospects.
-And, moreover, he was conscious of a peculiar and novel
-sensation in regard to the young lady, which made him
-rather shamefaced under the paternal eye. In short,
-he was in love. All the symptoms were apparent: a
-rush of blood to the face, and a stammering in the
-speech, whenever proximity to the infecting object induced
-a spasm. He also had the secondary symptoms,&mdash;a
-sensation of the spinal cord, as if molasses were being
-poured down the back, and a general feeling "all over,"
-such as little boys call "goose-flesh," and which is ordinarily
-occasioned by a ghost story, or a cold draught
-from an open door-way.</p>
-
-<p>To the writer, who stands upon the high level of the
-philosophic historian, it is evident that the same feelings
-warmed the gentle breast of Terpsichore that burned in
-the bosom of Augustus. To furnish food, however, for
-the unextinguishable laughter of the gods, this fact is
-never made clear to the principals themselves till the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[44]</a></span>
-last moment. "And so from hour to hour we ripe and
-ripe ... and thereby hangs a tale."</p>
-
-<p>With the foregoing paragraph, I bridge over an
-"hiatus, as it were," of several months.</p>
-
-<p>Respect for truth obliges me to record the fact, that
-Mrs. Taragon regarded her daughter with that unchristian
-feeling called jealousy. But, if a heartless, she was a
-shrewd woman, and she meant to dispose of Terpsichore
-advantageously.</p>
-
-<p>There was, at this time, and I believe there is still, in
-the village of which I write, an "order of the garter,"
-under the control of one Mrs. Grundy, the motto of
-which was: "Those are evil of whom we evil speak."
-Its evening meetings were familiarly known as the
-"nights of the sewing-circle;" and it was the duty of
-each member to attend to everybody's business but his
-own. An agent of this order promptly put Mrs. Taragon
-in possession of everything which had been discovered
-or invented concerning Mr. Pompadour, not forgetting
-to enlarge upon the conditions of the will. Mrs.
-Taragon thereupon resolved to marry Mr. Pompadour;
-for, in addition to other reasons, she confessed to herself
-that she really liked him. As may be supposed, therefore,
-she looked with much disfavor on the increasing
-intimacy between the young people; but she feared
-that any violent attempt to rupture it would precipitate
-the very result she would avoid. She sat, one day,
-in a brown study, regarding the subject in all its bearings,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[45]</a></span>
-with her comely cheek resting upon her plump
-hand, and, at last, arrived at a conclusion.</p>
-
-<p>"I think it would not be wise," she said, consulting
-the mirror to see if her hand had left any mark upon
-her cheek,&mdash;"to interfere just at present; at any rate,
-not till I am <i>sure</i> of Mr. Pompadour; but I will keep a
-close watch upon them."</p>
-
-<p>Not many days afterwards, a picturesque group occupied
-the bow-window of Mrs. Taragon's drawing-room.
-Mrs. T. herself, quite covered with an eruption of worsted
-measles, was the principal figure. At her feet, like
-Paul at Gamaliel's, sat Augustus; but, unlike Paul, he
-held a skein of worsted. Nestling on an ottoman in the
-recess of the window was Terpsichore, inventing floral
-phenomena in water-colors, and looking very bewitching.</p>
-
-<p>"'Twas a fair scene." As under the shade of some
-far-spreading oak, when noon holds high revel in the
-heavens, the gentle flock cluster in happy security, fearing
-no dire irruption of lupine enemy, so&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Mr. Pompadour," announced the servant.</p>
-
-<p>"The devil!" echoed Augustus Fitz Clarence.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Taragon's first impulse was to spring up and
-greet her visitor cordially. Her second, to do no such
-thing. Napoleon said, "An opportunity lost is an occasion
-for misfortune." Here was her Austerlitz or her
-Waterloo! With the rapidity of genius, she laid the
-plot for a little comedy of "The Jealous Lovers," to the
-success of which the actors themselves unwittingly contributed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[46]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Half rising, she acknowledged Mr. Pompadour's
-elaborate bow, and, motioning him gracefully to a seat,
-sank back into her chair. Then, pretending that the
-worsted was knotted, she bent her curls so near Augustus'
-face, and made a whispered remark with such a
-conscious air, that the blood rushed to that young man's
-face in an instant.</p>
-
-<p>"I saw you out riding yesterday, Mr. Pompadour,"
-said the cheerful widow, pleased that her first shot had
-taken effect. "And what a <i>beautiful</i> horse! and you
-ride <i>so</i> gracefully!"</p>
-
-<p>"Thank you, madam," said Mr. Pompadour, stiffly;
-"I think I may say, without vanity, that I do ride tolerably
-well."</p>
-
-<p>"And you," to the son, "now your father is present,
-I must call you <i>Mr.</i> Augustus,&mdash;may I not?" she said,
-coaxingly. The "Mr." was emphasized, as if when
-alone she did not use it. But this was, of course, unintentional.</p>
-
-<p>Now Augustus, for some time, had endeavored to ingratiate
-himself with Mrs. Taragon, but with little
-success, and, therefore, he was utterly unable to comprehend
-her sudden benignity. He glanced at his
-father, and met the eyes of that individual glaring on
-him with the look of an ogre deprived of his baby lunch.
-He glanced at Terpsichore, but that young lady was
-absorbed with a new discovery in botany. He glanced
-at Mrs. Taragon, but she was calmly winding worsted.</p>
-
-<p>"Terpy, dear," said her mother, "<i>do</i> show Mr. Pompadour<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[47]</a></span>
-some of your drawings. My dear little girl is
-<i>so</i> devoted to art!" she exclaimed, enthusiastically, as
-the daughter rose to bring her portfolio. "Take care,
-Mr. Augustus; you know worsted is a dreadful thing to
-snarl." Augustus had involuntarily sprung up to offer
-his assistance, but he sank back in confusion.</p>
-
-<p>"Are you fond of engravings, Mr. Pompadour?"
-asked the young lady, sweetly.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah! yes! I&mdash;I think I may say without vanity,"&mdash;began
-Mr. Pompadour, but he finished silently to himself,&mdash;"D&mdash;me,
-I'll make her jealous!" Whose Austerlitz
-or Waterloo should it be? He put on his eye-glass
-to inspect the volume, and for a little while almost forgot
-his egotism in admiration of the beauty of nature
-beside him, if not of the beauties of art before him.</p>
-
-<p>Augustus was not slow in perceiving that, for some
-unknown reason, Mrs. Taragon's attention was gained,
-and he tried desperately to improve the occasion. Every
-once in a while, however, his eyes would wander toward
-his father, who played his part with so much skill that
-the bosom of Augustus was soon filled with burnings,
-and the mind of the widow with perplexities. The gentle
-heart of Terpsichore was grieved also, and her mind
-sorely puzzled at the enigmatical conduct of those about
-her, while she was somewhat annoyed at the pertinacious
-attentions of the elder P.</p>
-
-<p>The distinguished gentleman who wrote so graphically
-about the "Elbows of the Mincio," must confess that
-<i>our</i> Quadrilateral is only second to that which he has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[48]</a></span>
-helped to embalm in history. The Irishman's experience
-with the large boot and the small one, and the other pair
-similarly mismated, was here reproduced with painful
-reality. Some evil genius had scattered wormwood on
-the air, and asphyxia, or something worse, seemed likely
-to supervene, when the entrance of another visitor broke
-the charm, and the <i>téte-à-téte</i>, and the gentlemen fled.</p>
-
-<p>The thermometer of Mr. Pompadour's temper indicated
-boiling heat. He sputtered and fumed like an
-irascible old gentleman as he was, and managed to work
-himself into a crazy fit of jealousy, about his son and
-the too fascinating widow; and, oddly enough, this feeling
-thus aroused by the green-eyed monster, for the
-time being, quite eclipsed his mercenary muddle. So,
-upon poor Augustus, as the available subject, fell palpable
-and uncomfortable demonstrations of paternal displeasure.</p>
-
-<p>For several days Mr. Pompadour stayed away from
-Mrs. Taragon's, and that good lady began to fear lest
-she had overdrawn her account at the bank of his heart,
-and that further drafts would be dishonored. The
-thought of such a catastrophe was torture of the most
-refined quality. By an illogical system of reasoning,
-peculiar to the female mind, she imagined that Terpsichore
-was the cause of his desertion, and that young
-lady thereupon became the recipient of an amount of
-small spite and aggravated vindictiveness, which reflected
-great credit upon Mrs. Taragon's inquisitorial
-capabilities.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[49]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>She had, it must be obvious, set her heart upon having
-those diamonds from Tiffany's.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of a week, however, Mr. Pompadour called
-upon Mrs. Taragon, and this time he found her alone.
-His countenance gave proof of some desperate resolution.
-His attire was more than usually elegant. His
-hair and whiskers were a trifle blacker and glossier than
-ever. He had a rose in his button-hole, and yellow kids
-on his hands. Solomon, in all his glory, was not arrayed
-(I sincerely trust) like unto him! Mrs. Taragon rose
-cordially, and held out to him her plump little hand; it
-lay a moment in his, as if asking to be squeezed. Mr.
-Pompadour looked as if he would like to squeeze it, and
-perhaps he did.</p>
-
-<p>The lady's cordiality soon gave place to a timid shyness.
-To use a military phrase, she was "feigning a retreat."
-Mr. Pompadour waxed bold and advanced.
-The conversation skirmished awhile, the widow occasionally
-making a sally, and driving in the enemy's outposts,
-his main body meanwhile steadily approaching. The
-tone in which they conducted hostilities, however, gradually
-fell, and if one had been near enough he might have
-heard Mr. Pompadour remark, with a kind of quiet satisfaction,
-"For I think I may say, without vanity, I
-still possess some claim to good looks." The widow's
-reply was so low that our reporter failed to catch it, and
-then&mdash;military phraseology avaunt!&mdash;the old veteran
-knelt on the carpet, and surrendered at discretion.</p>
-
-<p>"Good gracious, Mr. Pompadour!" exclaimed the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[50]</a></span>
-widow, with well-feigned alarm, at the same time picking
-a thread off her dress, "<i>Do</i> get up, somebody may come
-in!"</p>
-
-<p>"Never!" said the old hero stoutly, seeing his advantage,
-and determined to have its full benefit, "at any
-rate, not till you promise to marry me!"</p>
-
-<p>A form passed the window. This time Mrs. Taragon
-was really frightened. "I will," she said hurriedly;
-"now get up, and sit down."</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pompadour leaped to his feet with the agility of a
-boy&mdash;of sixty, and imprinted a kiss lovingly upon the
-lady's nose, there not being time to capture the right
-place on the first assault. What followed we will leave
-to the imagination of the reader.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It was now October, and the trees had adorned themselves
-in their myriad dyes. The maple had put on
-crimson, the hickory a rich gold, and the oak a deep
-scarlet; while the pine and the hemlock "mingled with
-brighter tints the living green."</p>
-
-<p>To the woods one balmy day Augustus and Terpsichore
-went together, to gather leaves for wreaths and
-screens. Both were carelessly happy, and the pines
-echoed their merry voices as they laughed and sang.
-At length the basket, which Augustus carried, was filled
-with gorgeous booty, and they sat down upon a fallen
-log, while Terpsichore wove a garland for her hair. No
-wonder that in the tranquil beauty of the scene their
-noisy mirth should become hushed. No wonder that,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[51]</a></span>
-as the sun stole through the branches, and like Jove
-of old fell in a shower of gold about them, upon both
-their hearts fell the perfect peace of love! With the
-full tide of this feeling came to Augustus the resolve
-to know his fate; for he felt that upon that answer
-hung his destiny.</p>
-
-<p>They sat in silence while he tried to teach his tongue
-the language of his heart. Then he glanced timidly at
-the maiden, but her head was drooped low over the
-wreath, and her cheeks reflected its crimson dye.</p>
-
-<p>"Miss Taragon," he said, at length, abruptly, "were
-you ever in love?"</p>
-
-<p>She started like a frightened bird. The rich blood
-fled to her heart, and left her face pallid as marble.</p>
-
-<p>"I&mdash;I&mdash;don't know," she stammered. "Why do you
-ask me such a question?"</p>
-
-<p>"Because," he said, "then you may know how I feel,
-and pity me! O Terpsichore!" he added passionately,
-"I love you with my whole soul, and if you will but
-bless me with your love, my whole life shall be devoted
-to your happiness."</p>
-
-<p>And so he talked on in an impetuous strain, of mingled
-prayer and protestation, which was stereotyped
-long before the invention of printing.</p>
-
-<p>Terpsichore's heart beat wildly. The color came and
-went in her cheeks, and she turned her head away to
-conceal her emotion.</p>
-
-<p>The wreath lay finished in her lap; and at last, with
-a bright smile, she placed it on his forehead; and, clasping<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</a></span>
-his hand in both her own, she kissed him on the forehead.
-And now we might as well leave them alone
-together.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Taragon, having made sure of Mr. Pompadour,
-now proceeded to carry out her plan of throwing obstacles
-in the way of the young people. Augustus, of
-course, was not aware of her complete information in
-regard to his "property qualifications," and attributed
-her disfavor to personal dislike. Whatever her motives,
-however, her actions were unequivocal; and Terpsichore,
-especially, had a sorry time of it. So uncomfortable did
-matters become, that, upon a review of the situation, and
-an eloquent appeal from Augustus, she consented to take
-with him that irrevocable step, to which Virgil undoubtedly
-alluded under the fine figure of "Descensus Averni."
-In plain English, they resolved to run away and be
-married.</p>
-
-<p>I will not weary the reader with details of the preliminaries.
-They are unimportant to my narrative. A
-note, dispatched by Augustus to the Rev. Ebenezer Fiscuel,
-informed that gentleman that about half-past ten
-o'clock of an appointed evening he would be waited on by
-a couple desirous of being united in holy matrimony.</p>
-
-<p>Augustus arranged to have a carriage in waiting under
-Terpsichore's window about ten o'clock, and, with
-the aid of a ladder and the above-mentioned clergyman,
-he hoped to settle the vexed question of the property,
-and render all further opposition to their union of an
-<i>ex post facto</i> character.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The evening came, and it found Mrs. Taragon and her
-daughter seated together in the parlor. Terpsichore was
-crocheting a net, which, like Penelope's, grew very
-slowly. She was nervous and fidgety. Her eyes wandered
-restlessly from her mother to the door, and she
-started at the slightest sound. Mrs. Taragon seemed
-uncommonly suspicious and alert. She was reading, but
-had not turned a leaf for half an hour. She glanced furtively
-and continually about the room.</p>
-
-<p>"She has found us out," thought Terpsichore, and
-her heart almost stopped beating. With a great effort
-she controlled herself, and had recourse to stratagem.</p>
-
-<p>"Mother, dear," she said, dropping the net in her lap,
-"you look tired; why don't you go to bed?"</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, no, darling," said the widow, cheerfully, "I don't
-feel a bit weary. But your eyes look red, and I think
-<i>you</i> had better retire."</p>
-
-<p>"No, mamma, not yet," she replied. "I want to finish
-this net. I have done so little upon it lately."</p>
-
-<p>A slight shade of vexation crossed the face of the
-widow.</p>
-
-<p>"If you had devoted yourself to the net," she said,
-spitefully, "it would have been finished."</p>
-
-<p>Terpsichore blushed guiltily. Augustus had spent
-more than two hours with her that day; and she felt a
-presentiment that impending wrath was about to descend
-on her devoted head.</p>
-
-<p>"I am sure, mother," she said, quietly, "<i>you</i> can't
-complain of my seeing too much company."</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>This shot told; for Mr. Pompadour had been very
-attentive of late.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Taragon nearly tore a leaf out of her book.</p>
-
-<p>"At any rate," she retorted, "my visitors are respectable."</p>
-
-<p>Terpsichore's lip quivered. The remark was cruel,
-but it roused her spirit.</p>
-
-<p>"If my company is not respectable," she said, with
-an incipient sob, "it is the fault of his bringing up."</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pompadour was hit this time, right between his
-eyes. The widow blazed.</p>
-
-<p>"You&mdash;you&mdash;you minx," she said, angrily, "I believe
-you'd like to see me dead, and out of your
-way!"</p>
-
-<p>The remark was utterly irrelevant; but she saw it in
-the book, and thought it would be dramatic.</p>
-
-<p>Terpsichore burst into tears, and beat a retreat in disorder.
-As she left the room, Mrs. Taragon said to herself,
-with a sigh of relief,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Well, the coast is clear for Pompadour,&mdash;and she's
-safe for to-night, any way."</p>
-
-<p>Which was a slight mistake.</p>
-
-<p>Ten o'clock came, and with it the carriage. A man
-glided silently underneath Terpsichore's window, and
-a ladder was reared against the wall. Silently the
-window opened, and a form descended the ladder, and
-was clasped in an equally silent embrace at the foot.
-Terpsichore had not entirely recovered her spirits, but
-she stifled her emotions for the sake of Augustus. For<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</a></span>
-the same reason she did not scold him for rumpling her
-bonnet. Hurrying into the carriage, they drove rapidly
-away.</p>
-
-<p>As they turned the corner into the principal street,
-another carriage, going in the same direction, came up
-behind them at a quick trot. Augustus sprang to his
-feet, and peered out into the darkness. "Betrayed,"
-was the thought which flashed through his mind, and
-he muttered an eighteen-cornered oath. Terpsichore
-clung to his coat with an energy which indirectly reflected
-lasting credit upon his tailor.</p>
-
-<p>"Put on more steam," whispered Augustus hoarsely
-to the driver, and the horses dashed onward at a break-neck
-pace, soon leaving the other carriage far behind.</p>
-
-<p>At the rate they were going, it took but a few minutes
-to reach the parsonage. Directing the coachman
-to drive round the corner and wait, Augustus half-led,
-half-carried the trembling girl into the house. The
-Rev. Fiscuel's family and one or two neighbors were
-assembled in the parlor. The ceremony was soon performed,
-and an earnest blessing invoked upon the married
-life of the young people. As they were receiving
-the congratulations suited to the occasion, a juvenile
-Fiscuel came in, and whispered something to his father.
-Mr. Fiscuel, with a smile, turned to Augustus, saying,
-"My son tells me that your father is coming in at the
-gate with a lady."</p>
-
-<p>The newly-married looked at each other in mute
-surprise. "I'll bet a hat," exclaimed Augustus, suddenly,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>
-"it's your mother; and they've come to get
-married!"</p>
-
-<p>The Rev. Ebenezer spoke eagerly: "Did you send me
-two messages this morning?"</p>
-
-<p>"No!" said Augustus; "of course I did not."</p>
-
-<p>"Then they have, verily," exclaimed the clergyman,
-in a tone of very unclerical excitement; "for I received
-two messages from 'Mr. Pompadour.' I spoke of the
-singularity at the time."</p>
-
-<p>"Can you hide us somewhere?" said Augustus, "till
-you've 'done' the old gentleman?"</p>
-
-<p>"Come in here," said Mrs. Fiscuel, who had her
-share of that leaven of unrighteousness which is usually
-called fun. As she spoke, she opened the drawing-room
-door.</p>
-
-<p>The Rev. Ebenezer sat down to write a certificate for
-Augustus; and, as one door closed upon the young
-couple, the other opened to admit the older one. If not
-in as great a hurry as their children, they seemed
-equally desirous of making assurance doubly sure. The
-family and the witnesses, who had followed Mrs. Fiscuel
-out of the apartment, were again summoned, and, for a
-second time that evening, the words were spoken which
-made a Pompadour and a Taragon "one bone and one
-flesh." Watching the proceedings through the crevice
-of the half-opened door, was a couple not counted
-among the "witnesses," and certainly not invited by the
-principals.</p>
-
-<p>When the ceremony was over, Augustus and Terpsichore<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
-entered the room. Their appearance created
-what "Jenkins" would call "a profound sensation."
-Mr. Pompadour looked bowie-knives and six-shooters,
-Mrs. P., darning-needles and stilettoes. Augustus was
-self-possessed. Perhaps he remembered the old saying,
-"Let those laugh who win."</p>
-
-<p>"We happened here not knowing you were coming,"
-he said, addressing both; "wont you accept our congratulations."</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly Mrs. Pompadour <i>née</i> Trelawney, gave a
-scream, and fell back in a chair, with symptoms of
-hysterics. She had caught sight of the <i>ring</i> on her
-daughter's finger, and comprehended everything in
-an instant,&mdash;the carriage which had fled before them
-as they left the house; this "accidental" visit to the
-minister's; and, worse than all, how she had been outwitted!</p>
-
-<p>Terpsichore sprang forward to assist her.</p>
-
-<p>"Go away from me! Go away! Don't let her touch
-me!" she screamed, throwing her arms about like a
-wind-mill. "I wont have it! I wont! I wont!"</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pompadour, during this outburst, showed signs
-of exasperation; apparently, however, he did not see
-the point, but was fast concluding that he had married a
-lunatic.</p>
-
-<p>Terpsichore was frightened and began to cry. Augustus,
-to reässure her, put his arm around her waist. At
-this, the senior Mrs. Pompadour sprang up, and seized
-her husband by the arm, so energetically that it made<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
-him wince. Pointing to the tell-tale ring with a gesture
-worthy of Ristori, she managed to articulate: "Don't
-you see it? That undutiful girl has married Augustus,
-and&mdash;and he has married <i>her</i>!"</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Pompadour "saw it," and uttered some words
-which were not a blessing.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-<h1 style="margin-top: 8em; margin-bottom: 8em;">THE PROPER USE OF GRANDFATHERS.</h1>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span></p>
-
-<h2 style="margin-top: 3em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;"><a name="The_Proper_use_of_Grandfathers" id="The_Proper_use_of_Grandfathers"><span class="smcap">The Proper use of Grandfathers.</span></a></h2>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;">
-<img style="margin-bottom: 1.5em;" src="images/image1.jpg" width="100" height="18" alt="fancy line" />
-</div>
-
-<div><img class="dropcap" src="images/dropcap-i.jpg"
-width="50" height="86" alt="i" />
-</div><p><span class="dropletter">I</span>F people without grandfathers are in need of
-any particular solace, they may find it in the
-fact that those cumbrous contingencies of existence
-cannot be continually stuck in their
-faces. A wise man has remarked, that the moderns
-are pigmies standing upon the shoulders of giants.
-He would have been wiser still, had he observed how
-frequently the giants change places with the pigmies,
-and ride them to death like Old Men of the Sea. If,
-at sixteen, I have the dyspepsia and a tendency to
-reflect on the problems of my being, I am begged to
-notice that, at a corresponding period old Jones, of the alternate
-generation, was gambolling o'er the dewy meads,
-a gleesome boy. If my baby cries and is puny at teething-time,
-the oracles, with an intuitive perception how
-my grandfather behaved a hundred years before they
-were born, tell me it was not so in his day; that heaven
-lay about him in his infancy; but that none of the article
-exists either in that loose condition or otherwise for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span>
-the immature human animal who breaks out of darkness
-and mystery into this day of gum-rings. If the tremendous
-pace at which the modern world is going
-knocks me up at forty, and compels me to keep my stall
-for a year of valetudinarianism, I am asked to remember
-what a hale old fellow the same inevitable ancestor
-was at ninety; I am inundated with his exuberance of
-spirits, overwhelmed with the statistics of his teeth; and
-invited in the mind's eye (in my own, too, if I know
-myself!) to take six-mile walks with him before breakfast
-unassisted by a cane. It is not a pleasant state of
-mind to be disgusted with one's forefathers, who would,
-probably have been very jolly fellows to know, and not
-the least in the world like the people who are all the
-time boring us about them. If there is truth in spiritualism,
-a delegation from those fine old boys will, some
-of these days, take advantage of a sitting, and rap out an
-indignant disclaimer of the bosh that is talked in their
-name. If my grandfather was not a much more unpleasant
-person than myself, he would scorn to be made
-a boguey of for the annoyance of his own flesh and
-blood. Any man of well-regulated mind must prefer
-utter oblivion among his descendants to such perpetuation
-as that of Mr. Wilfer.</p>
-
-<p>"Your grandpapa," retorted Mrs. Wilfer, with an
-awful look, and in an awful tone, "was what I describe
-him to have been, and would have struck any of his
-grandchildren to the earth who presumed to question
-it."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>If our ancestors could return to the earth, it is little
-likely that their first inclination would be to goody themselves
-over the excellence of their own period, or pull
-faces at the degeneracy of ours. Sleepers in ill-ventilated,
-or rather entirely non-ventilated apartments, eaters
-of inordinate late suppers, five-bottle men, and for
-the most part wearers of sadly unphilosophical raiment,
-those sturdy old fox-hunters would acknowledge it just
-cause for astonishment that their children have any constitutions
-at all. Little motive for self-laudation would
-they find in the fact, that, after drawing out their account
-with Nature to the last dime, they had taken a
-respectable first-cabin passage to the Infinite Boulogne
-just before the great Teller said "No funds," and
-shoved back their checks through the window, leaving
-to their children the heritage of a spotless name and the
-declaration of physiological bankruptcy.</p>
-
-<p>Nor would they content themselves, I fancy, with
-the negative ground of mere humility. They would
-have something very decided to say to the wiseacres,
-who taunt our wives in the agony of tic-doloureux with
-the statement that their grandmothers knew nothing of
-neuralgia. "No!" these generous ancients would retort,
-"that is the residuary legacy of a generation to
-whom we left a nervous system of worn-out fiddle
-strings." To such as talk of that woful novelty diphtheria
-as a crime of the present age, they would point
-out the impossibility of a race's throat descending to it
-without tenderness, a race's blood flowing to it without<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
-taint, from ancestors who swaddled their necks in fathoms
-of cravat, and despised the question of sewage.
-When I had the gout, and could not stand up for myself,
-those brave <i>vieilles moustaches</i> would stand up for me.
-"Many a fine old bin of our port," would they exclaim,
-"has been emptied down through the æons into those
-innocent toes of thine. I mind me how I smacked my
-lips over that very bottle whose broken glass now grinds
-around, red-hot, in the articulation of thy metatarsal phalanges.
-Dancing at thy fair great-grandmother's wedding,
-I slaked the thirst of many vigorous sarabands in
-that identical ruby nectar, which, turned by the alchemy
-of generations into acid blood, now through thy great
-toe distils in gouts of fiery torture. I danced;&mdash;thou,
-poor Serò-natus, dancest not, but dost pay the piper."</p>
-
-<p>Suppose that our returning ancestors regarded us in
-the intellectual and spiritual, as well as the physical
-aspect, they must find still less reason to put on airs of
-superiority. If, in the sphere where they have been
-lately moving, improvement goes on as fast as we believe,
-they may be expected to wonder that the theological
-and scholastic training of their own earthly day has
-not resulted in a present race of imbeciles and fetish-worshippers,
-or Torquemadas and madmen. With
-thankful astonishment will they revere that nature whose
-boundless elasticity and self-repair has brought bright
-and self-reliant, even though sometimes a trifle too pert
-and iconoclastic, Young America from loins burdened,
-through all their period of cartilage, with five days and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span>
-a half per week of grammar-grinding, a Saturday afternoon
-of "keeping in for marks," and a seventh day
-which should have been the Lord's, but was conspicuously
-liker the devil's.</p>
-
-<p>Woman, religion, and the forefathers are all the victims
-of a false quality of reverence. The world has immemorially
-paid them in the coin of lip-service for the
-privilege of using their sacredness as a yoke. They are
-defrauded of their true power by the hands that waft
-them hypocritical incense; bought off the ground where
-their influence might be precious and permanent, by the
-compliment of a moment, or the ceremony of a day.
-We pick up the fan of the first, and shoulder her out of
-her partnership in our serious business of living. We
-build temples for the second, that she may not gad
-about among our shops, or trouble the doors of our
-houses. In the third, we do superstitious homage to a
-mere accident of time, and feel free to neglect the genial
-lesson of humanity which is eternal.</p>
-
-<p>It is impossible not to reverence our forefathers&mdash;those
-grand old fellows who, long before we rose, got
-up to build the fires, and shovel the sidewalks of this
-world. The amount of work which they did was immense;
-great was their poking and their pushing; their
-thrashing of arms, and their blowing of fingers. If they
-sometimes made a compromise with their job; if here
-and there they left the gutters uncleared, or a heavy
-drift to thaw over under the sun of modern conscience,
-and flood our streets with revolution; if they built some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
-of their fires with wet wood, which unto this day smokes
-the parlors, or even the inmost bed-chambers of mankind,&mdash;let
-us remember how frosty the dawn was, how
-poorly made were the tools and mittens of the period.
-All honor to their work, and the will with which they
-went at it! But when we are asked to regret the rising
-of the sun; to despise a time of day when there are no
-more fires to build, no more walks to shovel; or, if such
-anywhere remain, when there are snow-ploughs and
-patent-kindling to use in their behoof&mdash;distinctly No!&mdash;a
-No as everlasting as Mr. Carlyle's, and spelt with
-as big a capital.</p>
-
-<p>The mistake of that great writer and minor disciple
-of the Belated-Owl school to which he belongs, naturally
-arises, not from the over-development of reverence,
-to which it is generally ascribed, but from a constitutional
-divorce between the poetic imagination and
-the power of analysis. The former faculty, by itself,
-results in impatience with the meaner actualities of life,&mdash;a
-divine impatience in great poets, a petulant in small
-ones. Lacking the latter faculty, such persons are in the
-condition of a near-sighted man placed without chart or
-compass at the helm of a free-going clipper. Making
-no allowance for the fact that the blemished and the
-trivial disappear with distance, and, ignorant of the direction
-in which humanity must steer, they put out with
-disgust from a shore where every old clam-shell and
-rotten wreck is as conspicuous to those, at least, who
-look for it as the orange-groved cliffs, and the fair retiring<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
-stretches of greensward, to voyage for some scarce
-descried Atlantis gemming the horizon ring with an
-empurpled roundness born of vapor, time, and space.
-To such, the future might be a noble course to lay; but
-that lies beyond the horizon, and impatience is not consistent
-with faith. On, then, on to the farthest visible,&mdash;but
-westward, while the grand fleet of humanity sails
-last. Into shadow which drowns the petty details of
-existence,&mdash;not toward a shore which shall be reached
-only by long buffeting and weary watching, whose noble
-scenery, glorious with all the temples and trophies of
-the latest age, shall bear unshamed the scrutiny of the
-full-risen sun.</p>
-
-<p>The application of scientific processes to the study of
-history has revealed the steady amelioration of the race.
-The mail of chivalric giants is brought out of romance's
-armory to the profane test of a vulgar trying on, and,
-behold, it is too small for the foot-soldier of to-day.
-Population everywhere increases, while the rates of
-mortality diminish. The average longevity of the people
-of London is greater, by something like twenty-five
-per cent., than it was a century ago. The improvement
-of machinery is more and more lifting the yoke of physical
-labor from the neck of man, leaving his mind freer
-to cope with the higher problems of his own nature and
-the universe without. Not as a matter of platform enthusiasm
-and optimist poetry, but of office statistics, do
-we know that the world is an easier and better place
-to live in, and that a man is luckier to be born into it,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
-than in the day of the fathers. So much has changed,
-and changed for the better. That analysis, which the
-Carlylists lack, reveals still other changes worked by
-the course of time in the phenomena of the race,&mdash;such
-changes as concern the habits of society, the styles
-of literature, the systems of political economy and commercial
-order, the tenets of philosophy, the schools of
-art, the forms of government and religion. This analysis
-further reveals that, while all these functions of life
-are in their nature endlessly mutable, the organic man,
-from whom, under all variations, they get their <i>vis viva</i>,
-remains from age to age eternally the same. While
-each successive generation has its fresh, particular business
-on the earth,&mdash;something to do for the race, which
-succeeding generations will not have the time, even
-as prior generations had not the light, to do,&mdash;something
-which is wanted right away,&mdash;something for
-which it was sent and for which the whole machine-shop
-of time had been shaping the material to be worked by
-its special hand,&mdash;analysis discloses that the capital
-upon which every business is to be carried on undergoes
-neither increase nor diminution. There is just as much
-faith, just as much courage, just as much power in the
-world as there ever was. They do not show themselves
-in Runnymedes, because Runnymede has been attended
-to; nor in wondrous Abbot Sampsons, because monkery
-is mainly cured. They are not manifest in martyred
-Edwardses, because at this day Edwards could call a
-policeman; nor in burning Cranmers, because society has<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
-made a phenomenal change in her method with martyrs
-and shuts them in a refrigerator, where once she chained
-them to a stake. They do not appear in French Revolutions,
-because the world has grown through a second
-American Revolution, grander than the first, and a
-great representative native has plucked Liberty out of
-the fire without one scorch of license on her garments.
-They seek no outlet in crusade, for Jerusalem has been
-made of as little consequence as Barnegat, by the fulfilment
-of the promise,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"The hour cometh when ye shall neither in this
-mountain, nor yet in Jerusalem, worship the Father,
-... when the true worshippers shall worship him in
-spirit and in truth."</p>
-
-<p>I have a little butcher, who is C&oelig;ur de Lion in the
-small. He does not split heads nor get imprisoned in
-castles, but has the same capricious force, the same capacity
-for affront-taking, the same terribleness of retribution,
-and the same power of large, frank forgiveness
-which belonged to the man who broke the skulls of the
-Saracens and pardoned his own assassin. I went to
-school to Frederick the Great. He did not take snuff
-nor swear in high Dutch, and it was his destiny to be at
-the head, not of an army of men, but of one hundred as
-unmanageable boys as ever played hawkey or "fought
-pillows" in the dormitory. His solution of difficulties
-was as prompt, his decisions were as inexorable, he had
-as irascible a temper and as admirable a faculty of organization
-as his Prussian prototype's. Calvin and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span>
-Servetus discuss their differences at my dinner-table;
-the former possesses all his old faith in the inscrutable;
-the latter all his ancient tendency to bring everything
-alleged to the tribunal of science, and I may add that
-Calvin has as little doubt as ever of the propriety of
-having Servetus cooked,&mdash;only he postpones the operation,
-and expects to see it done without his help. I am
-acquainted with Sir Philip Sidney, the courtly knight
-and the melodious poet. The chivalry with which he
-jousted at Kenilworth and fought at Zutphen are hourly
-needed in the temptations and harassments of a broker's
-office, and many's the hard day through which it has
-borne him with honor. The pen which he devotes to
-the Muses is as facile as in the Arcadian time,&mdash;though
-the sturdy lance he used to set in rest is substituted by
-another pen, of the fat office type, consecrated to the
-back of gold certificates and the support of an unmediævally
-expensive family.</p>
-
-<p>Looking in all directions round the world, I find the
-old nobleness,&mdash;the primeval sublimities of love and
-courage, faith and justice, which have always kept humanity
-moving, and will keep it to the end. In no age
-has the quantity of this nobleness been excessive, but so
-much of it as exists is an imperishable quantity. It is
-a good interred with no man's bones; it is the indispensable
-preventive of the world's annihilation. Carlyle has
-been praised for the epigrammatic assertion that nothing
-can be kept without either life or salt. This is true,
-but not the whole truth; salt will keep beeves, but as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span>
-for nations and races which have lost their savor, wherewithal
-shall they be salted? The fact that mankind
-survive at all is the proof that ages have not tainted
-them with putrescence. Things live only by the good
-that there is in them, and the interests to which they
-appeal; the fields which open to man, in our own day,
-are so much vaster and massier than they were in the
-day of our fathers, that the tax on the activities of the
-race could not be met by our capital of life if we had lost
-one particle of the good which supported them.</p>
-
-<p>When I look at the fathers, I recollect that courage
-and love, faith and justice, have no swallowing horizon,
-while all that is petty and base succumbs in one generation
-to the laws of perspective. It is pleasanter thus.
-At the grave of the old schoolmaster who flogged us, we
-remember the silver hair and the apple he gave us once,&mdash;never
-the rattan. "We had fathers after the flesh
-who corrected us, and we gave them reverence," nothing
-but reverence, when we leaned with tearful eyes over
-their vacant chairs. If I have ever quarrelled with my
-friend, when he can return to me no more, I make up
-with his memory by canonizing him. The tendency to
-do thus is among the loveliest and divinest things in our
-nature. But it is a still lovelier and diviner thing to anticipate
-the parallax of time and look upon the present
-with the same loving, teachable, and reverent eyes, which
-shall be bent upon it from the standpoint of coming generations.
-He to whom the beauty and nobleness of his
-own time are, throughout all that he deplores in it and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span>
-in himself, the conspicuous objects of love and veneration,&mdash;who
-extends the allowance of the dead to the
-faults of the living,&mdash;from whom no personal disappointments
-can ever take away his faith in the abiding divinity
-of his kind,&mdash;need never fear that his judgment of the
-fathers will be a churlish and disrespectful one. The
-only object which such a man can have in recalling the
-vices and defects of older generations is to establish
-their kinship with his own, to prove his era's legitimacy
-against philosophers who find only pettiness in the
-present and grandeur in the past. If he cannot make
-them see the good side by which the modern family
-receives blood from the ancient, there shall not be any
-bend sinister on his escutcheon because he neglects to
-show them the bad one, though he would rather vindicate
-his lineage the other way. To him the organic
-unity of mankind, throughout all generations, is dearer
-than the individual reputation of any one of them.</p>
-
-<p>Having the faith of this organic unity he can look at
-the errors of the forefathers without pain. They lessen
-neither his love nor his respect for them. Who is there
-that would care to know king David only as a very
-respectable Jew, in a Sunday-school book, who was
-always successful, invariably pious, and passed his time
-wholly in playing hymns on a harp with a golden crown
-upon his head? To almost all young readers, and many
-an old one, the vindictive psalms seem a shocking inexplicability
-in the sacred canon. The philosopher, however,
-feels with the illiterate preacher, "It is a comfort to us<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span>
-poor erring mortals, my brethren, to remember that on
-one occasion even, David, beloved of the Lord, said not
-only, 'I am mad,' but 'I am fearfully and wonderfully
-mad?'" Not that it would be any comfort to us if that
-were all we possess of him; but we also have the record
-of his getting over it. I once knew a little boy who
-learned to swear out of the psalms, and it must be
-acknowledged that of good round curses there is in no
-tongue a much fuller armory. Conscientious persons,
-who want to damn their enemies without committing sin,
-no doubt often sit down and read an execratory psalm
-with considerable relief to their minds. Not in this spirit
-do men skilled in human nature peruse the grand rages
-of the many-sided fighting bard; not because they would
-cloak their errors with the kingly shadow of his own,
-do they rejoice that he exists for us to-day just where
-the rude, large simplicity of his original Hebrew left
-him, and that tame-handed biography has never been
-able to pumice him down into a demi-god. They are
-glad because these things prove him human and imitable.
-If his stormy soul triumphed over itself; if he could be
-beloved of the Infinite at a moment when the surges of
-both outer and inner vicissitude seemed conspiring to
-sweep him away, then we cease to hear his swearing
-or the clamor of his despair; and to us, whose modern
-spirits are not exempt from flood and hurricane, his
-grand voice chants only cheer down the centuries, and
-we know that there is love caring and victory waiting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</a></span>
-for us also in our struggle, since we are not the lonely
-anomalies of time.</p>
-
-<p>As with David so with all the men of the past,&mdash;it
-gives us no pain to find that they were not a whit nearer
-perfection than ourselves. We do not regret their superseded
-customs, nor wish them restored in the living age.
-He who takes them from the time of which they are a
-congruous part and seeks to import them into a day
-which has no explanatory relevance to them, so far from
-showing them reverence, is like a man who, to compel the
-recognition of his grandfather's tombstone, strips it of
-its moss, scrubs it with soap and sand, and sets it up on
-Broadway among signs and show-cases. Their opinions
-are not final with us, because every age brings new proofs,
-and every generation is a new court of appeal. Their
-business methods are framed upon a hypothesis which
-does not include the telegraph or the steam-engine.
