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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.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
+jurisdictions other than the United States. Anyone seeking to utilize
+this eBook outside of the United States should confirm copyright
+status under the laws that apply to them.
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #63685 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/63685)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Graham's Magazine, Vol. XVIII, No. 3, March
-1841, 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: Graham's Magazine, Vol. XVIII, No. 3, March 1841
-
-Author: Various
-
-Editor: George R. Graham
-
-Release Date: November 8, 2020 [EBook #63685]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GRAHAM'S MAGAZINE, MARCH 1841 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Mardi Desjardins & the online Distributed
-Proofreaders Canada team at https://www.pgdpcanada.net
-from page images generously made available by the Internet
-Archive (https://archive.org)
-
-
-
-
-
- GRAHAM’S MAGAZINE.
- Vol. XVIII. March, 1841. No. 3.
-
-
- Contents
-
- Fiction, Literature and Articles
-
- The Lady Isabel
- The Confessions of a Miser (continued)
- The Alchymist
- The Circassian Bride
- The Maiden’s Adventure
- The Destroyer’s Doom
- The Empress
- The Reefer of ’76 (continued)
- The Major’s Wedding
- The Father’s Blessing
- A Sketch from Life
- Sports and Pastimes
- Partridge Shooting
- Review of New Books
-
- Poetry, Music and Fashion
-
- Callirhöe
- Napoleon
- Lines
- Lake George
- The Departed
- I Am Your Prisoner
- The Invitation
- You Never Knew Annette.—Ballad
- Fashions for March, 1841
-
- Transcriber’s Notes can be found at the end of this eBook.
-
- * * * * *
-
-[Illustration: _Eng^d. by J. Sartain_
-_Why don’t he come?_
-
-_Engraved for Graham’s Magazine from the Original Picture by Leutze, in
- the possession of Charles Toppan, Esq^r._]
-
- * * * * *
-
- GRAHAM’S MAGAZINE.
-
- Vol. XVIII. March, 1841. No. 3.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- THE LADY ISABEL.
-
-
- A TALE OF THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY.
-
-
- Chapter I.
-
- _Why don’t he come?_
-
-It was a splendid landscape. Far away before the eye stretched a wide,
-undulating country, checkered with lordly mansions, extensive woodlands,
-and here and there a quiet little village peeping out from amidst the
-verdant hills; while away on the verge of the horizon glittered a
-majestic river, which, winding hither and thither among the uplands,
-burst at length into view in a flood of glorious light, that lay like a
-shield of burnished silver in the distance.
-
-Nor was the foreground of the scene less beautiful. Art had there been
-taxed to rival nature in loveliness. Terraces sinking one beneath
-another; a verdant lawn that seemed like velvet; rich, old lordly
-balustrades skirting the garden at your feet; and beyond, open glades,
-and clumps of forest trees thrown together in apparent confusion, but to
-produce which the utmost skill had been tasked, evinced at once the
-taste and opulence, of Lord Deraine, the owner of that rich domain. Such
-was the scene upon which two beings gazed on a lovely summer afternoon,
-in the year 16—.
-
-One of these was a youth, just verging into manhood, dressed in a dark,
-plain suit, with a deep lace collar, and cuffs of the same material. He
-had apparently been singing, and accompanying himself on the guitar; for
-his instrument was still held idly in his hand, as he sat at the feet of
-a lady, into whose face he was looking up with a rapt intensity of gaze,
-which told that the soul of the page—for such he seemed—was in every
-glance.
-
-And well might his emotion toward that lovely being be one of unmixed
-love; for never did a more beautiful creature gaze upon a summer
-landscape. Tall, stately, with dark lustrous eyes, and a port that might
-have become a queen, Isabel Mowbray, was a being formed to be loved with
-an intensity such as this world rarely witnesses. As she now stood
-gazing out upon the landscape, with one hand shading her brow, and the
-other thrown back, and resting on the balustrade, thus displaying her
-snowy neck and bust, and her matchless figure to the best advantage, she
-seemed a being too beautiful for aught but a poet’s imagination.
-
-“You are silent, this afternoon, cousin,” at last said the youth,
-breaking a silence which had lasted for several minutes, “what are you
-looking at, Isabel?”
-
-The maiden made no reply, but still gazed down the park. She was
-apparently lost in thought.
-
-“Shall I sing again for you?” said the boy, in his low, sweet voice,
-looking up more devotedly than ever into the maiden’s face, “you used to
-like to hear me sing, you know, Isabel.”
-
-“Oh! Henry is it you?” said the beauty, looking down, and half blushing,
-as if detected in something she wished to conceal, “sing by all means,
-my pretty page and coz. Sing me that old lay of the troubadour, and here
-Wyn,” and she called playfully to a beautiful greyhound reposing at the
-feet of the boy, “come here and let me talk to you, while Henry sings.”
-
-An expression of gratified joy—of joy such as is rarely seen, except in
-the countenances of those who love—illumined the whole face of the boy
-as the maiden thus spoke—and taking up his guitar, he sang the words of
-an olden lay, which has now passed, with many a fair lip that once
-warbled it, into oblivion.
-
-Gazing up into the face of the maiden as he sang, the youth appeared to
-have forgotten that aught else existed on earth besides the object of
-his adoration,—while the caresses lavished upon his greyhound, but more
-than all the occasional smiles which Isabel bestowed upon himself,
-filled his whole soul with a delicious emotion, such as is known only to
-us when we fancy our first love is returned. But had he not been misled
-by his own blind admiration, he might have seen much in her conduct to
-dissipate his delusion; for scarcely a minute would elapse, without
-Isabel casting an anxious glance, down the avenue of the park, and once
-her lips moved unconsciously, and even the page might have heard her
-murmur, had he listened, “I wonder where he can be?” But appearing to
-awake to her indiscretion, the maiden suddenly ceased gazing, and
-turning to Henry, said,
-
-“A thousand, thousand thanks, sweet coz. You sing, to-night, sweeter
-than ever. But there if Wyn—the saucy fellow—has not run off with my
-shawl.”
-
-The eyes of the youth lighted up with pleasure, and the blood mounted
-even to his brow, at this encomium,—and exclaiming,
-
-“Stay—I will win back the truant,” he bounded gaily down the terrace
-after the playful hound.
-
-The maiden followed him with her eyes, and sighed, “Poor Henry.” In
-those two words what a volume of hopeless love and years of anguish for
-the youth were spoken.
-
-
- Chapter II.
-
- _The Page: The Lovers._
-
-Henry De Lorraine was the only son of a once proud, but now decayed
-lineage, and, being left an orphan at an early age, had been reared in
-the house of his cousin, Lord Deraine. His life there had been that of
-most noble youths of his day, who, either through necessity, or for the
-purposes of advancement, were brought up as pages in the establishments
-of the wealthier nobility. Lorraine, however, possessed one advantage
-over the other pages of his cousin: he had from the first been the
-companion of the Lady Isabel, the only child of his patron. Although a
-year or two older than himself, the want of either brother or sister,
-had induced Isabel to confide in him all her little difficulties; and
-they had grown up thus, more on the footing of children of the same
-parent, than as a wealthy heiress, and a poor dependant.
-
-During the last year of their lives, however, a change had silently, and
-almost imperceptibly, come over their feelings toward each other. An
-absence of nearly a twelvemonth with his patron at a foreign court, had
-in part altered the sentiments of Lorraine from those of a devoted
-brother to the emotions of love. He left Isabel, when both thought as
-children; he returned and found her already a woman. During that
-interval new scenes, new thoughts, new emotions had successively
-occupied the heart of the page; and though when he came back he was
-still a boy in years, he had already began to feel the intenser passions
-of the man. Never had he seen such beauty as burst upon him when Isabel
-entered the room on his return. It was as if a goddess of olden Greece
-had been ushered into his presence, as if the inanimate statue of
-Pygmalion had flushed, all at once, into a breathing being. Lorraine had
-dreamed of loveliness, but he had never, in his brightest visions,
-pictured aught so fair. He had expected Isabel to be improved, although
-he had left her the loveliest being of the riding; but he had not
-imagined that she would bud forth into a flower of such surpassing, such
-transcendent beauty. He was awed; he was filled as if with the presence
-of a divinity, to which he bowed irresistibly, but in strange delight.
-From that hour the bosom of the warm, high-souled boy, was ruled by a
-passion that devoured his very existence.
-
-But we said Isabel had changed. She too had learned to love, though not
-her cousin. As yet she scarcely knew it herself; the secret lay hidden
-in the recesses of her own bosom; and though her heart would beat more
-wildly, and the blood rush in deeper tints to her cheek, whenever the
-steed of her lover, the young Lord De Courtenay, was seen approaching
-her father’s gate, yet the Lady Isabel had never asked herself whence
-arose her emotion. Perhaps she feared to institute the inquiry. Certain
-it is, that like every other delicate female, she almost shrank from
-owning, even to herself, that her affections had strayed from their pure
-resting-place in her own bosom.
-
-It was well for Lorraine’s present, though unfortunate for his future,
-happiness, that De Courtenay had left the country a few days prior to
-the page’s return. By this means he was prevented from learning, what,
-otherwise would have checked his growing affection even in its bud, and
-suffered to go on in his dreams of love, until the very existence of the
-endeared object became almost a part of his being.
-
-It was some time before Isabel perceived the change which had been
-wrought in her cousin’s feelings toward herself, and when she did, the
-knowledge served more than aught else, to reveal to her the state of her
-own heart. She saw she could not return her cousin’s passion, though she
-still loved him with the same sisterly affection as ever, and with this
-discovery came that of her own love for De Courtenay. Although her equal
-in rank, and even her superior in wealth, there was a romantic gallantry
-in her lover which had forbade him to woo her as others of like elevated
-station would have done. Though, therefore, her parent would have
-sanctioned the alliance at once, he was yet ignorant of the love the
-only son of his neighbor, the earl of Wardour, bore to his daughter. And
-though the lady Isabel thought of her absent lover daily, there was
-something—it might be maiden modesty, which made her shun breathing De
-Courtenay’s name.