-Where a man can persuade his correspondents to send
-their letters by the coach and their goods by the freight-wagon,
-he may adjust himself very comfortably to the
-good old way by which his grandfather made a fortune
-and preserved his health to a great age. Until he gets
-his mail weekly and answers it all in a batch, recuperating
-from that labor by the sale of merchandise, one box
-to an invoice, he is simply absurd to lament over the
-rapidity with which fortunes are made at this day, and
-eulogize the "sure and slow" process by which a lifetime
-whose sole principle was the avoiding of risks attained
-the same object. As if the whole problem of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</a></span>
-life were not how to secure, as quick as possible, all the
-material good necessary for living, in order to leave the
-kind free for all its higher functions of self-development
-and discipline. As if money were not a mere expression
-of the extent to which a man has subordinated
-the forces of the world to his own use,&mdash;a thing, therefore,
-which naturally comes quicker to a generation
-which has taken all the great atmospheric and imponderable
-couriers into its service!</p>
-
-<p>The true use of ancestors is not slavish; we do not
-want them for authority, but for solace. If my grandfather
-could come back, he certainly would be too much
-of a gentleman to sit down on my hat or put his feet on
-my piano; and how much less would he crush my convictions
-or trample on my opinions! He would be
-equally too much of a business-man to interfere in the
-responsibilities of any practical course I might take,
-when he had not looked into the books of the concern,
-taken account of its stock, or consulted the world's market-list
-for an entire generation. He would do what any
-man would be proud to have his grandfather do,&mdash;take
-the easiest and most distinguished chair at the fireside,
-and tell us night by night, the story of his life. What
-roars of laughter would applaud his recollection of jokes
-uttered by some playmate of his boyhood. They would
-seem so droll to us at the distance of a hundred years,
-though a contemporary might have uttered them without
-raising a smile on our faces. What mingling of tears and
-laughter would there be when he related some simple<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</a></span>
-little family drama,&mdash;its pathos depending on incidents
-as slender as the death of Auld Robin Gray's cows, but
-like the wonderful song, in which those animals have
-part interest, going unerringly to the fountains of the
-human heart! How would we double up our fists, how
-red would we grow in the face when he told us, in the
-most unadorned, dispassionate way, about the cruel creditor
-who foreclosed a mortgage on him and turned him
-and our grandmother into the street, just after the birth
-of their first child, our father; and when he came to the
-passage where the kind friend steps in and says, "here
-are five hundred dollars,&mdash;pay me when you are able,"
-how many girls there would be sobbing, and men violently
-blowing their noses! If we had belonged to
-the period of the foreclosure and been next-door neighbors
-to the mortgagor, the thing might have impressed
-us simply as the spectacle of a young couple with a baby
-who couldn't meet their quarterly payments, and were
-obliged to curtail their style of living. The thing still
-happens, and that is the way we look at it. But when
-grandpapa relates it, nothing in the domestic line we
-ever saw upon the stage seems half so touching. The
-littlest school-boy feels a roseate fascination hovering
-around the dogs that went after squirrels with that venerable
-man when he wore the roundabout of his far-off
-period; there is glamour about the mere fact that then,
-as now, there were dogs, and there were squirrels; and
-as the grandchild hears of the boughs which hung so
-full, the crisp leaves which crackled so frostily those<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</a></span>
-many, many falls ago&mdash;a strange delight comes over
-him, and he seems to be going out chestnutting in the
-morning of the world.</p>
-
-<p>What we want of one, we want of all the grandfathers
-of the race,&mdash;their story. Their value is that they take
-the experience of human life, and hold it a sufficient distance
-from us to be judged in its true proportions.
-That experience in all ages is a solemn and a beautiful,
-a perilous, yet a glorious thing. We are too near the
-picture to appreciate it, as it appears in our own day,
-though all its grand motives are the same. We rub our
-noses against the nobilities and cannot see them. The
-foreground weed is more conspicuous than the background
-mountain. When the grandfathers carry it
-from us, and hang it on the wall of that calm gallery
-where no confusing cross-lights of selfish interest any
-longer interfere, the shadows fall into their proper
-places, the symbolisms of the piece are manifest, and
-above all minor hillocks, above all clouds of storm, unconscious
-of its earthquake struggles and its glacier
-scars, Human Nature stands an eternal unity, its peak
-in a clear heaven full of stars. We recognize that unity
-and all things become possible to us, for thereby even
-the commonest living is glorified.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-<h1 style="margin-top: 8em; margin-bottom: 8em;">AT EVE.</h1>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[77]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h2 style="margin-top: 3em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;"><a name="At_Eve" id="At_Eve"><span class="smcap">At Eve.</span></a></h2>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;">
-<img style="margin-bottom: 1.5em;" src="images/image1.jpg" width="100" height="18" alt="fancy line" />
-</div>
-
-<div><img class="dropcap" src="images/dropcap-quotei.jpg"
-width="60" height="87" alt="i" />
-</div><p><span class="dropletter">&ldquo;I</span>T is almost time for John to come home, I
-guess," and the young wife rose from her sewing
-and put the tea-kettle over the bright fire on the
-clean-swept hearth. Then she pulled the table
-out into the middle of the floor, right to the spot
-where she knew the setting sun would soon shine
-through the latticed window; for John loved to see the
-light play upon the homely cups and saucers, and pewter
-spoons; he said it reminded him of the fairy stories,
-where they ate off gold dishes. She went about her
-work swiftly, but very quietly. Once there had been a
-time when the little cottage rang early and late with the
-sound of her glad voice. But then a pair of little feet
-crept over the floor, and a tiny figure had raised itself up
-by the very table whose cloth was now so smooth and
-unruffled by the small awkward hands.</p>
-
-<p>When Margery had put the golden butter, the jug of
-cream, and the slice of sweet honey on the table, she
-went to the door to look for John. A narrow path,
-skirted on one side by waving corn-fields, on the other
-by pastures and orchards, stretched from the cottage<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[78]</a></span>
-down to the broader road that led to the village. The
-sun was already low in the sky, and threw across the
-path the shadow of the old apple-tree that stood beside
-the house. Margery remembered how full of pink and
-white blossoms the tree had been that spring when she
-first came here as John's bride, and how they showered
-down like snow, while now a ripe apple occasionally
-dropped from the branches with a heavy plump.</p>
-
-<p>"Here comes John at last," she said in a low voice, as
-she saw him approaching from the village. He was yet
-a considerable distance off, but Margery's bright eyes
-discerned that he was not alone. Beside him walked a
-girl, whom Margery had known already while they were
-both children. Mary was called handsome by the village
-lads; but she was poor, and she and her father helped to
-do field work, on the neighboring farms, in the busiest
-seasons of the year.</p>
-
-<p>As she and John advanced, Margery noticed that they
-seemed engaged in earnest conversation. Then John
-stood still and gave her his hand. The girl seized it
-eagerly and put it to her lips, and looking up at him
-once, turned around and walked back to the village, while
-John hastened on with longer steps.</p>
-
-<p>Margery's lips quivered. She did not wait for John at
-the door, but turned back into the house, and was busied
-at the hearth when he came in.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, wify, how goes it this evening?" he asked in
-his cheery voice, which always reminded Margery of the
-time when he used to add, "And how is my little pet<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[79]</a></span>
-darlint?" and pick the baby up from the floor. The
-tones of his voice had grown almost kinder and more
-cheerful since, if that were possible, though he always
-gazed around the room with a vague kind of look, as if
-he half-expected to see the baby toddle up to him from
-some corner.</p>
-
-<p>"Thank you, John, all goes as well as usual. You are
-late to-night."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, there was something to detain me," he said, as
-he took down the tin-basin and filled it with water, to
-wash his sunburnt face and hands. A shadow flitted
-over Margery's face, but it was gone again when they
-sat down to table. It was still light enough to see without
-a candle, though the golden sunbeams John loved so
-much had faded long ago. He talked cheerily of the
-crops, and of harvest-time, and of the excellent prospects
-for the coming winter. There was no occasion for
-Margery to say much, and she was glad of it.</p>
-
-<p>Then she quickly cleared the table, and John sat down
-by the hearth, lighted his pipe, and laid his evening
-paper across his knee to be read afterwards by candle-light.
-While Margery washed the dishes there was no
-sound in the room but the clatter of the cups and spoons,
-and the monotonous ticking of the old-fashioned clock in
-the corner. Margery sometimes glanced over at John,
-who sat smoking and looking into the fire. At last he
-got up, lit the candle, and, going up to Margery, he asked,
-"What's the matter, Margery? You are uncommonly
-silent to-night."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[80]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>She stopped in her work, and hung the towel over her
-arm.</p>
-
-<p>"John," she said, looking straight at him, with a
-strange light in her brown eyes, and her face rather pale,
-"I want to go home."</p>
-
-<p>An expression half of pain, half of astonishment, came
-into John's honest face. He too was a shade paler, and
-the candle trembled a little in his hand as he asked,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Is the house too lonely again, Margery? You did
-say you wanted to go home for a spell, after, after&mdash;but
-I thought you had got contented again."</p>
-
-<p>She had turned away from him as she answered,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, John, the house is lonely again. I see the little
-hands on all the chairs, and hear the little feet crawling
-over the floor;" but there was something of coldness in
-her tone, very unlike the pleading voice in which she had
-once before made the same request.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, Margery," he went on, after a pause, going to
-the table and putting the candle upon it, "if you think
-it will ease your heart to go and see the old folks a little
-while, I am willing you should."</p>
-
-<p>He never spoke of the utter loneliness that fell upon
-him at the thought of her going away, and how to him,
-too, the dim room was full of the golden hair and the
-blue eyes of his child.</p>
-
-<p>She said nothing.</p>
-
-<p>"When will you come back, Margery?" he asked,
-after another pause.</p>
-
-<p>"I don't know, John."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[81]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"When do you think of going?"</p>
-
-<p>"On Monday morning, if you can spare the horse to
-take me over."</p>
-
-<p>"I think I can, Margery; but I shall be sorry to lose
-my little wify so soon," he could not help saying, as he
-laid his rough hand on her hair, with so soft a touch that
-the tears started to her eyes.</p>
-
-<p>"I shall ask Mary to come here and keep house for
-you, while I am away," she said. "Mary is used to our
-ways, and can do for you very well."</p>
-
-<p>"Mary?" asked John, "I reckon she will be busy
-enough at harvest-time. I need nobody when you are
-gone. I can live single again," with a half smile; "but
-just as you think, Margery."</p>
-
-<p>Nothing more was said on the subject. Margery took
-up her sewing, and John his paper. But he did not read
-very attentively that evening, but often stopped and
-looked long and intently at Margery, who kept her eyes
-steadily on the busy needle that was flying to and fro in
-her fingers. It was a Saturday, and John tired with a
-week's hard labor. So the fire was raked for the night,
-the old clock wound up, and the little kitchen soon dark
-and silent.</p>
-
-<p>Next morning Margery awoke bright and early. So
-early indeed, that through the open window of the bedroom
-she could see the pink clouds floating in the sky,
-and felt the cool wind that always goes before the rising
-of the sun. The swallows under the roof were just
-waking up, and beginning to twitter half-dreamily. With<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[82]</a></span>
-her hands folded under her head, Margery lay musing
-for a long while. Somehow her whole life passed before
-her on this still, holy Sunday morning. She remembered
-when she used to play barefoot in the little brook
-or sit on warm summer afternoons on the straight-rowed
-wooden benches of the village school. How the years
-had sped by like a single day, and she was a grown young
-girl. Then John came and courted her, and then&mdash;. The
-sun had come up, and played in bright lights over the ceiling,
-while on the floor quivered the shadows of the rose-leaves
-from outside before the window. The church-bell
-in the village began to ring. Margery listened to
-the sounds, as they came borne on the soft breeze, across
-the waving corn-fields. She looked out at the blue sky
-and thought of heaven, and the blessed angels singing and
-rejoicing there. She thought of her child, and of John,
-and of herself. A mingled feeling of joy and pain, of
-calm and unrest, crept into her heart. She felt the tears
-rising to her eyes again, but she would not let them.
-She sprang up, dressed hastily, and went softly downstairs,
-while John slept heavily on.</p>
-
-<p>As Margery entered the kitchen, the cat got up from
-her rug, stretched her legs and yawned, and then came
-forward to be petted. On the next Sunday, Mary would
-probably be here to give pussy her milk, and stroke her
-soft, glossy back. Margery threw open the door to let
-in the beautiful fresh morning air. The dew lay sparkling
-on the grass and flowers. Down there on the road
-was the spot where John and Mary had parted last<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[83]</a></span>
-night. Margery turned away and shut the door again.
-Then she bestirred herself to get breakfast.</p>
-
-<p>When John came down to it, Margery thought his
-step sounded heavier than she had ever heard it before.</p>
-
-<p>"Will you go to church this morning, Margery?" he
-asked, when the simple meal was over.</p>
-
-<p>"No, John, I guess not."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, Margery, I am going. I will come home as
-soon as service is over; but I think it will do me good."</p>
-
-<p>"John, will you promise me to"&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"What, Margery?"</p>
-
-<p>"This afternoon, after I have got ready to go, will
-you come once more with me to the&mdash;the grave?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, Margery, yes."</p>
-
-<p>She helped him on with his best coat, brought him the
-prayer-book, and then watched him from the window as
-he walked down the road with slow steps.</p>
-
-<p>Margery wondered what could be the matter with herself
-that morning. She felt so tired that her feet almost
-refused to carry her. A hundred times in her simple
-household duties, she paused to take breath, and sat down
-to rest so often, that John came home from church and
-to dinner, almost before it was ready. He praised the
-cookery; but the dishes were taken almost untouched
-off the table again, and when everything was cleared
-away, Margery said,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I must go upstairs now, John, to get ready. I want
-to take some of my clothes with me."</p>
-
-<p>He sat on the doorstep, holding his pipe, which had<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[84]</a></span>
-gone out, between his fingers, and only nodded his head,
-and said nothing. Margery went up to the bedroom,
-and began to open closets and drawers, and pack articles
-of clothing into a small trunk. At last she unlocked the
-great old bureau, and took out a pile of tiny dresses and
-aprons, a tin cup, and a few bright marbles, and stowed
-them carefully away in the trunk. A pair of small, worn-out
-leather shoes, turned up at the toes, stood in the
-drawer yet. Should she carry both these away, too?
-No, she thought, as she brushed away the tears that had
-fallen upon it, one she had better leave John. She put it
-resolutely back, locked the drawer, and laid the key on
-the top of the bureau. Now there was nothing more to
-be done. She looked around the room. Yes, that was
-to be readied up a little, so that John might not miss her
-too much for the first day or two. So she polished the
-chairs and the bureau, and carefully dusted the mantlepiece,
-with the red and white china dog and the kneeling
-china angel that stood there. Then she herself was to
-be dressed; she had almost forgotten that altogether.
-She opened her trunk once more, and took out the dress
-John loved best to see her in.</p>
-
-<p>Several hours had slipped by while she was thus employed,
-and now the village-clock struck five. She hastened
-down. John still sat on the doorstep where she
-had left him.</p>
-
-<p>"John, dear, I did not think it was so late. It is time
-to go to the graveyard. Are you ready to come?"</p>
-
-<p>He looked up as if he had been dreaming, but rose
-and said, "Yes, Margery."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[85]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He shut the house-door, and they turned into a path to
-the rear of the cottage. For some distance this road,
-too, was skirted on both sides by fields of ripened corn.
-John passed his hand thoughtlessly over the heavy ears,
-and now and then pulled one up, and swung it round in
-the air. Neither of them spoke, and for a long while
-there was no other sound but the rustle of their steps.</p>
-
-<p>The path at length turned aside and led to a high plateau
-that overlooked the valley, in which deep shadows
-were already beginning to fall. Blue mists crept over
-the foot of the mountains, while their tops were yet lit
-up by the sun. The smoke from the chimneys rose up
-into the air, and the shouts of the village children, playing
-on the meadow, faintly came up from below. There
-under that great oak, the only tree for some distance
-around, John had first asked Margery to be his wife.
-Involuntarily the steps of both faltered as they drew
-near the spot, but neither stopped. Margery glanced up
-at John; she could not see his face, for his head was
-turned, and he seemed to be attentively looking at something
-down in the valley.</p>
-
-<p>Another turn in the road, and the small cemetery,
-with the white stones that gleamed between the dark
-cypress-trees, rose up before them. In silence they
-found their way to the little grave. John seated himself,
-without a word, on a mound opposite, Margery knelt
-down and pulled some dried leaves off the rose-tree she
-had planted, and bound the ivy further up on the white
-marble cross. She felt that John watched her, but did<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[86]</a></span>
-not look up at him. Though she tried hard to keep them
-back, the tears would fill her eyes again and again, so
-that she could hardly see to pluck up the few weeds that
-had grown among the grass. When that was completed,
-she covered her face with her hands and tried to pray.
-She wanted to ask that John might be happy while she
-was away, and that,&mdash;but her head swam round, and
-she found no words. She raised her eyes, and glanced
-at John through her fingers. He sat with his back toward
-her now, but she saw that his great, strong frame
-trembled with half-suppressed sobs.</p>
-
-<p>"O John!" she cried, bursting into tears. She only
-noticed yet that he suddenly turned around, and then
-closed her eyes, as he clasped her in his arms. For a
-time she heard nothing but the sound of her own low
-weeping, and the throbbing of John's heart. Suddenly
-she looked up, and said,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"O John, dear, dear John, please, please forgive me!"</p>
-
-<p>"Margery," he answered, in as firm a tone as he could
-command, "don't talk so."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, but, John, I did not want to go away only
-because the house was so lonely, but because,&mdash;because,"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Because what, Margery?" he asked, astonished.</p>
-
-<p>"O John, because I&mdash;I thought you loved Mary better
-than me, because I saw you together so many times
-in the last weeks; and she kissed your hand last night."</p>
-
-<p>John's clasp about Margery relaxed, and his arms
-sank down by his side. His tears were dried now, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[87]</a></span>
-his earnest blue eyes fixed upon Margery with a dumb,
-half-unconscious expression of surprise and pain. She
-could not bear the look, and covered her face with her
-hands again.</p>
-
-<p>"No, Margery," he said, slowly, "I only saw Mary
-because,"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Margery raised her head.</p>
-
-<p>"John, dear John, don't talk about it! I don't believe
-it any more! I know I was a bad, foolish wife!
-Only love me again, and forgive me, dear, dear John!
-Oh, I don't believe it any more!" and she took his right
-hand and kissed it, as Mary had done.</p>
-
-<p>"Wont you forgive me, John? I will never, never go
-away from you," she pleaded, while the tears streamed
-down her face.</p>
-
-<p>He took her in his arms once more, and kissed her
-lips.</p>
-
-<p>The red evening sunlight had crept away from the
-little grave, and the dusk was fast gathering about it.
-Margery bent down and kissed the white marble cross;
-then they turned their steps homeward, Margery holding
-John's hand like a child.</p>
-
-<p>"I must unpack my clothes again to-night," she said,
-after a while. "I have all the baby's little things in my
-trunk, but, John, I was going to leave you one of the
-little shoes."</p>
-
-<p>She felt her hand clasped closer in his.</p>
-
-<p>"Margery," he said then, "I think I had better tell
-you about Mary."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[88]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"John, dear John, didn't I tell you I don't believe
-that any more," she answered, with another pleading
-look.</p>
-
-<p>"No Margery, it is not that, but I guess you might
-help us. You never knew that Mary's father is getting
-very bad in the way of drinking. Since his house was
-burnt down, and he lost his property, he has been going
-on in that way. Mary takes it dreadful hard, and wont
-let the news get about, if she can help it. She thinks so
-much of you, and she says you used to like her father so
-well, that she wouldn't have you know for almost any
-money. So I promised not to tell you. She has come
-to me many and many a time, crying, and begging me
-to help her. She works as hard as she can, but her father
-takes all she gets; so they are very poor. When you
-saw us yesterday, I had given her money to pay their
-rent. She wants to raise money enough to take him to
-the Asylum, because there he may be cured. I promised
-her to get him some decent clothes."</p>
-
-<p>"O John, I will sew them. Poor Mary! and you
-needn't tell her who sewed them."</p>
-
-<p>"That's right, Margery!"</p>
-
-<p>They had reached the house by this time, and John
-opened the door. The kettle was singing over the
-hearth, and the bright tin pans against the wall shone
-in the firelight. On the doorstep Margery turned
-around, and, throwing her arms around John's neck,
-said softly,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"John, I am glad I am going to stay."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[89]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>When they had entered, John lit the candle, and while
-Margery was getting supper, took up yesterday's unfinished
-paper. He read very attentively this evening,
-but suddenly stopped, and Margery saw the paper
-tremble in his hand. Then he rose, gave it to her, and
-said, in a husky voice,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Read that, Margery."</p>
-
-<p>Margery read. Then the paper dropped, and with a
-fresh burst of tears she once more threw her arms about
-John's neck.</p>
-
-<p>In one corner of the paper that lay neglected on the
-floor was the poem:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p style="margin-top: 1.5em; margin-bottom: 2em; margin-left: 28%;">"As through the land at eve we went,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;And plucked the ripened ears,<br />
-We fell out, my wife and I,<br />
-Oh, we fell out, I know not why,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;And kissed again with tears.<br />
-<br />
-"For when we came where lies the child<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;We lost in other years;<br />
-There above the little grave,<br />
-Oh, there above the little grave,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;We kissed again with tears."</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[91]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h1 style="margin-top: 8em; margin-bottom: 8em;">BROKEN IDOLS.</h1>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[93]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2 style="margin-top: 3em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;"><a name="Broken_Idols" id="Broken_Idols"><span class="smcap">Broken Idols.</span></a></h2>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;">
-<img style="margin-bottom: 1.5em;" src="images/image1.jpg" width="100" height="18" alt="fancy line" />
-</div>
-
-<div><img class="dropcap" src="images/dropcap-n.jpg"
-width="55" height="86" alt="n" />
-</div><p><span class="dropletter">N</span>OT long since, it was my misfortune to be
-inveigled into attending one of the semi-periodical
-"Exhibitions" of the &mdash;&mdash; Institute, a
-seminary for young ladies. I say it was my
-misfortune, because, to please my better half,
-I abandoned the joys of my fireside, my book, and my
-slippers, to stand for two hours by an open window,
-with a cold draft blowing on my back; hearing, now and
-then, a few words of the sentimental and "goody" platitudes
-of which the young ladies' essays were composed,&mdash;the
-reading of which was interspersed with pyrotechnic
-performances on the piano-forte, which the programme
-was kind enough to inform me were "The
-Soldiers' Chorus from Faust," "Duette from Norma,"
-etc. I was fortunate in having a programme to enlighten
-me.</p>
-
-<p>There was nothing remarkable about the "Exhibition,"
-except that, in the dozen essays which were read,
-all the verses of Longfellow's "Psalm of Life" were
-quoted, and that through them all there ran a dismal
-monotone of morbid sentiment. One young lady, who<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[94]</a></span>
-had a beautiful healthy bloom on her cheeks and wore
-quite a quantity of comfortable and elegant clothing,
-uttered a very touching wail over her buried hopes,
-her vanished joys, and the mockery of this hollow-hearted
-world. She stated that all that's brightest
-must fade,&mdash;that "this world is all a fleeting show, for
-man's illusion given,"&mdash;that "our hearts, though stout
-and brave, still, like muffled drums, are beating funeral
-marches to the grave;" and much more of the same sort.
-She was impressed with the fact that Time is an iconoclast,&mdash;which
-last word seemed to strike her as one of
-the finest in the dictionary.</p>
-
-<p>This is very true. Time does smash our idols continually;
-but should we lament and sing dirges and make
-ourselves generally uncomfortable on that account?
-Because the geese that we thought swans have turned
-out to be only geese after all, should we go into mourning
-for our "buried hopes," and "vanished joys"?
-That we outgrow our youthful fancies is no more a
-cause for sentimental regret than that we outgrow our
-youthful jackets. For myself, I can look upon the
-ashes of my early loves,&mdash;and their name was legion,&mdash;with
-as few tears as I bestow upon the ragged remnants
-of my early trousers.</p>
-
-<p>A number of years ago my young heart's fresh affections
-were lavished upon the bright-eyed girl whose
-father kept a little candy-shop and bakery across the
-way, and who with her own fair hands often gave me
-striped sticks of stomach-ache for my pennies, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</a></span>
-sometimes, when I was penniless, sweetened my lot with
-a few peppermint drops, telling me to pay for them when
-I came into my fortune. Many a time have I stood by
-the lighted window of the little shop, heedless of the
-bell that summoned me to my nightly bread and milk,
-watching her trip about among the jars of candy and
-barrels of nuts, tying up parcels and making change
-with a grace that seemed unsurpassable. But there was
-a red-haired, scorbutic youth who drove the baker's
-bread-cart, and also drove me to distraction. He was
-always flinging my youth into my face and asking if
-my mother was aware of my whereabouts. At last a
-grave suspicion forced itself upon my mind that Lizzie
-looked upon him with favor and made light of my juvenile
-demonstrations. Time proved that my suspicion
-was well founded; for one day a carriage stopped in
-front of the little shop, out of which sprang the scorbutic
-young man, clad in unusually fine raiment, including
-a gorgeous yellow vest and immaculate white gloves.
-He was followed by a solemn-looking person, who wore
-a very black coat and a very white choker. They
-passed through the shop and went up the back stairs.
-After a while they returned, and with them Lizzie, all
-smiles and blushes and ribbons and a bewitching pink
-bonnet. The carriage was driven away and my idol
-was smashed.</p>
-
-<p>Straightway I builded me another, which was in turn
-broken, and followed by another and another. Sometimes
-it was the dashing highwayman, whose life and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</a></span>
-brilliant exploits I furtively made myself acquainted
-with, out in the wood-house, and whose picture, in profuse
-curls, enormous jack-boots, and immense expanse
-of coat-flap, graced the yellow covers of the Claude
-Duval series of novels. Anon it was the great Napoleon
-seated so proudly,&mdash;in cheap lithograph,&mdash;upon
-the extreme hind-quarters of his fiery charger, and
-pointing with aspiring hand toward the snowy Alps,
-that I set up and worshipped.</p>
-
-<p>Nor was I free from relapses of the tender passion.
-About the time that my first love, Lizzie, was putting
-the third of her red-haired progeny into pantaloons, and
-torturing his fiery elf-locks into an unsightly "roach,"
-and when I was a freshman in college, I became convinced
-that the light of my life shone from a certain
-window in Miss Peesley's boarding-school; for behind
-that window a comely maiden, with golden hair and eyes
-of heavenly blue, slept and studied and ate sweetmeats
-and read Moore's melodies. My heart was hers entirely,
-as was also my spare coin,&mdash;for we had specie in
-those days,&mdash;which I converted into valentines and
-assorted candies and "The Language of Flowers," for
-her especial use and behoof. I worshipped her at church,
-as she sat, with a bevy of other girls, aloft in the gallery,
-the entrance to which was guarded by the ancient and
-incorruptible damsel who taught algebra in Miss Peesley's
-academy, and who also marshalled the young ladies
-to and from church, keeping them under her eye, and
-putting to rout any audacious youth who endeavored to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</a></span>
-walk with one of them. It was for her that I bought a
-flute, and with much difficulty so far mastered it as to
-play "Sweet Home" and "What fairy-like music,"&mdash;in
-performing which, standing in the snow under her
-window at midnight's witching hour, I caught a terrible
-cold, besides being threatened with arrest by a low-bred
-policeman for making an unseemly noise in the night-time,&mdash;as
-if I were a calliope. It was to bow to her
-that I neglected to split and carry in my Saturday's
-wood, and stood on the street-corner all the afternoon,
-for which I was soundly rated at night by my venerable
-father, who also improved the occasion by repeating his
-regular lecture upon my inattentions to study and
-general neglect of duty.</p>
-
-<p>So great was my infatuation that I manifested an unheard-of
-anxiety about the details of my dress. I even
-went so far as to attend the Friday evening "Receptions"
-at the academy, where Miss Peesley graciously
-gave the young gentlemen an opportunity to see and
-converse with the young ladies, under her own supervision.
-It was a dismal business,&mdash;sitting bolt upright in
-a straight-backed, hair-cushioned chair, under the gaze of
-Miss P. and her staff, smiling foolishly at some dreary,
-pointless sally of Miss Van Tuyl's, who taught rhetoric
-and was remarkably sprightly for one of her years,&mdash;crossing
-and uncrossing my legs uneasily, and endeavoring
-to persuade myself that I was "enjoying the evening."
-Nevertheless, I made desperate attempts to be
-happy even under these adverse circumstances.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>And what was my reward?</p>
-
-<p>There came to college a young man who was reputed
-to be a poet. He wore his hair long and parted in the
-middle, was addicted to broad Byronic collars, could take
-very pretty and pensive attitudes, and was an adept in
-the art of leaning his head abstractedly upon his hand.
-He at once became that terrible thing among the ladies, a
-lion. And he was a very impudent lion. Regardless of
-my claims and feelings, he sent to her, whom I had fondly
-called mine own, an acrostic valentine of his own composition,
-taking care that she should know from whom
-it came. The result was that I was&mdash;as we Western
-people would term it&mdash;"flopped!"</p>
-
-<p>And so another idol was smashed.</p>
-
-<p>Then came a reaction. I scorned the sex and sought
-balm for my wounded feelings in the worst pages of
-Byron.</p>
-
-<p>Having by this time attained the sophomoric dignity,
-I discovered that the end and aim of existence was to
-be <i>fast</i>,&mdash;that the divine significance of life consisted in
-drinking villanous whiskey "on the sly," and proclaiming
-the fact by eating cardamom seeds; in stealing gates
-and the clapper of the chapel bell; in devouring half-cooked
-chickens, purloined from professional coops; in
-hazing freshmen; in playing euchre for "ten cents a
-corner;" and in parading the streets at midnight, singing
-"Landlord, fill the flowing bowl," and vociferously
-urging some one to "rip and slap and set 'em up ag'in,
-all on a summer's day." I smoked vile Scarfalatti tobacco<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</a></span>
-in a huge Dutch pipe, wore a blue coat with brass
-buttons, a shocking hat, and my trousers tucked into my
-boots,&mdash;which after my great disappointment befell me
-I ceased to black with any degree of regularity,&mdash;and
-regulated my language according to a certain slangy
-work called "Yale College Scrapes."</p>
-
-<p>I am inclined to look upon these youthful pranks not
-as unpardonable sins, though I freely admit their utter
-folly, but as the vagaries of immature <i>genius</i>,&mdash;if I may
-say so,&mdash;scorning to walk decorously, because other
-people do, struggling to throw off the fetters of conventionality,
-burning to distinguish itself in some new and
-original way, striking out from the beaten paths,&mdash;to
-repent of it afterward. For it does not take many years
-to teach one that the beaten paths are the safest; and I
-have often wished that I had had a tithe of the application
-and assiduity of "Old Sobriety," as we rapid
-youngsters called the Nestor of the class, who plodded
-on from morn till dewy eve and far into the night,
-and quietly carried off the honors from the brilliant
-geniuses, who wore flash neckties and shone at free-and-easys.
-But what thoughtless college-boy does not
-prefer worshipping at the shrine of the fast goddess
-to treading the straight and safe paths of propriety?
-It takes time and one or two private interviews
-with a committee of the Faculty to rid him of his delusion.</p>
-
-<p>I have been making these confessions to show that I,
-too, as well as the handsome and healthy young lady<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</a></span>
-whose essay furnishes my text, have had some joys that
-are vanished and some hopes that are buried.</p>
-
-<p>But I do not therefore find that this world is a dark
-and dreary desert. I do not rail at life as a hollow
-mockery, nor long to lay my weary head upon the lap
-of earth. On the contrary, the longer I live in this
-world, the better I like it. It is a jolly old world, after
-all; and, though Time is an iconoclast and does smash
-our idols with a ruthless hand, it is only to purify our
-vision; and, as the fragments tumble and the dust settles,
-we see the true, the beautiful, and the joyous in
-life more clearly. I know that life has its disappointments
-and crosses; but I think that it is too short for
-sentimental lamentation over them. In homely phrase,
-"There is no use in crying over spilt milk." If Dame
-Fortune frowns, laugh her in the face, and, with a light
-heart and brave spirit, woo her again, and you will
-surely win her smile. I am as fully impressed as any
-one with the fact that this world is not our permanent
-abiding-place; but that is no reason why we should
-underrate, abuse, and malign it. There is such a thing
-as being too other-worldly. The grand truths and
-beautiful teachings of God's gospel do not conflict with
-the grandeur, the beauty, and the mystery of God's
-handiwork, the world; and we can no more afford to
-despise and dispense with the one than with the other.
-And it seems to me that we cannot better prepare for
-enjoying the life hereafter than by a healthy, hearty,
-rational enjoyment of the one that is here.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Do not, then, O youth, sit down and grow sentimental
-over your fancied griefs. Do not waste your time in
-shedding weak tears over the fragments of your broken
-idols. Kick the rubbish aside, and go on your way,
-with head erect and heart open to the sweet influences
-of this bright and beautiful world, and you cannot fail
-to find it not a "Piljin's Projiss of a Wale," but</p>
-
-<p class="center" style="margin-top: 1.5em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;">"A sunshiny world, full of laughter and leisure."</p>
-
-<p>In worthy action and healthy enjoyment you will find
-a cure for all your imaginary woes and all your maudlin
-fine feelings.</p>
-
-<p>In two little lines lies the clue to an honorable and
-happy life:&mdash;</p>
-
-
-<p class="center" style="margin-top: 1.5em; margin-bottom: 2em;">"Thou shalt find, by <i>hearty striving</i> only<br />
-&nbsp;And <i>truly loving</i>, thou canst truly live."</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</a></span></p>
-
-<h1 style="margin-top: 8em; margin-bottom: 8em;">DR. HUGER'S INTENTION.</h1>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[105]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h2 style="margin-top: 3em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;"><a name="Dr_Hugers_Intention" id="Dr_Hugers_Intention"><span class="smcap">Dr. Huger's Intention.</span></a></h2>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;">
-<img style="margin-bottom: 1.5em;" src="images/image1.jpg" width="100" height="18" alt="fancy line" />
-</div>
-
-
-<div><img class="dropcap" src="images/dropcap-d.jpg"
-width="51" height="86" alt="d" />
-</div><p><span class="dropletter">D</span>R. HUGER was thirty years old when he deliberately
-resolved to be in love,&mdash;I cannot say
-"fall in love" of anything so matter-of-fact and
-well-considered. He made up his mind that
-marriage was a good thing,&mdash;that he was old enough
-to marry,&mdash;finally, that he <i>would</i> marry. Then he
-decided, with equal deliberation, on the qualifications
-necessary in the lady, and began to look about him to
-find her. She must be a blonde. Above all things else,
-he must have her gentle and trustful; and he believed
-that gentleness and trustfulness inhered in the blue-eyed,
-fair-haired type of womanhood. She must be appreciative,
-but not strong-minded,&mdash;well-bred, with a
-certain lady-like perfectness, which could not be criticised,
-and yet which would always save her from being
-conspicuous. Not for the world would he have any
-new-fangled woman's-rights notions about her.</p>
-
-<p>You might fancy it would be a somewhat difficult
-matter for him to find precisely the realization of this
-ideal; but here fate befriended him,&mdash;fate, who seemed
-to have taken Dr. Huger under her especial charge, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[106]</a></span>
-had been very kind to him all his life. He looked out
-of his window, after he had come to the resolution heretofore
-recorded, and saw Amy Minturn tripping across
-the village green.</p>
-
-<p>Amy was eighteen,&mdash;blonde, blue-eyed, innocent,
-well-bred, unpresuming, without ambition, and without
-originality. She was very lovely in her own quiet, tea-rose
-style. Her position was satisfactory; for her father,
-Judge Minturn, was a man of mark in Windham, and
-one of Dr. Huger's warmest friends. So, having decided
-that here was an embodiment of all his "must-haves,"
-the doctor went over that evening to call at the Minturn
-mansion. Not that the call in itself was an unusual occurrence.
-He went there often; but hitherto his conversation
-had been principally directed to the judge,
-and to-night there was a noticeable change.</p>
-
-<p>Amy was looking her loveliest, in her diaphanous
-muslin robes, with blue ribbons at her throat, and in
-her soft light hair. Dr. Huger wondered that he had
-never before noticed the pearly tints of her complexion,
-the deep lustrous blue of her eyes, the dainty, flower-like
-grace of her words and ways. He talked to her, and
-watched the changing color in her cheeks, and her rippling
-smiles, until he began to think the falling in love,
-to which he had so deliberately addressed himself, the
-easiest and pleasantest thing in the world. She had the
-prettiest little air of propriety,&mdash;half prudish, and half
-coquettish. She received his attentions with a shy grace
-that was irresistibly tempting.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[107]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He went often to Judge Minturn's after that&mdash;not <i>too</i>
-often, for he did not wish to startle his pretty Amy by
-attentions too sudden or too overpowering; and, indeed,
-there was nothing in the gentle attraction by which she
-drew him to hurry him into any insane forgetfulness of
-his customary moderation. But he liked and approved
-her more and more. He made up his mind to give her
-a little longer time in which to become familiar with
-him, and then to ask her to be his wife.</p>
-
-<p>When he had reached this determination, he was sent
-for, one August day, to see a new patient,&mdash;a certain
-Miss Colchester. He was thinking about Amy as he
-went along,&mdash;laughing at the foolish old notion concerning
-the course of true love; for what could run any
-smoother, he asked himself, than his had? It seemed
-to him as simple and pretty as an idyl,&mdash;the "Miller's
-Daughter" New Englandized.</p>
-
-<p style="margin-top: 1.5em; margin-bottom: 1.5em; margin-left: 25%;">"Oh, that I were beside her now!<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Oh, will she answer if I call?<br />
-&nbsp;Oh, would she give me vow for vow,&mdash;<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Sweet Amy,&mdash;if I told her all?"</p>
-
-<p>he hummed, half unconsciously, as he walked on.</p>
-
-<p>Soon he came in sight of Bock Cottage, the place to
-which he was going, and began thereupon to speculate
-about Miss Colchester. Of course she was one of the
-summer boarders of whom Rock Cottage was full. He
-wondered whether she were young or old,&mdash;whether he
-should like her,&mdash;whether she would be good pay;&mdash;and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[108]</a></span>
-by this time, he had rung the bell, and was inquiring for
-her of the tidy girl who answered his summons.</p>
-
-<p>He was shown into a little parlor on the first floor,
-and, pausing a moment at the door, he looked at his patient.
-A very beautiful woman, he said to himself, but
-just such an one as he did not like. She sat in a low
-chair, her back to the window and her face turned toward
-him. She wore a simple white-cambric wrapper.
-Her beauty had no external adornment whatever. It
-shone upon him startlingly and unexpectedly, as if you
-should open a closet, where you were prepared to find
-an old family portrait of some stiff Puritan grandmother,
-and be confronted, instead, by one of Murillo's
-Spanish women, passionate and splendid. For Miss
-Colchester was not unlike those Murillo-painted beauties.
-She had a clear, dark skin, through which the
-changeful color glowed as if her cheeks were transparent;
-dark, heavily-falling hair; low brow; great, passionate,
-slumbrous eyes; proud, straight features. There
-was nothing like a New-England woman about her.
-That was Dr. Huger's first thought; and she read it,
-either through some subtle clairvoyant power, or, a
-simpler solution, because she knew that every one, who
-saw her under these cool skies of the temperate zone,
-would naturally think that thought first. Her full,
-ripe lips parted in a singular smile, as she said,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"You are thinking that I am not of the North. You
-are right. I was born in New Orleans. I am a Creole
-of the Creoles. I don't like the people here. I sent for
-you because you were German, at least by descent."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[109]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"How did you know it?"</p>
-
-<p>It was an abrupt question for a man of the doctor's
-habitual grave courtesy; but she seemed to him unique,
-and it was impossible to maintain his old equipoise in
-her presence. She had read his thought like a witch.
-Was there something uncanny about her?</p>
-
-<p>"How did I know you were German?" She smiled.
-"Because your name suggested the idea, and then I
-saw you in the street, and your features indorsed the
-hint your name had given me."</p>
-
-<p>"I am glad that anything should have made you think
-of me."</p>
-
-<p>It was one of the conventional platitudes, of which
-self-complacent men, like Dr. Huger, keep a stock on
-hand for their lady friends. Miss Colchester saw its
-poverty, and smiled at it, as she answered him,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I think of every one with whom I come in contact;
-and I thought of you, especially, because I intended
-from the first, if there were a good physician here, to
-consult him."</p>
-
-<p>The doctor looked into her radiant face.</p>
-
-<p>"Is it possible that you are ill?"</p>
-
-<p>He had sat down beside her by this time, and taken
-her hand. It gave him a curious sensation as it lay
-quietly in his. He felt as if there were more life, more
-magnetism, in it than in any hand he had ever touched.</p>
-
-<p>"That <i>you</i> must tell me," she said, quietly. "My
-heart feels strangely, sometimes; it beats too rapidly,
-I think, and sometimes very irregularly. I have lived<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[110]</a></span>
-too fast,&mdash;suffered and enjoyed too keenly. The poor
-machine is worn out, perhaps. I look to you to inform
-me whether I am in danger."</p>
-
-<p>"I must have my stethoscope. I will go for it. Are
-you sure you can bear the truth?"</p>
-
-<p>She smiled,&mdash;a cool smile touched with scorn.</p>
-
-<p>"I have not found life so sweet," she said, "that its
-loss will trouble me. I only want to know how long
-I am likely to have in which to do certain things. If
-you can tell me, I shall be satisfied."</p>
-
-<p>As Dr. Huger went home, he met Amy. Something
-in the sight of her fresh, blonde beauty, with its fulness
-of life and health, jarred on his mood. He bowed to
-her with a preoccupied air, and hurried on. When he
-went back to Rock Cottage, Miss Colchester was sitting
-just as he had left her. To sit long at a time in one
-motionless attitude was a peculiarity of hers. Her
-manner had always a singular composure, though her
-nature was impetuous.</p>
-
-<p>He placed over her heart the instrument he had
-brought, then listened a long time to its beating. He
-dreaded to tell her the story it revealed to him, and at
-last made up his mind to evade the responsibility.
-When he had come to this conclusion, he raised his
-head.</p>
-
-<p>"I do not feel willing," he said, "to pronounce an
-opinion. Let me send for a medical man who is older,
-who has had more experience."</p>
-
-<p>She raised her dark eyes, and looked full in his face.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[111]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"You are afraid to tell me, after all I said? Will
-you not believe that I do not care to live? I shall send
-for no other physician. I look for the truth from your
-lips. You find my heart greatly enlarged?"</p>
-
-<p>"I told you I did not like to trust my own judgment;
-but that <i>is</i> my opinion."</p>
-
-<p>"And if you are right I shall be likely to live&mdash;how
-long?"</p>
-
-<p>"Possibly for years. Probably for a few months.
-There is no help,&mdash;I mean, no cure. If you suffer
-much pain, that can be eased, perhaps."</p>
-
-<p>Miss Colchester was silent a few moments. Dr. Huger
-could see no change in her face, though he watched
-her closely. The color neither left her cheeks or deepened
-in them. He did not see so much as an eyelash
-quiver. At last she spoke,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"You have been truly kind, and I thank you. I believe
-I am glad of your tidings. I think I shall stay
-here in Windham till the last. I would like one autumn
-among these grand old woods and hills. I have nothing
-to call me away. I can do all which I have to do by letter,
-and my most faithful friend on earth is my quadroon
-maid who is here with me. She will be my nurse, if I
-need nursing. And you will be my physician,&mdash;will
-you not?"</p>
-
-<p>"I will when I can help you. At other times, may I
-not be your friend, and as such come to see you as often
-as I can?"</p>
-
-<p>"Just as often,&mdash;the oftener the better," she answered,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[112]</a></span>
-with that smile which thrilled him so strangely
-every time he met it. "I shall always be glad to see
-you. Your visits will be a real charity; for, except
-Lisette, I am quite solitary."</p>
-
-<p>He understood by her manner that it was time to go,
-and took his leave.</p>
-
-<p>That night he walked over to Judge Minturn's. Amy
-was just as pretty as ever,&mdash;just as graceful and gentle
-and faultless in dress and manner. Why was it that he
-could not interest himself in her as heretofore? Had
-the salt lost its savor? His judgment endorsed her as
-it always had. She was precisely the kind of woman to
-make a man happy. That pure blonde beauty, with its
-tints of pearl and pink, was just what he wanted, always
-had wanted. Why was it that he was haunted all the
-time by eyes so different from those calm blue orbs of
-Amy's? He thought it was because his new patient's
-case had interested him so much in a medical point of
-view. He was tired, and he made it an excuse for shortening
-his call.</p>
-
-<p>He went home to sit and smoke and speculate again
-about Miss Colchester. He seemed to see her wonderful
-exotic face through the blue smoke-wreaths. Her words
-and ways came back to him. He had discovered so soon
-that <i>she</i> was no gentle, yielding creature. She had
-power enough to make her conspicuous anywhere&mdash;piquant
-moods and manners of her own, which a man
-could find it hard to tame. He was glad,&mdash;or thought
-he was,&mdash;that such office had not fallen to his share,&mdash;that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[113]</a></span>
-the woman he had resolved to marry was so
-unlike her; yet he could not banish the imperious face
-which haunted his fancy.</p>
-
-<p>The next day found him again at Rock Cottage; but
-he waited until afternoon, when all his other visits had
-been made. It was a warm day; and Miss Colchester
-was again in white, but in full fleecy robes, whose effect
-was very different from the simple cambric wrapper
-she had worn the day before. Ornaments of
-barbaric gold were in her ears, at her throat, and
-manacled her wrists. A single scarlet lily drooped
-low in her hair. She looked full of life,&mdash;strong,
-passionate, magnetic life. Was it possible that he had
-judged her case aright? Could death come to spoil this
-wonderful beauty in its prime?</p>
-
-<p>Their talk was not like that of physician and patient.
-It touched on many themes, and she illuminated each one
-with the quick brilliancy of her thought. He grew acquainted
-with her mind in the two hours he spent with
-her; but her history,&mdash;who she was,&mdash;whence she came,&mdash;why
-she was at Windham,&mdash;remained as mysterious
-as before. Her maid came in once or twice, and called
-her "Miss Pauline," and this one item of her first name
-was all that he knew about her more than he had discovered
-yesterday. He saw her,&mdash;a woman utterly different
-from the gentle, communicative, impressible, blue-eyed
-ideal he had always cherished,&mdash;a woman with
-whom, had she been in her full health, his reason would
-have pronounced it madness to fall in love. How much<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[114]</a></span>
-more would it be madness now, when he knew that she
-was going straight to her doom,&mdash;that when the summer
-came again, it would shine upon her grave! And yet it
-seemed as if the very hopelessness of any passion for her
-made her power over him more fatal.</p>
-
-<p>He went to see her day after day. He did not consciously
-neglect Amy Minturn, because he did not think
-about her at all. She was no more to him in those days
-than last year's roses, which had smelled so sweet to him
-in their prime. He was absorbed in Pauline Colchester&mdash;lived
-in her life. She accepted his devotion, simply
-because she did not understand it. If she had been in
-health, she would have known that this man loved her;
-but the knowledge of her coming fate must make all that
-impossible, she thought. So she accepted his friendship
-with a feeling of entire security; and, though she revealed
-to him no facts of her material life, admitted him to such
-close intimacy with her heart and soul as, under other
-circumstances, he might never have reached in a lifetime
-of acquaintance.</p>
-
-<p>And the nearer he drew to her the more insanely he
-loved her,&mdash;loved her, though he knew the fate which
-waited for her, the heart-break he was preparing for himself.</p>
-
-<p>At last he told her. He had meant to keep his secret
-until she died, but in spite of himself it came to his lips.</p>
-
-<p>In September it was,&mdash;one of those glorious autumn
-days when the year seems at flood-tide, full of a ripe
-glory, which thrills an imaginative temperament as does<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[115]</a></span>
-no tender verdure of spring, no bravery of summer.
-Pauline Colchester, sensitive to all such influences as
-few are, was electrified by it. Dr. Huger had never
-seen her so radiant, so full of vitality. It seemed to him
-impossible that she should die. If he had her for his
-own,&mdash;if he could make her happy,&mdash;could he not
-guard her from every shock or excitement, and keep
-her in such a charmed atmosphere of peace that the
-worn-out heart might last for many a year?</p>
-
-<p>It was the idlest of lover's dreams, the emptiest and
-most baseless of hopes, which he would have called any
-other man insane for cherishing. But he grasped at it
-eagerly, and, before he knew what he was doing, he had
-breathed out his longing at the feet of Miss Colchester.</p>
-
-<p>"Is it possible," she said, after a silent space, "that
-you could have loved me so well? That you would
-have absorbed into your own the poor remnant of my
-life, and cherished it to the end? I ought to be sorry
-for your sake; but how can I, when just such a love is
-what I have starved for all my life? I have no right to
-it now. I am Mrs., not Miss, Colchester. I was Pauline
-Angereau before Ralph Colchester found me and married
-me. I had money and, I suppose, beauty; perhaps he
-coveted them both. He made me believe that he loved
-me with all his heart; and then, when I was once his
-wife, he began torturing me to death with his neglect
-and his cruelty. He was a bad man; and I don't believe
-there is a woman on earth strong enough to have saved
-him from himself. I bore everything, for two years, in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[116]</a></span>
-silence. Then I found that it was killing me, and, in one
-of his frequent absences, I came away to die in peace.
-When it is all over, Lisette will write to him. He will
-have the fortune he longed for, without the encumbrance
-of which he tired so soon. You must not see me any
-more. Bound as I am, feeling what you feel, there
-would be sin in our meeting. And yet I shall die easier
-for knowing that, once in my life, I have been loved for
-myself alone."</p>
-
-<p>Then Dr. Huger rose to go. To-morrow, perhaps he
-could combat those scruples of hers; but to-day, there
-was no more to be said to this woman whom another man
-owned. To-morrow, he could tell better how nearly he
-could return to the quiet ways of friendship,&mdash;whether
-it would be possible for him to tend her, brother-like, to
-the last, as he had meant to do before he loved her. He
-took her hand a moment, and said, in a tone which he
-tried so hard to make quiet that it almost sounded
-cold,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I must go now. I dare not stay and talk to you. I
-will come again to-morrow."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, to-morrow."</p>
-
-<p>Her face kindled, as she spoke, with a strange light
-as of prophecy. What "to-morrow" meant to her he
-did not know. He turned away suddenly, for his heart
-was sore; and, as he went, he heard her say, speaking
-very low and tenderly,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"God bless you, Francis Huger."</p>
-
-<p>The next day he went again to Rock Cottage. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[117]</a></span>
-had fought his battle and conquered. He thought now
-that he could stay by her to the end, and speak no word,
-look no look, which should wrong her honor or his own.
-He asked for her at the door as usual; and they told
-him she had paid her bill that morning, and left. She
-had come, they said, no one knew from whence; and no
-one knew where she had gone. She had left no messages
-and given no address.</p>
-
-<p>Dr. Huger understood that this was something she
-had meant to keep secret from him of all others. Was
-he never to see her again? When she had said, "Yes, to-morrow,"
-could she have meant the long to-morrow,
-when the night of death should be over? He turned
-away, making no sign of disappointment,&mdash;his sorrow
-dumb in his heart; and, as he went, her voice seemed
-again to follow him,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"God bless you, Francis Huger."</p>
-
-<p>For two months afterward, he went the round of his
-daily duties in a strange, absent, divided fashion. He
-neither forgot nor omitted anything; yet he saw as one
-who saw not, and heard with a hearing which conveyed
-to his inward sense no impression. <i>She</i> was with him
-everywhere. All the time, he was living over the brief
-four weeks of their acquaintance, in which, it seemed to
-him, he had suffered and enjoyed more than in all the
-rest of his lifetime. Every day, every hour, he expected
-some message from her. He felt a sort of conviction
-that she would not die until he had seen her again. He
-thought, at last, that his summons to her side had come.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[118]</a></span>
-He opened, one day, a letter directed in a hand with
-which he was not familiar. He read in it, with hurrying
-pulses, only these words:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p>"Madame Pauline Angereau Colchester is dead. I
-obey her wish in sending you these tidings."</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 70%;">"<span class="smcap">Lisette.</span>"</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>From the letter had dropped, as he unfolded it, a long
-silky tress of dark hair. He picked it up, and it seemed
-to cling caressingly to his fingers. It was all he could
-ever have in this world of Pauline Colchester. Her "to-morrow"
-had come. His would come, too, by-and-by.
-What then? God alone knew whether his soul would
-ever find hers, when both should be immortal.</p>
-
-<p>Will he go back again some day to Amy Minturn?
-Who can tell? Men have done such things. It will
-depend on how weary the solitary way shall seem,&mdash;how
-much he may long for his own fireside. At any
-rate, he will never tell her the story of Pauline.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[119]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h1 style="margin-top: 8em; margin-bottom: 8em;">THE MAN WHOSE LIFE WAS SAVED.</h1>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[121]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h2 style="margin-top: 3em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;"><a name="The_Man_whose_Life_was_Saved" id="The_Man_whose_Life_was_Saved"><span class="smcap">The Man whose Life was Saved.</span></a></h2>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;">
-<img style="margin-bottom: 1.5em;" src="images/image1.jpg" width="100" height="18" alt="fancy line" />
-</div>
-
-<h3 style="margin-bottom: 1.5em;">I.</h3>
-
-<div><img class="dropcap" src="images/dropcap-o.jpg"
-width="56" height="87" alt="o" />
-</div><p><span class="dropletter">O</span>N a pleasant, sunshiny afternoon of early summer,
-Mlle. Lisa sat knitting in the door-way of
-a white, shining house, fronting on a silent, remote
-street of a garrisoned town of France, not
-far distant from Paris. The street was narrow
-and badly paved with sharp, irregular stones, sloping
-gradually down to a point in the centre, which formed
-the gutter, and at night was feebly lighted by an oil-lamp
-suspended to a rope and stretched across the street
-at the corners. The general aspect of the place was not
-amusing, for the habitations were few and the passers-by
-fewer. Long rows of high, white-washed walls, the
-boundaries of gentlemen's gardens, garnished with
-broken glass and pots of cactus, gave a certain monotony
-to the Rue Arc en Ciel. The very blossoms of the
-fruit-trees and flowering-shrubs behind the white-washed
-walls, looked sleepily over their barriers, as they diffused
-the contagious languor of their odors along the
-silent white street. These drowsy influences, however,
-seemed in no ways to diminish the carolling propensities<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[122]</a></span>
-of Mlle. Lisa, or to abate in any particular the ardor
-of her knitting.</p>
-
-<p>Lisa Ledru was the daughter of the <i>proprietaire</i> of
-No. 29,&mdash;a worthy woman who had toiled to sustain herself
-and an agreeable, sprightly husband, addicted to no
-vice save that of contented idleness, through many long,
-weary years, and had brought up her only child, Lisa, to
-a point of prettiness and usefulness, which compensated
-for past sacrifices, and promised well for the future.</p>
-
-<p>Madame Ledru's house had been for years the abode
-of <i>militaires</i>. She would occasionally condescend to the
-admission of a bourgeois, but this infringement of habit
-and inclination was but a condescension after all, and
-left her with a certain sense of degradation, when she
-exposed her stair-case, which had creaked so long under
-the thundering tread of martial heel and spur, to the
-mild, apologetic footstep of a man of peace. Mme. Ledru's
-principles were well-known and properly appreciated
-by the regiments in garrison, and her house never
-lacked inmates. Her reputation for discretion and
-adroitness, in bringing order out of the chaotic love affairs
-which perpetually entangled the impetuous sons of
-Mars, was established on the firmest basis. No lodger
-was ever "at home" to an importunate creditor, so long
-as madame's ample person could bar the passage to
-their entrance, and no <i>tête-à-tête</i> of a tender nature was
-ever interrupted by the untimely appearance of a cherished
-mother or aunt, or, still worse, the jealous intrusion
-of a rival queen.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[123]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The court-yard of Mme. Ledru's house presented a
-far more lively appearance than the street in which it
-stood. In the centre of the court stood a large, umbrageous
-tree, drooping over a stone watering-trough,
-which gave drink to the numerous horses in the stable-yard
-as well as to the chickens and barn-yard fowls,
-who cackled and prowled about in its vicinity, as they
-picked up their precarious living. At times their foraging-ground
-would be enriched by a shower of crumbs
-from a friendly window above, and rumor asserted that
-the gallant Colonel Victor de Villeport, hero of many
-campaigns, with the prestige of a wound or two, and a
-compensating glitter of decorations, had so far abandoned
-himself to the pastime of chicken-feeding as to
-invent new methods of beguiling the monotony of the
-entertainment,&mdash;such as tying morsels of bread to a
-string and dancing it distractedly before the eyes of
-stupid clucking hens, until experience had taught
-them in a measure how to cope with this unexpected
-phase of their trying existence. The stable-yard, extending
-to the left of the court, was gay with the bright
-military caps of orderlies, who sang snatches of vaudeville
-airs, as they rubbed down their masters' steeds,
-and polished up their sabres and buckles.</p>
-
-<p>But to return to Mlle. Lisa, who sat knitting and
-singing in the Porte Cochère of No. 29, on a warm summer
-afternoon. Her joyous refrain ceased, for a moment,
-as she heard the little gate opposite to the house,
-belonging to the Countess d'Hivry's garden, creak on<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[124]</a></span>
-its hinges, and the next instant saw protruding the
-round, red head of François, the gardener. This apparition,
-though not itself enchanting, gave Mlle. Lisa, on
-this occasion, the liveliest satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>"Good-morning, Monsieur François," she said, with a
-beaming smile, as she glanced furtively at the bouquet
-of flowers which was in his hand. However dull might
-be the instincts of François in many things, they were
-keen enough where Lisa was concerned; and, recognizing
-at once the advantages of the situation, he advanced
-with a profusion of bows, and a grin of ecstasy, to deposit
-his tribute of flowers at the feet of his <i>adorata</i>.</p>
-
-<p>"What beautiful taste you have in flowers, Monsieur
-François," said Lisa, with a perceptible elevation of
-voice, and with a sidelong glance at the stone trough in
-the court-yard, whereat Ulysse, the orderly of Colonel
-de Villefort, was watering his master's horse. "Mme. la
-Contesse d'Hivry says that she could never give a dinner-party
-without you to arrange flowers for the Jardinières,
-and to furnish all that lovely fruit for dessert,
-which you grow in the glass-houses."</p>
-
-<p>"As to that," replied François, drawing himself up,
-and assuming an attitude of professional dignity, which
-had momentarily yielded to the all-absorbing power of
-Lisa's presence, "as to that, mademoiselle, I can say,
-without boasting, that the yellow roses and tulips of the
-Jardin du Roi would never be known for tulips and
-roses alongside of mine; though for red and white roses
-I will not say so much, and the pears&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[125]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"O mademoiselle! how lovely you are with those
-flowers in your hair!" cried out the enamored gardener,
-once more forgetful of his life-long enthusiasm, the pears
-and roses, and only mindful of the unexpected form of
-female seduction offered to his distracted gaze. "I
-never knew that roses could be so beautiful," he added,
-with a genuineness which would have touched any being
-less merciless than a girl of eighteen, bent on piquing a
-more indifferent admirer into something like jealousy.</p>
-
-<p>"It is your roses," said Lisa, laughing, "that make
-me, what you call lovely. I don't make the roses. But
-what have you peeping out of your pocket?" she inquired,
-fearing that the conversation was about to assume
-a more tender character than she desired; "a note
-I should think"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, yes! I had forgotten," said poor François, with
-a sigh over his own hopeless perturbation. "It is from
-Mme. la Contesse to the Colonel de Villefort, and it
-was to be given without delay."</p>
-
-<p>"Ulysse, Ulysse," cried Lisa, gladly availing herself
-of this welcome diversion, "here is a note for you."</p>
-
-<p>"Do you not see, mademoiselle," said Ulysse, pettishly,
-not entirely pleased with François and his flowers,
-"do you not see that I am watering the colonel's horse?
-I should think, too, that the bearer of a note might deliver
-it himself."</p>
-
-<p>François, with a soothing sense of present preferment,
-was about to make a good-natured reply, when the colloquy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[126]</a></span>
-was terminated by a sonorous voice from an
-upper window shouting, "Ulysse!"</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Mon colonel.</i>"</p>
-
-<p>"Saddle one of my horses immediately."</p>
-
-<p>"Impossible to use either to-day, <i>mon colonel</i>; one
-limps, and I have taken Mars to the blacksmith's, for he
-cast a shoe this morning."</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Sapeisti!</i> What am I to ride then? There is the
-horse of Monsieur le Baron always at our service. He
-is a nasty, stumbling thing, but if it is very pressing"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Victor de Villefort looked irresolutely out of the
-window, and twirled his blonde mustache. He was a
-man between thirty and forty perhaps, <i>distingué</i> in manner
-and bearing, and gifted with a charming sympathetic
-voice.</p>
-
-<p>"Here is a note for you, <i>mon colonel</i>," said Lisa,
-glancing reproachfully at Ulysse, as she tripped lightly
-across the court-yard, and passing the corridor of red
-brick, mounted two flights of narrow wooden stairs to
-the colonel's room.</p>
-
-<p>"Thank you, mademoiselle," said Victor, courteously,
-as he took the note. "Ulysse shall stay with me always
-if you say so. Do the roses worn so gracefully on the
-left side of the head, indicate consent?"</p>
-
-<p>"I wear the roses for the sake of François, the gardener
-of Madame la Contesse d'Hivry, who brings them
-to me."</p>
-
-<p>"Ah! I am always allowing myself to be taken by surprise,
-Lisa," said Victor, opening his note and glancing
-over its contents. "I never keep pace with fickleness."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[127]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"But is it fickleness, <i>mon colonel</i>, to like what belongs
-to the Contesse d'Hivry?" inquired Lisa, lowering
-her eyes with assumed <i>naïveté</i>.</p>
-
-<p>"For you, yes. I should say that it was. But I
-dare say, with your little malicious airs, mademoiselle,
-you mean more than that. But I advise you to wear
-roses on the right side for Ulysse, and then tell him that
-he must never leave me; and he shall not, I give you my
-word," said Victor, gayly, taking up his hat and gloves
-and moving to the door. "What a lucky thing," he
-continued to himself as he descended the stair-case,
-"that the charming countess only asks for a pedestrian
-cavalier! If she had asked for a mounted escort, I
-should have been forced to have recourse to this tiresome
-baron here," and Victor brushed lightly against
-the door of a fellow-lodger, "to have used his stumbling
-horse, and then to have been bored for the rest of my
-life, or of his life, about helping him to the cross of the
-Legion of Honor."</p>
-
-<p>The baron in question was a retired <i>militaire</i>, who,
-inspired with an insatiable thirst for fame, was writing
-a military history of France. His chief claims to notice
-appeared to be the possession of a stumbling horse, and
-an overwhelming greed of decorations.</p>
-
-<p>As Victor mused over the consequences of an incautious
-acceptance of the baron's steed, and over the base
-intrigues in which a pursuit of the coveted cross might
-involve him, his brow darkened, and his step grew
-heavier.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[128]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3 style="margin-top: 2.5em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;">II.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> drawing-room of the Contesse d'Hivry was a
-comfortable, social-looking apartment, though with too
-great abandon in the matter of furniture and decorations,
-to claim to be a model of any particular epoch.
-The well-polished floors and numerous mirrors reflected
-back the sun's rays, which sometimes penetrated
-through the fragrant vines shading the windows.
-Bright oriental rugs were at the feet of yellow damask
-ottomans, and the etagères and tables were covered with
-rare bronzes, costly bits of porcelain, alabaster, and goblets
-of crystal. But the appointments of the room
-seemed never so complete as when the countess herself
-was seated in the embrasure of one of the windows, as
-she was on this occasion, working at her embroidery or
-her aquarelles. Mathilde d'Hivry enjoyed the deserved
-reputation of being irresistibly charming. She
-was nothing in excess. She was not very young, nor
-very rich, nor very handsome, nor very clever. But she
-was exactly what every one desired that she should be
-at the moment. No one could precisely define why
-they left her presence in a complacent mood and in a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[129]</a></span>
-friendly attitude towards the whole human race. Such
-being the case, however, her society was naturally
-sought for, and reluctantly abandoned. As the countess
-sat this afternoon, listlessly and idly before her
-aquarelles, quite disinclined for work, and leaning her
-little head with its great coils of black braids wearily on
-her hands, her eyes rested mechanically on a miniature
-likeness near her. The miniature was that of a young
-man, well-featured, well dressed, well <i>frisé</i>, and well-painted.
-Under the sober tint of the beard and hair
-was the suggestion of a more fiery hue,&mdash;the red of the
-ancient Gaul,&mdash;just as in the mild brown eyes lurked
-the possibility of a flash of "<i>furia Francese</i>," the savage
-ferocity which centuries of civilization and good manners
-have only smothered in the modern Frenchman,
-and which shows itself any day in the blouses, as it
-might in the time of Charlemagne, in spite of their
-surroundings of millinery, cookery, hair-dressing, and
-the art of dancing. These reflections, however, were
-not in the least the source of Mathilde's preoccupation.
-After a prolonged contemplation of the young gentleman's
-miniature, she exclaimed petulantly, "Why should
-my aunt and uncle urge me to marry again, especially
-Armand?" always regarding the brown eyes of the
-miniature. "He looks mild enough there on ivory.
-But I can imagine him clothed with the authority of a
-husband, making scenes of jealousy, interfering, dictating,
-and being quite insupportable. I like him too well
-to expose him to such temptations. We are much better<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[130]</a></span>
-as we are. There is De Villefort. He is more solid,
-and more simple in character, but terribly in earnest, I
-should say. And they say he will never marry. Some
-disappointment in the past, or some hope for the future
-will keep him as he is,&mdash;so they say, at least;" and she
-fell into another revery, which was finally interrupted
-by a servant announcing the Colonel de Villefort.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! I am so glad that you could come to-day," said
-the countess, resuming her wonted gayety. "Do you
-share my wish for a stroll in the park this afternoon,
-whilst the band is playing?"</p>
-
-<p>"I always share your wishes, dear countess, and am
-too happy when I may share your pleasures."</p>
-
-<p>"That is almost a compliment, I should say, and you
-think yourself incapable of paying one. Why do you
-never pay compliments?"</p>
-
-<p>"I will tell you, if you will, in return, tell me why the
-portrait of Monsieur Armand is always so near your
-favorite seat."</p>
-
-<p>"The reason is, I suppose," said the countess, laughing,
-"that I am so used to it, that I am quite unconscious
-whether it is there or not."</p>
-
-<p>"Then I will tell you why I rarely pay you compliments,&mdash;because
-I like you too well."</p>
-
-<p>"So you can only compliment those whom you dislike?"</p>
-
-<p>"On the contrary, those to whom I am indifferent."</p>
-
-<p>"But Colonel de Villefort," exclaimed the countess,
-gravely tying on her white bonnet before the mirror<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[131]</a></span>
-and observing, with satisfaction, that the soft white lace
-brought out the lustre of her rich hair and her clear
-gray eyes, "do you know that public opinion decides
-that you will never marry?"</p>
-
-<p>"Public opinion, perhaps, is wise enough to decide,
-because I never have married, that I never shall," replied
-De Villefort, offering his arm to the countess as
-they passed through the door.</p>
-
-<p>"There is certainly a reason for such a supposition in
-your case,&mdash;for you have had inducements to marry."
-The colonel was grave and thoughtful, and, for a few
-moments, they walked on in silence until the sound of
-music roused him from a revery which Mathilde cared
-not to disturb. "We are in the park now," he said, at
-last, "and almost in the midst of 'public opinion,'" he
-added laughing; "but, after the music, if you are not
-too tired for a stroll in the Jardin du Roi, I will tell you
-some incidents of my early life, and you shall judge
-whether I can marry."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh! thank you," said the countess, eagerly and
-gratefully, more with her eyes than her voice, for the
-latter was quite lost in a blast of Roland à Roncevaux
-from the trumpets of one of the imperial bands. The
-afternoon being warm, the band was ranged in a circle
-under the protecting shade of the great, careless old
-trees; but the sun's rays penetrated here and there
-through their branches, throwing a golden light on the
-curls of rosy children frolicking on the green grass,
-casting an aureole of glory around the heads of gray-haired<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[132]</a></span>
-old men, and glittering in the epaulets of flighty
-young officers. There were knots of people grouped
-about in every direction,&mdash;French girls, by the side of
-their chaperons, immersed in needle-work; imperious
-English misses staring haughtily at the officers; ladies
-of opulent financial circles, in striking toilets of the
-last mode, fresh from Paris, and a few relics of the
-"<i>Ancienne Noblesse</i>," plainly attired, and looking curiously
-and, perhaps, disdainfully from their small exclusive
-<i>coterie</i>, at all this bourgeois splendor. Old women
-with weather-beaten, parchment faces, under neat frilled
-caps, were possibly retrieving, in their old age, the errors
-of a stormy youth, by carrying on the "<i>Service des
-chaises</i>." Others were plying a brisk trade among the
-children by the sale of cakes, plaisirs, and parlor balloons.</p>
-
-<p>Joining a group of acquaintances, Victor fastidiously
-placed Mathilde's chair in a position sheltered from inconvenient
-sunlight, in proper proximity to the music,
-and where no dust could tarnish the hem of her floating
-immaculate robe. In these commonplace "<i>petits soins</i>,"
-common enough in the life of any woman of society,
-Mathilde recognized a spirit of sincere devotion and
-protecting affection, which gave her, at the same time, a
-thrill of joy, and an undefined sense of apprehension
-and lingering regret. The Contesse d'Hivry passed,
-in the world's estimation, as a model of happiness, and,
-in one sense, she was happy. Gifted with health, a
-kindly, joyous nature, a due share of worldly advantages,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[133]</a></span>
-and an easy philosophy which enabled her to
-accept cheerfully all daily cares and petty vexations, she
-was to be envied. But she had, as we all have, her own
-particular demon, who was fond of drawing aside a dark,
-impenetrable curtain, and showing her, in a vision of exceeding
-loveliness, the might-have-beens, and the might-be,
-of this deceptive life, and just as she would rush
-forward to seize on these delicious illusions, they would
-straightway vanish, leaving her to stare once more
-hopelessly at the same dark, impenetrable curtain. As
-the countess looked out beyond the great trees at the
-velvet sward of the Tapis Vert, at the orange-shrubs in
-their green boxes, at the rows of antique statues on their
-solitary perches, leading to the great fountain, and then
-the broad massive steps leading at last to the distant
-château, she wondered whether the little demon of "<i>le
-grand Monarque</i>," who had cooked in his majesty's
-behalf so many pleasant scenes, had ever the audacity
-to drop, unbidden, the dark curtain before his royal eyes.
-Whatever had been done, or left undone, in the case of
-"<i>le grand Monarque</i>," the demon had conjured up spectacles
-for some of his successors, which had not been so
-pleasant. It had not been the fate of all to look from
-their bed of state, with dying eyes, on the finer alleys,
-the shining lake, and the peaceful grandeur of the royal
-grounds. The curtain had been drawn once for a sleeping
-queen, and had revealed so dreadful a picture, that
-she had fled from her bed at midnight to escape it. The
-demon, wearied with the eternal scene of the marquis<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[134]</a></span>
-and marquise, in powder and high heels, bowing and
-mincing before their Great King, had chosen to vary his
-pleasures by calling up the old forgotten Gaul, with his
-red beard and his ferocious eye, to storm and rage at
-the château gates.</p>
-
-<p>Mathilde had wandered so far away with her demon
-and his pictures, that she was astonished, in turning her
-eyes, to find Victor gazing at her with a look of troubled
-inquiry. The music had changed its character, and the
-triumphal strains of Roland à Roncevaux had given
-place to a plaintive melody of the Favorita, and Mathilde,
-glad to know her secret thoughts thus interrogated
-by Victor, threw them aside and became once more the
-gay and talkative Contesse d'Hivry.</p>
-
-<p>"How gay you are now," said Victor, acountess, just as the last strains of the Favorita had
-died away, "when I am quite the reverse. I never can
-listen to that duo without feeling its meaning,&mdash;from
-association, perhaps; for it is connected with a happy and
-still painful part of my life. Shall we walk now?"
-said Victor, as the countess made her adieus to her
-friends, and, taking his arm, they sauntered away to the
-Jardin du Roi.</p>
-
-<p>"You sang that duo once," said Mathilde, half-inquiringly,
-"and I know more than you think of your past
-life, for I will tell you with whom?"</p>
-
-<p>"You knew her, then?" asked Victor.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, I knew Pauline D'Arblay, slightly, but I have
-never seen her since her marriage, as Pauline Dusantoy."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[135]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"She is quite unchanged, at least she was when I last
-saw her, some years ago, and I think that she can never
-change," said Victor, enthusiastically. "She must always
-be beautiful, as she is good, and her native purity,
-I believe, must always resist the attacks of the world,
-and leave her unscathed from contamination."</p>
-
-<p>"Where is she now?" asked the countess, after a few
-moments of silence; for in proportion to the warmth
-evinced by Victor in recalling these memories of the
-past, his companion was chilled into quiet reflections.</p>
-
-<p>"In Algiers, I suppose," replied Victor, "where her
-husband, General Dusantoy, has been for years past."</p>
-
-<p>"My enthusiasm for Pauline is only surpassed by my
-affection and reverence for her husband. I have known
-Dusantoy and have loved him from my earliest childhood,
-and have received from him more proofs of undeviating
-friendship and unwearied devotion than I can
-ever repay. He has saved my life, too, though he unwittingly
-took from me, what I believed at that time to
-be all that made life desirable," said Victor sadly, as
-they approached the palings of the Jardin Du Roi,
-through which the red and yellow roses and peonies,
-confident in their gorgeousness, were nodding their heads
-insolently at the <i>gens d'arme</i>, who paced listlessly before
-the gate. The verbenas and pansies, equally brilliant
-but less flaunting, were dotted about in compact
-groups in the parterres and on the lawn. The statue,
-surmounting the column in the centre of the lawn,
-blackened and defaced by the wear and tear of years,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[136]</a></span>
-looked down grimly from its pedestal, as if to impose
-silence on all beneath. So that the jardin, in its absolute
-repose, found little favor in the eyes of children and
-nurses, who respectively chose for their gambols and
-their flirtations some more joyous and expansive locality.
-Its sole occupants on this occasion were an elderly
-priest, too much absorbed in his breviary to be conscious
-of the rustling of Mathilde's dress as she passed
-him, together with a pensive soldier, who possibly
-sought diversion from the pangs of unrequited affection
-by tracing with a penknife, on the stone bench
-which he occupied, an accurate outline of his sword.</p>
-
-<p>"You knew Pauline d'Arblay as a child," said the
-countess to Victor, as they seated themselves on a bench
-at the extremity of the lawn.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, we were brought up together,&mdash;that is, our
-families were very intimate. She was the only child of
-her parents, and I was the youngest of a large family;
-but as my brothers and sisters were much older than
-myself, and Pauline was nearer my age, we were always
-together, and, until I was sent to college, she was my
-constant playmate."</p>
-
-<p>"You must regard her as a sister, then," said Mathilde.
-"Remembrances of childish intimacy and souvenirs
-of soiled pinafores and soiled faces, I should think,
-would always be destructive of romance."</p>
-
-<p>"It might be so, if the transformation of later years
-did not suggest other sentiments,&mdash;sentiments which,
-unhappily for us, were only understood when too late<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[137]</a></span>
-for our mutual happiness. I had scarcely seen Pauline
-since our days of hide-and-seek in the château grounds,
-until I finished my course at St. Cyr, and returned a
-sub-lieutenant, to find that Pauline, the child of the
-pinafore, as you say, had expanded into a lovely and
-lovable girl. At that age, however, I believe that few
-can experience a serious passion. Curiosity and inexperience
-of life prevent concentration on any one object,
-and make us incapable of estimating things at their
-proper value. At college, too, I had formed a romantic
-friendship for one of my classmates,&mdash;Dusantoy,&mdash;and
-the ardor of this sentiment occupied me entirely, to the
-exclusion of all others. Dusantoy had a rich uncle, who
-had purchased a large estate in the vicinity of our châteaux.
-He came to visit his uncle, but passed his time
-naturally with me. Pauline shared our walks and our
-drives. We read to her as she embroidered or sewed,
-and she sang to us in the summer twilight. We were
-very gay and <i>insouciant</i> in those days, little dreaming
-that our innocent affection would give place to a mad
-passion, that would one day separate us eternally, and
-fill our lives with unsatisfied longings. It was not until
-some time after, that a winter passed by us both in the
-gay world of Paris revealed to me the nature of my
-love for Pauline. A jealous fear took possession of me.
-Seeing her the object of universal homage and admiration
-induced me to declare my love. She had already
-discarded wealthy and brilliant suitors; and for my
-sake. But, alas! I was the cadet of the family, with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[138]</a></span>
-only a good name, my sword, <i>et voila tout</i>! Pauline's
-mamma was more prudent than her daughter and myself.
-Circumstances favored her, and separated us. I
-was ordered to Africa, and Pauline returned to the château;
-but we parted hopefully and confidently, vowing
-eternal constancy. When we next met, she was the
-wife of another man, and that man was my best friend,
-Dusantoy."</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Mon pauvre ami</i>," said Mathilde, almost inaudibly,
-and her hand unconsciously rested on his. He pressed
-it to his lips, and they were both silent. Victor's
-wound was deep as ever; but the poignancy of such a
-grief is already much diminished when the consoling
-voice of another woman and the pressure of her hand
-can soothe for an instant the anguish of the past.</p>
-
-<p>"You know, dear Mathilde," continued Victor, "the
-history of Pauline's misfortunes,&mdash;the sudden death of
-her parents, her father's embarrassments and insolvency,
-and how on his death-bed he implored his only child to
-save the honor of his name by accepting the hand of a
-man in every way worthy of her, and who, at his uncle's
-recent death, had come into possession of an immense
-fortune, a portion of a Conte d'Arblay's forfeited estate.
-I was in Africa when the news came to me that
-Pauline was affianced to Dusantoy. But I heard it
-without a murmur; for I heard it from Dusantoy's own
-lips. He had been sent to Algiers on an important
-mission, and came to confide in me in all the rapture
-and ecstasy of his love. Nothing makes one so selfish<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[139]</a></span>
-and inconsiderate as an absorbing happiness. Besides,
-poor Dusantoy believed my love for Pauline to
-be purely fraternal. In my grief and despair, I believed
-once that I must tell him that he was robbing me of my
-sole treasure and hope in life; but, fortunately for him,&mdash;for
-us both, perhaps, for I should never have ceased
-to repent such an act of cowardice,&mdash;I was seized with
-brain fever, and for some time my life was despaired
-of. Meanwhile, Dusantoy, with characteristic devotion,
-postponed his return to France and to Pauline, that he
-might watch over me; and to his untiring assiduity and
-unceasing care I undoubtedly owe my recovery. But
-that is not all. Another accident befell me, which
-would unquestionably have proved fatal to my existence
-had not the skill and courage of Dusantoy again
-interposed to save me. At the beginning of my convalescence,
-when I was first able to walk a few steps in
-the open air, I was one day pacing the court-yard of
-the house where I lodged, when a low, suppressed roar
-struck my ear, and turning my head, I saw that a large
-lion had entered the open door-way, and was standing
-within a few paces of me. My first emotion was not
-that of terror,&mdash;not the same which I see on your face
-at this moment, <i>chère contesse</i>" said Victor, laughing;
-"for I recognized the animal as a tame, well-conducted
-lion belonging to a gentleman living in the outskirts of
-the city, and was about to approach him, when the sight
-of blood trickling from a wound in his side, and the
-menacing look of his eye, warned me to retreat. Escape<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[140]</a></span>
-by the outer door was impossible, as well as entrance
-to the house, for the lion barred the passage
-which led to both doors; but I thought of a gate leading
-to a side street, which was now my only means of
-flight. With feeble, tottering steps I had gained this
-point, and in another instant should have made my escape;
-but, by a singular fatality, the gate was bolted.