-
-Several weeks had now elapsed, and months were beginning to pass away,
-since the departure of De Courtenay for Flanders. The time for his
-return had nearly arrived, and Isabel had even received a hasty note
-from him, breathing a thousand delicate flatteries, such as lovers only
-know how to pay and to receive, telling her to expect him at Deraine
-Hall, on this very afternoon—yet he came not. Why did he tarry? It was
-this knowledge which had made the lady Isabel watch so long from the
-terrace, down the avenue of her father’s park. Little did Lorraine
-think, as he gazed so devotedly into her face, that her thoughts even
-then were wandering upon another.
-
-Let it not be fancied that the lady Isabel trifled with her cousin’s
-feelings. Deeply, daily was she pained at his too evident love. She
-longed to tell him the truth, and yet she shrank from it. She could not
-inflict such agony upon his heart. She would have given worlds to have
-had the power of returning his love, but that had long since passed from
-her, and like the pitying executioner, she loathed striking the blow,
-which she knew must eventually be struck. And thus the story of those
-two beings went on, and while both were full of joy and hope, one, at
-least, had before him to drink, a cup, as yet unseen, of the bitterest
-agony. Alas! for the disappointments, the worse than utter wo, which a
-devoted heart experiences, when it discovers that its first deep love is
-in vain.
-
-
- Chapter III.
-
- _The Letter: The Discovery._
-
-“She loves me—she loves me,” exclaimed the page joyfully, as he stood
-in a sequestered alley in the garden, a few hours later than when she
-first saw him, “yes!” he exclaimed, as if he could not too often repeat
-the glad tidings, “she loves me; and, poor, as I am, I may yet win her.”
-
-As he spoke his whole countenance lighted up; his slender figure
-dilated; his chest heaved; and all the lofty spirit of his sires shone
-in the boy’s eyes, and spoke in his tones.
-
-“Yes! she loves me,” he repeated, “she called me ‘sweet coz,’ and
-thanked me a ‘thousand times’—these were the very words—and she played
-so with Wyn, and said I sang better than ever. Yes! yes! I cannot be
-mistaken—she loves me, me only.”
-
-The page suddenly ceased, for he heard a rustling as of some one walking
-slowly up an adjacent path, separated from his own by a narrow belt of
-shrubbery. His heart fluttered, and the blood rushed into his cheek. He
-wanted nothing to tell him that the intruder was the lady Isabel.
-
-She was evidently reading something, though in a low voice, as if to
-herself. For a minute the page hesitated whether he should join her, but
-then he reflected that she could be perusing nothing that she would not
-wish him to hear, when something in her glad tones, something in the
-words she read, induced him, the next instant, to pause. The lady Isabel
-was apparently repeating a letter, but from whom? Did he dream? Could
-those terms of endearment be addressed to her? Was it her voice which
-lingered upon them in such apparent pleasure? She was now directly
-opposite to the page; not more than a few feet distant; and the sense
-which hitherto had only reached him in broken fragments, now came in
-continuous sentences to his ear. The letter ran thus:
-
- Dearest Isabel:—I write this in haste, and with a sad heart,
- for instead of being on my journey to see your sweet face once
- more, I am suddenly ordered back to Flanders with despatches for
- the commander in chief. You may judge of your Edward’s feelings,
- to have the cup of bliss thus dashed from his lips at the very
- moment when he had thought a disappointment impossible. Oh! if I
- knew that you still thought of me, love, as you once said with
- your own sweet lips that you did, I would depart with a lighter
- heart. God only knows when I shall see you. But the king’s
- messenger has come for me, and I must go. Farewell, dearest. I
- have kissed the paper over and over again. Farewell, again, and
- again.
-
-Here the words of the reader became once more undistinguishable; but had
-they continued audible, Lorraine could have heard no more. A fearful
-truth was breaking in upon him. His brain was like fire: his heart beat
-as if it would snap its bonds asunder. He staggered to a tree, for a
-faintness was coming over him. Big drops of agony rolled from his brow,
-and he placed his hand to his forehead, like one awaking from delirium.
-At length he found words for his woe.
-
-“No no, it cannot be,” he exclaimed “it was all a dream. Yes! it is too,
-too true. But I will not, cannot believe it, unless I hear it from her
-own lips,” and starting forward, with sudden energy, the page placed his
-hand upon the shrubbery, and pushing it aside with superhuman strength,
-he stood the next instant panting before his cousin.
-
-Astonished at his unexpected appearance, Isabel started back with a
-suppressed shriek; but on recognising the intruder, her fear gave way to
-confusion. The blood mounted in torrents over brow, neck, and bosom; and
-hastily crushing the letter in her hands, and concealing it in her
-dress, she paused hesitatingly before her cousin. His quick eye detected
-the movement, and rushing forward, he flung himself at the feet of
-Isabel.
-
-“It is then true—true—true,” he exclaimed passionately, “my ears are
-not deceived, and you love another. Is it not so Isabel?” The maiden
-averted her head, for she saw at once that she had been overheard, and
-she could not endure the boy’s agonised look. “Oh! Isabel, dear, dear
-Isabel, say it is untrue. Only say I was mistaken, that it was all a
-dream, that you still love me as you used to love me.”
-
-“I do love you still,” murmured Isabel, in broken accents, “as I ever
-did, as my dearest, nearest cousin.”