-I had neither strength to force it nor agility to scale the
-wall. The lion, irritated by his wound, and excited, as I
-found afterwards, by previous pursuit, followed me with
-another ominous roar and a look of hostility far from
-encouraging to one in my position.</p>
-
-<p>"Of all that followed I have but a confused idea. I
-was weak and ill,&mdash;my brain reeled; but I remember
-that, as the lion was about to spring, a violent blow
-made him turn with a snarl of rage, and spring towards
-a new adversary,&mdash;Dusantoy,&mdash;who stood, gun in hand,
-in the centre of the court-yard. Then the report of a
-fire-arm, and I can recall nothing further. Dusantoy
-was an admirable shot, took cool aim, and hit the lion
-in the heart. Pauline and I fancied that we felt the
-recoil of the weapon in our own hearts for many a long
-day afterwards. But perhaps it was mere fancy," said
-Victor, lightly, as he watched the cheek of the countess
-growing paler as he spoke.</p>
-
-<p>"To end my long story," continued Victor, "after
-these experiences I took a voyage to reëstablish my
-health; and, when I returned, I spent a week in the
-same house with General Dusantoy and his wife. It<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[141]</a></span>
-was heroic on my part; but I could stay no longer, and I
-have never seen them since. And now you understand,
-<i>chère contesse</i>, why I have never married."</p>
-
-<p>"I understand for the past? Yes," said Mathilde,
-rising from her seat; "but the future"&mdash;her sentence
-terminated in a shrug.</p>
-
-<p>The last rays of sunlight were gilding the head of the
-statue on the lawn; the priest had closed his book, and,
-with the swift, noiseless tread of his order, had glided
-from the garden; the melancholy soldier had girded his
-sword about him, after leaving its dimensions gracefully
-reproduced on the bench where he sat, and had followed
-the priest; the evening air was damp and chill, and Victor
-drew Mathilde's shawl around her with tender care.</p>
-
-<p>"You are tired, dear Mathilde," said Victor. "You
-are pale; I have wearied you with my long stories,
-<i>Appuyez vous bien sur moi</i>," and he drew her arm
-through his, as they turned their steps homeward.</p>
-
-<p>"You have made me so happy to-day!" said Victor,
-as they approached the house of the countess. "Will
-you give me some souvenir of this afternoon,&mdash;the
-ribbon that you wear?"</p>
-
-<p>"We will make an exchange then," said Mathilde,
-laughingly, as she handed the ribbon. "I will give a
-ribbon for the flowers in your button-hole; and we will
-see who is most true to their colors."</p>
-
-<p>A passionate pressure of the hand and a lingering
-kiss on Mathilde's primrose gloves were the only reply,
-and they parted. The delicate odor of the primrose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[142]</a></span>
-gloves lingered with Victor, as he sauntered homeward
-in the dim twilight. The earnest, almost appealing,
-look of Mathilde, as he parted from her, haunted him.</p>
-
-<p>"Could I ever forget and be happy?" he asked of
-himself. The very idea seemed to him an unpardonable
-infidelity,&mdash;a culpable forgetfulness of past memories,
-which lowered him in his own estimation. At the corner
-of the Rue Arc en Ciel he encountered Mlle. Lisa,
-hanging contentedly on the arm of Ulysse. Poor
-François and his flowers were forgotten at that moment,
-and Lisa had abandoned herself to the delights of
-allaying a jealousy successfully roused in the heart of
-the gallant Ulysse by her recent tactics.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Mon colonel</i>," said Ulysse, "a lady has called twice
-to see you in your absence. The last time she waited
-a long while in your room, and finally left a note,
-which she said was important and must be handed to
-you at once."</p>
-
-<p>"A lady! Who can it be? My venerable maiden
-aunt, I suppose," said Victor, shrugging his shoulders,
-"who has lost her vicious, snarling poodle,&mdash;a wretched
-brute that always bites my legs, when I dare to venture
-them in my aunt's snuff-colored saloon, and that I am
-expected to find for her now, by virtue of my name of
-Villefort."</p>
-
-<p>"The lady is young, handsome, and in widow's
-weeds," said Ulysse, half in reply to his colonel's muttered
-soliloquy, as he ran before him and vanished
-into the court-yard of No. 29, in search of the note.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[143]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The twilight deepened and thickened on the silent little
-street. The oil lamp, hanging from the rope at the
-corner, was lighted, but its feeble rays only penetrated a
-short distance, leaving the rest wrapt in mystery and
-gloom, and the gate opening from the Contesse d'Hivry's
-garden, François' portal of happiness, through which he
-passed into the blissful presence of his Lisa, was scarcely
-discernible. The evening was clear and fine, however,
-the stars were beginning to glimmer in the sky,
-and a faint band of light in the east was growing every
-moment into glistening silver, under the rays of the coming
-moon.</p>
-
-<p>After parting with Victor, Mathilde entered the
-<i>salon</i>, and, throwing herself languidly into a chair, recalled
-with feminine minuteness the events and conversation
-of the afternoon, until oppressed with the light
-and warmth of the house, she sought refuge in the cool
-air of the <i>balcon</i>, and, leaning on the balustrade, looked
-dreamily through the honeysuckle vines at the parterres
-and lawn beyond. The meditations of the countess,
-however, were not exclusively romantic, in spite
-of the languid grace of her attitude, and the poetic abstraction
-of her gaze. She was fortifying herself against
-an attack of imprudent tenderness, by sternly picturing
-to herself all the practical disadvantages of a marriage
-of inclination. Could she incur the lasting displeasure
-of her aunt and uncle by marrying any one save her
-cousin Armand? Could she sacrifice the half of her
-fortune, which was the penalty of such a caprice of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[144]</a></span>
-heart, and sink into comparative poverty? The souvenir
-of a single phrase, however, in the tender inflection
-of a manly voice,&mdash;"<i>Appuyez vous bien sur moi</i>,"
-was ever present to her memory quickening the beatings
-of her heart, and bringing the warm blood to her
-cheeks. The moon had risen, pouring a flood of silver
-light over François' roses, and the pots of cactus
-on the garden-wall. The countess strolled into the garden,
-and, fancying that she heard a whispered conversation
-proceeding from the little gate leading into the
-Rue Arc en Ciel, she turned her footsteps in that direction.</p>
-
-<p>"Is that you, Lisa?" asked the countess, rightly suspecting
-that the muslin dress, fluttering in the moonlight,
-could belong to none other than the daughter of the
-worthy Mme. Ledru, and that she was about to surprise
-a <i>tête-à-tête</i> between the coquettish Lisa, and her
-gardener, the enamored François.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, madame," said Lisa, "can I be of any service?"</p>
-
-<p>The countess shared poor François' partiality for
-Lisa. Her bright eyes and shining hair were pleasant
-to look at, and her quick wit and cheerful voice made her
-a nice companion, and then she enjoyed the inestimable
-privilege of living in the same house with Victor de
-Villefort. Perhaps some bit of intelligence concerning
-him would escape her,&mdash;whatever it might be, Mathilde
-knew that it would be of thrilling interest to her. If
-there was to be a morning-parade the following day,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[145]</a></span>
-Mathilde would go to the <i>Terrain de Man&oelig;uvre</i>, to
-see her hero "<i>en grande tenue</i>," in the staff of the General.</p>
-
-<p>"What a beautiful moonlight, Lisa! Will you walk
-with me towards the lake? Fetch my shawl first from
-the house."</p>
-
-<p>"Here it is, madame," said Lisa, quite breathless, as
-she returned with the shawl, and wrapped it around
-Mathilde. François unbarred the gate and they stepped
-into the street.</p>
-
-<p>"I should like to know, madame, what has befallen
-the Colonel de Villefort this evening," said Lisa, divining
-with tact the role she was destined to play.</p>
-
-<p>"What has happened?" asked Mathilde, with ill-feigned
-unconcern.</p>
-
-<p>"We cannot imagine, madame. But this afternoon,
-during the absence of Colonel de Villefort, a lady in
-deep mourning, young and handsome, called to see him.
-Finding that he was not at home, she left a note for him,
-and when the colonel read it, he was wild with excitement,
-and called to Ulysse for his horse. The horse was
-lame, and not fit for use, and the colonel swore, for the
-first time, I think since he has been in our house. That
-is saying a great deal for a <i>militaire</i>, madame. Ulysse
-has never seen the lady before. The colonel never receives
-any lady but his aunt the Marquise de Villefort,
-and that is also saying a great deal for a <i>militaire</i>,&mdash;is
-it not, madame?"</p>
-
-<p>"Well, did he get a horse?" asked Mathilde, with a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[146]</a></span>
-severity which astonished Lisa, in the unconsciousness
-of her childish babble.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, madame; there is the horse of a queer baron,
-who lives with us, who often puts his horse at the disposal
-of Monsieur le Colonel. The horse stumbles too,
-but the colonel mounted him and rode off in furious
-haste."</p>
-
-<p>"Who can she be?" asked the countess with an anxiety
-impossible to repress. "Did he take this direction
-when he rode away?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, madame, he rode toward the lake. But take
-care, take care, madame!" shrieked Lisa, as the furious
-clatter of a horse's hoofs on the pavement warned her
-of danger. They had barely time to take refuge in an
-open door-way, before a riderless horse dashed past them.</p>
-
-<p>"'Tis the baron's horse,&mdash;and the colonel, madame.
-<i>Mon Dieu! Mon Dieu!</i> What has become of him?
-Let me run for Ulysse."</p>
-
-<p>"And I will go on to the lake," said the countess; "perhaps."</p>
-
-<p>"Not alone, madame," exclaimed Lisa.</p>
-
-<p>But the countess had already disappeared under the
-shadow of the houses, and Lisa, equally fleet of foot,
-vanished in the opposite direction, in search of Ulysse.
-Mathilde hurried on,&mdash;whither she knew not. A blind
-instinct stronger than reason warned her that delay
-would be fatal, and that the life, grown to be so precious
-in her eyes, was awaiting her coming, flickering
-and failing, perhaps, as it hovered near death, which<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[147]</a></span>
-was for her to avert. She redoubled her pace, and flew
-through the silent street, where she had passed but a few
-hours before leaning on Victor's arm. She saw the lake
-before her, calm and silvery. There was a hill to descend,
-and at the foot, by the side of the lake, was a loose pile
-of stones. She sprang forward to pick up something in
-the road. It was a riding-whip which she knew well
-and had handled a hundred times. For an instant she
-was motionless, her head swam, and her eyes closed to
-shut out the sight of a prostrate form, lying at her feet
-so still and calm in the white moonlight. She knew
-that, too. She knew well the blonde hair stained with
-blood, trickling from a wound near the temple; and with
-a wild cry for help, Mathilde raised the head, half-buried
-in mud and water, and gazed despairingly at the closed
-eyes and rigid features of Victor de Villefort.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[148]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3 style="margin-top: 2.5em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;">III.</h3>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">The</span> autumn days had come again, and the sun shone
-on heaps of dried brown leaves, which went whirling
-about in the Rue Arc en Ciel, with every gust of wind.
-Mlle. Lisa was in her accustomed seat in the door-way,
-No. 29, with shining hair and rosy cheeks, absorbed in
-the customary knitting, but still capable of casting sly
-glances in the direction whence François or Ulysse
-might finally appear. She was not fated to languish
-long in solitude, for the faithful François, never sufficiently
-confident of his personal attractions to present
-himself empty-handed before the object of his admiration,
-was soon standing by her side, fortified with a propitiatory
-offering of grapes.</p>
-
-<p>"O François," exclaimed Lisa, "how glad I am to see
-you! Has Mme. la Contesse really gone?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, she has gone," replied François. "Monsieur
-Armand and the aunt of madame have accompanied her.
-But you should have seen her pale face, all covered with
-tears. It would have made you weep, too, Mlle. Lisa,
-for it made me. Just think, mademoiselle, she never<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[149]</a></span>
-once tasted of the grapes that I picked for her this morning,
-and placed so neatly in a little basket."</p>
-
-<p>And poor François groaned audibly over this conclusive
-proof of the countess's changed and melancholy
-condition.</p>
-
-<p>"Ah, poor madame, she has been so ill! But why
-did she go, then?" asked Lisa.</p>
-
-<p>"Monsieur Armand and her aunt told her that she
-would never get well here, and that she needed change
-of air, and so they hurried her away,&mdash;only giving her
-time to write a few lines to your colonel, whose life is
-not worth saving, if he cannot love Mme. la Contesse.
-Here is the packet for Colonel de Villefort."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, it was very brave and good of madame," said
-Lisa, "to find the colonel, and to pull his head out of
-the water. He must have suffocated, so says the doctor,
-if madame had not found him when she did. But there
-is some mystery about the handsome lady in deep mourning.
-I know who she is. She is the widow of General
-Dusantoy, who lately died in Algiers; and she came every
-day to inquire for Colonel de Villefort, when he was not
-expected to live; but since he is better, I have seen no
-more of her."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, I will say again," said François, "that if your
-colonel finds the lady handsomer and better than Mme.
-la Contesse, then madame had better left his head in the
-water."</p>
-
-<p>Whilst Victor and his affairs were thus discussed below-stairs
-with the intelligence and fairness usually developed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[150]</a></span>
-in such discussions, he sat in his room above, pale
-and thin, the shadow of his former self,&mdash;twisting his
-blonde mustache, and gazing moodily through the window
-at distant hills, all brown and yellow with autumn
-leaves and autumn sunlight. His meditations were far
-from cheerful. People were perpetually saving his life.
-Here was a new dilemma: Pauline free once more,&mdash;free
-and true to her early love. Happiness once more in
-his grasp; but Mathilde&mdash;was not his honor half-engaged,
-as were his feelings a few weeks since? Could
-he so readily forget all that had passed between them,
-and all that he owed her? Could he repay the debt of
-his life by vapid excuses or by cold desertion? He
-gazed mechanically at colored prints of Abelard and
-Heloise, hanging side by side on the wall, and hoped
-that inspiration, or at least consolation, might descend
-on him from these victims of unhappy passion. But
-in Abelard's face he looked in vain for anything beyond
-conceited pedantry, and Heloise was too much absorbed
-in her own mighty resignation to trouble herself concerning
-the woes of others. A tap at the door roused
-him at last from this unprofitable contemplation, and in
-reply to his "<i>entrez</i>," the bright face of Mlle. Lisa appeared
-at the open door.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Bon jour</i>, monsieur; here is a letter from Mme. la
-Contesse d'Hivry, who has gone this morning with her
-aunt and Monsieur Armand," and Lisa paused to notice
-the effect of her abrupt announcement.</p>
-
-<p>"Gone!" said Victor, with unfeigned astonishment.
-"Where has she gone?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[151]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>But Lisa observed that the hand of the colonel, as he
-opened the packet, was, in spite of recent illness, ominously
-steady, and that the surprise naturally occasioned
-by the news of the countess's departure was quite unmingled
-with the grief and despair which mademoiselle
-had kindly hoped to evoke. If she had dared, however,
-to remain until the opening of the packet, her curiosity
-and interest would have been rewarded by observing
-Victor's start of pained surprise as a faded flower fell
-from the open letter, and his sigh of genuine regret as
-the memory of the last happy day passed with Mathilde
-d'Hivry came to him in full force, effacing, for the
-moment, all trace of his recent reflections, and investing
-the image of Mathilde with all the poetical charm of an
-unattainable dream of happiness. She was no longer
-an obstacle in the fulfilment of his life-long hopes,&mdash;hopes
-persistently cherished, yet cruelly baffled. He
-looked wistfully at the faded flower as he crushed it in
-his hand, and recalled their last parting, and though the
-souvenirs of the day&mdash;the flower from his button-hole,
-and the ribbon which she had worn&mdash;had been lightly
-exchanged and laughingly given, he knew well that the
-worthless relic, which he now crumbled into dust and
-threw from the window, would have been tenderly kept
-and treasured in good faith, had his destiny so willed it.
-Victor turned sadly to the letter which lay before him,
-in Mathilde's delicate writing. It began cheerfully
-enough, however, as her letters were wont to do.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[152]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"I cannot leave you, dear Victor, without a word of
-parting, and I fear that a personal interview between
-invalids, like ourselves, might not conduce to our mutual
-recovery. In my own case, absolute change of air
-and scene are ordered, together with perfect quiet and
-rest. The one is easily gained by going to Italy; but do
-we ever attain the other? or would we attain it, if we
-could? When we next meet, for we must meet some
-day, <i>mon ami</i>, we shall know, by looking in each other's
-eyes, how obedient we have been to our physician's advice,
-and how great has been its efficacy. The climate
-of Paris will heal in your case, dear Victor, all that
-time has left unhealed, and I shall prepare for your
-coming, by making a visit of explanations as well as of
-adieus. Lest you find this enigmatical, I must explain,
-that certain rumors concerning us, so rife in our little
-town, have reached the ears of one who daily awaits you
-in Paris. I shall see Pauline Dusantoy, and dissipate
-all doubts, by announcing my immediate departure for
-Italy. I send you a faded rose-bud, which you may remember
-in all its freshness, and which I have no heart
-to throw away. But you know how jealous Armand is.
-Adieu, dear Victor, my hope in the future is, that the
-life which I have just seen trembling on the brink of
-eternity, may be crowned with full and perfect happiness.
-Adieu."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Colonel de Villefort was still weak and easily moved,
-and a choking sensation in the throat made him quite<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[153]</a></span>
-uncomfortable, as he placed carefully in a little drawer
-the letter which he had just read. He was still haunted
-by a wistful look of soft and winning eyes, and he seemed
-to hear the whispered adieu of a silvery voice, whose
-pure tones had so often charmed and soothed him. Is
-the adieu eternal? he asked himself. I think not, for I
-want no nobler and truer friend for my Pauline than the
-Contesse d'Hivry, and Pauline will hold sacred as myself
-the debt of gratitude due to the woman who has saved
-my life. But the idea of marrying Monsieur Armand!
-To be sure he is handsome, rich, well-connected, and has
-a certain charm in conversation, but quite incapable of
-appreciating so noble a being as Mathilde; and then
-what want of taste on her part! Victor's impatience
-was changing rapidly into indignation, at the thought of
-the Contesse d'Hivry presuming to marry, or trying to
-be happy, when another knock at the door changed the
-current of his thoughts. This time it was Ulysse
-and not Lisa who was the bearer of a letter, covered
-with armorial bearings, and addressed with many flourishes
-to Colonel de Villefort.</p>
-
-<p>"What does the German baron want now?" said
-Victor, with an impatient shrug as he glanced at the
-writing, "after breaking my neck with his wretched
-brute of a horse? He sends many compliments of congratulation
-to Monsieur le Colonel for his rapid recovery
-after the deplorable accident, etc., etc., etc. And as he
-understands that Monsieur le Colonel contemplates a visit
-to Paris, the moment that his health permits, may Monsieur<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[154]</a></span>
-le Baron hope for his gracious intercession in his behalf,
-that he may at last receive the reward of merit, the
-much-desired cross of the Legion of Honor. Just as I
-supposed," said Victor, laughing. "It would save me
-much trouble and mental agony to give him mine, only
-I remember that Pauline has a weakness for these baubles."</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Mon colonel</i>, may I say a word?" asked Ulysse,
-awkwardly, turning the door-knob to keep himself in
-countenance. "Mlle. Lisa"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Is that the word, my good Ulysse?" said Victor,
-waiting in vain for Ulysse to complete his sentence. "I
-understand that you should think it the only word worth
-uttering, and I think you quite right. There is only
-poor François, who may object to have his heart broken.
-Lisa is a nice girl, and I have promised her that you
-should not leave me."</p>
-
-<p>"Thank you, <i>Mon colonel</i>," said Ulysse, glowing
-with exultation and triumphant pride.</p>
-
-<p>"Now pack my portmanteau. I shall go to Paris
-to-morrow in the early train."</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[155]</a></span></p>
-
-<h1 style="margin-top: 8em; margin-bottom: 8em;">THE ROMANCE OF A WESTERN TRIP.</h1>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[157]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h2 style="margin-top: 3em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;"><a name="The_Romance_of_a_Western_Trip" id="The_Romance_of_a_Western_Trip"><span class="smcap">The Romance of a Western Trip.</span></a></h2>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;">
-<img style="margin-bottom: 1.5em;" src="images/image1.jpg" width="100" height="18" alt="fancy line" />
-</div>
-
-<div><img class="dropcap" src="images/dropcap-t.jpg"
-width="51" height="85" alt="t" />
-</div><p><span class="dropletter">T</span>HE two following letters, received by me in the
-year 1852, will explain themselves.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p style="margin-top: 2em;">"<span class="smcap">My dear W&mdash;&mdash;</span>: When I left you at
-the depot in Boston, and was whirled away
-westward, I knew not from what point I should address
-you. I promised you, on the last evening that we
-passed together, that from time to time I would, for
-your delectation, give you an account of any adventure
-I might chance to meet with in my wanderings; as, also,
-to try my hand at pen-and-ink sketches of men and
-manners.</p>
-
-<p>"Could you appreciate my surroundings, you would
-give me credit for a truthful adherence to my word.
-As to where I am at this present writing, I cannot say.
-In order to understand why I make so strange a statement,
-I must begin my story some weeks back, and
-narrate an incident that befell me, and led to the penning
-of this epistle.</p>
-
-<p>"The month of May, in our northern climate, needs<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[158]</a></span>
-no laudation as to its charms; and, after a sojourn of
-many years in your crowded city, I was fully prepared
-to appreciate all the beauty of this spring-time among
-the wilds of Michigan. Therefore, after leaving Detroit
-for the interior, I soon found (as the days were growing
-much warmer) that it would be wisdom for me to discard
-most of the luggage with which I had encumbered
-myself; as, by so doing, I could, as it were, cut loose
-from dependence upon vehicles of all descriptions; and,
-when my desires pointed that way, or a necessity arose,
-I could make use of those powers of locomotion with
-which nature has endowed me. Therefore, at the termination
-of the stage-route at H&mdash;&mdash;, I selected a few
-indispensable articles, and, transferring them to a knapsack,
-sent back my trunk to an acquaintance at Detroit,
-with a request to hold it subject to my order, and prepared
-myself for rough travelling in the interior, or, as
-a New Englander would denominate it, 'the backwoods.'</p>
-
-<p>"At the country tavern, in which I abode as a guest
-from Saturday until Monday, I made inquiries of the
-landlord as to the route I was to take, and the nature of
-the roads between H&mdash;&mdash; and the town of N&mdash;&mdash;, which
-I desired to visit. My host, a shrewd, bright-eyed little
-man of forty, and a former resident of New Hampshire,
-lowered his brows, and assumed a dubious look as he listened
-to me; and, on my asking for an explanation of this
-change of countenance, informed me that, had I money of
-any amount about my person, I had better look to the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[159]</a></span>
-availability of my pistols, and pay particular attention to
-the company I might fall in with; for, within the past two
-years, a number of travellers had been relieved of their
-possessions, and two of them murdered on the roads I
-should be under the necessity of passing over. The
-country being sparsely settled, the officers of the law
-had been unable to trace the perpetrators of these acts
-of felony. I listened to these details with much uneasiness,
-for, on leaving Boston, I had, by an acquaintance,
-been intrusted with a package of three hundred dollars,
-to deliver to Judge Perry, of N&mdash;&mdash;, to meet some payments
-becoming due on a purchase of pine lands; in
-addition, I had upon my person some means of my own,
-the loss of which would indeed be a calamity of a serious
-nature, as I was too far away from friends to avail
-myself of their good services. I assumed an air of ease,
-however, which I was far from feeling, and left my loquacious
-friend, laughing defiance at all the dangers of
-the way. I had been unable to obtain a conveyance
-at anything like a reasonable rate; therefore, as the
-weather was so charming, had determined to undertake
-the journey of seventy miles on foot, trusting to obtain
-a ride from such travellers I might chance now and then
-to meet going westward. For two days, I pressed cheerfully
-forward, being kindly welcomed to a supper and bed
-in the cabin of the settlers. The roads were rough, and at
-places illy defined, and I was often at fault as to my route;
-this, and want of practice as a pedestrian, made my progress
-slow. As the evening of the third day drew near, I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[160]</a></span>
-judged I must still be some twenty or twenty-five miles
-from my destination. I was ascending a hill over the
-worst road that I had yet encountered. The dwarf pine
-clothed the whole declivity, and rendered the approaching
-night more gloomy than it would have been in the
-more open country. I was greatly fatigued from my
-long day's walk, and, coming to a large boulder that
-had evidently rolled from the higher ground above, I
-seated myself to gain strength, and lifted my hat to let
-the wind cool my heated forehead. Down, far away to
-my right, I could hear the gurgling and splashing of a
-torrent, while the sough of the breeze among the pines
-made a weird music that added somewhat to a depression
-that had been, for the last hour, gradually stealing
-over me. The romantic visions I had formerly entertained
-of nature in her solitary moments had all departed,
-and I longed for the companionship of man.
-Some five miles back, I had been at fault as to my
-route; but, trusting to good fortune, had taken the road
-I was now upon. As I sat meditating, I all at once
-recollected that I had been cautioned, by a man of
-whom I had inquired, against taking the way that led
-to the hills; for, by so doing, I should go astray. Undecided
-as to whether it would be better to retrace my
-steps, or go on, in hopes of finding a lodging for the
-night, I had arisen, and was hesitating which way I
-should turn, when I heard the tramp of horses' hoofs,
-and down, from the higher ground on my left, rode two
-men.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[161]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"The obscurity had become so great while I had lingered,
-that I could form but an indefinite idea as to their
-characteristics. The foremost, mounted on a dark-bay
-horse, was slightly built, and evidently young. His felt
-hat was so slouched over his face that all I could note
-was, that he wore beard and mustache long, both of
-intense blackness.</p>
-
-<p>"His companion was a much more powerful man, and
-sat upon the roan mare he bestrode in a careless manner;
-his face, also, was hidden by an equal amount of
-hair, and, in addition, warm as was the weather, his neck
-was muffled in a large woollen comforter. My presence
-evidently took them by surprise, for they abruptly
-checked their horses, and the younger man pulled
-sharply upon the bridle, half-turning his steed, and
-seemed about to retrace the way he had come, without
-greeting me. He, however, recovered his self-possession,
-and with a 'Good-evening, stranger,' continued on
-until he was at my side. I was truly thankful at this
-encounter, for I felt my doubts as to my movements
-would now be solved. In a few words, I stated that I
-had wandered from the road I should have taken, and
-asked their assistance to set me right. The younger
-man seemed to labor under restraint, and spoke but little;
-the other, however, offered to show me the way, and
-stated they were going in the direction I desired to pursue.
-They spoke in a manner and used language that
-convinced me they were men of superior culture from<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[162]</a></span>
-those one might expect to meet in the wild and sparsely
-settled district in which I was now travelling.</p>
-
-<p>"'We have no time to spare, if we would get out of
-these pine-lands and beyond the river-ford before the
-darkness becomes troublesome,' said the larger man, as
-he urged his horse to a quick walk along the road up the
-hill. 'You had best follow me, while my companion can
-bring up the rear.'</p>
-
-<p>"Without hesitation, I acted upon his suggestion, as I
-was anxious to reach a place of rest. 'You should consider
-yourself highly honored to be so escorted and
-guarded from the dangers of the road,' said my guide, as
-he half-turned in his saddle, with what I then thought a
-jocular, but have since recalled as a sinister, laugh.
-'Have you any valuable property about you, that you
-can feel grateful for the convoy?' Without a thought of
-the wisdom of silence on this point, I answered: 'More
-than I should care or can afford to lose, for I am a thousand
-miles from home, and among strangers.' The next
-moment I felt as if I could have bitten out my tongue
-for its imprudence; for flashing upon me came the remembrance
-of the landlord's tales of robbery and violence.
-We had turned from the main road to the right,
-into a narrower track, and were descending the hill toward
-the river, as I judged; for each moment the noise of its
-waters were more audible. In a brief time after my last
-remark, I felt that the horseman behind me was pressing
-closer than was needful, and I partly stepped from the
-path, intending to let him pass; for I instinctively felt I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[163]</a></span>
-would rather have them both in front. As I did so, I
-almost unconsciously placed my hand upon my revolver.
-The younger man stooped from his saddle as he came
-abreast of me, and, speaking in a cold, hard tone, exclaimed,
-'My good fellow, we will take charge of your
-watch and money.' He leaned forward as he spoke, as
-if to grasp my collar. At the same moment he who
-rode in front leaped to the ground, and turned toward
-me. I saw my danger in an instant, and, quickly drawing
-my pistol, fired at the head of my nearest foe. The
-flash of the powder gave me a more distinct view of his
-face than I had yet had. As he recoiled from me, I noticed
-a peculiar droop of the left eyelid, and heard the
-expression, 'My God, I am hit!' At the same moment
-a crushing blow descended upon my skull, and a thousand
-stars seemed falling around me, and all was blackness.
-My return to consciousness was occasioned by a
-sudden contact with cold water, and I awoke to find
-myself struggling in the midst of a rushing torrent.
-Instinctively I grasped at a support, comprehending
-my situation in an instant. I had been hurled by my
-assailants into the stream we had been approaching, and
-they undoubtedly supposed that I was beyond the
-chance of recovery. The moon was not yet up, and I
-could discern nothing except the general outlines of the
-banks of the stream, which, rising high on each side,
-showed me I was at the bottom of a ravine. It was
-many minutes ere my efforts were crowned with any
-degree of success; at last, as I was hurled along, my<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[164]</a></span>
-hands came in contact with the drooping bough of a
-tree, and, weak as I was from the blow I had received
-and the benumbing effect of my immersion in the icy
-current, the principle of self-preservation enabled me to
-put forth almost superhuman strength, and to retain my
-hold on this anchor of hope.</p>
-
-<p>"After many abortive attempts, I succeeded in dragging
-myself up, as it were out of the jaws of death,
-upon the rocks which composed the banks of the stream.
-As soon as I felt I was safe from the danger of a watery
-grave, my strength left me, and I fell back almost utterly
-devoid of life. My head felt as if a thousand triphammers
-were at work upon it; a deadly sickness came
-over me, and I found that I was relapsing into insensibility.
-By a great effort, however, I overcame this
-lethargy, and crawled on my hands and knees up over
-the piled-up rocks and bare roots of trees, until I found
-myself upon the soft moss and dead leaves beyond.
-Here I lay for a long time, slowly recovering. On an
-examination of my person, I found my watch and purse
-gone, as well as the money-belt containing the three
-hundred dollars in gold with which I had been intrusted.
-But what I felt to be a more severe loss than all else
-was a valuable diamond ring, that had once been my
-dead mother's, and given to me by her in her last illness.
-Some hundred and fifty dollars in bank-bills and
-a letter of introduction to Judge P&mdash;&mdash;, placed two days
-before in one of my boots, had escaped the search of the
-highwaymen. None of my bones were broken; but a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[165]</a></span>
-frightful swelling upon my head proved the force of the
-blow dealt me, evidently from the loaded handle of a
-riding-whip. The pain was intense, and, not knowing
-how serious might be the injury I had received, I determined
-to seek some shelter while I was yet able to
-do so. I cannot describe the agony I endured in the
-next three or four hours. Though weak and suffering,
-I succeeded in finding by accident a narrow by-path,
-or trail, leading through the forest, and continued on,
-shivering with cold, and frequently obliged to throw
-myself upon the ground, in order to gain strength and
-rally my wandering senses. The moon came up, and
-my knowledge of the time of its rising proved to me
-that I must have been insensible and in the hands of the
-two ruffians for at least two hours. I was now in a
-level country once more, having left the hills behind me,
-and, as the moon rose higher in the heavens, I could
-distinguish my surroundings without difficulty. I
-stumbled along the path I was treading, faint and ill,
-and at last, as I began to think I could go no further,
-came to a clearing, and, at my left, beheld a
-rough log-house among the charred stumps of the trees.
-I reached the door, and, after many efforts, awakened
-the sleepy inmates. A good-natured face greeted my
-sight, as a bushy head was protruded from a narrow
-window at my right, and a kindly voice asked, 'What
-is wanted?' Each instant growing fainter, I was
-hardly able to articulate; and, before I could explain
-my position, I sank insensible upon the threshold.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[166]</a></span>
-When I say that it is almost three weeks since that
-occurrence, and that from then until now I have not
-been in the open air, you will understand how desperate
-was the illness that followed. My honest host and his
-good wife have watched over me as if I had been a son
-instead of a stranger; and to their tender nursing I owe
-my recovery, for no physician has seen me. Far away
-from any settlement, upon one of the least frequented
-cross-roads in the wild section in which they dwell,
-sometimes weeks would elapse without a wayfarer
-passing their humble abode. Now, once more, I am
-able to arise and sit in the sunshine; and I hope soon
-to be in a condition to seek out the authors of my sufferings.
-As I have lain on my bed, too weak to move, I
-have thought much, and, strange as it may appear, I
-feel an innate conviction that I shall not only discover
-the two men who endeavored to murder me, but that I
-shall also recover the property I have lost. The reason
-that I entertain this opinion is this: The very fact of my
-long insensibility after the blow upon my head, and the
-subsequent disposal of my body by casting it into the
-mountain torrent, all go to confirm me in my belief that
-they thought me dead. Consequently, having no fear
-of my reappearance, they will not seek to conceal themselves,
-or seek refuge from detection by flight. The
-old lady (whom I have found a great gossip), I presume,
-thinks it a 'God-send' my being here; for she
-can now give vent to her loquacity; and, were it not
-that this letter was already frightfully long, I would<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[167]</a></span>
-quote some of her decidedly original remarks for your
-entertainment. I accounted for the plight I was in by
-stating that I had missed my footing in the darkness,
-and fallen into the stream, striking my head upon a
-projecting rock as I descended. At night when my
-host has returned from his labor, I have gleaned from
-him a full description of the country for miles around,
-and find that I can reach N&mdash;&mdash; in a day's ride, and
-that it is one of the most noteworthy places this side of
-Detroit. As soon as I dare, I shall proceed there, and
-my next letter will undoubtedly be mailed from that
-point. I shall not tell you that I wish I had remained
-in Boston; for to do so would be useless and foolish.
-I am now desirous of going forward to the accomplishment
-of the object I first had in view when I left
-you, but shall remain, however, in this part of the country,
-both to regain my health and strength, and to seek
-out and punish my assailants."</p></blockquote>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p style="margin-top: 2em;">"<span class="smcap">My dear W&mdash;&mdash;</span>: When I finished my last epistle, I
-little thought I should allow six weeks to elapse before
-I again took up the thread of my story; but, my mind
-and time have been so fully occupied, that I must crave
-your indulgence. It is now the latter part of July, and
-as you know, at this season of the year one does not feel
-disposed to be loquacious. That you may fully comprehend
-my position, however, I must be somewhat more
-minute in my descriptions than I could wish to be. The
-sun was near its setting on as lovely a day as I have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[168]</a></span>
-ever seen, when I approached the house of which I am
-still an inmate. The kind-hearted man who had given
-me shelter and care during my illness, brought me to
-the village of N&mdash;&mdash;, and seemed to regret parting from
-me. I walked up the pretty street towards a large,
-white house standing upon an eminence at its termination,
-which had been pointed out to me as the residence
-of Judge Perry. As I paused at a gate leading into the
-finely-kept grounds, I could, without an effort of the
-imagination, fancy that I was once more in dear New
-England, for all evidence of newness seemed to have
-been obliterated. I turned and looked back upon the
-scene; the cottages quietly nestling amid a multitude of
-shade-trees, now clothed in their loveliest garments of
-green; far away the encircling hills, and, a little to my
-left, a pretty stream creeping down the valley, its
-waters turned to molten silver by the glance of the
-sinking sun. While lost in revery I had not noticed the
-approach of an elderly gentleman, who now came forward,
-and placed his hand upon the latch of the gate at
-which I was standing, at the same time greeting me
-with the remark of 'A delightful ending to as beautiful
-a day as one need wish for.' I responded, eulogizing
-both the weather and scenery. Whilst speaking,
-I took cognizance of my companion, and felt sure, from
-the descriptions I had received, that I was addressing
-the owner of the residence; and he, in answer to my inquiry,
-answered in the affirmative, and said, 'You are
-Mr. James H&mdash;-, I presume. I have been expecting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[169]</a></span>
-you for some time, having received a letter from my
-friend in Boston, advising me of your intention of visiting
-me. I heartily welcome you, and trust that on
-further acquaintance we shall be mutually pleased with
-each other; but I am keeping you here at the gate, when
-I should show you truer hospitality by inviting you
-within.' I accepted his courtesy and was soon in a
-pleasant bed-chamber, where I made such a toilet as my
-limited means afforded. As I descended the stairs in
-response to the summons of the supper-bell, I felt the
-awkwardness of my position; placed as I was, without
-a suitable wardrobe, in a family of such evident social
-standing. Trusting soon to remedy this deficiency, I entered
-a large apartment at the left, and found my entertainer
-ready to lead me to the supper-room. I made
-some excuses as to my appearance, which he turned off
-with a jest, and, opening a door, ushered me to the well-spread
-table. As we came forward, a young lady arose
-from beside an open window, where she had evidently
-been awaiting us, and I was introduced to my entertainer's
-only daughter. You have frequently bantered me
-on my stoical indifference to female beauty. And now,
-when I tell you that she whose hand I took was one of
-the most lovely of women, you will not have occasion to
-make allowance for undue enthusiasm. I shall not here
-attempt to describe her, further than to say, she was a
-blonde, with glorious eyes and a wonderful wealth of
-hair. Her voice was music itself, and her every movement
-denoted the grace of a well-bred lady. As we<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[170]</a></span>
-seated ourselves at the table, I regained my self-possession,
-which had been disturbed at this unexpected
-vision of loveliness. We chatted cheerfully as we partook
-of the tea and toast, and I soon felt as if with
-friends of long standing. When the repast ended, the
-daughter lovingly placed her hand on her father's arm
-to detain him, and my eyes encountered upon it a jewelled
-ring that flashed like a thing of life in the lamplight.
-Could I be dreaming? For an instant my brain
-whirled and I grew giddy, for I had discovered that
-which I so much prized, and had lost,&mdash;the last gift of
-my dead mother. This ring, from the peculiarity of its
-construction, and the antique setting of the stones, I
-could not mistake, and yet I could in no wise account
-for what I saw. One glance at that lovely face, whose
-every line spoke of innocence, was enough to drive away
-all suspicions as to her complicity with the men who had
-sought my life. I cannot detail to you the incidents of
-that evening; for, short as has been the time since, I have
-forgotten them. I was as one in a maze, and talked mechanically,
-and only awoke to a recollection of what
-courtesy demanded, when Judge Perry remarked 'that
-as I was evidently much fatigued, and not yet in my
-usual health, they would allow me to retire.' I sat at
-my chamber window gazing out on the moonlit valley
-until long after midnight, but I could illy appreciate the
-beauty of the scene. I was seeking to arrange some
-plan of action by which I might trace up this first clew
-to a discovery I now felt most certain. At last, wearied<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[171]</a></span>
-with fruitless thought, I determined to await the course
-of events, and to trust to time for additional light.</p>
-
-<p>"The next few days were agreeably occupied in forming
-a more intimate acquaintance with Helen Perry and
-her father. I put forth what powers of pleasing nature
-has endowed me with, and my success seemed complete.
-Ere long I was on such terms of friendship with them
-as I desired; and then I learned from Helen that she
-had lost her mother many years before,&mdash;soon after
-their emigration from Eastern New York to their present
-home. I had thus far passed the time each day until
-two or three o'clock with the judge in his office, after
-which I wandered with Helen in the tasteful grounds
-surrounding her home, or upon the low-lying hills beyond.
-Her education had not been neglected, and her
-reading had been extensive. Thus we could converse
-upon the merits of the literature of the day, and in such
-topics discovered we had kindred tastes. She was ever
-frank and cheerful; and, short as had been our acquaintance,
-my heart was beginning to beat faster at her approach,
-and each morning, as I awoke, I looked eagerly
-forward to the hour that would find her disengaged from
-household duties, and with leisure to devote to me.</p>
-
-<p>"Once or twice the judge spoke of an absent friend, a
-Doctor Wentworth, in a manner which caused me some
-uneasiness; for, as he did so, he cast upon Helen a good-natured,
-sly glance that meant much, and always produced
-a blush upon her sweet face. It was after dinner
-on Tuesday, that we came out upon the lawn to inspect<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[172]</a></span>
-a rose-bush, which Helen wished transplanted, when her
-father remarked,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"'By the way, my dear, I received a letter from Edward
-this morning, and he tells me he shall be here to-day;
-so, as in duty bound, and like an ardent lover, I
-presume he will at once fly to you. I should advise
-that you forego your accustomed ramble, and remain at
-home to welcome him. I have no doubt our guest will
-be pleased for one day to escape the task of following
-you as an escort.'</p>
-
-<p>"By the terrible sinking of my heart that these words
-occasioned, I knew in an instant that I loved her; and,
-half-glancing at her as I turned away (with difficulty
-hiding my emotion), thought I saw the bright flush
-upon her animated face dying away, and a deadly pallor
-taking its place. I dared not remain and listen to her
-reply, and therefore wandered on past the summerhouse
-in which I had passed so many pleasant hours with
-her, until my steps were stayed upon the bank of the
-stream whose waters had now no music to my ears. I
-had heretofore been unconscious of the hopes that had
-gained access to my heart. Day by day I had, as it
-were, allowed my purposes to slumber. Her charms
-had bound me a willing captive, and all unwittingly I
-had cast aside thoughts of the future, and forgotten that
-the life of inaction in which I was indulging could not
-last. I had found ample joy and occupation in watching
-the play of her expressive features, and in listening to
-the words that came from her lips. After my first few<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[173]</a></span>
-hours of astonishment and wonder at the discovery of
-my stolen ring upon her hand, I had ceased, even when
-alone, to dwell upon the mystery connected with it.
-Now I was brought back to a remembrance of all I had
-vowed to do as I lay ill and suffering in the rude log
-cabin of the settler. It was long before my calmness
-returned, and my heart ceased to beat wildly. The afternoon
-had waned as I turned back towards the house
-and friends I had so abruptly left. It was in a more collected
-frame of mind that I ascended the steps, and entered
-the parlor. I am sure that, on encountering those
-there assembled, not the quiver of a muscle betrayed the
-agitation I felt. Helen was half-reclining upon a sofa,
-and leaning upon its back was the form of a tall and
-rather slightly-built man. She started up as I entered.
-Could it be that a brighter light beamed in her eyes as
-they encountered mine? I knew not, for the judge, who
-was seated near, was prompt to rise also, and said,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"'Mr. Palmer, we are glad of your return. Both
-Helen and myself were beginning to fear you had been
-spirited away. Allow me to make you acquainted with
-Doctor Wentworth. Doctor Wentworth, Mr. Palmer,
-our guest. I trust that you will learn to value the hour
-that brings you together.'</p>
-
-<p>"I looked the physician full in the face, as I took his
-hand. The sun, streaming in through the western windows,
-fell full upon his features, bringing out every line
-in a marvellous manner, and distinctly exposing their
-play, as he acknowledged my greeting. The countenance<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[174]</a></span>
-was one to attract the attention, and yet not pleasant
-to look upon. His forehead was high and fair; hair
-and mustache black as night, chin smoothly shaven and
-dimpled, and yet the eye repelled me. As I looked at
-him, I had an unaccountable impression that we had met
-before, but I could not tell where, or why it seemed as if
-the circumstances attending it had been of a disagreeable
-nature. As, after the first words of conversational
-politeness, he turned to Helen, I had a few moments for
-reflection, and suddenly flashed upon me the recollection
-of the scene in the wood,&mdash;the man leaning from his
-horse to grasp my collar, the tones of his voice, the momentary
-glance I had of his face as I fired my pistol at
-him, and the peculiar droop of his right eye that I had
-noticed. Could it be possible? Had I gained one more
-clew to the mystery? Was the man before me the
-would-be assassin? No! no! I was mad to indulge
-such a thought. This physician, the friend of Judge
-Perry, a gentleman, and evidently, from the judge's own
-words, the accepted suitor of his daughter, could be no
-vulgar highwayman; and yet, as he maintained a brisk
-conversation with Helen, and allowed me full opportunity
-for close observation, the more convinced did I become
-that he was the man. As she raised her hand, I
-saw the gleam of the diamond upon it. At last the
-chain of evidence for me was complete. What so natural
-as that her lover should present this to her? I
-thanked God that I was to be made the instrument by
-which she was to be rescued from such a marriage. I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[175]</a></span>
-forgot my own private desire for vengeance. My love
-for her&mdash;this beautiful and innocent girl&mdash;was of so
-true a nature, that every other consideration was subordinate
-to the one for the furtherance of her welfare.
-By a powerful effort I controlled my feelings, and assumed
-an air of ease that I could not feel.</p>
-
-<p>"The doctor was all animation, and talked at a rapid
-rate, while I thought I had never seen Helen so dull.
-'By the way, doctor,' remarked the judge, after we had
-left the tea-table and entered the parlor, 'have you recovered
-from the accident you met with a few weeks
-ago? Pistol-shots are anything but pleasant reminders,
-and you had a narrow escape.' I was gazing directly at
-him while the judge spoke, and for an instant, even as a
-summer breeze would ruffle a placid lake, a frown gathered
-upon his brow, and was gone. 'I am as well as I
-could wish to be,' was the answer, 'and have almost forgotten
-the occurrence.' Pleading a dull headache, I retired
-to my chamber at an early hour. I wished to be
-alone, that I might take counsel with myself as to the
-course I ought to pursue, in order to bring this scoundrel
-and his associate to justice. The longer I dwelt
-upon the matter, the more convinced I became that my
-proper course was to make the judge my confidant.
-He was of years' experience and discretion, and also a
-deeply interested party, through his daughter's connection
-with Wentworth.</p>
-
-<p>"I slept but little that night, and was in the grounds,
-when my host came out for a stroll in the morning air.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[176]</a></span>
-I knew that it would yet be an hour before the breakfast-bell
-would ring; therefore, after speaking of the beauties
-of the morning, I took his arm as if for a promenade, and
-said, 'If you can spare me some thirty or forty minutes,
-and will come where we can by no possibility be overheard,
-I will tell you what I know is of vast importance to
-you.' He looked surprised, but acceded to my request at
-once, recommending the arbor already in view as a desirable
-place for private conversation. We seated ourselves,
-and, with but few preliminary remarks, I gave him a full
-account of my adventures since leaving Detroit. He
-did not once interrupt me; but, as I proceeded, his face
-became more and more ashen, until, as I concluded by
-denouncing the doctor as one of my assailants, it was as
-white as that of a corpse.</p>
-
-<p>"For a minute after I had ceased speaking he remained
-silent; then, drawing a long breath, he seemed to regain
-command over himself, and said: 'I can but believe all
-that you have told me, for there are many circumstances,
-with which you are evidently unacquainted, that go to
-corroborate your story. Can you remember the day of
-the month upon which your murder was attempted?'</p>
-
-<p>"'The twenty-second,' I replied.</p>
-
-<p>"'And on the twenty-fourth,' he said, 'Dr. Wentworth
-returned home after an absence of some days, in charge
-of Hugh Chapin, an intimate friend of his. He could
-with difficulty sit upon his horse, and was apparently
-suffering severely. He stated that he had been injured
-by the accidental discharge of his pistol, but that, as the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[177]</a></span>
-ball had only inflicted a flesh-wound in the shoulder, it
-would soon heal. The explanation was plausible, and
-no one doubted his word.'</p>
-
-<p>"'Was there any mark upon the ring by which you
-could identify it?'</p>
-
-<p>"'On the inner-side, below the centre-stone,' I answered,
-'was the letter P, in Roman characters, and above
-it was some fine scroll-work, and close observation would
-show the name of Susie, in minute lettering, amidst it;
-any one gazing upon it in an ordinary manner would fail
-to perceive it. My mother's maiden name was Susan
-Palmer, and this ring was presented to her by my father
-previous to their marriage. I feel sure that an inspection
-will prove my description to be true, although I have
-not seen the jewel since I lost it except upon your
-daughter's hand.'</p>
-
-<p>"'I am satisfied,' said my companion; 'I have seen the
-initial P, as you describe it, but as it corresponded with
-my Helen's family name, I thought it intended for it. I
-can readily identify the larger of the two men, and the
-one who inflicted the blow that nearly cost your life, in
-the person of a resident of a farm-house some three
-miles from us, one Hugh Chapin, a bachelor and the almost
-inseparable companion of Dr. Wentworth. I have
-never been pleased with this intimacy, for I have felt an
-aversion to this man from my first knowledge of him.
-As I could give no reason for it, I have said little to
-Wentworth on the subject. They came here about the
-same time, four years ago, and Dr. W., displaying considerable<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[178]</a></span>
-skill in his profession, soon acquired a good
-practice, and has enjoyed the confidence of the community.
-This Chapin purchased the house and farm he
-now occupies soon after his arrival, and has always
-seemed to have the command of money, although I learn
-that he is but an indifferent farmer, and often absent
-from home for weeks together. I employed Dr. W. in
-a severe illness I had some two years ago, and after I recovered
-he was much at my house, and Helen saw much
-of him. He proposed for her hand, and at first she
-seemed inclined to reject his suit, but, thinking the match
-a desirable one, I persuaded her not to do so. I have
-since often fancied that perhaps I did wrong in thus using
-my influence, as she has since their betrothal seemed loth
-to accord him the privileges of an accepted lover. His
-profession has often called him away, but I now see it
-may have frequently afforded an excuse for an absence
-in which were performed deeds too dark even to contemplate.
-The sheriff of our county is a brave, shrewd
-man, and I will lay the facts of this case before him, and
-we will devise the best means of bringing these men to
-justice. I need not point out to you the wisdom of silence;
-we have cunning knaves to deal with, and must
-use care, so they may gain no clew to our intentions.
-Knowing that you had been intrusted with three hundred
-dollars to pay into my hands, I have wondered at
-your silence on the subject; but your explanation has
-made all plain at last. It will be difficult to dissemble
-in the presence of this scoundrel, Wentworth, I know;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</a></span>
-yet for a brief time we must submit to the infliction of
-his presence, and allow him to visit Helen as heretofore.'</p>
-
-<p>"When we returned to the house, my heart was lighter
-than it had been since my arrival at N&mdash;&mdash;. I will pass
-over the record of the next few days, for nothing of importance
-took place. The judge and myself held frequent
-consultations with the sheriff in my host's office;
-care being taken that these meetings should attract no
-attention. The doctor was occupied with his patients,
-as the warm weather was developing disease. Once
-only had his confederate, Hugh Chapin, made his appearance
-in the village. I had seen him as he rode up
-the street to the door of Dr. Wentworth's office, where
-dismounting, and securing his horse, he entered. I
-would have given much to have been a private spectator
-of their interview, but only remained book in hand
-in my seat at the window. You may be sure I comprehended
-nothing printed upon the page before me. Not
-many minutes elapsed after Chapin came forth and rode
-away, ere the sheriff dropped in upon us. The moment
-he made his appearance, I saw, by the twinkle in his eye,
-he had pleasant intelligence to communicate. Glancing
-around to see that we were alone, he cast himself into a
-chair, giving vent to a gratified chuckle. 'We have
-them at last,' said he, 'thanks to the intelligence of the
-boy the doctor employs to wait upon him, and whom I
-frightened and bribed into playing the spy. A nice plot
-of robbery has just been concocted by the two worthies
-closeted up yonder. Old Seth Jones to-day received a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</a></span>
-payment upon the farm he sold Thompson, and will take
-it to Pollard whose place he has purchased; having to
-travel some twenty miles of bad road, it will be dark
-before he can reach his destination, and Chapin and
-Wentworth are intent upon relieving him of his money;
-the rocky gully between Harrison's and Thompson's is
-the point selected for operations; and I, with my men,
-shall take care to be there in time to have a hand in the
-game.'</p>
-
-<p>"That was an anxious evening for me. I sat with
-Helen and her father until after ten, and, despite the
-efforts we all made, the conversation languished. I saw
-she felt a weight upon her that she could not cast off.
-As I gazed upon her face, while she bent over some feminine
-employment, I could perceive the great change
-that had been wrought in her in the few weeks I had
-known her. She had grown thin and pale, and a look of
-suffering had taken the place of one of cheerfulness. I
-asked myself if it could be that I had awakened her
-love, and that she had discovered this fact and allowed
-her betrothment to Wentworth to eat like a canker at
-her heart. I felt an almost irresistible desire to tell her
-how dear she was to me, and that if she returned my
-affection, all would be well with us. By a powerful
-effort, however, I choked back the words that trembled
-on my lips, and retired to my chamber, where I alternately
-paced the floor and sat by the open window until
-near morning. The night was intensely dark, and I
-could distinguish only the outline of the trees upon the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</a></span>
-lawn. It was three o'clock, and a faint streak of light
-began to illumine the eastern horizon, when I at last
-heard the tramp of horses upon the bridge that crossed
-the stream down the valley. I could control my impatience
-no longer, and, opening my door, descended the
-stairs with rapid feet, but the judge fully dressed was
-before me in the hall, proving that he, too, like myself,
-had impatiently awaited news of the result of the sheriff's
-ambuscade. We hurried down the street, and, in
-the dull light of the dawning day, met a party of six
-men having Hugh Chapin in charge. He was securely
-bound, and riding upon a horse in the midst of his captors.
-I noted the absence of Wentworth at once, and
-felt the most bitter disappointment, but soon learned the
-occasion of it. In an attempt to escape, he had been
-shot through the head, and was then lying dead at a
-farm-house near the scene of action.</p>
-
-<p>"I can now condense into a few sentences what more I
-have to relate. On being confronted with me, Chapin
-made a full confession of his own and Wentworth's
-crime. It was he who struck me upon the head as I
-fired at his companion, and, after binding up Wentworth's
-wound, he robbed and then conveyed me to a
-lonely part of the stream and cast me in; my long insensibility
-had cheated them into the belief of my death.</p>
-
-<p>"Helen made no pretext of regret at the awful judgment
-that had overtaken her betrothed; on the contrary,
-her face now wears an expression of repose which
-the dullest observer could not fail to perceive. Need I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</a></span>
-add that I had a long conversation with her last night
-during which she acknowledged her affection for me,
-and promised to be my wife provided her father sanctioned
-our wishes. The judge has since listened to my
-petition with a pleased smile, and answered that in
-due time we should be made happy.</p>
-
-<p>"When our nuptials are performed, then will end my
-western trip and its attending romance."</p></blockquote>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h1 style="margin-top: 8em; margin-bottom: 8em;">THE TWO GHOSTS OF NEW LONDON<br />
-TURNPIKE.</h1>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[185]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h2 style="margin-top: 3em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;"><a name="The_two_ghosts" id="The_two_ghosts">THE TWO GHOSTS</a><br />
-<small>OF</small><br />
-<span class="smcap">New London Turnpike</span>.</h2>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;">
-<img style="margin-bottom: 1.5em;" src="images/image1.jpg" width="100" height="18" alt="fancy line" />
-</div>
-
-<div><img class="dropcap" src="images/dropcap-t.jpg"
-width="51" height="85" alt="t" />
-</div><p><span class="dropletter">T</span>HERE is a certain ancient and time-honored institution,
-which, in the advancement of recent
-discoveries and the march of modern improvements,
-seems destined soon to pass from the use,
-and then, in natural sequence, from the memories
-of mankind. For even the highest type of civilization
-is prone to ingratitude, and drops all thoughts of its best
-agencies as soon as it has outlived its absolute need of
-them. Towards this Lethean current, whose lazy waters
-glide so silently and yet so resistlessly along the borders
-of the Past, gradually undermining and crumbling
-away the ancient landmarks and the venerable institutions
-known and loved of the former generations, the
-whale-ships are already drifting.</p>
-
-<p>For year by year, as they set sail with their hardy
-crews, every succeeding voyage took them nearer to the
-court of the Ice King, the chill of his breath grew
-deadlier, and the invasion of his dominions more desperate.
-But, lo! when Jack Tar was almost at his wit's
-end, a cry arose upon the prairie, and the disciples of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[186]</a></span>
-commerce dropped their harpoons and left their nets to
-follow the guidance of the new revelation. Jets of oleaginous
-wealth sprang and spirted, and blessed was he
-whose dish was right-side-up in this new rain of pecuniary
-porridge. Instead of the old launchings and weighings
-of anchors, came the embarkation of all sorts and
-sizes of solid and fancy craft on the inviting sea of speculation,
-and men ran hither and thither, outrivalling
-the tales of the bygone voyagers, by stories of vast
-fortunes made in a day, and of shipwrecks as sad as any
-on the ocean. And so, in place of dingy casks and creaking
-cordage and watery perils, there sprang up the reign
-of pipes and drills, and for the laden ships, black and oozy
-with their slippery cargo, we began to have long trains of
-bright blue tanks speeding over all our western railways;
-and the whaling vessels, with their smooth, tapering sides,
-and blowsy crews, and complicated mysteries of rigging,
-seem already like forsaken hulks, hopelessly stranded
-upon the shores of antiquity.</p>
-
-<p>But all this belongs to the Present, and any such
-prophecy uttered in the days with which our story has
-to do would have been regarded as the wildest of ravings.
-For then the whale-ship was a reality and a
-power, the terror of all mothers of wayward boys, and
-the general resort of reckless runaways and prodigals.
-The thought that it could ever be superseded by any
-undiscovered agency had not yet made its way into the
-heads of even the sage prognosticators who studied the
-prophets and the apocalypse, and were able to dispose of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[187]</a></span>
-all the beasts and dragons, and to assign them appropriate
-places in the future, with the utmost certainty and
-satisfaction.</p>
-
-<p>It is certain that no such forebodings startled the
-complacency of two young men who sat, in the gathering
-twilight of a mild spring evening, on a fragment of
-drift-wood in a little cove of New London harbor, with
-the waves sweeping up almost to their feet, and the
-western sky still flushed with the departing glory of
-sunset.</p>
-
-<p>They were a stout, bronzed, muscular couple, loosely
-clad in the common sailor-suits of the period, and both
-with the shrewd, resolute cast of countenance that distinguished
-the irrepressible Yankee then no less than
-now. The darker of the two was the more attractive,
-for he had the jolly twinkling eye, and gayly infectious
-air that goes with the high animal temperament, and
-always carries a bracing tonic with it like the sea-breeze.
-Wherever John Avery came, all the evil spirits
-of dulness and mopes and blues, that conspire so
-fearfully for the misery of mankind, had to give way,
-and one burst of his spontaneous merriment would exorcise
-the whole uncanny troop. John was a born sailor,
-with all the dashing frankness, and generous, hearty
-temper characteristic of the class, and not deficient in
-the faculty for getting into scrapes that is also an invariable
-endowment of his prototypes.</p>
-
-<p>The other was a less open face, sharper in its outlines,
-and with more angles than curves. Had it been less<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[188]</a></span>
-kindly, it might have been the face of a rascal, and yet
-an artist could easily have idealized it into that of a
-hero. For all these variations and contrasts of characteristic
-expression, that have such influence among us,
-are, after all, wonderfully slight affairs, and a few touches
-either way, upon the vast majority of faces, would
-give a seraph or a demon at the shortest notice. The
-bright, plump countenance of Jack was an open book,
-known and read of all men, while that of his cousin
-Philo was a study far more perplexing, and in the end
-less satisfactory. But the conversation of the two was
-sufficiently plain.</p>
-
-<p>"Sails on Thursday, does she, Phil?" said the cheerful
-voice of John as his practised eye sought out a certain
-ship from among the crowd of vessels in the harbor.</p>
-
-<p>"All hands aboard at nine o'clock's the order," replied
-Philo, taking off his cap, and turning his face to the
-wind.</p>
-
-<p>"And the Sally Ann don't sail till Saturday. I say
-Phil, old fellow, I wish we were going together,"
-cried John with one of his bursts.</p>
-
-<p>"It's better as 'tis," said Philo, thoughtfully. "There's
-a better chance for one of us to come back, you know,
-than if we were in the same ship."</p>
-
-<p>"'<i>Come back.</i>' Why, of course we shall come back,&mdash;that
-is, I hope so, both of us. That wasn't what I
-meant. I'd like you for a shipmate,&mdash;that's all," was the
-eager response.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes,&mdash;I understand," answered Philo. "We shan't<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[189]</a></span>
-both come home, <i>of course</i>; but there's hopes for both of
-us, and a pretty strong chance for one of us at least."</p>
-
-<p>And then a seriousness fell upon the cousins, and for
-many minutes they sat and watched the tide creeping
-up to them like the lapping, hungry tongue of some slow
-monster, thinking such thoughts as will sometimes come
-unbidden to the heart of youth, and become more and
-more intrusive and importunate as we grow older.</p>
-
-<p>These boys were offshoots of a sturdy Puritan stock,
-and the pluck and backbone of their ancestry suffered
-no degeneracy in them. John had been an orphan from
-infancy, and had grown up in an atmosphere of loving
-kindness and tender mercy under the auspices of his
-Aunt Betsy,&mdash;Philo's mother. She it was, who, in view
-of his orphanage, had winked at his boyish misdemeanors,
-indulged his naturally gay disposition in every way
-that her strict and somewhat barren orthodoxy allowed,
-and when his sea-going propensities could no longer be
-controlled by the mild influences of her molasses gingerbread
-and sweet cider, she had made him a liberal
-outfit of flannel shirts and blue mixed hose, and, tucking
-a Bible into the corner of his chest, bade him God-speed
-on his first voyage.</p>
-
-<p>It was with some surprise that she saw him come
-back from a three months' cruise, with no more serious
-damage than a scar across his forehead; but still she felt
-reproached at the sight of it, and on Jack's next start
-rectified her previous neglect, by sending Philo along
-with him in the capacity of mentor and protector,&mdash;an<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[190]</a></span>
-office which she, in the devotion of her heart, would
-most joyfully have undertaken herself if the art and
-practice of navigation could have been adapted so as
-to admit of the services of an elderly lady. But becoming
-convinced of the utter impracticability of this plan, she
-wisely settled herself down to be comfortable with tea-drinking
-and knitting-work, with great confidence in
-Philo's sobriety and force of character, as applied to preserve
-her darling Jack from harm; for Aunt Betsy,
-like many other excellent people, was not free from favoritism,
-and her adopted son was the child of her affections,
-while Philo had the secondary place, and was expected
-to consider it his highest happiness to fiddle for
-Jack's dancing, and otherwise to hold the candle in a
-general way for the benefit and pleasure of that superior
-being. Had Jack been less jolly and generous, or Philo
-less amiable and forbearing, this maternal arrangement
-would have been a fruitful source of jealousy and contention;
-but the two natures were so fortunately balanced
-that even the one-sided weight of Aunt Betsy's
-partiality worked no such derangement of the family
-peace, as might have been supposed. The boys had
-made three short voyages together, and were now about
-shipping for their first long absence in different vessels
-only because Philo's superior education and business
-aptitude qualified him for the position of supercargo,
-which had been offered him on board the Skylark.</p>
-
-<p>Philo was already developing the great Yankee trait
-of penny-catching, for even then he had saved quite a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[191]</a></span>
-pretty sum out of the very moderate pay of a foremast
-man in those times, and this, in addition to his patrimonial
-inheritance of a few hundred dollars, made a nice
-nest-egg for the fortune that he hoped to realize in late
-life. Jack, too, had his property interest, for he had just
-come to man's estate in the eye of the law, and his little
-property, carefully hoarded, and with its due interest
-had been, only the day previous, paid into his hands in
-good gold, accompanied by much sound advice and the
-warmest good wishes from his benignant guardian,
-'Squire Tupper, who, thanks to Aunt Betsy's interposition
-had found him the most dutiful and least troublesome
-of wards.</p>
-
-<p>Philo renewed the conversation by inquiring whether
-Jack had thought of any particular mode of investment,
-and stating his own intention of purchasing an interest
-in the Skylark, if on his return it should appear advisable.
-But the former topic appeared to push itself
-uneasily uppermost, and he soon came abruptly back
-to it,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I shall do that thing if I live to see home again;
-and, if anything should happen that I don't, I want my
-money to go to you, Jack, except half the income, and
-that I want to have settled on mother as long as she
-lives."</p>
-
-<p>"You'd better say all the income, and the principal
-too, for that matter, Phil," cried the hearty Jack, with
-a little break in his voice at the last words.</p>
-
-<p>"No," replied the cousin, soberly. "There's enough<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[192]</a></span>
-besides to keep the old lady comfortable as long as she
-lives, and more would only worry her. If she gets
-something to show that I didn't forget her, it'll be better
-than if she had it all to take care of; and she'll be just
-as well suited to have it go to you."</p>
-
-<p>"But think of my getting what Aunt Betsy ought to
-have," remonstrated Jack, sturdily.</p>
-
-<p>"It's best," said Philo.</p>
-
-<p>"And to hear you talk as if you was bound straight
-for Davy Jones' locker," pursued Jack.</p>
-
-<p>"I shan't go any straighter for talking about it, as I
-know of," answered Philo, looking steadily towards the
-dim horizon as if his fate lay somewhere between the
-water and the sky.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, then," shouted the impulsive Jack, "if it must
-be so, I'm glad I can match you at the other end of the
-same rope. You're as likely to come home as I am,
-and, if I'm never heard from, all I've got shall go to
-you."</p>
-
-<p>"Then we'd better make our wills in form, if that's
-your wish," said Philo, rising from the log.</p>
-
-<p>"We'll make all fast to-morrow," remarked Jack,
-cheerfully; "though it makes one feel queer to be doing
-such business at our age."</p>
-
-<p>"It can't hurt anything; and we're no more likely to
-meet with bad luck for having things in ship-shape," replied
-Philo, as they walked up towards the little town,
-whose twinkling lights winked like fireflies out of the
-darkness.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[193]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Let's do it to-night, and have it over," exclaimed
-Jack, who found an unpleasant creeping sensation gaining
-upon him as he dwelt on the subject.</p>
-
-<p>"Well," said Philo.</p>
-
-<p>The cousins turned into the main street of the village,
-now a busy mart of business, but in those days broad
-and grassy, with a row of respectable gambrel-roofed
-houses, each with its liberal garden at the side. Pre-eminent
-in respectability was the abode of 'Squire Tupper,
-with its large, clean yard, small, patchwork-looking
-windows, and ponderous brass knocker, which disclosed
-the terrific head of some nondescript animal in most
-menacing attitude. Upon this brazen effigy Jack
-sounded a vigorous rap, since 'Squire Tupper was the
-prime magnate and authority of the small town, in all
-matters requiring legal adjustment; and any well-instructed
-resident would as soon have thought of having
-a funeral without the minister as of making a will
-without the advice of the 'squire.</p>
-
-<p>The summons was answered by a pretty blonde girl,
-dressed in the nicest of blue stuff gowns, the whitest of
-muslin tuckers, and with her pretty feet displayed to
-advantage by fine clocked stockings and neat morocco
-shoes. All these little matters and her dainty air gave
-her the appearance of a petted kitten, or, rather, of some
-small, ornamental image, made of cream candy, and
-kept in a Chinese doll-house.</p>
-
-<p>She turned rosy at sight of Jack, who came instantly
-out of his solemn mood, and, in the frank, saucy way<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[194]</a></span>
-habitual to him, swung his arm around the neat waist,
-and, spite of some tiny remonstrances and vain struggles,
-planted a big sailor kiss right in the centre of the demure
-mouth. All this was natural enough; for, besides
-being the 'squire's ward and connected in that sort of
-cousinhood which extends to the forty-ninth degree of
-consanguinity, Jack had now regularly "kept company"
-with Molly for several months, and all his Sunday
-nights on shore were piously devoted to "settin' up"
-with her in the prim, sanded best parlor, where it is
-not to be supposed that he abstained totally from such
-"refreshment" as Mr. Sam Weller was accustomed to
-indulge when opportunity offered.</p>
-
-<p>But his demonstrativeness served to discompose Molly's
-ladyhood on this occasion; and the presence of
-Philo with his business-like face added so much scandal
-that she disengaged herself as quickly as possible from
-Jack's audacious grasp, and, with such dignity as a
-white kitten might assume in the presence of two intrusive
-pups, ushered them into the family "keepin'-room,"
-and withdrew, as if she wished it understood that
-she washed her hands of them and their kind from that
-time forth. But Jack slipped out after her, and probably
-made peace; for they returned together,&mdash;he very
-brisk and shining, and she blushing like Aurora.</p>
-
-<p>Philo, however, meant business, and said as much in
-plain terms, that set Miss Molly into a perfect maze of
-conjecture as she went to call the 'squire. Her only solution
-of the mystery was that Jack had now come for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[195]</a></span>
-the momentous <i>pop</i>, toward which events had been
-tending; and that Philo had accompanied him in the character
-of second. She felt a little piqued that she had
-not been able to bring him to the point herself; but then
-it was certainly very straightforward in him to come
-right to her father in that way; and so the little lady
-rushed out to the wood-pile in a perfect flutter of delicious
-perplexity, and imparted the fact that the two
-young men had called <i>on business</i>, with such decided emphasis
-that the 'squire immediately took the cue, and prepared
-himself to be especially benignant and paternal.</p>
-
-<p>Relieved of Molly's inspiring presence, Jack felt all
-the solemnity of the affair returning upon him, and, as is
-usual with these strong, mercurial natures, it loomed before
-him more and more grim and ghastly, till, by the time
-that the 'squire made his appearance, he had become almost
-persuaded that his last hour was really approaching.
-This state of mind imparted to his countenance an
-expression of such touching melancholy as made the
-old gentleman take him for the most despairing of lovers,
-and wrought upon his sympathies amazingly.</p>
-
-<p>'Squire Tupper was the embodiment of magisterial
-dignity, owlish wisdom, and universal benevolence.
-With a fine, showy person that was in itself the guaranty
-of unimpeachable respectability, he had gone on in
-life, and come to hold the position of an oracle; not on
-account of anything he ever said, but because of a general
-way that he had of looking as if he could on all occasions
-say a great deal if he chose, which is a sure way to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[196]</a></span>
-attain the distinction of being considered remarkably
-well-informed, though it is one that is greatly neglected
-of late years. The world laughs at witty people, and
-despises them; and 'Squire Tupper was a bright example
-of the truth that it takes a thoroughly dull man to
-be profoundly respected.</p>
-
-<p>He now saluted the cousins with grave urbanity, and
-deliberately placed his stately form in the arm-chair,
-taking a fresh cut of tobacco as a preliminary to business.
-If Molly had enough of mother Eve about her to
-cause her to peep and listen behind the door, we don't
-know as it concerns us. We don't say she did; but
-would be slow to take the responsibility of declaring
-that she didn't. Young ladies, who may chance to peruse
-this veracious history, are at liberty to decide this
-point according to their own estimate of the temptation,
-and the average feminine power of resistance.</p>
-
-<p>Jack plunged desperately into the middle of the subject,
-and then tried to swim out toward the introduction.</p>
-
-<p>"We thought we'd stop in, sir, this evening, as we've
-made up our minds to do a certain thing; and it seemed
-as if we&mdash;I mean I&mdash;felt as if I should like to have it
-done, and over with."</p>
-
-<p>"I see, I see," replied the 'squire, with the utmost consideration
-for Jack's embarrassment, and the delicate
-nature of his errand. "You've spoken to Molly about
-it, I suppose?" he added, encouragingly.</p>
-
-<p>"Why, no. Didn't think it was worth while, as you
-was at home," answered Jack.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[197]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Ah, I see! Jes' so, jes' so! Very thoughtful in
-you, Jack,&mdash;very, indeed." The 'squire paused, and
-took a pinch of snuff, nodding his satisfaction, and proceeded:
-"It's highly gratifying to me, Jack, to see you
-so thoughtful as to come to me first on this business;
-though it isn't what all young men would do. I'm glad
-to see that you respect the parental relation, and respect
-my feelings, though you've no parents of your
-own; still you've had an excellent bringing up by your
-Aunt Betsy, and I've tried, in my humble way, to do
-what I could." (Graceful self-abasement was one of the
-'squire's strong points.) "And now I say you've acted
-just right, because I am better capable of judging what
-is for Molly's good than she can be herself; and, of
-course, I'm the person to be first consulted; and it's
-most creditable and gratifying"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Why, it isn't about Molly, at all!" cried Jack in
-bewilderment.</p>
-
-<p>O happy, doting pride of fatherhood! What a falling
-off was there, and what blankness, followed by confusion,
-overspread 'Squire Tupper's countenance, as the
-nature of his blunder and its extreme awkwardness became
-apparent to his puzzled faculties.</p>
-
-<p>"No&mdash;no&mdash;certainly not&mdash;not in the least!" gasped
-he, catching after his dignity, as a man drowning grasps
-at straws.</p>
-
-<p>"We came to see if you could attend to making out
-our wills, this evening," said Philo.</p>
-
-<p>The 'squire looked from one to the other with such<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[198]</a></span>
-dazed incredulity that both the young men applied
-themselves to explanations which brought his senses
-back into the world of facts.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, yes, certainly,&mdash;very creditable and prudent
-in you to wish to make things all snug before you go.
-Excellent idea; though you're both rather youngish to
-be doing such business. Still it's highly gratifying to
-see you take it up in this way,&mdash;certainly,&mdash;just let me
-get the materials." And the 'squire plunged with great
-eagerness into the subject, briskly opening an old-fashioned
-secretary, and setting out upon the table a heavy
-stone inkstand, a sand-box, some large sheets of paper,
-and a bunch of quills; and then, being quite restored to
-his accustomed equilibrium, begged them in the most
-impressive magisterial manner, to state their wishes, and
-commenced making his pen, while Philo explained the
-subject-matter of the conversation previously recorded.</p>
-
-<p>"I see, I see!" said the 'squire, deliberately, when he
-had elaborated the point of the quill, and tried it repeatedly
-on his thumb-nail. And, without further ado, he
-drew his chair to the table, and headed the page in a
-large, round hand: "<i>The Last Will and Testament of
-Philo Avery</i>;" following it up with the regular formula
-for such cases made and provided.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>In the name of God, Amen.</i></p>
-
-<p>"I, Philo Avery, of the town of New London and
-state of Connecticut, being of sound mind and memory,
-and considering the uncertainty of this frail and transitory
-life, do, therefore, make, advise, publish, and declare
-this to be my last will and testament," etc.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[199]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Scratch&mdash;scratch, went the 'squire's pen, interrupted
-only by occasional dips into the ink, while the two testators
-sat and looked on in unwinking silence, and the
-tall candles flared and sputtered as their sooty wicks
-dropped down into the tallow. Hardly had this happened
-when Molly tripped shyly into the room, bringing
-a pair of silver snuffers on a little tray, and with one
-dexterous nip relieved each smoking luminary of its incumbrance,
-at the same moment casting her demure
-eyes upon the page which her father was now covering
-with sand. If she was not ignorant of the old gentleman's
-palpable blunder (and remember the narrator
-takes no responsibility on that point), she was certainly
-very innocent and unconscious, and, as Jack looked at
-her, he anathematized his own stupidity in not taking the
-opportunity which the 'squire had so temptingly opened
-for him, and determined that he would rectify the omission
-speedily.</p>
-
-<p>Meanwhile, the quill travelled over another broad
-page, and the documents were ready for the signatures.
-And then it was necessary that Molly and the hired-man
-should be called in as witnesses, and the former made
-very wide eyes of wonderment (little budget of deceit!)
-when she learned the nature of the papers, and wrote her
-name in a tiny, cramped hand, with many little quirks
-like the legs of spiders, and this was supplemented by
-the laborious autograph of Silas Plumb, the teamster, a
-young man of limited education and bushy hair.</p>
-
-<p>And when all this was done, the cousins exchanged<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[200]</a></span>
-the wills, and tucked them into their respective side-pockets,
-feeling greatly relieved, and the 'squire, after receiving
-his fee in a benevolent, deprecating manner, as
-if it was quite a trial to his feelings, but must be undergone
-as a duty, brought out some excellent port wine,
-and pledged them both in liberal glasses, with wishes
-for their prosperous voyage and safe return. And at
-the mention of this sorrowful topic, poor Molly's spirits
-suffered such charming timid depression, and were affected
-to such a degree that when Philo took leave, it
-was necessary for Jack to lag behind, and finally allow
-him to go away alone, since nothing else would serve to
-restore the languishing damsel to comparative cheerfulness.
-At this interval of time, and without the advantage
-of being an eye-witness, it would be a vain attempt
-for anybody to undertake a minute account of how,
-standing in the low "stoop," with its little round posts
-like drumsticks, and huge tubs of thrifty, rough-leaved
-plants, Molly made herself perfectly irresistible with
-her shy regrets, and how, when her grief and apprehension
-at once welled up from her heart to her face, in the
-midst of bashful palpitations and broken sobs, her
-proud little head wilted weakly over on Jack's shoulder,
-and she begged him not to go sail-ail-ailing away, and
-be drownd-ed-ed&mdash;and have that horrid old will-ill-ill
-for his sole memento. Neither would it be easy to portray
-how Jack soothed and petted, with all the little endearments
-that are such delightful realities for the moment,
-but so silly and absurd to remember, and finally,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[201]</a></span>
-when nothing else would answer, committed himself
-past all remedy, as what man could help doing, with
-such a dainty little figure leaning close, and the sweetest
-of mournful faces buried in his collar. And then, there
-were more tears and kisses, and at the end a long, quiet
-talk of all that should be realized when that one voyage
-was over, and he should be ready to resign his sea-faring
-life.</p>
-
-<p>At last Jack tore himself away from all these enchantments,
-and rushed home for a couple of hours of
-delicious dreamy tumbling about in bed before daylight,
-which seemed to come much sooner than he had
-calculated, and aroused him to complete his preparations
-for departure.</p>
-
-<p>Everybody knows what a queer, altered aspect certain
-actions and feelings take after one night, and the
-dawning of the clear, practical light of the next day.
-Ideas that have seemed most urgent and actual will at
-such times appear extremely unreal and visionary, and
-be quite eclipsed in interest by the trifles that come in
-between and demand immediate attention. Jack found
-it so, in the hurry and bustle of the next day, what with
-the preparations for sailing, and all the little matters
-that such a start involves. The doings of the previous
-night seemed quite distant and foreign to his own personality;
-and it needed the big-folded document, with
-its formal phraseology and crisp rattle, to convince him
-that the acts of the evening before had not been a rather
-memorable dream. Once, in the course of the day, he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[202]</a></span>
-took out the will, read it hastily over, and then tucked it
-away in a little brass-bound box, that answered for him
-the same purpose that a Herring's Patent does for prudent
-young men of the present day.</p>
-
-<p>But however it might be about the wills, and the
-chances that the Great Reaper should overtake either of
-the cousins before the return-voyage, Molly was a present
-and delightful reality; and that very evening Jack
-made her another visit, justified 'Squire Tupper's presumption
-of the former occasion, and amid Molly's tears
-and kisses, and big sighs and little sobs, wished most
-heartily that the Sally Ann had made her cruise, and
-that the future programme was ready to be carried into
-effect. But then, he might be lucky enough to pay for
-waiting; and if anything should happen to Philo in the
-interval,&mdash;of course, he hoped there wouldn't, poor fellow;
-but accidents will happen, and if anything so sad
-should occur, why, then he would be in a position to
-keep Molly in the style she deserved and was accustomed
-to; and to buy out a share in some nice little craft, that
-should bring home to them treasures as rich, after their
-kind, as those that the ships of Tarshish brought to
-King Solomon. But all this was mere conjecture, and
-Jack renounced it with a feeling of reproach for having
-indulged it even for a moment.</p>
-
-<p>The next day the Skylark sailed, Philo starting away
-from the old house with his chest on a wheelbarrow, and
-leaving Aunt Betsy on the doorstep, with her lips
-pressed very tight, and all the grim fatalism of her religious<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[203]</a></span>
-faith making stern struggle against the natural
-motherly instincts of her heart. For she did love
-Philo; and even the reflection that he wasn't going to
-wait upon Jack, according to his established usage, was
-lost in genuine grief for his departure.</p>
-
-<p>Jack rowed out to the ship with him; and it would be
-doing both an injustice to ask whether the cordial regrets
-of their separation were mingled with any remembrance
-on the part of either, that in case they should
-never meet again, one of them would be a few hundred
-dollars richer for the death of the other.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>On the morning of May 5th, 1805, the Sally Ann
-sailed out of New London harbor. On the evening of
-September 12th, 1808, she dropped anchor in the very
-spot which she had left three years and four months before.</p>
-
-<p>The first object, aside from the familiar shore, that
-met Jack's recognition, as they sailed up the bay, was
-the ship Skylark, arrived just six weeks previously, and
-the first man he saw, as he stepped on land, was his
-Cousin Philo. There could hardly have been a more cordial
-greeting than that which the bystanders witnessed;
-and yet a close look into the heart of each might have
-disclosed a shade of something strangely inconsistent
-with the outward semblance of happiness that both
-wore.</p>
-
-<p>For three years is a long time for some thoughts and
-impulses to mature in, and day after day out at sea, with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[204]</a></span>
-only the monotony of the ever-undulating waves, and
-the easily exhausted resources of variety to be found on
-shipboard, give great opportunity for brooding, and
-such speculations as come naturally to people who are idle
-and isolated. Seeds of the devil's planting possess a peculiarly
-vital and fructifying property and are sure to come
-to maturity sooner or later. One can easily imagine the
-thoughts that might have come to these two young men
-in the long, solitary watches, come perhaps like suggestions
-from the world outside, wafted on the wings of the
-wind, or caught up in chance hints and scraps of sailor talk,
-but coming nevertheless straight from the God of mammon,
-and, with their slow canker working a steady and
-sure corruption. And yet, neither had probably ever allowed
-these thoughts to take any such positive form as
-to be capable of recognition. They were always, even
-in the moments of their strongest domination, veiled in
-some perfectly innocent mental expression, such as <i>if</i>
-anything should happen, or <i>supposing</i> such an affliction,&mdash;meditations
-which the most sensitive conscience could
-not possibly challenge, but which had a way of creeping
-in upon the minds of these two far oftener than they
-would have done, but for the existence of the wills.</p>
-
-<p>Philo had an inborn love of lucre that was strong
-enough to give spice and fascination to these ponderings
-of possibilities, while Jack was constantly under the
-stimulus of his fondness for Molly, and desire to make a
-handsome provision for her. And by these means, this
-indefinite <i>if</i>, acknowledged at first only as a remote and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[205]</a></span>
-dreaded contingency, gradually took to itself substance,
-and began to figure in the plans and projects of each as
-if it were almost a positive certainty. Always, however,
-with the proviso that it was a very sad possibility, to be devoutly
-deplored and hoped against, but still accepted and
-treated as an actuality. And such an effectual devil-trap
-did this <i>if</i> prove to be, that this meeting of the two
-cousins was, in the hidden consciousness of each, in the
-nature of an unexpected shock that made a sudden scattering
-of many schemes and purposes, all based, to a
-great extent upon that wicked and fallacious <i>if</i>. And
-while all this was lurking under the demonstrative
-warmth and gladness of their greeting, probably no
-greater surprise nor horror could have befallen either
-than to have had the veil of his self-deception for one
-moment lifted, and to have had a single glimpse at the
-truth within him, or a single intimation of the lives that
-they two should lead through the next half century
-under the evil consciousness of that ever impending <i>if</i>.</p>
-
-<p>But nothing of this supernatural character befell
-them, and after a few warm greetings among the crowd
-on the pier, Jack hastened toward the town. There
-were some changes in the familiar streets; buildings
-newly built or altered, signs changed, and a barber's
-pole freshly painted. All these he observed carefully
-as he walked on. When he came in sight of 'Squire
-Tupper's, the radiant, blushing face of Molly disclosed
-itself for an instant at the window, and speedily reappeared
-in a flutter of delicious expectancy at the half-open<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[206]</a></span>
-door, for the news of the arrival was already all
-over town. She gave a series of little screams as Jack,
-with such a big black beard, and so very brown, came up
-and saluted her with a strong bearish hug and a general
-smell of whale-oil.</p>
-
-<p>For Jack was considerably altered by reason of a certain
-manly reticence that seemed to have grown on
-with his whiskers, in place of the old boyish dash and
-frankness. Molly had become steady and womanly, too,
-and now saw with vast pride the dignified way in which
-Jack deported himself, how he met the 'squire's gracious
-welcome with equal ease and affability, and talked
-of his voyage and its adventures in such a quiet, modest
-way as showed him to be every inch a hero. And when,
-after a short stay, he spoke of Aunt Betsy, and would
-not prolong her waiting, Molly was quite resigned to let
-him go, contenting herself with dwelling upon his improved
-looks, and indulging in charming little maidenly
-reveries that centred in the anticipated joys and splendors
-of a certain day which she had settled in her own
-mind as not far distant.&mdash;Alas, Molly! Indulge your
-reveries, poor girl. Dream on, and let your dreams be
-sweet. Play over and over in anticipation your pretty
-little drama of white dresses and bridesmaids and wedding-cake,
-and make it all as gay as possible, for little
-else shall you have by way of reward for your many
-months of constancy to Jack Avery, save his occasional
-attentions and the satisfaction of being for years the
-wonder and mystery of all the gossips in town. Yes;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[207]</a></span>
-for years. It may as well be said now as any other
-time. The day when Molly's dreams should be realized
-withdrew itself from time to time, and at length took
-up its permanent position in the distant horizon of uncertainty.
-"Colts grew horses, beards turned gray,"
-but Molly Tupper was not merged in Molly Avery,
-and there were no prospects of that consummation more
-than had appeared for the last&mdash;well&mdash;we wont say
-how many years. For tender and devoted as Jack was
-for a long time, there was a change in him, that brought
-something of constraint and reserve between them, and,
-with all her delicate feminine tact, she could never lead
-him into any direct avowal of his wishes on the subject.