-
-“Is that all!” said the boy, whose eyes for a moment had lighted up with
-wild unchecked joy, but which now shewed the depth of his returning
-agony in every look, “is that all?” he continued in a tone of
-disappointment. “Oh Isabel,” and the tears gushed into his eyes, “is
-there no hope? Speak—only one word, dear Isabel. I have dared to love
-you—I might have known better—and now you spurn me. Well—the dream is
-over,” and dropping the hands which he had seized, he gazed a minute
-wildly into her face, to see if there was one last gleam of hope. But no
-response came back to dispel his agony. The lady Isabel was violently
-agitated, and though her look was one of pity, it was not, alas! one of
-encouragement. She burst into tears, and turned her head partially away.
-Striking his brow wildly with his hands, the page rushed from her
-presence, and when she murmured his name and looked up, he was gone.
-
- (To be continued.)
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- CALLIRHÖE.
-
-
- BY H. PERCEVAL.
-
-
- Whence art thou bright Callirhöe,
- Calm, Hebé-eyed Callirhöe?
- Art thou a daughter of this earth,
- That, like myself, had life and birth.
- And who will die like me?
- Methinks a soul so pure and clear
- Must breathe another atmosphere,
- Of thought more heavenly and high,
- More full of deep serenity,
- Than circles round this world of ours;
- I dare not think that thou shouldst die,
- Unto my soul, like summer showers
- To thirsty leaves thou art,—like May
- To the slow-budding woodbine bowers.
- Oh no! thou canst pass away.
- No hand shall strew thy bier with flowers!
- Those eyes, as fair as Eve’s, when they,
- Untearful yet, were raised to pray,
- Fronting the mellow sunset glow
- Of summer eve in Paradise,
- Those bright founts whence forever flow
- Nepenthe-streams of ecstacies.
- It cannot be that Death
- Shall chill them with his winter breath,—
- What hath Death to do with thee,
- My seraph-winged Callirhöe?
-
- Whence art thou? From some other sphere,
- On which, throughout the moonless night,
- Gazing, we dream of beings bright,
- Such as we long for here,—
- Or art thou but a joy Elysian,
- Of my own inward sight,
- A glorious and fleeting vision,
- Habited in robes of light,
- The image of a blessed thing,
- Whom I might love with wondering,
- Yet feeling not a shade of doubt,
- And who would give her love to me,
- To twine my inmost soul about?
- No, no, these would not be like thee,
- Bright one, with auburn hair disparted
- On thy meek forehead maidenly,
- No, not like thee, my woman-hearted,
- My warm, my true Callirhöe!
-
- How may I tell the sunniness
- Of thy thought-beaming smile?
- Or how the soothing spell express,
- That bindeth me the while,
- Forth from thine eyes and features bright,
- Gusheth that flood of golden light?
- Like a sun-beam to my soul,
- Comes that trusting smile of thine,
- Lighting up the clouds of doubt,
- Till they shape themselves, and roll
- Like a glory all about
- The messenger divine.—
- For divine that needs must be
- That bringeth messages from thee.
- Madonna, gleams of smiles like this,
- Like a stream of music fell,
- In the silence of the night,
- On the soul of Raphael.
- Musing with a still delight,
- How meekly thou did’st bend and kiss
- The baby on thy knee,
- Who sported with the golden hair
- That fell in showers o’er him there,
- Looking up contentedly.
- Only the greatest souls can speak
- As much by smiling as by tears.
- Thine strengthens me when I am weak,
- And gladdens into hopes my fears.
- The path of life seems plain and sure,
- Thy purity doth make me pure
- And holy, when thou let’st arise
- That mystery divine,
- That silent music in thine eyes.
- Seldom tear visits cheek of thine,
- Seldom a tear escapes from thee,
- My Hebé, my Callirhöe!
-
- Sometimes in waking dreams divine,
- Wandering, my spirit meets with thine,
- And while, made dumb with ecstacy,
- I pause in a delighted trance,
- Thine, like a squirrel caught at play,
- Just gives one startled look askance,
- And darteth suddenly away,
- Swifter than a phosphor glance
- At night upon the lonely sea,
- Wayward-souled Callirhöe.
- Sometimes, in mockery of care,
- Thy playful thought will never rest,
- Darting about, now here, now there,
- Like sun-beams on a river’s breast,
- Shifting with each breath of air,
- By its very unrest fair.
- As a bright and summer stream,
- Seen in childhood’s happy dream,
- Singing nightly, singing daily,
- Trifling with each blade of grass
- That breaks his ripples as they pass,
- And going on its errand gaily,
- Singing with the self-same leap
- Wherewith it merges in the deep.
- So shall thy spirit glide along,
- Breaking, when troubled, into song,
- And leave an echo floating by
- When thou art gone forth utterly.
- Seeming-cheerful souls there be,
- That flutter with a living sound
- As dry leaves rustle on the ground;
- But they are sorrowful to me,
- Because they make me think of thee,
- My bird-like, wild Callirhöe!
-
- Thy mirth is like the flickering ray
- Forthshooting from the steadfast light
- Of a star, which through the night
- Moves glorious on its way,
- With a sense of moveless might.