-And since Molly was the very paragon of maidenly
-modesty and trusting devotion, she came to indulge the
-conviction that Jack knew best, and had some wise
-though inscrutable reason for delaying matters. And
-in time, even those indefatigables, the village gossips,
-wearied of wondering and surmising, at their perennial
-tea-parties, and the whole thing settled down into a discouraging
-calm.</p>
-
-<p>And yet Jack had no design of doing an injustice.
-He was really fond of Molly, and fully intended to
-marry her. But for that ever-present <i>if</i>, and the complications
-it involved, the event would have taken place
-in due time. His reflections sometimes took a very
-painful turn, as he pondered the subject. Here was this
-beautiful, affectionate girl, to whom he had long been
-pledged, waiting his time with all the truth and constancy<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[208]</a></span>
-of her loving nature. And here he was, living a
-dreary and almost hopeless bachelor life, and standing
-in the way of any advantageous match which might be
-otherwise open for her acceptance. But, in case of his
-marriage, the will arrangement must be broken up, and
-he should have the mortification of making that suggestion
-to Philo; which seemed an almost impossible thing
-to do, for not a word with reference to it had ever passed
-the lips of either since the night when the agreement
-was made, and both had come to regard it with something
-like a superstitious dread, as a theme whose discussion
-might portend some fatal result.</p>
-
-<p>And then, again, thought Jack, life was such an
-uncertainty, and a few months of waiting might make a
-vast difference. Suppose, in his foolish haste, he should
-throw up the will arrangement, and marry Molly, and
-it should turn out, after all, that a little delay would
-have improved their condition so much. Though life
-insurance was still unknown, and its cool calculations
-and scientific averages would have been then regarded
-as the extreme of impiety, and its risks as a wicked
-tempting of Providence, Jack had made out in his own
-mind a tolerably accurate table of averages, which
-showed quite conclusively against his cousin's chances
-for longevity. It is hardly to be supposed that Philo
-had neglected the same satisfactory proceeding, or that
-his results were very different.</p>
-
-<p>And thus this corrupting temptation, that is the root
-of all evil, had crept upon these two noble young hearts<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[209]</a></span>
-distorting and defiling them with its slow taint. And
-even now, either of them might truthfully have questioned,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p style="margin-top: 1.5em; margin-bottom: 1.5em; margin-left: 25%;">"What shall I be at fifty,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;If nature keeps me alive,<br />
-&nbsp;If life is so cold and bitter,<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;When I am but twenty-five?"</p>
-
-<p>It would be too dreary a task to follow them year by
-year. Let us make leaps and take glimpses at them by
-intervals.</p>
-
-
-
-<p style="margin-top: 2.5em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;"><i>Twenty-five.</i> What we have seen.</p>
-
-
-<p style="margin-top: 2em;"><i>Thirty.</i> Aunt Betsy, weak and childish for many
-months, has gone to her long home, with a final admonition
-to Philo that he must make Jack the object of his
-best watch and care for the entire period of his natural
-life.</p>
-
-<p>Molly is still pretty, though a little thin and with
-a perceptible sharpening of the elbows. Her color is
-not quite so high, nor her figure so plump. She keeps
-house for the 'squire, with devotion and good management
-that are the admiration of the town; continues
-to love and trust in Jack with unabated fervor, though
-some young women, whom she remembers to have held
-in her arms when they were babies in long clothes, are
-long since married and have babies of their own. Still
-she receives the sometime visits of her laggard lover
-with the same grace and sweetness, confident that it will
-all come right in time; has dropped the old familiar<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[210]</a></span>
-"Jack" for "John" or "Mr. Avery," which is a hint
-that we ought to do so, too.</p>
-
-<p>That unfathomable individual has been for some time
-a partner in a grocery establishment, carrying on a
-good business, and realizing fair profits; devotes much
-of his leisure to revising the imaginary insurance table,
-and has brought it down considerably closer; maintains
-a great regard for his Cousin Philo, and has much affectionate
-solicitude for his health; gives occasionally to
-various benevolent objects; is extremely regular in all
-his habits, and is generally regarded as a very nice
-young man, who has turned out much better than was
-expected of him.</p>
-
-<p>Philo has purchased a farm in an adjoining town, and
-is improving it with great care; is considered rather
-"near" in his dealings, and is generally quite distant
-and reserved. Suspicions are entertained that he has
-been disappointed in love, though nobody pretends to
-know the particulars; always takes a great interest in
-his Cousin John, whom he suspects of a tendency to
-dropsy. John, on his part, thinks Philo consumptive.</p>
-
-
-<p style="margin-top: 2.5em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;"><i>Thirty-five.</i> No great variation.</p>
-
-<p>Both the farmer and the grocery-man are moderately
-prosperous; though neither ventures much into speculation,
-because each is mindful of possibilities in the
-future that will give great additional advantages. The
-insurance table has been reduced to one of the exact
-sciences.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[211]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Molly, poor girl, has faded a shade or two. She still
-keeps house, and raises an annual crop of old-maid
-pinks and pathetic-looking pansies, together with sage
-and rosemary and sweet marjoram, which she dries and
-puts in her closets and drawers, in order that their
-delicate, homelike fragrance may keep out the moths
-and pervade her apparel. But, as she moves so briskly
-and cheerfully about her little tasks, or bends over some
-bit of sewing or other ladycraft, grave doubts intrude
-themselves; and, if she were one whit less patient and
-self-forgetful, she would sometimes throw aside all these
-little occupations, and, like Jephthah's daughter, bewail
-her virginity. And, as she sits on Sunday mornings in
-church, alone in the pew except the 'squire,&mdash;now an
-old man who takes incredible quantities of snuff and
-drops the hymn-book,&mdash;as she sits thus, and watches
-the happy matrons, no older than she, coming in one
-by one, with their manly husbands and groups of rosy
-children, there comes up, sometimes, a great rising in
-her throat, which she is fain to subdue by taking bits of
-her own preserved flag-root, which she carries always
-in her pocket. Or, when she sees some pretty bride
-arrayed in the customary fineries, she sighs a little, as
-the thought that she has lost her best bloom comes uneasily
-to the surface; and then she sometimes looks
-timidly around to see if Mr. Avery has come to church.
-But Mr. Avery isn't often there; the insurance table
-takes up a good deal of his attention on Sundays.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[212]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Molly has long ceased to dream about the white
-dresses and orange-blossoms. She would be glad, indeed,
-to make sure of a plain dark silk and only two
-kinds of cake; and of late even her hopes of these have
-become empty and melancholy as a last-year's birds-nest.
-Yet she clings still to the shadow of her old coquette
-girlhood, and rejuvenates herself with a new bonnet
-every spring, with as much seeming cheerfulness and
-confidence as if she were fifteen instead of thirty-five.</p>
-
-
-<p style="margin-top: 2.5em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;"><i>Forty.</i> Decided changes.</p>
-
-<p>'Squire Tupper rests in a grave marked by the most
-upright and respectable of tombstones. And then all
-the chattering tongues, that had before wagged themselves
-weary with gossip and conjecture, took a renewed
-impetus, and it was settled in all quarters that Molly
-would now be married as speedily as the proprieties
-of mourning would permit. And John himself, it
-would seem, thought as much; for, without any undue
-haste, he did make some motions looking that way.
-He bought a new gig, and took Molly out to ride
-several times, besides sitting very regularly in her pew
-at church. And, having thus evinced the earnestness
-of his intentions, he made himself spruce one Sabbath
-evening, and proceeded to call on her, with the express
-design of asking her to fix the long-deferred day.</p>
-
-<p>But what was his surprise on finding, as he came
-upon the stoop where he and Molly had so often exchanged
-vows of eternal fidelity (which had, indeed,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[213]</a></span>
-been tolerably tested), the best parlor gayly alight as
-in the days of his early courtship, and to hear a male
-voice in very animated conversation with Molly.</p>
-
-<p>Curiosity and pride alike forbade him to retreat; but
-how was his surprise intensified to dismay when Molly,
-looking remarkably bright and young, ushered him into
-the presence of Mr. Niles, a most respectable gentleman
-resident in town, whose wife had been now three months
-dead. He was as smiling and interesting as Molly.
-And presently that outrageous damsel spoke up in the
-easiest way in the world,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"You dropped in just the right time, <i>Cousin</i> John, for
-now you shall be the first one to be invited to our
-wedding. It is to come off a week from next Wednesday
-in the evening. We have just settled the time, and
-I shall have to stir around pretty lively to get ready."</p>
-
-<p>It was all true, and there was no help for it. John
-Avery had presumed a trifle too much upon the elastic
-quality of Molly's love for him, and now, at the eleventh
-hour, her seraphic patience had given way, and let him
-most decidedly and disgracefully down. When her
-father was dead and she left in loneliness, and John still
-delayed to make direct provision for altering the state
-of things, Molly felt that she had passed the limit of forbearance,
-and with a sudden dash of spirit, in which she
-seemed to concentrate all the unspoken pain and suppressed
-sense of wrong that had struggled in her heart
-through all these years past, she actually set her cap for
-this forlorn widower with six children, caught him,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[214]</a></span>
-rushed him through a violent courtship, evoked from
-his stricken heart an ardent and desperate declaration,
-accepted, and married him, all in the space of eight
-weeks.</p>
-
-<p>And this was John's first intimation. Will any woman
-blame her if she <i>had</i> been a little studious to conceal
-the preliminaries from him, till it should be time to
-acquaint him with the result, or if she wasn't especially
-tender of his nervous sensibilities in making her disclosure?</p>
-
-<p>But he was bidden to the wedding, and must needs
-go,&mdash;which he did, looking very glum, and kissing the
-bride with far less gusto than he had done in former
-times. But it was a very festive occasion, notwithstanding,
-for the bridegroom appeared in a blue coat
-with brass buttons, and his hair was greased to preternatural
-glossiness, while all the six children stood in a
-row, their stature being graduated like a flight of steps,
-and the cake was all that Molly had ever pictured it in
-the wildest flight of her imagination. And Molly herself
-in a perfect cloud of gauze and blaze of blushes renewed
-her youth prodigiously.</p>
-
-<p>It was all over, and John Avery walked slowly homeward
-with a glimmering consciousness that the things
-of this life in general were rather shaky and uncertain,&mdash;indulging
-even a brief doubt as to the reliability of his
-system of averages.</p>
-
-
-<p style="margin-top: 2.5em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;"><i>Fifty.</i> Both of our old bachelors are beginning to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[215]</a></span>
-grow gray and morose. Philo stoops considerably, but
-is otherwise in excellent physical preservation; reads
-all the medical books about abstinence and frugality as
-the means of promoting long life, and practises rigidly
-upon their principles. John is equally tough and temperate.
-Neither shows the least sign of giving out for
-fifty years to come. Both have increased in substance
-and have the reputation of being "forehanded." The
-insurance table has been reduced to the very last fraction;
-but, spite of its scientific accuracy, seems to be one
-of those rules that are proved by their exceptions.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Niles is the most devoted of wives, the perfection
-of step-mothers, and rejoices, besides, in a chubby
-little boy of her own. All the seven are united in neglecting
-no opportunity to rise up and call her blessed.</p>
-
-
-<p style="margin-top: 2.5em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;"><i>Sixty.</i> Ditto&mdash;only more so.</p>
-
-
-<p style="margin-top: 2.5em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;"><i>Seventy.</i> The Ghosts?</p>
-
-
-<p>Yes, indulgent reader, your patience hath had its perfect
-work, if it hath brought you through all these preceding
-pages, in order that you may witness this <i>denouement</i>
-scene, in which the ghosts appear, with such
-real and startling semblance in the eyes of some of our
-actors, that, in comparison, the fifth act of a sensation
-drama would have seemed mild as milk.</p>
-
-<p>It is to see these supernatural visitants that we have
-brought you all this long road. Let them show themselves
-but once, and we will then be content, nay glad,
-to drop our curtain, retire from the footlights, and whisk<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[216]</a></span>
-our actors back to the serene shades of private life.
-Grant us, for a little time, the gifts of conjurers and
-"meejums." Let our Asmodeus take you in charge,
-and show you things that are beyond the range of mere
-mortal perception. Ubiquity shall be yours while you
-journey into the land of spirits, and the name of the
-mischievous wizard and terrible practical joker who
-conducts you thither shall be Jack Niles.</p>
-
-<p>For we omitted to mention, in its appropriate connection,
-that when Molly found herself laid under the responsibility
-of naming her boy, she was debarred from
-bestowing on him that of his father, since it had been
-previously appropriated among the six, and her artistic
-sense revolted from starting the poor, helpless innocent
-out in the world under the honored designation of
-Zophar Tupper, which his grandfather had borne with
-such eminent respectability. And so, being influenced
-by the tender grace of motherhood, and desirous of
-showing her kind feeling towards the man whom she
-had once so loved and had now so freely forgiven, she
-felt that she could do it in no more expressive way than
-by calling her baby John Avery. The compliment was
-appreciated, and there may still be seen, among the family
-treasures of the Niles tribe, a silver cup, of punchy
-form and curious workmanship, marked with the inscription
-"J. A. N. from J. A."</p>
-
-<p>Jack the second grew up a tolerably correct copy of
-the boyhood of his namesake. He was gifted with the
-same gayety of temperament, and facility for getting<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[217]</a></span>
-into scrapes. It had happened more than once that
-heedless pranks of his had been leniently looked upon,
-and concealed or remedied by the considerate care of
-John the elder, who, spite of all the miserable warping
-and drying up of all his kindlier sympathies under the
-influence of that ever-impending possibility, still seemed
-to find a congenial satisfaction in the society of this
-frank, jolly youth, whose presence brought with it such
-an echo of his own once careless, joyous life.</p>
-
-<p>But, spite of warnings and admonitions, Jack was still
-a sad boy, and his favorite mode of working off his surplus
-activity was in devising and executing practical
-jokes. His invention and audacity reached their culmination
-in a most unprincipled scheme against the two
-venerable Avery cousins.</p>
-
-<p>Philo was now as sour, dry, and wizened an old man
-as dwelt in the state of Connecticut, and those bleak
-hills and stony slopes do not seem to produce very ripe
-and mellow old age. But Philo was known as an especially
-hard and grasping old sinner, living a sort of
-dog's life, all by himself, and too stingy to open his eyes
-wide. And it befell once that he and his strange, barren
-mode of life were touched upon in the evening talk
-of the Niles family, and then the mother, with her old,
-modest sprightliness, went over the story of the two
-wills made so long ago, and which must, in the natural
-course of human events, soon come into effect. She had
-grown to be an old woman, this blessed mother, but
-none of the loving ones, to whom her presence had been<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[218]</a></span>
-a joy and consolation for so many years, ever thought
-of her gray hairs or caps or spectacles, except as the
-emblems of more abundant peace and benediction.</p>
-
-<p>She tells her story now,&mdash;about the early days of the
-two old men, whose withered faces, and bent forms, and
-eager, acquisitive eyes are so familiar to them all,&mdash;and
-as she proceeds, Jack lapses from lively attention to a
-mood of profound reflection, which is always a bad sign
-for somebody.</p>
-
-<p>In the evening twilight of the next day, a thin, yellow-haired
-lad, mounted on a large, bony, sorrel horse,
-presented himself with an appearance of great haste and
-urgency before the door of Philo Avery's hermetic
-dwelling. After a vigorous though fruitless knocking, he
-made his way to the rear of the small, dismal brown
-house, and spied an aged figure advancing from an adjacent
-piece of woods, bending under the weight of a
-large heap of brush.</p>
-
-<p>"Be you Philo Avery?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," answered the ancient, with evident suspicion.</p>
-
-<p>"Then I've got a letter for you," said the thin youth,
-and, thrusting it forth, sprang upon his high horse and
-clattered away down the road.</p>
-
-<p>A letter! Philo stood and watched the messenger
-till he disappeared from sight, filled with a vague sense
-that something strange was about to break upon him.
-A letter sent to him was in itself a strange occurrence.
-Who could write to him? and for what? Could it indeed
-be the one thing so long looked for? and, if it<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[219]</a></span>
-were, how sudden! Tremulous with excitement, he trotted
-into the house, and, after many minutes of agitated
-fumbling, succeeded in lighting a candle. Then he held
-the letter close and tried to examine the address, for
-Philo was a victim to that unaccountable oddity, to
-which the greater portion of human nature is prone, of
-making a close and critical scrutiny of any unexpected
-or mysterious letter, before opening it for the conclusive
-knowledge of its contents. But everything looks misty
-before his eyes, and, after much squinting and peering, it
-occurs to him that he has forgotten his spectacles. And
-at last, after more delay and fumbling, he comes to the
-subject matter, very brief but comprehensive:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"John Avery died last night. Funeral at ten o'clock
-to-morrow morning."</p>
-
-<p>No date, no signature; but what of that? Over and
-over Philo read the two lines, before his mind could
-really grasp the intelligence they conveyed. It would
-have made a striking picture,&mdash;that withered, bent figure,
-in its coarse, well-worn clothes, stooping in the dim,
-lonely room, and the hungry eyes devouring that bit of
-news. It had happened at last, this thing for which he
-has waited almost half a century. How many hundred
-times he had imagined his own feelings when it
-should come to him, and how different it all was! The
-old man sinks into a chair and gives himself up to revery.
-And sitting thus, there come stealing upon him
-remembrances of long past scenes. He thinks of the time
-when he and John were boys together, and of all his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[220]</a></span>
-mother's love and care of both; of the parting on the
-deck of the Skylark, and their long voyage. And then
-came the slow-moving panorama of all the dull, dreary,
-barren years that dragged their slow length onward between
-his present self and all these boyish memories.
-The hours pass unnoted as the poor old man goes
-through the successive stages of his retrospect, and
-finally arouses himself with a start when the candle, that
-has been burning dim and flickering, gives a dying glare
-and goes out in the socket. And then he arises, cramped
-and stiff, and creeps trembling to bed as the cocks are
-crowing for midnight. But the newly-made heir cannot
-sleep. Haunting images visit him, as the Furies surrounded
-Orestes. At length he rises and seeks the repository
-of his valuables. He takes out the will, and
-though he has known it, every word by heart, for a
-whole generation's lifetime, he reads it mechanically
-over. How strange the lines look, and the name of
-<i>Zophar Tupper</i>, written with the old magisterial flourish!
-Here, too, are the signatures of the witnesses, and he
-finds himself wondering why John never married Molly
-after all, and, even now, does not dream that he himself
-was the obstacle, by his disagreeable persistency in living;
-for our mortality is the last and severest lesson
-that we learn in life.</p>
-
-<p>Philo wonders if it is not almost daylight, and looks
-out at the east window for the first streak of dawn;
-reflects that he must start early, for it is nine miles to
-the town, and his old horse is not over-active. He will<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[221]</a></span>
-have to dress up, too, for the funeral. How strange!
-To pass away the time, he begins to get out his clothes
-and lay them ready. From the depths of a great red
-chest he brings up a pair of good, new pantaloons, that
-he has not worn for ten years, and then a coat to match,
-and a fine shirt with a ruffled bosom, that Aunt Betsy
-made for him while she was still young enough to do
-such things. And, lastly, he bethinks himself of a pair
-of black linen gloves that he bought on the occasion of
-the good woman's funeral, and from the darkest corner
-of the chest he fishes them up. A little dingy and rotten
-they are, to be sure, but still in wonderful preservation,
-though they give way in two or three spots when
-he puts them carefully on.</p>
-
-<p>In these little occupations he wears away the hours
-till the darkness begins to grow gray, and as soon as he
-can see sufficiently he goes to the pasture and leads his
-astonished old horse to the door. Then comes the terrible
-process of shaving;&mdash;and what spectacle is more forlorn
-than that of an old bachelor trying to shave a long,
-stiff beard by a weak light and with cold water? Even
-this is at length achieved; and then, after much brushing
-and other unaccustomed elaborations of toilet, he
-places the will carefully in his pocket, and, drawing on
-the rusty gloves, takes a final survey of himself before
-starting. The mouldy little mirror reflects a thin, yellow
-face dried into long, fine wrinkles, straggling gray
-locks, and watery, pale-blue eyes. The old-fashioned
-clothes make the thin, stooping figure more awkward<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[222]</a></span>
-and spindling, and a high, tight cravat completes the
-scarecrow effect of the whole. Still Philo has done his
-best, and is satisfied, as he mounts his ancient steed, that
-he presents the very likeness of respectable sorrow.</p>
-
-<p>And jogging decorously onward, as becomes his dismal
-errand, he ponders how different this morning is
-from all the other mornings of his life. In the silver-gray
-dawn there come back all the strange sentiments
-that had arisen out of the surprise and excitement of the
-previous midnight. A thick mist creeps up from a little
-stream that runs by the road-side, and its damp, clinging
-chill seems to strike through and saturate his very vitals.
-It occurs to him that the road is very lonely, and the few
-scattered farm-houses very dreary and inhospitable-looking,
-for it is a cloudy morning, and people are not
-yet stirring.</p>
-
-<p>All the influences and associations of the hour are
-dreary and funereal. He tries to fix his mind upon the
-inheritance into which he is about to step, but no bright,
-alluring visions rise at his call, and his thoughts are
-either perpetually recurring to the early memories that
-so affected him the night before, or else to the suggestion
-of his own form lying stiff and cold for burial in the
-place of his cousin's. All the well-known landmarks of
-the familiar way start into new and strange aspects; and
-he recoils in affright from an old guideboard that has
-stood in exactly the same place for forty years, but now
-appears like some spectral gallows that spreads its arms
-in ghostly invitation. He twists and pinches himself as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[223]</a></span>
-he rides along, to be assured that he is in the world of
-realities; but the night's experiences have unstrung his
-aged nerves, and mind and body quiver helplessly alike.</p>
-
-<p>And now, from the brow of a little eminence, he perceives
-a gig slowly advancing from below, and, as it
-nears him, he becomes conscious of a great familiarity
-in its appearance. It is certainly very like the one that
-John bought so long ago, before Molly was married,
-and which he has used ever since. Curiously, too, it is
-drawn by a white horse, and John has had a white horse
-for ages past. This is indeed a coincidence. The thing
-comes noiselessly nearer. Oh, horror of horrors! It is
-John's own self,&mdash;his form,&mdash;his features,&mdash;his old
-brown hat,&mdash;John indeed, but deadly pale, and with
-wide, wild eyes fixed in a terrible stony gaze. No
-natural look, no nod of recognition, but only that
-hideous, glassy stare as he comes silently along, riding
-up out of the white fog.</p>
-
-<p>Philo can neither move nor cry out. He would turn
-and escape, but his stiffened hand refuses to draw the
-rein, and his horse has become, like himself, rigid and
-motionless.</p>
-
-<p>Prayers, oaths, and invocations rush, in a confused
-huddle, through his bewildered brain, as he sits and
-gazes, unable to remove his eyes from that horrid sight,
-and while he is vainly seeking to frame his lips to some
-sort of utterance, the wraith itself breaks the silence.</p>
-
-<p>"Philo." The tone is broken and distant.</p>
-
-<p>Trembling and choked, he tries to answer. The blood<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[224]</a></span>
-rushes to his face and almost blinds him, and he stammers
-out,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"John Avery,&mdash;aren't you dead?"</p>
-
-<p>"Are you?" asks the wraith.</p>
-
-<p>"I&mdash;I&mdash;I don't know," says Philo, and he didn't.</p>
-
-<p>The ghost rises, steps down from the gig, and extends
-his hand. It is very cold and clammy, but still a sound,
-fleshly hand, though quite hard and shrunken from its
-early proportions.</p>
-
-<p>"Thank God!" shouts Philo Avery.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Thank God!</i>" responds John Avery, fervently.</p>
-
-<p>"How came you here?" asks Philo, still a little incredulous
-as to the real mortality of his companion.</p>
-
-<p>"On my way to attend your funeral," says John.</p>
-
-<p>"Why, no,&mdash;that can't be,&mdash;I'm going to yours."</p>
-
-<p>"Heavens!" exclaims John.</p>
-
-<p>"I guess it's a hoax," suggests Philo.</p>
-
-<p>John takes out a letter and reads aloud: "<i>Philo Avery
-died last night. Funeral at ten o'clock to-morrow morning.</i>"</p>
-
-<p>"Just like mine, except the name," says Philo. "So
-you thought I was a ghost."</p>
-
-<p>"Didn't know what else you could be. You looked
-queer enough for one," replied John.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, I've lived long enough to see ghosts, but this
-is the first of that kind of gentry that ever showed themselves
-to me," cried Philo, in his high, cracked voice, and
-actually convulsed with laughter. John joined in, and
-the two ghosts made the whole region alive.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[225]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"It must have been somebody that knew about the
-wills," said John, when they had grown calm.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," replied Philo; "and what cursed things they
-have been?"</p>
-
-<p>"Cursed&mdash;for both of us," said John.</p>
-
-<p>"Have you got it along with you?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, of course,&mdash;have you?" answered John, reddening
-faintly.</p>
-
-<p>"Why, yes,&mdash;and here it goes," cried Philo, with
-sudden energy, pulling it out, and shredding it in strips.
-John was not to be outdone. With equal eagerness he
-pulled his out, and, in a few seconds, both the wills were
-fluttering in fragments among the elderberry bushes by
-the road-side.</p>
-
-<p>"What a contemptible old screw I've been!" exclaimed
-John, penitentially, as the insurance table came
-into his mind.</p>
-
-<p>"No worse than I," said Philo, thinking of all his
-drudging, grovelling years.</p>
-
-<p>"Why, do you know I've wished you dead," burst
-out John.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, suppose you have,&mdash;I've done the same by
-you," answered Philo.</p>
-
-<p>"May God forgive us both."</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Amen</i>," said Philo, solemnly.</p>
-
-<p>"And help us in the future," continued John.</p>
-
-<p>"Amen again," said Philo.</p>
-
-<p>The muffled clatter of a horse's hoofs sounded through
-the fog, and presently the twinkling face of Jack Niles<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[226]</a></span>
-beamed upon the ghostly couple. Looking with well
-simulated astonishment on the group, the empty gig,
-and his venerable namesake standing in the middle of
-the road, Jack paused and begged to know what was
-the trouble, and whether he could be of service.</p>
-
-<p>"I believe it was you," said Philo, looking at the mischievous
-lad with sudden prescience.</p>
-
-<p>"I know 'twas," said John.</p>
-
-<p>And though Jack never owned it, that was a conviction
-that never departed from the minds of the two, and
-when they died, long after, he found himself bound by
-substantial reasons to remember the Two Ghosts of
-New London Turnpike.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[227]</a></span></p>
-
-<h1 style="margin-top: 8em; margin-bottom: 8em;">DOWN BY THE SEA.</h1>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[229]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h2 style="margin-top: 3em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;"><a name="Down_by_the_Sea" id="Down_by_the_Sea"><span class="smcap">Down by the Sea.</span></a></h2>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;">
-<img style="margin-bottom: 1.5em;" src="images/image1.jpg" width="100" height="18" alt="fancy line" />
-</div>
-
-<div><img class="dropcap" src="images/dropcap-t.jpg"
-width="51" height="85" alt="t" />
-</div><p><span class="dropletter">T</span>HERE is a lonely old house situated close down
-by the sea, in one of the most secluded yet lonely
-nooks, not far from one of the most noted
-resorts on the seaboard; an old gray stone
-house, showing the marks of the many wild
-storms which have beat upon it in all the long years
-which have passed over it; a house whose bareness
-and desolation are enlivened but little by the heavy-trailing
-ivy which creeps over a portion of it and in
-which many wild birds build their nests. Old as it is, it
-seems never to have been finished,&mdash;rather to have been
-left without any of the last touches which complete a
-building, and to have thus stood for many years, with
-the wild winds and storms of the coast beating against
-it. Here and there a shutter is torn from its hinges,
-and lies where it fell under the window. The point is
-entirely gone from cornice and colonnade, and the floor
-of the latter, which had never been painted, is old and
-worm-eaten. The grounds about it are an intricate tangle
-of brushwood. Flowering shrubs, which had been
-planted here and there, have grown up into wild and unshapely<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[230]</a></span>
-trees. Rose-bushes and wild vines choke up the
-paths, and the gates and fences are broken and dilapidated.
-There is one path, which leads down to the
-beach, which has been kept open, and has, apparently,
-been often trodden; but apart from this there seems to
-be but little sign of life around the old gray house.
-There is, indeed, one red-curtained window upon the
-side which looks out to sea, and here a bright light is always
-burning at night, and all night, and the sailors
-have learned to watch for it as for a signal; and the
-place is known to them as the Lone-Star House. Let
-us watch around the house, and perhaps it will have a
-story to tell,&mdash;such places often do have, lonely and
-deserted as they seem; stories often full enough of
-human love and heart-break. "It looks as though it
-might be haunted," say the gay parties who ride by it
-from the fashionable resort a few miles away. Yes, and
-there is no doubt but what it is.</p>
-
-<p style="margin-top: 1.5em; margin-bottom: 1.5em; margin-left: 20%;">"All houses wherein men have lived and died<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Are haunted houses. Through the open doors<br />
-&nbsp;Phantoms unseen upon their errands glide<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With feet that make no noise upon the floors."</p>
-
-<p>It is growing sunset now, and the sky is blossoming
-most gloriously with many-colored clouds, as out of
-the door of the old house a woman glides and takes the
-beaten path to the beach. A great rough and shaggy
-dog follows her, and the two together walk thoughtfully
-along. They go down where the great waves are tumbling<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[231]</a></span>
-and tossing upon the rocks, and pace rapidly up
-and down the shore, looking far out over the green
-waters with their fleecy crowns of foam. She is a woman
-of middle-age, verging near upon forty, one would say,
-tall, and straight as an arrow, with large, unfathomable
-gray eyes and a massive coronal of glossy hair,
-streaked here and there with gray. She wears a cheap,
-dark dress; but she has a handsome scarlet shawl
-around her shoulders, of the most superb tint of which
-you can conceive; and she looks like a woman who
-would love rich and gorgeous coloring; and, indeed, it is
-one of her passions. In draperies, in articles of dress
-where such colors are admissible, and more than all in
-flowers and leaves, she loves the deepest and richest
-tints. Every night the sunset is a revelation to her.
-She studies the gorgeous castles and cathedrals of gold,
-which are builded in the western heavens with a glory
-which the temple of Solomon could never attain; and
-she watches, from her little turret window up in the old
-gray house yonder, every morning for the rising of the
-great high-priest in his garments resplendent. There
-was, indeed, something warm and rich and tropical in
-her blood, albeit it sprung from the cold New England
-fount. She reminded one, as much as anything, of</p>
-
-
-<p style="margin-top: 1.5em; margin-bottom: 1.5em; margin-left: 10%;">"The wondrous valley hidden in the depths of Gloucester woods<br />
-&nbsp;Full of plants which love the summer blooms of warmer latitudes,<br />
-&nbsp;Where the Arctic birch is broided by the tropic's flowery vines,<br />
-&nbsp;And the silver-starred magnolia lights the twilight of the pines."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[232]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>She walks upon the beach till the sunset has burned
-low in the red west, and then takes the path back to the
-house. When about half-way across the garden, she
-turns off a little from the main path, and, putting back
-the bushes with her hands, makes her way for a few
-paces and stops at a little grave,&mdash;a child's grave,&mdash;tufted
-thick with purple pansies, sprinkled with white daisies.
-She sits down for a moment beside it, plucks one
-or two spires of grass which have sprung up among the
-flowers, then hurriedly leaves it, calling her dog after
-her, and going into the house, where the light soon
-shines in the seaward-looking window. The woman's
-name is Agnes Wayland, and here she has lived alone
-for now nearly twenty years,&mdash;alone, except once in a
-while of a summer she takes a quiet boarder or two,
-who see little of her and know less, and of whom she
-esteems it a great pleasure to be well rid, when the autumnal
-equinox comes on. Winter and summer, in
-storm and sleet, rain and shine, she stays shut in the
-dim old house all day, and emerges only towards evening
-for her walk upon the beach, and her peep at the little
-grave, with its coverlet of pansies in summer and its
-white drapery of snow in winter. Upon the night of
-which I have been writing, she made her way back, as I
-have said, into her own room,&mdash;a room where her prevailing
-tastes could quickly be discovered. A peculiar
-depth and brilliancy of coloring pervaded everything;
-carpet and curtains were of the same vivid crimson,
-and the large bay-window filled with plants was gorgeous<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[233]</a></span>
-as a festal-room of the fairies. Everything was old and
-much worn, and had a look of old but not faded splendor.
-A few books occupied a cabinet in one corner, and
-a piano, which was always locked, stood in another.
-An easy-chair was drawn up to a little stand, near the
-window, and upon it lay an open Bible. This was the
-place where she sat and read hour by hour and day by
-day, always from the Bible, only varying her occupation
-by weary hours over intricate and elaborate pieces
-of fancy-work,&mdash;more beautiful and marvellous than
-such pieces of work ever were made before, but always
-things which required only mechanical kind of ingenuity,
-and needed genius and taste only in the coloring,&mdash;and
-these she sold at the nearest town, and so earned her
-daily bread. After she had taken her accustomed seat
-this evening, she was startled by a ring at the door,&mdash;a
-sound so unusual that she trembled like a leaf as she
-took the lamp and started to answer the summons. She
-had got half-way down the stairs, when she stopped, and
-called lightly to the dog, who was beside her in a moment,
-and together they opened the door. A grave-looking
-elderly gentleman stood there, who inquired if
-he had the honor of addressing Mrs. Wayland.</p>
-
-<p>"That is my name, sir," she answered, not opening
-the door or bidding him enter.</p>
-
-<p>"And mine is Ashly, madam. I am a clergyman, living
-in Boston, and I am seeking a quiet place, near the
-sea, in which to spend the summer. I have been told in
-the village yonder that you sometimes receive a boarder,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[234]</a></span>
-and I think your place will just suit me. I have recommendations,
-if you wish."</p>
-
-<p>But Mrs. Wayland did not need them. She was too
-good a judge of character, despite her long seclusion,
-not to see at a glance that he was what he asserted,
-and that, if she must have boarders at all, he was
-just what she wanted. So she invited him in, without
-relaxing a particle in the coldness of her demeanor, and,
-giving him a seat in a cheerless-looking and scantily-furnished
-dining-room, told him in as few words as possible
-what she would do for him and for how much she
-would do it,&mdash;a straightforwardness which raised her
-very highly in the reverend doctor's estimation, although
-she designed, if she had a design in the matter,
-quite a contrary effect. She had sometimes had some
-trouble in keeping her boarders at a sufficient distance
-to suit her, and she had found it necessary upon their
-first arrival to have it distinctly understood that they
-were to expect no sort of companionship from her; that
-she gave them a room and their board, such as it was, and
-she never took any pains to make it good or attractive,
-and that that was all she wanted of them. But Dr. Ashly
-had a great horror of a bustling and gossipy landlady,
-and thought he had found a perfect treasure; and when
-she had shown him the room he could have, if he liked,
-he eagerly agreed to take it, and said if she had no objection
-he would take possession forthwith, and not go
-back to the village till morning. To this she assented
-indifferently, and soon left him alone, calling the one<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[235]</a></span>
-house-maid to get him some supper, and, retiring to her
-own room, was soon buried in her accustomed thoughts,
-and scarcely aware of his existence. And as landlady
-and lodger were equally pleased to let each other alone,
-there was little intercourse between them for several
-weeks. But one night, when the doctor had been for
-a long walk on the beach, he saw, as he was returning,
-Mrs. Wayland, in her usual evening exercise, pacing up
-and down the beach, and was struck by her appearance
-as she walked thus, and stood still for a time observing
-her, and followed her at last, at a little distance, while she
-made her visit to the child's grave. His kind heart was
-very much touched by the sight, and he determined to talk
-with her and give her his sympathy and friendship, if she
-needed them. So he gathered some of the pansies off
-from the grave, and, holding them in his hand, went into
-tea. Mrs. Wayland had laid aside her shawl and was
-already seated at the table. They usually had little conversation
-at these times, and that of the most commonplace
-character. This evening, as he came through the
-door and she caught sight of the flowers in his hand,
-she exclaimed, in a quick, excited way, "You have been
-to my grave!"</p>
-
-<p>She spoke as though he had intruded upon her most
-sacred privacy, and he answered, apologetically, "Yes,
-I have visited the little grave in the garden. I hope I
-have not intruded. I have a little grave in the churchyard
-at home, and such spots are very sacred to me."</p>
-
-<p>Agnes Wayland was a lady, and she would not have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[236]</a></span>
-been guilty of a rudeness for the world, so she hastened
-to reply,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, no, sir, you have not been guilty of intrusion, but
-you are the first one who has ever visited my grave,
-and I have watched it so fondly for so many years
-that I almost felt jealous that any other eyes should
-ever look upon it."</p>
-
-<p>"And I have not only looked upon it," said the minister,
-very softly and benignantly, "but I have dropped
-a tear upon it."</p>
-
-<p>"That is something that I have never done."</p>
-
-<p>"Then I pity you with all my heart, my friend. If I
-had not been able to weep over my child's grave, I think
-my heart would have broken."</p>
-
-<p>"Mine, sir, was broken before the child died," and, as
-she said this, she arose hastily and left the room.</p>
-
-<p>The minister was much interested and full of sympathy
-for this lonely woman, whose lot was so isolated, and
-as he lay that night and listened to the deep, hollow roar
-of the sea, he thought of the great deeps of the human
-heart, and the fierce passions which were ever tossing
-it, and of the great calm of death.</p>
-
-<p>A few days after he ventured as delicately as he
-could to return to the subject, by referring to the little
-girl he had lost, and of how her mother had followed
-her, but a short time before, to the better land.</p>
-
-<p>"You seem very cheerful, sir," said Agnes Wayland,
-in a quick, impetuous way, "and yet you have had
-trouble, it seems."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[237]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Yes, madam, I have had some very severe and dreadful
-trials; but I am very happy and hopeful in spite of
-them all, for I know that now they will soon be ended, and
-that I shall recover all that I have lost when I reach the
-heavenly land."</p>
-
-<p>"How do you know that? I don't know it. When I
-buried my only child down in the garden there, I thought
-I had lost him forever. That was why, in my stony grief,
-no tear ever fell upon his grave. I have been trying
-these fifteen years to believe what you say you believe;
-but it has no consolation for me. God took my child
-away from me in my bitterest need, and he took him
-forever. Was it a good God who did that?"</p>
-
-<p>Her voice was cold and rigid, and a pallor as of death
-was upon her face as she paused for a reply.</p>
-
-<p>"A good God, madam! and whom he loveth he chasteneth!"</p>
-
-<p>"No, indeed, sir, I don't believe that. He didn't love
-me, and I didn't love him, and I don't love him now,&mdash;hate
-him, rather. He has tried me too sorely."</p>
-
-<p>"My dear friend, you know not what you say. I beseech
-you, do not blaspheme your God."</p>
-
-<p>"I have only said, sir, for once, what I have been
-thinking all these dreadful years. When I buried my
-child down there, I did not believe in any God for
-years. I thought some vile and fiendish Fate was pursuing
-me. Then you ministers were always saying to
-me, 'Pray;' and I prayed. They said to me 'Study the
-word of God;' and I studied it. It has been my only<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[238]</a></span>
-study for fifteen years, and it has brought me no consolation
-yet."</p>
-
-<p>"But you have found God in it,&mdash;have you not? You
-do not deny a God?"</p>
-
-<p>"I have found a God in it certainly, but only a God
-who has separated me eternally from all I love."</p>
-
-<p>"My dear friend, I assure you, you have not yet found
-the true God, if you believe this."</p>
-
-<p>"I have found I verily believe the God of the Bible,
-and he has said the wicked shall go away into everlasting
-punishment; and I am the most wicked of all God's
-creatures."</p>
-
-<p>Here Mrs. Wayland left him again standing upon the
-colonnade, and hurried rapidly from him down the path
-which led to the sea. Her conversation had revived in
-her heart all the strong passions which slumbered there,
-and which she usually held in close repression. As she
-paced wildly up and down the beach, feeling in her
-nearness to the sea a sort of comfort as though the
-great ocean were her friend, she thought over her whole
-lonely life. She thought of her happy and brilliant
-youth, of its gayeties, its triumphs, and its great hopes;
-she beheld herself the petted darling of a joyous circle
-of companions and friends. She thought of her journeys
-in distant lands, whither a loving father had taken her,
-and of all the delights of those years when they had
-wandered through all the sunny climes of southern
-Europe, and so away on to the Orient, where she had
-trodden with pilgrim feet all the sacred places of that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[239]</a></span>
-Holy Land. It was there she had first met her husband;
-and she dwelt with fondness upon every little incident
-which memory recalled of her intercourse with
-him there, and of how they had sailed together upon
-their return to their native land. It was then she had
-learned to love the ocean. In those long days, when
-they were out upon the trackless deep, they had
-learned together the sweet mystery of loving. Night
-after night they had paced the deck together, gazing
-out upon the moonlighted expanse, and watching the
-breakers rise and fall. The long voyage had been a
-season of enchantment. It had passed into her being,
-and become a part of her inmost life forever. She had
-one of those natures to whom such things come but once
-in a lifetime. When they had reached home, they had
-been married, and, after a year or two of pleasant married
-life, they had built the old gray house of which I
-have told you, designing to pass their summers down
-there within hearing of the grand, eternal anthem of the
-sea. How well she remembered the hurry they were in to
-get down here,&mdash;so great a hurry that they could not stop
-to have the house entirely finished, and so in early May
-they had furnished two or three rooms, and lived here
-in a wild trance of what seems to her now, as she looks
-back upon it, perfect bliss. Here they wandered up
-and down the beach together hand in hand for hours
-and beheld the waters glowing in the early tints of sunrise,
-and reflecting the gorgeous splendors of sunset, and
-rippling and shimmering in the bewildering moonlight.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[240]</a></span>
-Then she thinks of how gayeties began up at the village
-yonder, and how they began to see much company and
-to mingle in all the excitements of watering-place life.