- Thine inner soul flows calm forever;
- Dark and calm without a sound,
- Like that strange and trackless river
- That rolls its waters underground.
- Early and late at thy soul’s gate
- Sits Chastity in maiden wise,
- No thought unchallenged, small or great,
- Goes thence into thine eyes;
- Nought evil can that warder win,
- To pass without or enter in.
- Before thy pure eyes guilt doth shrink,
- Meanness doth blush and hide its head,
- Down through the soul their light will sink,
- And cannot be extinguished.
- Far up on poiséd wing
- Thou floatest, far from all debate,
- Thine inspirations are too great
- To tarry questioning;
- No murmurs of our earthly air,
- God’s voice alone can reach thee there;
- Downlooking on the stream of Fate,
- So high thou sweepest in thy flight,
- Thou knowest not of pride or hate,
- But gazing from thy lark-like height,
- Forth o’er the waters of To be,
- The first gleam of Truth’s morning light
- Round thy broad forehead floweth bright,
- My Pallas-like Callirhöe.
-
- Thy mouth is Wisdom’s gate, wherefrom,
- As from the Delphic cave,
- Great sayings constantly do come,
- Wave melting into wave;
- Rich as the shower of Danäe,
- Rains down thy golden speech;
- My soul sits waiting silently,
- When eye or tongue sends thought to me,
- To comfort or to teach.
-
- Calm is thy being as a lake
- Nestled within a quiet hill,
- When clouds are not, and winds are still,
- So peaceful calm, that it doth take
- All images upon its breast,
- Yet change not in its queenly rest,
- Reflecting back the bended skies
- Till you half doubt where Heaven lies.
- Deep thy nature is, and still,
- How dark and deep! and yet so clear
- Its inmost depths seem near;
- Not moulding all things to its will,
- Moulding its will to all,
- Ruling them with unfelt thrall.
- So gently flows thy life along
- It makes e’en discord musical,
- So that nought can pass thee by
- But turns to wond’rous melody,
- Like a full, clear, ringing song.
- Sweet the music of its flow,
- As of a river in a dream,
- A river in a sunny land,
- A deep and solemn stream
- Moving over silver sand,
- Majestical and slow.
-
- I sometimes think that thou wert given
- To be a bright interpreter
- Of the pure mysteries of Heaven,
- And cannot bear
- To think Death’s icy hand should stir
- One ringlet of thy hair;
- But thou must die like us,—
- Yet not like us,—for can it be
- That one so bright and glorious
- Should sink into the dust as we,
- Who could but wonder at thy purity?
- Not oft I dwell in thoughts of thine,
- My earnest-souled Callirhöe;
- And yet thy life is part of mine.
- What should I love in place of thee?
- Sweet is thy voice, as that of streams
- To me, or as a living sound
- To one who starts from fev’rous sleep,
- Scared by the shapes of ghastly dreams,
- And on the darkness stareth round,
- Fancying dim terrors in the gloomy deep.
- Then if it must be so,
- That thou from us shalt go,
- Linger yet a little while;
- Oh! let me once more feel thy grace,
- Oh! let me once more drink thy smile!
- I am as nothing if thy face
- Is turned from me!
- But if it needs must be,
- That I must part from thee,
- That the silver cord be riven
- That holds thee down from Heaven,
- Not yet, not yet, Callirhöe,
- Unfold thine angel wings to flee,
- Oh! no, not yet, Callirhöe!
-
- Cambridge, Mass., 1841.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- THE CONFESSIONS OF A MISER.
-
-
- BY J. ROSS BROWNE.
-
-
- Continued from Page 87.
-
-
- Part II.
-
-That irrevocable passion which sprung up between Marco Da Vinci and
-Valeria, during the hours of mutual communion which they enjoyed while
-preparations were in progress for the annual exhibition at the Academy
-of Arts, was not destined to wither in its infancy.
-
-Scarcely had the portrait been finished, when notice was conveyed to the
-candidates to send in their productions; and of course my anxiety was
-great to ascertain what impression my daughter’s beauty should make in
-public. Completely blinded by those deep and damning schemes which have
-proved my ruin, I meantime suspected nothing of what was in progress
-between the young and ardent lovers. They were bound heart and soul to
-each other; but except by those involuntary signs, which none but the
-victims of passion can understand, their love was unuttered. Hourly was
-this misplaced flame acquiring an increasing degree of vigor, from the
-very means taken to suppress it. I saw not, in my blindness, that in
-spite of the respectful and irreproachable conduct of Da Vinci toward
-the idol of my mercenary dreams, his tender flame, his ill-disguised
-sentiments of admiration, his involuntary devotion, were all returned in
-the same manner by Valeria.
-
-In due time the exhibition took place. A week of thrilling excitement
-passed away. On the evening the premiums were to be awarded, I sallied
-out to await the decisions, persuaded that Valeria’s beauty, and not the
-skill of Marco Da Vinci, must make serious impressions in favor of the
-portrait. How describe my delight, when the premium was bestowed on the
-limner of my daughter’s charms! Her fame, I well knew, would now rapidly
-spread, and my fortune was sure!
-
-In the excitement of the moment, I hurried from the Academy, and sought
-to drown my feeling in deep potations. While under the influence of an
-unusual quantity of the stimulant, the time flew rapidly past; and it
-was late in the night before I recovered myself sufficiently to stagger
-home. To account for the sight which there paralyzed my eyes, it is
-necessary to touch upon what happened during my inebriation.
-
-Marco Da Vinci, on learning the decision made in favor of his work,
-proceeded with haste to pour out his feelings of gratitude to Valeria,
-whom he regarded as the instrument of his success. In the passionate
-eloquence of his temperament, he dwelt upon all, save that which was
-consuming his vitals, and which he dared not avow. They who pass any
-portion of their time in a state of beatitude, can alone say how swiftly
-it flies. Valeria and Da Vinci, entranced with their own dreamy visions
-of future happiness and of present joy, noted not that the hour of
-midnight had approached. At length the “iron tongue” of the town clock
-warned them to part; and with a deep sigh Valeria murmured a request
-that Da Vinci would visit the house again and frequently.
-
-“My determination,” said Marco, “can no longer be suppressed.” In a
-voice of the deepest agitation he proceeded: “I had hoped, Valeria, that
-we might part without a word of regret on either side; but your kindness
-and friendship toward me, render it a duty that I should make some
-explanations in defence of my refusal of your hospitable invitation. I
-must speak, whatever be the penalty. Your beauty and charms of
-person—your mental fascination—render it too dangerous for me to
-continue my visits! We must part—forever!”
-
-In a hurried and agitated manner the young painter rushed toward the
-door.
-
-“Stay!” cried Valeria, in whom the struggle between love and duty was
-for a moment so violent as to deprive her of her faculties, “Da Vinci,
-why must we part thus? Why are we never again to meet? I am sure it is
-no harm for us to enjoy the pleasure of each other’s society.”
-
-This was said in a voice of such warmth and artlessness, that, for a
-moment, he was unnerved in his resolution. The danger, however, was too
-great; and he resisted the temptation.
-
-“Valeria,” said Marco Da Vinci, endeavoring to answer calmly, “I am an
-outcast—a beggar!”
-
-“But I do not think less of you for that!” cried Valeria, passionately.
-
-“Hear me!” cried Da Vinci, in a hurried and choaking voice, “you know me
-not! I have dared—I still dare—to love you!”
-
-Valeria might have suspected, and probably did suspect, that this
-declaration was inevitable; but there is a great deal of deceit in the
-female heart; and she evinced much astonishment at the words of her
-lover. She endeavored to frown—to look serious—to speak of _my_
-authority—but love was the conqueror!
-
-That resource which woman is ever prone to make use of, was at hand; and
-Valeria wept. Her beauty had always been a subject of dangerous interest
-to Marco Da Vinci: it was now heightened in his mind by the
-consciousness that she loved him. No longer able to control those
-feelings, which from the moment of their meeting, had taken possession
-of Da Vinci’s heart, the enthusiastic lover sprang forward and clasped
-Valeria to his bosom. He pressed her lips to his own, and imprinted on
-them the burning kiss of first-love.
-
-At this critical moment I entered. Unable to believe my senses, I stood
-gasping for breath, and transfixed with doubt and astonishment.
-Convinced at length that I was not deceived, I sprang forward to wreak
-my vengeance on the villain who had so basely abused my confidence.
-
-“Monster!” cried Da Vinci, confronting me face to face, and darting from
-his fine expressive eyes the most deadly hatred, “Monster! you are
-known! whatever obligations I may have formerly considered myself under
-to you, I now look upon them as entirely cancelled by your hypocrisy
-toward myself, and your base conduct toward your daughter. Know, hoary
-villain, that no later than to day, I received a letter from Don
-Ferdinand Ruzzina, warning me to be on my guard in any of my
-transactions with you. Nor was this all! He openly exposed your
-villainy, and revealed the unnatural and cruel schemes you have
-concerted for the disposal of your daughter’s honor. Behold, wretch, in
-_me_ her protector! You have forfeited the title, and by the God that
-made me, your baseness shall not triumph!”
-
-So struck was I at this change in the conduct of Da Vinci, that for
-several moments I stood transfixed to the spot. Still stupified with
-rage and shame, I staggered back, and flung myself on a bench. Valeria,
-with that filial affection, which I had never known her to violate,
-sprang toward me in an agony of remorse; and kneeling at my feet,
-earnestly avowed her determination to remain forever obedient to my
-will; and craved forgiveness for her instrumentality in causing me such
-shame and misery. Already goaded to desperation by the taunts of young
-Da Vinci, and the reproaches of my own conscience, I was not prepared
-for this act of unmerited constancy. In the bitterness of my own
-self-detestation, I rushed from the room, striking my temples with my
-clenched hands, and uttering imprecations on those who gave me life. I
-hastily mounted the ladder, leading to my miserable garret; and darting
-through the trap-door, threw myself head-long on the squalid and
-tattered pallet.
-
-Ruzzina had not forgotten me! Awed by the unconquerable virtue of my
-daughter, he had no desire to renew visits which he well knew were alike
-useless and unwelcome. But I had exacted large sums from him. He was my
-dupe! Even in _that_, there was a pleasure. Aye, such a pleasure as a
-miser can feel when avarice triumphs over conscience, and vice over
-virtue!