-Here they had met the beautiful syren who had stolen
-her husband from her. With what angry hate she
-dwells upon the soft, bewildering beauty of that woman,&mdash;her
-rounded, dimpled form, her golden hair, and the
-languishing blueness of the dreamy eyes! She seemed
-in all her bewitching beauty, to the eye of Agnes Wayland,
-more hateful and hideous than a fiend. She had
-fascinated Mortimer Wayland almost from their first
-meeting. Of a dreamy, sensuous temperament, and a
-weak will, and with no great power of principle at his
-back, the artful and wicked woman had ensnared him with
-her wiles, and in the meshes of her charms he had forgotten
-the grand and queenly wife, who to every eye was
-so infinitely the superior of one for whom he was deserting
-her, and the little year-old baby, who was just learning
-to lisp "father" to him as he fondled him.</p>
-
-<p>Of the wild tempest which tossed her soul at this time
-she dreaded to think even now. It had been so near to
-madness that it was a terror to her yet. But pride had
-always been one of her ruling passions, and, instead of
-pleading with him with a woman's tenderness, as some
-might have done, she had treated him with coldness and
-disdain, and with reproachful scorn had goaded him on
-to take the last step in the dreadful drama.</p>
-
-<p>He had deserted her, and with the blue-eyed woman
-had sailed for a distant land. Never since that time,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[241]</a></span>
-now nearly twenty years, had she left, except for her
-lonely walks, the old gray house. She shut herself up
-like a hermit, and with wild and bitter grief cursed herself
-and her God. Down into the deepest gloom of
-despair she went, where never a single ray of heavenly
-light and comfort reached her. Her child, indeed, she
-had left; but although she loved him with all the concentrated
-passion of her nature, he seemed little comfort to
-her. She brooded continually upon the darkness of her
-fate, and upon the fathomless depths of despair into
-which she was sinking.</p>
-
-<p>Then the child died, and her last human interest went;
-and she made its little grave in the tangled garden, and
-every year covered it thick with flowers. But in her
-heart no white blossom of hope had ever sprung up, no
-purple pansy of royal magnanimity and forgiveness had
-yet blossomed there. And this night, after so many
-years, she was living it all over again with tragic interest,
-and no softened feelings of relenting or forgiveness
-entered her stern heart.</p>
-
-<p>"He is very happy," she thought to herself as she
-wended her way back and stood by her little grave; "he
-is very happy, for he can stand by his child's bed and
-weep; and so could I, if I had his hope. O my darling,
-my darling, darling boy!" and she stooped down,
-and threw her arms caressingly over the little mound.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, if God would only, only let me meet you once
-more! O my God, why cannot I forgive and be forgiven?"</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[242]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"My sister," said the kind old man, coming up and
-hearing her last words; and feeling how vain it would
-be to reason or expostulate with this woman,&mdash;"let us
-pray;" and, almost before she knew it, they were kneeling
-by the little one's grave; and before the old minister
-had concluded his simple but touching prayer, the
-woman, whose heart had been stone for so many years,
-was weeping, weeping with passionate sobs like a little
-child; and when he had concluded, she arose, and without
-a word made her way into the house, and soon the
-red light shone in the little window.</p>
-
-<p>Somehow after this a more gentle feeling crept into
-the heart of Mrs. Wayland. A softer light came into
-her eye, and a more gentle tremor was in her voice as
-she addressed the old minister, who saw that she was
-touched, but was too wise to meddle farther than was
-absolutely necessary with the good work which he was
-sure was going on.</p>
-
-<p>It was not many weeks from the evening of which I
-have spoken, when, as she was returning from her evening
-walk, she beheld a scene of bustle around the door of
-her house; a carriage was driving away, and a trunk
-stood upon the steps, while some figures seemed just entering
-the door whom she could not distinguish in the
-gathering darkness. "Dr. Ashly has some friends
-come," she thought, with a feeling of impatience; "what
-shall I do with them?" and she walked quickly to the
-house. As she turned into the cheerless dining-room,&mdash;the
-only room which was ever used below,&mdash;she saw,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[243]</a></span>
-stretched upon a couch, the figure of a man propped up
-by pillows, which seemed to have been hastily brought,
-and looking pallid and wan. She walked quickly forward,
-but when she had reached the middle of the room,
-she stopped like one transfixed, and, with wild eyes full
-of eagerness and something like joy, looked about her.</p>
-
-<p>"Mortimer Wayland!" she exclaimed at last, grasping
-the table for support. "Why come you here?"</p>
-
-<p>"I have come home to die, Agnes. I could not die anywhere
-else; I have been for years trying to do so,&mdash;but
-God would not let me. I was forced to come and
-seek your forgiveness, and God will not take me until I
-have it; yet I dare not ask you to grant it; it is too
-much!" At this the sick man shut his eyes wearily,
-and said no more.</p>
-
-<p>"Forgive us our sins as we forgive those who trespass
-against us," solemnly said the voice of the old minister,
-who was sitting near the couch upon which the man lay.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh, sir, you cannot know what it is for me to ask of
-her. Most wrongs may be forgiven; but mine against
-her is so great that she cannot forgive me, I am sure,
-unless God helps her. I have been suffering for it these
-twenty years,&mdash;trying to expiate it; but I have failed.
-I have suffered, I have struggled, I have almost died
-many times, sir; but I could not atone for my sin, and
-God could not forgive it, nor can she."</p>
-
-<p>Then the minister's voice was heard again, and it
-said, "Sister, remember the little child's grave in the
-garden, and forgive and be forgiven."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[244]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Then Mrs. Wayland, who had stood like a statue all
-this time, rushed forward, and, kneeling by the couch
-poured forth her whole heart in a torrent of passionate
-words,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"O my husband, my darling, my only love, forgive
-me for my coldness and my scorn! forgive me for not
-helping you to withstand temptation,&mdash;I, who was always
-the stronger! It was I who drove you away,
-and for it I have suffered and agonized all these years.
-I have been so hard, so wicked and cruel, so unpitying
-and unforgiving, that I have had no rest or peace
-night or day. It is so blessed to feel that I forgive
-you! so joyful to think that you will forgive me,&mdash;that
-God will forgive us both!" and the woman laid
-her head upon his breast, and rained upon his lips a
-thousand passionate kisses.</p>
-
-<p>Then Dr. Ashly would have left them; but the woman
-called him back.</p>
-
-<p>"Share in our great joy, dear friend," she said; "for,
-had it not been for you, this would never have been.
-A few weeks ago I should never have received him
-whom I loved even as I had always loved, but whom
-my pride would have banished from my door in the face
-of all his pleadings; but you have softened my heart,
-and to you we owe this joyful hour. And now you
-must help me," she continued, with a woman's thoughtful
-care, "to carry him to my own room upstairs, which
-is the only comfortable room I have; and there I can
-nurse him up, and soon have him well again."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[245]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>And so he was carried up to the room where she had
-sat alone so many years, and was soon as comfortable
-as womanly care could make him.</p>
-
-<p>"How natural it all looks here!" he said, glancing
-around the room. "It is just as it used to be,&mdash;isn't
-it, darling? And I remember it so well,&mdash;furnished,
-to suit you, in crimson, which you still like, as I see by
-your shawl."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes," she said, with a little blush; "I have always
-worn it for your sake. You used to say it was just the
-color to suit me, and I have worn it all these years."</p>
-
-<p>"Darling," said he, looking all about the room, "I see
-no traces of any one but yourself here. Where is our
-child,&mdash;our little baby boy?"</p>
-
-<p>Agnes Wayland went softly up to him, and put her
-arms around his neck, as she said,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"I thought, a few weeks ago, that he was down in
-the garden under a bed of pansies; but now I know he
-is in heaven, where you and I will soon join him."</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[247]</a></span></p>
-
-<h1 style="margin-top: 8em; margin-bottom: 8em;">WHY MRS. RADNOR FAINTED.</h1>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[249]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-
-<h2 style="margin-top: 3em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;"><a name="Why_Mrs_Radnor_Fainted" id="Why_Mrs_Radnor_Fainted"><span class="smcap">Why Mrs. Radnor Fainted.</span></a></h2>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;">
-<img style="margin-bottom: 1.5em;" src="images/image1.jpg" width="100" height="18" alt="fancy line" />
-</div>
-
-<div><img class="dropcap" src="images/dropcap-y.jpg"
-width="55" height="85" alt="y" />
-</div><p><span class="dropletter">Y</span>OU have seen hazel eyes,&mdash;have you not? I
-don't mean the quiet nut-brown ones, you meet
-every day, but <i>bona fide</i> hazel eyes, opaline
-in their wonderful changes,&mdash;that make you
-wonder, when you turn away from them, what
-color they will have assumed when you next look into
-their depths; for such eyes have depths, sometimes
-glowing emerald-like, with a steady, lambent flame, now
-gleaming with a soft lustre like pearls, or melted into
-sapphires by tears.</p>
-
-<p>Such eyes had Mrs. Radnor,&mdash;cold, beautiful woman
-that she was; insensible, I was about to say, only I remember
-her fainting at sight of a pond-lily. How well
-I recollect the day! There was a party of us passing
-the midsummer at the old Richmond farm, a few miles
-from &mdash;&mdash;; Mr. and Mrs. Ferdinand Radnor among the
-rest. The latter, a haughty statuesque woman, with
-nothing save her wonderful eyes to indicate anything
-approaching a heart,&mdash;lovely as a dream, yet with<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[250]</a></span>
-beauty that repelled even in its fascination. Such hair,
-too, as she had, rolling in golden ripples down to her
-slender feet;&mdash;fine as silk, it was brown in the shade,
-but glowed and intensified in the light till it seemed as if
-a thousand stray sunbeams were imprisoned in the radiant
-mass. We always called her the "Princess with the
-golden locks." You remember her in the fairy tale,&mdash;do
-you not? That one, I mean, whose hair was the wonder
-and admiration of the whole world, and whose lovers
-delighted to bind themselves with fetters so exquisite;
-yet when they strove playfully to throw them off, they
-found themselves with gyves and manacles of steel, under
-which they were powerless.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Radnor was urbane and gentlemanly; but, possessing
-only half a soul, he divided the interest of that
-equally between admiring his own person and annoying
-Mrs. Radnor by his attentions.</p>
-
-<p>It was a sultry July day, and we were all of us on the
-rose-terrace back of the house, some dozing,&mdash;I pretending
-to read, though all the time watching the
-"Princess" furtively from the shelter of my book.</p>
-
-<p>She had a pile of cushions spread with a scarlet shawl,
-and, like an Eastern beauty, lay languidly upon them.
-Her dress of palest blue was open at the throat, and her
-hands toyed listlessly with the heavy cord that confined
-her waist. There was a blush-rose tint on her usually
-pale cheek, and her hair, half escaped from its little net,
-lay like flecks of gold on the scarlet cover. I think I
-never saw repose, utter and perfect, before.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[251]</a></span></p>
-
-<p style="margin-top: 1.5em; margin-bottom: 1.5em; margin-left: 17%;">"Down through her limbs a drooping languor crept,<br />
-&nbsp;Her head a little bent, and on her mouth<br />
-&nbsp;A doubtful smile dwelt like a clouded moon<br />
-&nbsp;In a still water."</p>
-
-<p>Suddenly the charmed silence was broken, for round
-the corner of the house came Mr. Radnor, with his arms
-filled with superb water-lilies, which he threw in a fragrant
-shower over his wife. He was saluted with exclamations
-of wonder and delight, and while he was replying,
-I had leisure to observe his wife.</p>
-
-<p>The change was frightful: an ashen pallor had
-spread itself over her face, she was panting violently
-for breath, and, at the same time, attempting to clasp
-both hands before her eyes. I cried aloud and sprang
-towards her,&mdash;but it was too late.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. Radnor had fainted!</p>
-
-<p>At the same time, Anne Richmond threw herself upon
-her knees beside her, and, hastily gathering the snowy
-flowers from her dress and bosom, where they had fallen,
-thrust them into Mr. Radnor's arms, saying hurriedly,
-as she did so,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Pray, pray, take them away, sir, or your wife will die."</p>
-
-<p>He obeyed blankly, and together Anne and I applied
-the usual restoratives, and, after some minutes, were rewarded
-by a faint color in her lips, then a quivering of
-the mouth, and I heard her murmur faintly,&mdash;"I saw
-him again, Anne. Oh, those dreadful flowers!"</p>
-
-<p>Then her eyes opened,&mdash;those wonderful eyes, that
-were then almost startling in their blackness. She looked<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[252]</a></span>
-wildly round her for a single second, and, catching
-sight of me, was herself again,&mdash;haughty, self-sustained
-as before, even though lying helpless as a child on Anne
-Richmond's arms.</p>
-
-<p>And, after all, pride is better for a fainting woman than
-all the sal volatile in the world, thought I, receiving her
-languidly uttered thanks, and retreating.</p>
-
-<p>We saw no more of Mrs. Radnor that day. Her husband
-talked loudly of the extreme heat; and no one but
-the two who had observed the expression of her face
-when the perfume of the lilies first met her senses, knew
-anything to the contrary. As for me, I was restless and
-unquiet. There had been from the first a nameless
-something about Mrs. Radnor which had excited my
-deepest interest, and now my imagination was busy.
-One thing the painful scene of the morning had convinced
-me of, and that was, that some time in the past
-she had been quickened into life by the breath of love,
-and the flowers had played a terrible part in overwhelming
-her with memories possibly long buried in
-the deepest recesses of her heart; for&mdash;I acknowledged
-it&mdash;Mrs. Radnor had a heart. I never doubted it from
-the moment in which her face changed from its quiet
-repose into that torturing expression of fear that it
-wore when she fainted.</p>
-
-<p>"Anne," I said that evening to Miss Richmond, as I
-drew her into my chamber after the party had separated
-for the night, "tell me something of Mrs. Radnor. I am
-sure you are in some way concerned in her past."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[253]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Yes," she answered, with a little, fluttering sigh;
-"there is one page of her life that no one living has
-ever read but myself. Perhaps I do wrong in consenting
-to turn it for you; but it may be a warning to you,
-child. To-morrow we will go down to the lake together,
-and I will tell you what has changed Mrs. Radnor, from
-the brightest, sunniest girl that ever lived, to the breathing
-statue that she has been for ten years."</p>
-
-<p>She sighed again, as she kissed my cheek, and then I
-heard her footsteps die away in the long corridor.</p>
-
-<p>My room was in the second story, and directly over
-those occupied by the Radnors, which opened on a balcony
-leading down by a little flight of steps to the lawn.</p>
-
-<p>The night was sultry and still. All the usual bustle
-and stir of retiring had ceased, and, extinguishing my
-candle, I curled myself on the broad window-seat,
-watching the stars that seemed to smile in the hazy atmosphere.
-It was late,&mdash;nearly midnight, I think; and
-I drank with delight the heavy fragrance which that
-hour always seems to draw from the heliotrope, great
-masses of which grew under my windows. I do not
-know how long I sat there. Waking dreams, such as
-flit lightly in the tender stillness of summer nights,
-wooed me with delicious repose. I fancied myself beneath
-Eastern skies, and the faint stir of a bird in a
-neighboring tree seemed to me the pluming of a bulbul's
-wing; and through the gilded lattice of the harem two
-starry eyes&mdash;and they were Mrs. Radnor's&mdash;glittered
-and gleamed. The soft running of a brook through<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[254]</a></span>
-the grounds was the lapping of waves against Venice
-stones. I heard the twinkle of a guitar, and, framed
-by carved, gray stone work, her rippling golden hair
-stirred in the night-breeze.</p>
-
-<p>Then everything faded, and I slept a moment or an
-hour,&mdash;I cannot say which, so softly had the hours
-passed in softest sandals,&mdash;and it was with a start that
-I sat upright and heard, with a keen thrill of fear, a
-faint click, as of a drawn bolt, and immediately the distant
-bell of St. Michael's pealing out.</p>
-
-<p>One&mdash;two; and with the dying of the second stroke
-there was a rustling sound beneath my window, and
-then a shuddering whisper,&mdash;"My God! my God!
-have mercy upon me!"</p>
-
-<p>Shrouded by a half-closed blind, I peered out, and,
-kneeling on the balcony below, I saw a white figure illuminated
-by the strange, weird light of a waning moon.
-The face was uplifted, and the expression might have
-been that worn by Maria Therese in the solitude of her
-chamber when the Archduchess Josepha died.</p>
-
-<p>I drew back,&mdash;it seemed like profanity for any but
-the God to whom she appealed to witness her despair,&mdash;for
-it was Mrs. Radnor. I heard a long, deep-drawn
-sigh, a footstep, and then the silky tones of her husband.</p>
-
-<p>"My love,&mdash;why will you? The dew is very heavy."
-Then a stir and the sound of a closing door.</p>
-
-<p>I shivered in the ghostly light that had crept into my
-window, and, softly closing my blinds, I laid down to
-sleep if I could.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[255]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The first person I saw, on entering the breakfast-room
-the next morning, was Mrs. Radnor, pale as the muslin
-wrapper she wore, but as coldly self-contained as usual.
-I felt the passionate sympathy, which had taken firm
-hold on me since the scenes of the previous night, almost
-vanish before her languidly uttered replies to my inquiries
-for her health. It was only in watching the drooping
-corners of her rarely beautiful mouth and the violet
-circles beneath the wonderful eyes, that I could connect
-the haughty being before me with the utterer of the
-despairing cry of the night before.</p>
-
-<p>The day wore on slowly enough to me, and it was
-only when the lengthened shadows on the terrace, and
-Miss Richmond, equipped for her walk, greeted my eyes,
-that my impatience subsided.</p>
-
-<p>The path led us through a shady grove of pines, that
-sighed mournfully as one passed through them, then
-across a sloping interval made green by recent rains,
-and so down through a fringe of alders to a little seat
-close by the margin of a charming lake on which myriads
-of water-lilies were closing their cups of incense.</p>
-
-<p>"Sit here," said Anne, pointing to a place at her
-side.</p>
-
-<p>"It is not always pleasant to think or speak of the
-past," she began, after a few moments' silence, "although
-day by day its scenes and actors appear to us.
-There are some memories in every heart that thrill us
-with grief unutterable, and when you know that one person
-in the story which I shall tell you was dear to me as<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[256]</a></span>
-my own soul, you will not wonder if my lip falters or I
-fail to dwell on the more painful portions of it."</p>
-
-<p>Then for the first time I was aware of another unwritten
-heart-history, and knew why the soft lips and
-eyes of the woman beside me had so often uttered their
-fatal no.</p>
-
-<p>"Ten years ago," she said, "our house was full of
-guests, and among them was Eleanor Orne,&mdash;the most
-perfectly beautiful girl I ever beheld. Fancy Mrs. Radnor,
-younger by as many years, with a bewildering
-smile ever ready to play around the lovely mouth, with
-expressions as rapidly following themselves in her eyes
-as clouds on an April day, and you can form a faint idea
-of her loveliness.</p>
-
-<p>"There was also a young student of divinity, with an
-eye as clear as a star and a soul pure as prayer itself.
-Proud and calm he was; but it was a noble pride that
-clothed him as with a garment, and a gracious calmness
-resulting from a vaulting intellect, subdued and chastened
-by firmest faith.</p>
-
-<p>"He had been fond of me in a way, but from the night
-that Eleanor came floating down the long piazza, attired
-in some diaphanous gray that streamed around her like
-mist, I knew how it would be. I marked, with one
-great heart-throb, the perfect delight that flashed in his
-dark eyes as they rested upon her face and form.</p>
-
-<p>"After that they were always together. In the mornings
-he was reading to her as she worked; on afternoons,
-rocking together in the little boat on the lake;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[257]</a></span>
-and then, in the purple twilight, singing dreamy German
-music, of which they were both passionately fond.</p>
-
-<p>"I soon knew that James Alexander loved her. I read
-it in every glance, in every tone. But Eleanor? I was
-not sure. Watch her as narrowly as I would, I could not
-see that the rose in her cheek became a deeper pink when
-he approached, or that her eyes were raised more tenderly
-to him than to a dozen others who sought her smiles.</p>
-
-<p>"There had been rumors of Eleanor's engagement and
-approaching marriage, which had drifted to me from
-her city home; but, when I saw her day by day allowing
-him to become more attached to her,&mdash;for she could
-not fail to perceive it all,&mdash;I rejected the rumor, and
-with it the impulse which had prompted me to repeat it
-to James, that he might, if not already too late, be upon
-his guard.</p>
-
-<p>"At last the end came. I dozed one day on a sofa in
-an inner room, and watched with delicious delight my
-dream of fair woman that a dark-velvet lounging-chair
-brought out in clear relief. Eleanor sat there, with
-downcast eyes and clasped hands. Suddenly a step,
-hurried and joyous in its very lightness, sounded in the
-hall; the door opened and closed again, and Alexander
-stood before her with an open letter in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>"'See,' he said, speaking rapidly, 'it has come at
-last, and I may speak. It is a call to one of the largest
-parishes in your own city, and I may say, what
-you must have known for weeks past, that I love you,
-Eleanor, deeply, devotedly; that I want you. My<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[258]</a></span>
-darling, tell me that you are not indifferent to me,&mdash;that
-you will be my wife.'</p>
-
-<p>"It was too late for me to move; and something&mdash;perhaps
-it was a kind of dull despair&mdash;kept me motionless,
-with eyes riveted upon the group.</p>
-
-<p>"'Speak to me, Eleanor,' he said, more eagerly, bending
-over her as he spoke.</p>
-
-<p>"I saw her face flush, and an almost imperceptible
-shrinking from him, that made him quickly draw back.</p>
-
-<p>"'Speak, Miss Orne,&mdash;Eleanor, I implore you.'</p>
-
-<p>"'Oh, why have you said this to me?' she answered,
-faintly. 'I cannot hear you, Mr. Alexander. I am to
-be married next month.'</p>
-
-<p>"I saw him reel for an instant as one would under a
-heavy blow, and heard a deep sigh&mdash;almost a groan&mdash;burst
-from him; then a silence so long and so profound
-that I could hear my heart beat. At last he spoke, in a
-voice husky and changed,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"'Forgive me. I did not mean to offend; but God
-knows what a mercy it would have been if I could have
-known this before. I may touch your hand once,&mdash;may
-I not? And you will look up into my face? No,
-not that! Grant me this, at least then, before our
-long parting.' And he bent and kissed one of the sunny
-curls that streamed over the chair. Then I saw him
-raise one hand over her as in benediction, and, in another
-moment, he was gone. I looked at Eleanor.
-She had risen from her seat, and moved a step or two
-towards the door.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[259]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"'O James, James, I love you!' she said, piteously;
-and then I had just time to break her fall.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>"An hour later, I met him on the doorstep. 'I am
-glad to have seen you,' he said slowly, 'and to thank
-you for your kindness; for I am going away. You will
-be good to <i>her</i>, Anne, for my sake,&mdash;will you not?'</p>
-
-<p>"He turned from me, and passed down the walk. I
-watched him until a sharp turn hid him from my sight.
-I never saw him afterwards alive.</p>
-
-<p>"The next day it rained, and the next; and it was not
-until the third day that Eleanor and I took our usual
-walk. As we left the house, she suggested that we
-shape our way towards the lake. Agreeing, we walked
-on slowly, and I tried to make James Alexander the
-subject of our talk. At first she evaded me; and, when
-at last she found my persistence was not in any other
-way to be turned aside, said,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"'It is an unpleasant subject to me, dear Anne. I fear
-I have much to blame myself for. <i>I</i> suffer enough; for,
-in rejecting his love, I shut my eyes on a life that would
-have been a continual delight, to open them on one from
-which my very soul shrinks abhorrently, and yet to
-which I am solemnly pledged.'</p>
-
-<p>"'But it may not yet be too late,' I said, eagerly; for
-God knows I loved James Alexander with no selfish
-love.</p>
-
-<p>"'Yes, it is too late,' she replied mournfully. 'I shall
-never allude to it again, Anne; but I tell you now, that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[260]</a></span>
-I do not and can never love Mr. Radnor; but there are
-family reasons that make the sacrifice of my hand
-a necessity. I never realized, until within the last
-few weeks, that it <i>was</i> such a sacrifice. I have been
-so happy, that I dared not break the spell by telling
-him the truth. And somehow the future seemed very
-far; and I did not dream that this summer would ever
-end.'</p>
-
-<p>"Then there was silence between us for a space. At
-last she spoke again,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"'I hope he will not suffer long. Tell him some time,
-Anne, what I have told you. He will not quite hate me,
-perhaps, then, if he knows that I was not drawing him
-on to gratify a foolish coquetry, but loved and suffered
-like himself.'</p>
-
-<p>"I was about to reply, but she laid her hand on my
-mouth.</p>
-
-<p>"'No,' she said. 'Let the subject go now forever.
-And no one will dream by-and-by how fair a love lies
-buried beneath my laces and jewels; or that, in the life
-of the noted man that he will one day surely become, is
-a romance that belongs to a dead past. It will all be
-the same a century hence. What does it matter after
-all?'</p>
-
-<p>"But her words ended with a sigh that contrasted
-strangely with the forced lightness of her tone.</p>
-
-<p>"Just then we came out of the grove, and could see far
-off the little waves of the lake dancing in the morning
-sunlight. I paused a moment to pick some late wild<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[261]</a></span>
-flowers, while Eleanor walked on quickly and disappeared
-among the alders that fringed the lake. I was
-following her slowly, when suddenly I heard one wild,
-thrilling cry, and then my name three times repeated.
-I flew almost down to the water, and there I saw Eleanor
-unconscious; and, close to the shore, among the lilies,&mdash;white
-and pure as their own petals,&mdash;a face upturned
-to the sky, swaying gently with the motion of the
-water. I need not tell you whose." Anne faltered.</p>
-
-<p>"Do not go on," I said, with my own eyes and voice
-full of tears.</p>
-
-<p>She raised her head quickly.</p>
-
-<p>"I had schooled myself to it, dear, before I came, and
-I must finish. I am telling you of another's life, not
-mine.</p>
-
-<p>"Then there was a brain fever for Eleanor, that no
-one believed she would ever rally from, in which she was
-either unconscious, or else singing snatches of German
-songs, with a pathos that was heart-rending.</p>
-
-<p>"It was remarkable that neither to her mother nor to
-any one who watched over her did her words ever betray
-anything that could connect her illness with anything
-more than the bare horror of the discovery she
-made. She was married the next spring; and when I
-saw her, a month afterward, I should never, save for
-merest outline and coloring of beauty, have recognized
-her. Until last night, the past has never been alluded
-to by either of us. Then she confessed to me, that during
-the last ten years her life has been haunted by a perpetual<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[262]</a></span>
-remorse. The sun has set, dear, we will go
-home."</p>
-
-<p>It was dusk when we crossed the pine grove, and the
-branches of the trees seemed, to my quickened imagination,
-to be singing a sad refrain to the story I had
-heard. We walked slowly,&mdash;Anne with head uplifted
-and a serene look upon her fair face that made me realize
-the refiner's work.</p>
-
-<p>As we drew near the house there came forth a rolling
-symphony from the parlor organ, and then a voice
-that I had never heard before, in the <i>Agnus Dei</i> of the
-Twelfth Mass.</p>
-
-<p>We paused, and Anne said quietly,&mdash;"She has never
-sung since he died until now."</p>
-
-<p>We waited until the pure, pathetic tones had died
-away. Silence and the spirit of the hour was upon us.
-Overhead the large, calm stars hung low and bright. A
-gleam of light in Mrs. Radnor's rooms flashed for an instant,
-and disappeared; and a white figure came out
-upon the balcony of her apartment.</p>
-
-<p>"Kyrie Eleison," said Anne, in a hushed voice. "Let
-us go in."</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[263]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h1 style="margin-top: 8em; margin-bottom: 8em;">UNDER A CLOUD.</h1>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[265]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2 style="margin-top: 3em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;"><a name="Under_a_Cloud" id="Under_a_Cloud"><span class="smcap">Under a Cloud.</span></a></h2>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;">
-<img style="margin-bottom: 1.5em;" src="images/image1.jpg" width="100" height="18" alt="fancy line" />
-</div>
-
-<div><img class="dropcap" src="images/dropcap-o.jpg"
-width="56" height="87" alt="o" />
-</div><p><span class="dropletter">O</span>NE bitter cold day in January, four years ago,
-I had occasion to wait for a street-car in Chicago,
-on one of those aside lines where the cars
-pass but once in every ten or fifteen minutes.
-There was a German lager-bier saloon close
-by, and I entered it for shelter. As I stood by the
-stove, enjoying the grateful warmth, I observed near
-me a young man, in very seedy apparel, engaged in
-reading the <i>Staats-Zeitung</i>. Something in the air of the
-young man awakened my curiosity, and led me to address
-him. Although reading a German newspaper, he
-was not a German in appearance, and I put to him the
-question, "<i>Sind Sie Deutsch?</i>" by way of experiment.</p>
-
-<p>"No, sir," he replied, "I am not German, but I speak
-and read the language."</p>
-
-<p>I drew a chair near him, as he laid aside the newspaper,
-with the air of one willing to enter into conversation.</p>
-
-<p>"Where did you pick up your German?" I asked.</p>
-
-<p>"I picked it up," said the young man, with an air of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[266]</a></span>
-some pride in the statement, "where I picked up my
-Latin and Greek,&mdash;at college."</p>
-
-<p>At this I ran my eye over him curiously. He had
-not the appearance of a scholar.</p>
-
-<p>"You look surprised," said he. "Despite my present
-appearance, and the place you find me in, I am a graduate;
-but at present, I am under a cloud."</p>
-
-<p>"So I should imagine."</p>
-
-<p>I also imagined that the young man was probably
-shiftless, and no doubt addicted to liquor; but I did not
-say so. As if he read my thoughts, he spoke again:</p>
-
-<p>"People are always ready to think ill of a seedy man,
-I suppose. Probably you think me a good-for-nothing,
-and would give me some valuable advice about hanging
-around beer-saloons; but the fact is, I am an employé
-of this establishment."</p>
-
-<p>He spoke with a bitter irony, that ill-concealed a sort
-of shame in the confession.</p>
-
-<p>"May I ask in what capacity?" said I.</p>
-
-<p>"You may, sir; and I may answer or not, I suppose.
-I think I will decline to answer. As I said, I am under
-a cloud. I am not proud of my employment, but I do
-what I do because I can't do better, and idleness is
-synonymous with hunger and cold for me and mine."</p>
-
-<p>"You are married, then?"</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, sir,"&mdash;with sudden reserve.</p>
-
-<p>"Don't be offended at my inquisitiveness," said I. "I
-spoke to you first out of mere curiosity, it is true; but
-I speak now out of interest in you. If I could help you,
-I would. There is my card."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[267]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>He took it with a respectful inclination of the head.</p>
-
-<p>"I've heard of you," said he, as he glanced at the
-name. "I can't give you my card, sir, because I don't
-own such a thing." He smiled. "My name is Brock
-St. John."</p>
-
-<p>"I hear the car coming," said I. "I'll see you again,
-Mr. St. John. I don't set up for a philanthropist; but
-I like to do a good turn when I can. Good-morning."</p>
-
-<p>And I went my own way.</p>
-
-<p>Henry Kingsley,&mdash;or rather a character of his creation,&mdash;in
-one of his novels, remarks that he suspects
-there is some of the poetical faculty about him, because
-he is accustomed to walk out of nights when anything
-goes wrong.</p>
-
-<p>This is also my case.</p>
-
-<p>To "fetch a walk" about the streets, late in the
-evening, has long been a favorite antidote for trouble
-with me. When the night is stormy, the value of this
-remedy for fretting cares is tenfold increased. There is
-an exhilarating sense of power in overcoming the opposing
-forces of the elements, and breasting along at a
-brisk pace against a furious storm of sleet or rain. As
-Leigh Hunt said, you have a feeling of respect for your
-legs under such circumstances; you admire their toughness
-as they propel you along in the teeth of the storm.
-As your blood begins to warm up, and to whirl through
-your veins with an exhilaration beside which that of
-wine is tame and effeminate, the "blues" that have
-been gibing you vanish like magic. Always, after such<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[268]</a></span>
-a bout, I return home and "sleep like a top," no matter
-what discomforts or sorrows have been running their
-sleep-dispelling race through my head before starting
-out.</p>
-
-<p>On the night of the day that I met St. John I started
-out about eleven o'clock for such a walk. The winds
-were holding high carnival that night, and a fierce
-storm of mingled hail and rain swept through the almost
-deserted streets. I forged along (as the sailors say), with
-my head down, block after block, fighting the forces of
-nature, with the same pleasure that Victor Hugo's hero
-felt, no doubt, in like effort. True, my fight was to his
-as a cock-fight is to an encounter of lions; but the limit
-of power is the limit of delight in overcoming in any
-case. The boy who declaims "the Roman Soldier"
-at school to the rapture of his gaping audience is as
-happy in his achievement as the tragedian who thrills a
-theatreful. Gilliatt conquered storms, and so did I; he
-was on the high seas, and I was in the streets of Chicago.</p>
-
-<p>Sounds of music and dancing fell on my ear. They
-came from the beer-saloon of the morning. Curiosity
-impelled me to enter.</p>
-
-<p>The air was reeking with tobacco-smoke and the
-fumes of lager-bier. The seats about the half-dozen
-tables were crowded with Teutonic guzzlers; and, at
-the lower part of the room there was a cleared space
-where a half-dozen couples were whirling in a waltz
-with that thorough abandon which characterizes your<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[269]</a></span>
-German in his national dance. On a slightly raised
-platform against the wall was a band composed of a
-violin, a clarionet, and a trombone.</p>
-
-<p>The violinist was my acquaintance of the morning.</p>
-
-<p>He caught sight of me as I elbowed my way toward
-the dancing-floor, and blushed violently. Then an expression
-of angry pride settled on his countenance, and he
-continued his playing with stolid indifference to my gaze.</p>
-
-<p>When the dance was over (and St. John kept up the
-music till the surprised Teutons who played the wind-instruments
-were sheer worn-out with their prolonged
-exertions), I went up to the young man, and shook
-hands with him.</p>
-
-<p>"At work, eh?" I remarked, with a miserable effort
-to seem cheerful and easy.</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, sir. You have found me out. You know now
-how I keep the wolf from my door."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, Mr. St. John; and I do not forget that it <i>is</i> to
-keep the wolf from your door. Still, I hope you are
-thoroughly misplaced here,&mdash;I <i>hope</i> you are!"</p>
-
-<p>He grasped my hand with a quick, strong pressure.</p>
-
-<p>"I must prove to you that I am, that's all," said he;
-"come to&mdash;to where I live, to-morrow, and let me tell
-you the whole story."</p>
-
-<p>He took my pencil and wrote the address in my note-book.</p>
-
-<p>"To-morrow afternoon," said I, "I will call."</p>
-
-<p>The next day I found my way to the wretched tenement
-house in North Clark street, where St. John lived,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[270]</a></span>
-and climbed three pair of stairs to the door of his room.
-I rapped, and the young man opened the door.</p>
-
-<p>I have seen a good deal of poverty in my day, and I
-was prepared to find it here, as I did. But I was not
-prepared for the sight of such a beautiful young face as
-that which met my gaze here, and to the possessor of
-which St. John introduced me as his wife. She seemed
-like some little girl that was lost. The unmistakable air
-of the true lady showed itself in every detail of her
-dress and manner,&mdash;in the small, white collar at the
-neck of the calico dress, in the smooth-banded hair that
-matched the brown eyes, in the quiet demeanor that told
-of natural and unconscious self-respect. It showed itself,
-too, in the perfect neatness of the room, in which
-there was a cheerful, homelike air, despite the poor and
-barren nature of its furnishings. The room was kitchen
-and bedroom, dining-room and sitting-room, in one; but
-the bed was smooth and clean, and the little cooking-stove
-was without spot.</p>
-
-<p>Mrs. St. John was engaged in the unpoetic occupation
-of mending her husband's only coat. He was in his
-shirt-sleeves.</p>
-
-<p>"Aggie expected to get the coat done before our guest
-came," said St. John, with a smile. "If you are at all
-particular, I'll put it on with the needle sticking in it,
-and she can finish it after you are gone. But I am accustomed
-to sitting in my shirt-sleeves."</p>
-
-<p>"So am I," was my reply; and, accordingly, I pulled
-off my own coat, and sat in my shirt-sleeves, too. In
-the act, my cigar-case fell out of my pocket.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[271]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"Light a cigar, sir, if you like," said St. John, with a
-brisk assumption of the airs of a genial host; "my wife
-don't allow me to smoke, but my guests always do. She
-is fond of cigars, is Aggie."</p>
-
-<p>The little wife looked up with a demure and childlike
-air.</p>
-
-<p>"He never offers to smoke, sir," said she, "because"&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Because I can't afford it," put in St. John. "I was
-a great smoker in college; but those were my wild days.
-Thank you."</p>
-
-<p>The last remark was in acknowledgment of an offered
-cigar. We were soon puffing great cloud-wreaths toward
-the ceiling, and an air of restraint that had rested
-on us at first, despite our efforts to avoid it, was speedily
-vanished. Cigars are social.</p>
-
-<p>"And now, sir," said St. John, "you shall hear the
-story I promised you. I hope it wont bore you."</p>
-
-<p>"If it does I'll cry out," said I.</p>
-
-<p>The little wife laughed quietly.</p>
-
-<p>"I graduated; I married; I came to Chicago," began
-St. John, sententiously.</p>
-
-<p>"<i>Veni, vidi, vici</i>," said I.</p>
-
-<p>"Quite the contrary; I <i>was</i> conquered. I had that
-idea which young men from the east, just out of college,
-are apt to have, that in this great western city there
-was a comparative lack of intellectual culture, and that
-a man of my education must speedily and easily get
-into a position of prominence, where my talents would
-earn me a fine living. But I very soon found where<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[272]</a></span>
-my mistake lay. I had not been bred to work,&mdash;real,
-practical, marketable work,&mdash;either mental or physical.
-The professions were open to me, as to any other beginner,&mdash;nothing
-more. I could not step out of college
-into a lucrative practice at the bar; but I could enter a
-law-office, and study. So of the other professions. If I
-had any one idea more prominent than another, it was
-that I could secure an editorial situation at once on one
-of the newspapers here. I was surprised to find that
-there was absolutely no demand for such services as I
-had to offer.</p>
-
-<p>"'Do you know anything about the newspaper business?'
-was the first question put to me, by the first
-publisher to whom I made application.</p>
-
-<p>"That was the very last question that I had expected
-to have asked of me. Of course I imagined myself competent,
-or I should not have applied for editorial employment;
-but I knew the publisher meant, Had I had
-actual experience on the press? I felt so sure of myself
-that I was tempted to answer him 'Yes,' but the
-fact is I was never brought up with such a reverence for
-the truth, as to always keep at a respectful distance from
-it; so I told him I had not, but I could quickly learn.</p>
-
-<p>"'We are in no need of students,' said he; 'and, even
-if we took you to teach you, your pay would not settle
-your washing-bill.'</p>
-
-<p>"One editor was good enough to let me try my hand
-at writing a political article. I sat down in his sanctum
-and went to work. At the end of two hours I handed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[273]</a></span>
-him what I had written, quite confident that I had settled
-the question of utility. It was an essay that
-would have brought me honor at college. He read it
-and smiled.</p>
-
-<p>"'I don't want to hurt your feelings at all," said he,
-'but you have been two hours about a piece of work
-that a ready writer would knock off in half an hour, and
-now it is done it is good for nothing. You make the
-mistake so many have made before you, that an editor
-does not need to be bred to his business. <i>My</i> alma mater
-was a printing-office,' said he, proudly, 'and I crept
-up the ladder round by round. When I commenced
-editorial labor, I dropped type-setting, at which I earned
-two dollars a day, to handle the reporter's pencil at
-seven dollars a week. If you think you could do anything
-as a reporter, I'll show you our Mr. Pyke, the
-local editor.'</p>
-
-<p>"Mr. Pyke was a rough one.</p>
-
-<p>"'Posted around town,' said he.</p>
-
-<p>"I told him I was a new-comer.</p>
-
-<p>"'Know short-hand?'</p>
-
-<p>"'No, sir.'</p>
-
-<p>"'What line are you strongest in?'</p>
-
-<p>"What line?' said I, not exactly understanding.</p>
-
-<p>"'Yes, what line? Speeches, fancy-work, police,
-sensations, picking up items around town&mdash;or what?'</p>
-
-<p>"'I really don't know,' said I; 'I've never had any
-experience, practically, in the newspaper business.'</p>
-
-<p>"At this Mr. Pyke turned round on me with a queer
-look in his face.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[274]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>"'Oh, that's it,' said he; 'you want to work at a
-trade you haven't served an apprenticeship to. There!