-
-Early on the following morning, I indited a note to Don Ferdinand,
-which, in the plenitude of my craft, I looked upon as relieving me from
-all claims whatever on his part. It ran thus:
-
- “If you have any intention of consummating your designs on my
- daughter’s virtue—a thing which I regard as a mere
- misnomer—you must do so immediately. The advance-money hitherto
- received from you, I consider fairly my own; and if you think
- proper to neglect the chance I now give you of achieving your
- wishes, I am sure it is your own fault.
-
- “Be so good as to let me have a definite answer, when it suits
- your convenience; and believe me,
-
- Catruccio Faliri.”
-
-It afforded me much gratification to anticipate the wrath and
-indignation Ruzzina should evince on reading this. To gloat over the
-dark traits of men’s characters, has ever been my choicest amusement;
-and I well knew that he would either make a desperate attempt to
-retrieve his imprudence by recovering the money, or desist altogether
-and keep silent to avoid the shafts of satire and ridicule.
-
-I suffered much uneasiness, and had much to fear on account of the
-ardent and fiery temperament of Valeria. The passion she had betrayed
-for Marco Da Vinci was no childish fancy; but a deep-rooted, irrevocable
-love, which nothing could eradicate or assuage. Her pure Italian blood
-permitted no medium between passion and indifference. She loved him
-once, and was destined to love, or hate him forever after. Of this I
-quickly had a most satisfactory proof.
-
-Enraged one day at the obstinate manner in which she rejected the
-advances of every suitor I thought proper to introduce into my house, I
-bitterly reproached her for her disobedience; and in the excess of my
-anger, struck her a violent blow. Her proud spirit was instantly up.
-
-“Father,” said she, “you have struck me for the first, and for the last
-time. In defiance of your cruel and unnatural machinations for the
-disposal of my honor, you shall never reproach me with their success. I
-have hitherto mildly resisted your iniquitous designs; and I now boldly
-put myself out of your power. This roof shall never more shelter your
-daughter!”
-
-In scarcely any gradation of human depravity is man totally callous to
-the qualms of conscience. I have before remarked that I anticipated with
-joy the hour of death; but this was merely a fiendish delirium, wrought
-by the recollection of past iniquities: a kind of bravo, which, in the
-hour of cool contemplation, would be regarded with fear and horror.
-
-I confess I was much staggered at the justice of Valeria’s reproaches,
-and the firmness and dignity of her demeanor. Whatever might have been
-the nature of my former conduct toward her, I _did_ feel, at that
-moment, a sense of my baseness. Her fine, expressive eyes were eloquent
-with determination; and her beautiful figure, as she glided steadily
-from my presence, seemed to acquire a queenliness from passion and
-indignation. She spoke no more; and I was too relentless to excuse
-myself, or break the silence. I had pride—ay, the pride of a demon. I
-would not humble it by confessing my cruelty, or soliciting her
-forgiveness. Thus originated a disunion, which was soon destined to lead
-to the most tragical effects.
-
-I follow, for a moment, the fortunes of Valeria.
-
-During her residence in that part of Venice, in which we had latterly
-lived, she had, by the merest accident, become acquainted with the
-daughter of a neighboring officer, and had cultivated the society of
-this young lady, more from a natural fondness for association with the
-educated of her sex, than from any particular liking to her new
-acquaintance. Signora Almeda—the lady’s name—was not unusually
-prepossessing in her person or manners; but she had a vigorous and
-masculine mind, and possessed no small share of sound knowledge, both
-literary and scientific. She had, from the beginning, regarded my
-daughter with peculiar favor. Their acquaintance had latterly become
-quite intimate; and on the strength of this intimacy, and the dependance
-of her situation, Valeria resolved to claim the hospitality of her
-friend, until fortune should place it in her power to earn a livelihood
-by her own exertions. Signora Almeda accepted, with pleasure, the
-proposition of her accomplished acquaintance.
-
-For several months a sisterly harmony was observed between the friends.
-Though Valeria steadily refused to enter into society, yet it soon
-became obvious to her entertainer that she had the ascendency in the
-social circle. Of all stings prone to penetrate the female heart, none
-is so poisonous or painful as that which wounds vanity. Signora Almeda
-was piqued to discover that the suitors, who had before paid her the
-utmost devotion, now eagerly transferred their addresses to her guest.
-From learning to view her as a rival, she presently looked upon her as
-an ungrateful and disagreeable dependant. Every opportunity was now
-taken advantage of, both publicly and privately, by Signora Almeda, to
-vent her envy toward Valeria. The innocent cause of this disquietude,
-meantime wondered at the change. It was true, her entertainer still
-continued to treat her with formal hospitality; but all intimacy and
-friendship were at an end. This state of things was destined to be
-speedily brought to a close.
-
-Signora Almeda had among other suitors, one who really admired her, and
-for whom she had evinced much respect. This gentleman, inspired by the
-superiority of Valeria, physically if not mentally, forgot for a moment
-his promises and devotions toward Signora Almeda. The blow was not to be
-borne. A proud Italian spirit was roused. Revenge was now the sole
-subject of her thought.