-it's the old story. If you'll go up in the composing-room,
-they'll give you a stick and put you to setting
-type, I reckon. You better try it. Go and ask for our
-foreman, Mr. Buckingham, and tell him I sent you,&mdash;will
-you? Why, you couldn't tell where the <i>e</i> box is!'</p>
-
-<p>"The man's manner was not so rude as his language,
-sir. He seemed perfectly good-natured, and was scribbling
-away with a lead-pencil all the while he was talking,
-much as if he were a writing-machine."</p>
-
-<p>"Doubtless he is, to a great degree," said I; "that is
-just where the apprenticeship does its work. I know
-Pyke, and I've seen him write a column of city matter,
-carrying on conversations with half-a-dozen different
-people who dropped in during the time, without interrupting
-him at all. But I don't mean to interrupt <i>you</i>;
-go on, please."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, sir," St. John continued, "before I had thoroughly
-learned the lesson that I finally learned so well,
-I was almost literally penniless. Such had been my
-high confidence in the easy and prosperous path before
-me in Chicago, that when I came here I took board at a
-first-class hotel, with my wife. I had very little money,
-and one day I waked up to the consciousness that I had
-less than five dollars remaining of that little, and still no
-work. Two hideous gulfs yawned before me,&mdash;starvation
-and debt. My horror of the one is scarcely greater
-than my horror of the other. Debt converted my father<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[275]</a></span>
-from a well-to-do man into a bankrupt, and my mother,
-who owns the little that is left of our old homestead in
-Massachusetts, was and is in no condition to help me. I
-would beg in the streets, sir, before I would look to my
-poor mother for help, after the long years of self-denial
-she practised to get me through college. My wife is an
-orphan. You may judge the color my future was taking
-on. I left the Tremont House, and, falling at once
-from the highest to the lowest style of living in apartments,
-came <i>here</i>. I had no confidence left, now, in that
-future which had before seemed, so foolish and inexperienced
-was I, a broad and flowery path for talent and
-education to tread. I never intend to whine over anything
-in this world if I can help it, but I can assure you
-this was a pretty dark old world to Brock St. John
-about that time. The prospect of earning a dollar a day
-would have cheered me wonderfully. I cared more on
-account of Aggie than myself, of course. A man can
-bear ups and downs, kicks, cold shoulders, and an empty
-stomach, if he is alone; but the thought that I have
-dragged <i>her</i> down to this is almost unbearable at
-times."</p>
-
-<p>"You have <i>not</i> dragged me, Brock," spoke up the little
-wife; "I came of my own accord!"</p>
-
-<p>"That you did, Aggie," said the husband, his eyes
-moistening; "I am slandering you. But to go on: The
-day after we moved in here, and set up house-keeping in
-careful preparation for the cold winter coming (I had
-to pawn clothing to get these poor goods," he added,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[276]</a></span>
-looking about the room with a smile), "the German
-musician, who lives next door, came in to ask us if his
-practising on a trombone annoyed us. We were so
-hungry for a friendly face just then, that we would have
-let the good-natured German blow his trombone through
-our transom-window after that exhibition of fellow-feeling.
-That afternoon, I dropped in to see him, in continuance
-of the acquaintance. There was a violin hanging
-on the wall, and I took it down and played a tune on it.</p>
-
-<p>"That was my introduction to my first situation in Chicago.
-Stumm got me my place at the beer-saloon; and so,
-through the knowledge of an art which has always been
-to me nothing more than an amusement, I get enough to
-live, in this time when all the hard-earned culture, which
-cost me so much labor, fails me utterly. I am thankful
-for this, heartily thankful; but I don't need to tell you
-sir, how it galls me to do this work,&mdash;to sit three or
-four hours of every evening in a dense and vulgar atmosphere,
-fiddling for my daily bread. No wonder I am
-seedy; no wonder I get to look like a loafer, listless,
-without pride, spite of Aggie's wifely care. If I knew
-an honest trade, I should be a happy man. I would
-gladly barter my knowledge of Latin, Greek, and German
-for the knowledge of type-setting."</p>
-
-<p>"So that you could prove to Pyke that you know the
-<i>e</i> box from the <i>x</i> box?" queried I.</p>
-
-<p>He laughed.</p>
-
-<p>"But you talk the words of bitterness when you talk
-in that way, St. John. You can barter your knowledge<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[277]</a></span>
-of German for <i>cash</i>, and keep it too. Have you ever
-sought for pupils!"</p>
-
-<p>"Only a little. I have no acquaintances, you know.
-My only way to get pupils was to advertise, of course.
-I tried it three days, and got not a solitary reply. There
-are scores of teachers advertising. It seemed useless
-for me to waste money in that way."</p>
-
-<p>"Well," said I, "I think I can set you in a way of
-getting up a class. My own German is very rusty, and
-I will be pupil number one. Then I know of two or three
-friends who want to study the language. I think we
-can get you up a class among us."</p>
-
-<p>He made me no protestation of gratitude,&mdash;such
-protestations are usually humbug,&mdash;but I saw his gladness
-in his face.</p>
-
-<p>The little wife sat squeezing her fingers for joy.</p>
-
-<p>Before a month had passed, St. John had a large class
-in German, and bade adieu to fiddling. He proved an
-excellent teacher. Long before I left Chicago to resume
-my residence in this city, he had got nicely out from
-under his cloud, and was living in a snug house in the
-West Division.</p>
-
-<p>There was a little baby playing on the floor at his
-house last summer when I called to see him, on my way
-to Lake Superior. That baby bears my name, I am
-proud to say.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[279]</a></span></p>
-
-<h1 style="margin-top: 8em; margin-bottom: 8em;">COMING FROM THE FRONT.</h1>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[281]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h2 style="margin-top: 3em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;"><a name="Coming_from_the_Front" id="Coming_from_the_Front"><span class="smcap">Coming from the Front.</span></a></h2>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;">
-<img style="margin-bottom: 1.5em;" src="images/image1.jpg" width="100" height="18" alt="fancy line" />
-</div>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p style="margin-left: 35%; margin-top: 1.5em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;">"<span class="smcap">Head-Quarters. Dep't and Army of the Tennessee.</span><br />
-"<i>East Point, Georgia, September 22, 1864.</i>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 8%;">"SPECIAL ORDERS.<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"No. 214.</p>
-
-<p class="center" style="margin-top: 1.5em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;">[EXTRACT.]</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p style="margin-left: 8%;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"XI&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Having tendered his resignation, the following-named<br />
-officer is honorably discharged from the military service of the<br />
-United States, with condition that he shall receive no final payments<br />
-until he satisfies the Pay Department that he is not indebted<br />
-to the Government.</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 8%;">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"1st Lieut. &mdash;&mdash; &mdash;&mdash;, Ills. Vol. Inf'try.<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"By order of Maj. Gen'l O. O. Howard.<br />
-&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"(Signed) <span class="smcap">W. T. Clark</span>, <i>Ass't Adj't Gen'l.</i>"</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<div style="margin-top: 3em;"><img class="dropcap" src="images/dropcap-t.jpg"
-width="51" height="85" alt="t" />
-</div><p><span class="dropletter">T</span>HINK of that! After forty-one months of
-hard-tack and hard marching, interspersed with
-enough fighting to satisfy the stomach of an
-ordinary man; after so long an experience of
-the beautiful uncertainty of army life; after
-polluting, with the invading heel of my brogan, the sacred
-soil of several of our erring sister States; after
-passing many breezy and rainy nights under the dubious
-shelter of shelter-tents; after sitting through long and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[282]</a></span>
-weary days in the furnace-heat of narrow and dirty
-trenches;&mdash;after all this, I am at last permitted to bid
-farewell to "the front," to go home and doff the honorable
-blue for the more sober garb of the "cit," and
-drop into my wonted insignificance. That little "extract"
-has a sweeter perfume for me than any triple
-extract for the handkerchief ever elaborated by the renowned
-M. Lubin. It is fragrant with thoughts of
-home and loved ones far away in the Northland, of
-starry nights and starry eyes, of fluttering fans and
-floating drapery, of morning naps unbroken by the
-strident <i>ra-tata-ta-ta</i> of the bugle. I grow quite sentimental
-over it, notwithstanding the unpleasant condition
-with which it is qualified, and which involves such
-a fearful amount of writing and figuring on mysterious
-close-ruled blanks, and so much affidavit-making and
-other swearing,&mdash;especially at the blundering clerks in
-the departments at Washington.</p>
-
-<p>But this troubles me little now. Time enough to attend
-to it after I get home. That is all I can think of,&mdash;<i>home</i>,
-and how to get there.</p>
-
-<p>How I should get there, and whether or not I ever
-would get there, were questions not easily solved. It is
-the purpose of this sketch to show some of the beauties
-of travelling on railroads that are under military control,
-and especially to set forth the writer's experience
-in going from Atlanta to Nashville.</p>
-
-<p>It was a terribly hot morning when I reached the depot
-at Atlanta, amid a cloud of dust and a maze of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[283]</a></span>
-wagons and mules and commissary stores and frantic
-teamsters. I threw my valise into the nearest car and
-hastened to the Provost Marshal's office for my pass.
-There was an anxious crowd already in waiting: resigned
-officers and officers on leave; jolly, ragged privates on
-furlough, eager to see their wives and babies; sutlers
-and "sheap-cloding" men; flaring demireps, seeking new
-fields; mouldy citizens in clothes of antique cut, fawning
-abjectly and addressing every clerk and orderly as
-"kernel;" dejected darkies, shoved aside by everybody,
-with no "civil rights bill" to help them. While I was
-waiting for my turn, the train kept me constantly worried
-by pulling up and backing down and threatening to
-leave. At last I found an opportunity to exhibit my
-"Extract," and, after reading it as slowly and carefully
-as if it had been a dispatch in cipher, the Provost Marshal
-very deliberately wrote a pass, read it over two or
-three times, and then, looking at every one in the room
-but me, asked "Who's this for?" as if I had not been
-standing at his elbow with my hand held out for half an
-hour.</p>
-
-<p>I left the official premises in a highly exasperated
-state of mind. In the mean time the train had been
-plunging backward and forward in a wild and aimless
-way, and I was unable to find the car my valise was in.
-After much wear and tear of muscle and temper and
-trousers, in climbing over boxes and bales of hay, I discovered
-it, and found that it had been taken possession
-of by a crowd of roystering blades on furlough, whose<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[284]</a></span>
-canteens were full and fragrant, and in whose talk and
-manner appeared the signs of a boisterous night ahead,
-with the possibility of a fight or two by way of special
-diversion. As I was no longer in "the military service
-of the United States," I was, of course, a peaceable
-citizen, so I took my quarters in a more peaceful car. It
-was a cattle-car and not remarkably clean; but the company
-was good, and through the lattice-work around the
-upper part of the car one could get a view of the surrounding
-country; though looking through it gave one
-a sensation very much like being in a guard-house.</p>
-
-<p>"Will we never get off?" was the question asked
-dozens of times,&mdash;asked of nobody in particular, and
-answered by a chorus of incoherent growls from everybody
-in general, while some humorous young man suggested
-that if any one wanted to get off, he'd better do it
-before the train started.</p>
-
-<p>"Now we're off!"</p>
-
-<p>"No we're not," said the humorous young man, "but
-it's more'n likely we will be before we get to Chattanooga."</p>
-
-<p>This was not particularly encouraging to timid travellers,
-in a country abounding in guerrilleroes, and where
-accident insurance companies were unknown.</p>
-
-<p>Between Atlanta and Marietta we passed line after
-line of defensive works, protected by <i>abattis</i> and <i>chevaux-de-frise</i>,&mdash;feed-racks,
-I heard a bronzed veteran of rural
-antecedents call them,&mdash;built by the rebels at night,
-only to be abandoned on the next night to the great<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[285]</a></span>
-Flanker. While they wrought line upon line, Sherman
-and his boys in blue gave them precept upon precept,
-here a little and there a great deal. All this rugged
-country is historic ground. The tall, tufted pine-trees
-stand as monuments of the unrecorded dead, and every
-knoll and tangled ravine bears witness to a bravery and
-heroic endurance that has never been surpassed.</p>
-
-<p>Leaving Marietta,&mdash;deserted by its inhabitants and
-turned into an immense hospital,&mdash;we approached Kenesaw,
-so lately crowned with cannon and alive with gray
-coats, now basking in the afternoon sunlight, as quiet
-and harmless as a good-natured giant taking his after-dinner
-nap. We approached it from the inside, to gain
-which side the compact columns of Logan and Stanley
-and Davis hurled themselves against its rugged front so
-fearlessly, but, alas, so fruitlessly, on that terrible 27th
-of June.</p>
-
-<p>Farther on we came to Alatoona Pass, taken at first
-without a struggle, but afterward baptized in blood and
-made glorious by a successful defence against immense
-odds.</p>
-
-<p>It was sunset when we reached Kingston,&mdash;a straggling
-row of dilapidated shanties. As the train was to stop
-some time, I started out in search of supper. There was
-no hotel, so I had to depend upon sutlers, or peripatetic
-venders of pies. I entered one sutler's store, and found a
-few fly-specked red handkerchiefs and some suspenders.
-Another contained nothing but combs and shoe-blacking.
-Turning away mournfully, I espied an aged colored<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[286]</a></span>
-man limping up the street with a basket on his arm.
-I rushed madly at him, and, finding that he had apple-pies,
-was soon the happy possessor of a brace of them.
-I congratulated myself and gratefully sat down upon a
-stone to eat, and&mdash;well, <i>such pies</i>! It was utterly impossible
-to tell what the crust was made of. In taste
-and toughness it resembled a dirty piece of towel. The
-interior&mdash;"the bowels of the thing," as some one inelegantly
-called it,&mdash;consisted of a few slices of uncooked
-immature apple and a great many flies cooked whole.
-The cooks were altogether too liberal with their flies. I
-am not particularly well versed in the culinary art myself,
-but I venture boldly to say that the flies that were
-in those two pies would have sufficed, if judiciously distributed,
-to season two dozen pies with the same proportion
-of apple in them.</p>
-
-<p>And of such was my supper at Kingston. The whistle
-sounded, and we got aboard and were off for Chattanooga.
-Night fell peacefully upon Kingston and its
-dirty peddlers of unwholesome pies, as a curve in the
-road hid it and them from our reproachful gaze.</p>
-
-<p>As the darkness increased, and we went dashing at
-break-neck speed over a road that had had little or
-no care bestowed upon it since the opening of the campaign,
-I thought of the humorous young man's remark,
-and of how unpleasant and inconvenient it would be
-to have this long train thrown off and its contents, as
-Meister Karl hath it, "pepperboxically distributed" in
-the adjacent ditch.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[287]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>And then to have one of Wheeler's men take advantage
-of a fellow, as he lay there with a broken leg, and
-rob him of the few dollars he had borrowed to go home
-on! Well, we had been taking our chances for the last
-three years, and it was no new thing to take them now.
-With this comforting reflection, I sat down on my valise,
-and, wrapped in my great-coat, awaited the coming of
-"the balmy." It was rather unsatisfactory waiting.
-Something in my head kept going rattlety-bang, jerkety-jerk,
-bumpety-bump, in unison with the noise of the
-cars; and when I did get into a doze, I was harassed by
-the dim shadow of a fear that we were about to leave
-the track and go end-over-end down an embankment.
-At last weariness overcame me, and I slept soundly,
-half-lying on the dirty floor, half-leaning on my valise,
-coiled up in one of those attitudes in which only an old
-campaigner can sleep at all; I woke amid an unearthly
-whizzing of steam, to find the train standing still, and
-myself mysteriously entangled with various arms and
-legs that didn't belong to me. I extricated myself and
-looked out. Through the thick darkness of the early
-morning there glared upon me the light of what seemed
-to be innumerable fierce, unwinking eyes. I began to
-think that I had taken the wrong train and brought up in
-the lower regions; but a little reflection and rubbing of
-the eyes disclosed to me that we had reached Chattanooga
-in safety, and that those fierce eyes were the head-lights
-of the locomotives that had arrived during the night, and
-were now blowing off their superfluous steam in that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[288]</a></span>
-wild, unearthly manner. As soon as it was daylight I
-inquired about trains going North, and learned that
-there was no telling when a train would go, as Forrest
-was said to be in the neighborhood of the road. So
-there was nothing to do but to go to the Crutchfield
-House and wait. Alas for the man whose purse is slim,
-under any circumstances! Alas and alas for him if he
-was obliged to wait in Chattanooga at Crutchfield prices!
-It was a dollar that he had to pay for each scanty meal,
-a dollar for the use of a densely populated bed, and a
-dollar must be deposited with the clerk to secure the
-return of the little towel he wiped his face on. Besides
-the pecuniary depletion that he suffered, he was bored to
-death with weary waiting, with nothing to do and nowhere
-to go. Chattanooga was far from being a
-cheerful place, especially in the rainy season, when nothing
-was visible out of doors except the lonesome sentinels
-pacing their beats in dripping ponchos, and with
-guns tucked under their arms, and here and there a team
-of steaming mules, struggling to draw a creaking, lumbering
-wagon through the detestable clay.</p>
-
-<p>For amusement, there was a billiard-room, where one
-had to wait eight hours for a chance to play. If he failed
-to see any fun in this, he could step into another room,
-and squander his currency for, and bemuddle his brains
-with, a sloppy sort of beverage that the gentlemanly
-proprietor would assure him was good, new beer. I
-would rather take his word than his beer. At night, if
-his tastes ran that way, for a small outlay one could<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[289]</a></span>
-witness what was called a dramatic exhibition, but
-which was really more anatomical than dramatic.</p>
-
-<p>In this enlivening village, an ever-increasing crowd
-of us was compelled to wait for five long days. Resigned
-officers were far from being resigned, and officers
-on leave were vexed and impatient because it was impossible
-to leave.</p>
-
-<p>At length the joyful news spread that a train would
-leave for Nashville at two o'clock in the afternoon. I
-rushed to the depot, and was just fairly aboard a car,
-when some one, more forcibly than politely, told me to
-"git out o' that car." As he spoke as a man who had
-authority, and knew it, I got out, and learned that I
-was on the wrong train, and in a fair way to have been
-carried to Knoxville. I forgave the man his abruptness
-of speech, and went in search of the right train. Catching
-a glimpse of Capt. S., whom I knew to be going
-North, in one of the cars, I got in without farther question;
-and soon a fearful jerk, that piled us like dead-wood
-in one end of the car, started us towards Nashville.
-Rattling along at the usual reckless rate, we
-found ourselves, soon after dark, at Stevenson, Alabama.
-Here we were to stay all night; for the managers of
-affairs still had the fear of Forrest before their eyes, and
-dared not run trains at night. It was raining, and the
-darkness of Erebus covered the face of the earth. Notwithstanding
-this, Capt. S. and myself plunged out into
-the night, determined to get something to eat, or perish
-in the attempt. After wandering blindly for a while,&mdash;tumbling<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[290]</a></span>
-into ditches, and falling over boxes and barrels,
-that turned up where they were least expected,&mdash;we
-finally brought up among the ropes of the tent of a
-sutler. We entered, and found the proprietor dozing
-over a dime novel. We were sorry to disturb him in
-his literary pursuits; but we were hungry, and had to
-be fed. We eagerly demanded various articles of food,
-which he sleepily informed us he hadn't got. Questioning
-him closely as to the edible part of his stock in
-trade, we learned that it consisted of some Boston
-crackers and a little cheese. We filled our haversacks
-with these, regardless of expense. Having bought so
-generously, the proprietor became generous in turn,
-and, bringing forth a square black bottle, proffered it to
-us with the remark: "You'll find that a leetle the best
-gin this side o' Louisville. Take hold!" The captain
-took hold; but the silent, though expressive comment,
-that was written on his countenance when he let go,
-induced me to decline with thanks. A decent regard
-for the man's feelings prevented any audible expression;
-but, as soon as we were out of the tent, the captain solemnly
-assured me that he was poisoned, and that he
-would utter his last words when he got comfortably
-fixed in the car. Getting back to the car was almost as
-perilous an undertaking as finding the sutler's store;
-but, fortunately, we were guided by the voice of Capt.
-W. crying, in heart-rending tones, "Lost child! lost
-child!" Capt S. interrupted one of his most pathetic
-cries by striking him in the pit of the stomach with a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[291]</a></span>
-loaded haversack, and demanding to be helped aboard.
-Once more snugly ensconced in our car, we proceeded
-to sup right royally on our crackers and cheese. S.
-forgot all about his last words until some time near the
-middle of the night, when he woke me to say that he
-had concluded to postpone them till he got home, where
-he could have them published in the county paper.
-Barring this interruption, I slept soundly all night, having
-more room than on the trip from Atlanta, and not
-having the thunder of a running train sounding in my
-ears.</p>
-
-<p>At breakfast-time we drew out the fragmentary remainder
-of our last night's repast, and were about to
-take our morning meal, when we discovered that both
-crackers and cheese had a singularly animated appearance.
-Symptoms of internal commotion manifested
-themselves in all of us except S., who thought that, as
-the gin had not killed him, he was proof against anything.
-His stoic composure acted soothingly upon the
-rest of us, and we concluded that it was too late to feel
-bad, and consoled each other by repeating the little
-rhyme,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 40%; margin-top: 1.5em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;">"What can't be cured<br />
-&nbsp;Must be endured."</p>
-
-<p>By eight o'clock the fog lifted, and we started on our
-journey northward. Wild and contradictory stories
-were afloat in regard to the whereabouts and doings
-of the terrible, ubiquitous Forrest. Revolvers were
-brought out and capped and primed afresh, and watches<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[292]</a></span>
-and rings were hidden in what were deemed inaccessible
-parts of the clothing. There was considerable anxiety
-in regard to the bridges over Elk and Duck rivers, and
-when we had passed them both safely, the train quickened
-its speed, every one breathed more freely, and the
-belligerent men put away their fire-arms.</p>
-
-<p>We hastened on without accident and with decreasing
-fear, though the <i>débris</i> of broken and burned cars
-that lined the road-side, suggesting some unpleasant reflections,
-and at the close of the day entered the picket
-lines at Nashville, and were safe.</p>
-
-<p>Then came a foot-race, from the depot to the hotel,
-for a prize that nobody won, for all the hotels in the
-city were already full from cellar to garret. Capt. S.
-and I sat down upon the cold, hard curb-stone and
-mingled our weary groans, while W., more plucky and
-better acquainted with the city, went in search of a
-boarding-house. Having returned, with the cheering
-intelligence that he had found beds and supper, we followed
-him gladly, and, after eating a supper, the quantity
-of which I would not like to confess, retired to our
-rooms, and were soon&mdash;to use the captain's elegant
-language&mdash;"wrapped in that dreamless, refreshing
-slumber that only descends upon the pillow of the
-innocent and beautiful."</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[293]</a></span></p>
-
-
-
-<h1 style="margin-top: 8em; margin-bottom: 8em;">A NIGHT IN THE SEWERS.</h1>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[295]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h2 style="margin-top: 3em; margin-bottom: 1.5em;"><a name="A_Night_in_the_Sewers" id="A_Night_in_the_Sewers"><span class="smcap">A Night in the Sewers.</span></a></h2>
-
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 100px;">
-<img style="margin-bottom: 1.5em;" src="images/image1.jpg" width="100" height="18" alt="fancy line" />
-</div>
-
-<div><img class="dropcap" src="images/dropcap-p.jpg"
-width="55" height="85" alt="p" />
-</div><p><span class="dropletter">P</span>ERHAPS some of my fair readers will consider
-me a disagreeable person for telling them something
-I know about kid gloves. Perhaps they
-will not believe me when I tell them that in
-Paris and elsewhere there exists&mdash;or did exist not
-very long ago&mdash;an extensive trade in the skins of
-common rats, and that these skins, when dressed and
-dyed, are converted into those delicate coverings for the
-hands, commonly called "kid" gloves, and supposed to
-be manufactured from the hides of immature goats.</p>
-
-<p>I was acquainted with a dog-dealer in Paris, a Dane,
-whose name was Beck. To him I went one day, bent
-upon obtaining a terrier dog of good intellect and
-agreeable manners, who should be a companion to me in
-my "lodgings for single gentlemen," and whose gambols
-might serve to amuse me in my lighter hours, when, after
-work, I would make little pedestrian excursions in the
-neighborhood, for the sake of exercise and air. Beck's
-kennel was comprised in a small yard, at the back of a
-rickety house; and, when I entered it, persuasion was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[296]</a></span>
-hardly needed to induce me to stand as near the centre
-of the enclosure as possible, in order to keep at chain's
-length from what the French call <i>boule dogues</i>, several
-of which ill-looking canines formed a portion of Beck's
-stock in trade.</p>
-
-<p>"Here," said Mr. Beck, in reply to a question of mine
-and in pretty good English, "here in this box I have a
-small dog of a kind quite fashionable now. They call
-him a Skye terrier, and I have given him the name of
-'Dane,' because he comes from far north, like myself,
-and has long yellow hair."</p>
-
-<p>"With these words, Mr. Beck laid hold of a chain, and
-drawing it sharply, jerked out from among some straw a
-creature made up, apparently, of tow and wire, with a
-pair of eyes like black beads glittering through the
-shocks of hair that fell over its head. The animal
-seemed cowed, and I did not think much of him at first
-sight.</p>
-
-<p>"He has had bad usage," said Mr. Beck; "first time I
-saw him was yesterday, when he burst in at my backdoor,
-with a horseshoe fastened to his tail. There, you
-see I have nailed the shoe over the door of his box. He
-will be a lucky bargain for whoever buys him, you may
-depend upon that."</p>
-
-<p>"Good upon rats?" asked I.</p>
-
-<p>"Know nothing about him," replied Mr. Beck, honestly;
-"never saw him before yesterday. They all take
-the water kindly though, these Skyes do, and if you
-want to try him at rats, I can put you in the way of it."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[297]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Somehow I took to the ragged little beast, and so I
-paid Mr. Beck sixty francs for him, and ten more for the
-little wooden kennel with the horseshoe nailed upon it.
-I have a great regard for horseshoes as insurers of
-luck; because once, when I had picked up one on the
-road, and carried it home in my pocket, I found a letter
-on my table, informing me that I had come in for a
-small legacy, through the death of an aged kinswoman
-whom I had never seen.</p>
-
-<p>What with good treatment and diet, the frequent bath
-and the free use of the comb, it was not many days before
-master Dane became a very presentable dog, and
-had quite recovered his pluck and spirits. He bullied,
-and banished forever to the house-top, a large tortoiseshell
-cat, that had hitherto commanded the garrison, and
-I thought, one day, that I should like to try him at rats.
-So out I sallied with him in search of Mr. Beck, who
-had promised to put me in the way of getting some
-sport of the kind.</p>
-
-<p>That versatile gentleman was not in his kennel when
-I called, but his wife told me that I would find him in
-the "skinnery" attached to the establishment; and,
-asking me to follow her, she ushered me into a long, low
-apartment, lighted with a row of circular windows.
-The odor of the place was very pungent and disagreeable.
-There were several wooden tanks ranged along
-one wall of the room, and, on lines stretched along by
-the windows, a number of small skins were hung to dry.
-Mr. Beck, assisted by a couple of tan-colored boys, was<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[298]</a></span>
-busily engaged in stirring the contents of the tanks. A
-dead rat on the floor immediately engaged the attention
-of Dane, who seized it in his teeth, shook it savagely
-for a moment, and then pitched it away from him, apparently
-in disgust at finding it already dead.</p>
-
-<p>"What do you make of the rat-skins?" inquired I,
-after I had looked on for a while.</p>
-
-<p>"Money," rejoined Mr. Beck, curtly; "but the man I
-dress them for makes them into gloves,&mdash;ladies' gloves,
-of the primest quality."</p>
-
-<p>"Ladies have rats about them in more ways than one,
-then," said I. "Where do you get the raw material?"</p>
-
-<p>"The rat-hunters supply me. Their hunting-grounds
-lie all under the streets of Paris. Would you like to
-have a day in the sewers with your terrier? Simonet
-will be here in a few minutes, and you can go the rounds
-with him if you will."</p>
-
-<p>Just what I wanted, and so I sat upon a bench and
-waited, and presently a man came in. He was a low-sized,
-squat fellow of about forty, with heavy, round
-shoulders, and bowed legs; and his head and face were
-almost entirely covered with a thatch of tangled red
-hair, out from which there peered a couple of greenish
-eyes of very sinister expression. He had a leathern
-sack slung over his shoulder, and carried in his
-hand a long wand of birch, brushy, with the twigs left
-upon it at one end.</p>
-
-<p>"On the rounds, eh, Simonet?" said Mr. Beck, addressing
-this agreeable-looking gentleman; "well, here's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[299]</a></span>
-a monsieur who would like to go with you. He wants to
-try his terrier at the rats. You can make your own
-bargain with him."</p>
-
-<p>Then looking at me, he continued,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Better leave your coat with my old woman, who'll
-give you a clean <i>blouse</i> instead."</p>
-
-<p>Madame took my coat, and gave me a strong <i>blouse</i>
-and a somewhat greasy cap; and in this guise I went
-forth with Simonet, who immediately plunged into the
-thick of the city slums. After having gone some distance,
-we entered a dismal and dirty office, in which
-a man, turning over some piles of documents, after a
-few whispered words with my guide, handed him a
-bunch of heavy keys, and we again went out into the
-streets. Entering a paved court-yard, a declivity led us
-down to a sort of tunnel, the entrance to which was
-barred by a heavy, grated door, which Simonet opened
-with one of the keys, locking it again as soon as we had
-got in.</p>
-
-<p>"We are in one of the main sewers now, monsieur,"
-said he, in a squeaky, rat-like voice; "you must be careful
-to keep close by me, and not stray away into any of
-the branches."</p>
-
-<p>It was pitch dark, as I looked before me into the tunnel,&mdash;dark,
-and awful, and silent, but for the gliding,
-oozing sound of slowly-flowing water. Simonet produced
-a lantern, which he lit, and I could see by the dim
-light thrown from it that we were in a vast stone passage,
-through the centre of which there ran a dark, deep<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[300]</a></span>
-stream. Between the wall and the stream on either
-side there was a broad pathway, or ledge, and along
-this the rat-hunter motioned me to follow him. Soon
-we reached a turn in the tunnel, and here Simonet,
-after searching about upon the wall for a moment, found
-a rusty nail in it, upon which he hung his lantern.
-Then producing a couple of torches from his sack, he
-lighted them, and handed one to me.</p>
-
-<p>"There is a birch wattle hid away somewhere here,"
-said he,&mdash;"ah, yes!&mdash;here it is, take it monsieur, and
-use it just as you shall see me do when we get among
-the rats. Keep close to me, else you may get lost in the
-drains."</p>
-
-<p>Dane grew very excited, now, and ran ahead of us a
-good way, and presently we heard a great rushing and
-squeaking, and the suppressed snarling of the little dog
-as he worried the rats. Then we saw many rats running
-hither and thither, some of them so scared by the light
-of the torches, as they came near us, that they leaped
-into the water, while others ran up the wall, from
-which we quickly knocked them with our wattles. Simonet
-did not put them into his bag, but left them where
-they fell, saying that his custom was to pick them up on
-his way back.</p>
-
-<p>The dog behaved wonderfully well, fighting and shaking
-the rats that fell in his way with great fierceness and
-pluck. At last, when we had killed about a hundred of
-them, we thought it time to rest. Simonet produced a
-short, black pipe, and, as I was filling mine, he cast a wistful<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[301]</a></span>
-look at my tobacco-pouch, thinking, probably, that the
-article contained in it must be of a quality superior to
-that of the cheap stuff smoked by him; so I poured half
-the contents of it into his hand, and he filled his pipe
-from it, with a grin of satisfaction on his ugly face.</p>
-
-<p>"It will soon be time for us to turn back," said he,
-after a while; "the best place for rats is a little way
-further on, and it will be too late to try it if we don't go
-forward now."</p>
-
-<p>On we went, slashing right and left at the rats, most
-of which, I noticed, were of a very black color here, as
-if belonging to a peculiar colony that existed in this part
-of the tunnel. As we rounded a corner, however, a very
-large white rat ran past us, and disappeared down a
-cross-gallery that led away to the left. Wishing to secure
-this animal as a trophy, I hallooed the terrier upon
-its tracks, and was about following the chase, when
-Simonet laid his hand upon my arm, and whispered, in a
-tone of entreaty,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>"Don't risk your life, monsieur! He who follows the
-white rat of the sewer is likely never to find his way
-back alive. There's a blight about the creature, and old
-stories are afloat of how it has led rat-hunters away into
-dangerous parts of the sewers, like a jack-o'-lantern, and
-then set upon them with a number of its kind, and picked
-their bones clean!"</p>
-
-<p>Breaking away from the fellow, with a jerk that
-knocked the pipe out of his hand, and sent it spinning
-into the black water below, I ran down the by-sewer<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[302]</a></span>
-after the terrier, whose whimper, as though he were yet
-in full chase, I could hear at a good distance ahead of
-me. When I came up with him, which I did only after
-having taken several turns, he seemed at fault, head up
-and tail down, and gazing, with a very puzzled expression
-up at the vaulted roof. There was no white rat to
-be seen, nor could I detect any aperture in the walls,
-into which the creature could have made its escape.
-Then a sort of superstitious fear fell upon me, as I
-thought of Simonet's warning, and, with a word of encouragement
-to the dog, I hastened to retrace my steps,
-shouting loudly every now and then, so as to let the rat-hunter
-know of my whereabouts. But no responsive
-halloo came to my call. Not a sound was to be heard
-but the hollow beat of my footsteps on the damp, mouldy
-path, and the squeaking, here and there, of the rats, as we
-disturbed them from their feast on some garbage fished
-up by them from the slimy bed of the drain. Excited at
-the position in which I found myself, I now began to
-make reckless <i>détours</i> hither and thither, until, thoroughly
-exhausted by my exertions, I leaned my back against
-the wall, and tried to remember such marks as might
-have been observed by me in the tunnel since I had
-parted from Simonet. The only marks of the wayside
-that I could recall, however, were the dead rats left by
-us upon the ledge as we passed, and of these I had seen
-none while I was trying to retrace my steps. Arguing
-from this, and from the fact that Simonet did not respond
-to my shouts, which I continued to utter at intervals, I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[303]</a></span>
-began to feel an extremely unpleasant nervous shiver
-creeping over me, suggestive of all the horrors about
-which I had ever read or dreamed. The little dog lay
-cowering at my feet, as if he, too, were somewhat dejected
-at the prospect of being eaten alive by avenging
-rats; and, to crown the situation, just as I had
-nerved myself for another effort to recover the lost clue,
-my torch went out with a malignant flicker, and I found
-myself in black darkness!</p>
-
-<p>Sinking down at the foot of the wall, I now gave myself
-up for lost. Even had the torch not been quite
-burnt out, I had no means of relighting it, having used
-my last match when we stopped to smoke, just before
-I broke away from my guide. I think I must have
-become somewhat delirious now; for I have a faint
-recollection of wild songs chanted, and of yells that
-made the vaulted roof ring again. Then a heavy sleep
-must have fallen upon me, which probably lasted for
-several hours; and then I awoke to a dim consciousness
-of horror, as I began to realize the terrible situation
-into which I had brought myself by my reckless folly.
-My dog was still nestling close to me; and it may have
-been to his presence, perhaps, that I owed the fact of
-my not having been mangled by rats during my sleep.
-Rising with difficulty to my feet, for I was stiff from lying
-so long upon the damp, cold ground, I once more tried to
-shout; but my voice was utterly gone, from my previous
-exertion of it, and I could not raise it above a whisper.
-Then, in sheer desperation, I dragged myself along the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[304]</a></span>
-wall, feeling the way with my hands, and had not gone
-many paces when I felt an angle in the masonry, on
-rounding which a ray of hope dawned upon me, as I
-discerned a faint light, far, far away, at the end of what
-seemed to be all but, an endless shaft of darkness. The
-prospect of escape infused new vigor into my weary
-limbs, and I kept steering onward for the light, which
-grew larger and larger as I approached it. At last I
-got near enough to see that it came through a small
-<i>grille</i>, or iron door, which terminated the branch of the
-sewer in which I was. When I reached the grating, I
-saw that it looked out upon the river, between which
-and it, however, there lay a deep indentation, or channel,
-of some fifty or sixty yards in length. It was gray
-morning, and I could see boats and steamers and ships,
-passing and repassing upon the river. Surely deliverance
-was now at hand! but how was I to make my
-situation known? My voice, as I have said, was utterly
-gone, and I had barely strength left to wave my
-pocket-handkerchief from the grating. There I stood for
-hours,&mdash;a prisoner looking wistfully through the bars
-of a dungeon to which no wayfarer came. I had sunk
-down at the foot of the grating, from mere exhaustion,
-when the whining of my little dog attracted me, and I
-gave him a caressing pat. He licked my face and
-whined again, as much as to say, "Can't I be of some
-use to you?" This brought a bright idea to my mind.
-Tearing a leaf from my note-book, I wrote the following
-words upon it, with pencil:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[305]</a></span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-
-<p style="margin-left: 10%;">"I have lost my way in the sewers. You will find<br />
-&nbsp;me at the grating just opposite a large buoy marked X.<br />
-&nbsp;Come quickly."</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Placing this inside my india-rubber tobacco-pouch, I
-bound it tightly, with a strip from my pocket-handkerchief,
-to Dane's collar; and then, taking the little fellow
-gently in my arms, and speaking a word or two of dog-talk
-to him, I dropped him from the grating into the
-stream below, which was running out fast enough to
-prevent him from trying to return; nor was it long before
-I had the satisfaction of seeing him swimming
-boldly out toward the river, as if he knew perfectly
-well what he was about. I had no fears but that somebody
-in a boat would pick him up before he was exhausted,
-because this kind of dog can live for a great
-while in the water. Yet he was gone for a long, long
-time,&mdash;at least, it seemed a long time to me,&mdash;and I
-saw the distant boats passing and repassing, and the
-steamers and the ships, and heard the cheery voices of
-the mariners, as I held on there by the iron grating,
-half-dead. At last a boat, pulled by two men and
-steered by a third, shot up into the channel; and the
-boatmen raised a joyful shout as I waved my handkerchief
-to them from my prison-bars. The steersman
-held my little dog upon his knee; but the faithful animal
-broke away from him when he saw me, and would
-have jumped overboard in his eagerness to reach me
-had he not been caught by one of the men.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[306]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>When the boat had come quite close under the grating,
-I saw that it was manned by men of the river
-guard. They told me that one of their number had
-gone round to report the matter to the proper authorities,
-and that assistance would quickly be at hand, and
-one of them, standing on the thwarts of the boat, reached
-up to me a flask of brandy and a biscuit, after having
-partaken of which I felt sufficiently revived to be very
-thankful for my escape from a horrible death. In less
-than an hour keys were brought by an officer connected
-with the sewers, and I was released from my disagreeable
-position, much to the joy of Dane, who covered me
-with caresses after his honest doggy fashion; nor, half-starved
-as the little animal must have been, would he
-touch a morsel of biscuit until after he had seen me safe
-in the boat.</p>
-
-<p>The next thing to be done was to make a search for
-Simonet, who had not made his appearance in the upper
-regions since we entered the sewers. Men were sent
-after him, and he was found in a half-stupefied condition
-just where I had left him, among the dead rats. He
-could give little or no account of himself, save that his
-torch had gone out, just as he was about starting in
-search of me, and that a stupor came over him, then,
-and he sat down and fell asleep. This was all accounted
-for afterwards. Having lost his pipe, as I have said, he
-sought to assuage his craving for stimulants by chewing&mdash;or
-rather eating&mdash;quantities of the tobacco with
-which I had furnished him, and this proved, on examination,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[307]</a></span>
-to have been taken by me, in mistake, from a jar
-in which opium had been copiously mixed with the
-milder narcotic for experimental purposes. Probably
-the little I had smoked of it in my pipe had somewhat
-affected me; and Simonet averred that he thought it
-must have been the smell of it that saved us from being
-eaten by the rats. A few franc pieces, a new pipe, and
-a reasonable stock of the best tobacco, made a happy
-man of that rare old gutter-snipe; but nothing could
-induce him to make any further reference to the white
-rat, at the very mention of which he would scowl horribly,
-and retire, as it were, behind the mass of red hair
-with which his face was fringed.</p>
-
-<p>As for me, I believe more in horseshoes than ever,
-since the adventure narrated above. I had a small one
-made in silver, for Dane; and this the faithful animal
-wore suspended from his collar as a charm until he went
-the way of all dogs, full of honors and of years.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" style="page-break-after: always;" />
-
-
-<div class="transnote">
-
-<p class="ph2" style="margin-top: 3.5em; margin-bottom: 1em;">TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE:</p>
-
-<p>Obvious printer errors have been corrected. Otherwise, the author's
-original spelling, punctuation and hyphenation have been left intact.</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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