-
-Valeria one evening, soon after this, retired to her chamber to enjoy a
-few moments of solitude. In searching a small drawer for some article of
-habiliment, she accidentally discovered a note, directed to herself and
-handsomely sealed. It was inscribed in a bold, masculine hand; and ran
-thus:—
-
- “Bewitching girl!—In accordance with your repeated desire, I
- shall to-night gently tap at your chamber-window. O raptures!
- how I shall—but why anticipate.
-
- “_Votre roturiex_
- “Caius Pazzio.”
-
-Astonished and indignant, Valeria was about to tear this insulting
-epistle to atoms, when the door gently opened; and Signora Almeda glided
-in.
-
-“Ah! my charming guest,” she whispered, with forced friendship, “what
-now? Mercy, you seem like one who had just caught sight of an
-apparition! Dear me! what’s the matter?”
-
-“Matter!” cried Valeria, fired with shame and indignation, “read!—but
-no—the insult must not be known!”
-
-“Heavens! a letter—Ah, I guess the contents!” She snatched it
-playfully, and read with apparent surprise—what she had herself
-written!
-
-The result was such as might be expected. Valeria was peremptorily
-forbidden the house. Her character was blasted—her happiness destroyed!
-
-In this melancholy situation, Marco Da Vinci found her, when after a
-long and indefatigable search, he succeeded in tracing her to the
-residence of Signora Almeda. With all the ardor and sincerity of his
-character, Da Vinci had determined on bringing his fate to a speedy
-close, either by wedding the object of his affection, or by bidding her
-farewell forever. The critical situation in which he found her,
-immediately determined him to adopt the former course, if possible. He
-had, since his triumph at the Academy of Arts, attained some eminence;
-and his circumstances were now in a favorable condition.
-
-Valeria had many objections to the course proposed; but on the one hand
-poverty—perhaps beggary would be her lot; while on the other the
-importunities of Da Vinci were so urgent as to remove most of the
-remaining obstacles. After much hesitation she consented to acquiesce in
-his wishes. The young and loving couple were immediately united. I now
-return to my own narrative.
-
-Nearly a year had elapsed since I was left alone and desolate; when one
-evening I was astonished to see a female, closely muffled, enter my
-house. My mind had that day been peculiarly embittered against my
-daughter, and she was even now the subject of my thoughts. Great,
-indeed, was my astonishment, when the apparent stranger flung herself in
-a kneeling posture before me, and casting off her disguise revealed to
-my sight the faded lineaments of Valeria!
-
-“Father!” she cried, “forgive me!—forgive the partner of my misery! We
-are ruined by a reverse of fortune—we are beggars! Distress has
-deprived us of pride! We seek your pardon!”
-
-“Curse you!” I shouted, spurning her with my foot, “you demand pardon do
-you? Begone! Pardon, eh? Begone!” I thundered; and I pushed her
-violently toward the door. She fell. Her head struck a bureau; and the
-warm blood spouted from the gash. Had I reflected on the delicacy of her
-situation, it is probable I might have felt compassion enough to let her
-pass unmolested; but the deed was done. I did not regret it. My
-vengeance for the series of disappointments she had caused me was
-satiated.
-
- (To be Continued.)
-
- Louisville, Kentucky, February, 1841.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- THE ALCHYMIST.
-
-
- BY MRS. LAMBERT.
-
-
- “The machine of human life, though constituted of a thousand
- parts, is in all its parts systematically connected; nor is it
- easy to insert an additional member, the spuriousness of which
- an accurate observation will not readily detect.”—_Godwin._
-
-It was midnight. Darkness, deep as the sable of a funeral pall, hung
-over the streets of Madrid. The wind blew in strong gusts, and the rain
-fell in torrents. The lightning, which, at brief intervals, rent the
-clouds, and flashed across the gloom, revealed no living, moving thing.
-For an instant only, the livid sheets lit up the streets and squares,
-and glared over the Plaza Mayon, so often the scene of savage
-bull-fights, of cruel executions, and, in former years, of the horrible
-_Auto de fé_. And again, as it seemed, a tenfold blackness enveloped
-every object; convents, colleges and hospitals, closed at every
-aperture, were shrouded in the general gloom. Man, though the noblest
-work of his Creator—glorying in his wisdom and in his might—towering
-in the battle-field—great in council—overweening, arrogant, boastful;
-in such a night learns to feel his own insignificance. He, who adorned
-with all the pageantry of wealth, elevates himself far above the lowly
-individual that seeks his daily bread by daily labor—who looks down as
-from an immeasurable height upon the poor peasant of the soil—even he,
-so rich, so powerful, sheltered within his stately walls, listens to the
-war of the elements that rage without—and inwardly congratulating
-himself on his rich and comfortable asylum, yet shrinks involuntarily as
-the blast shrieks by—and silently acknowledges his own impotence.
-
-I have said no living thing moved in the street, and every building was
-closed against the storm; but in the outskirts of the city, in a narrow
-and solitary lane, built up at intervals with a few houses of mean and
-wretched appearance—a faint light shone through the gloom. It proceeded
-from the casement of a house of antique structure, and dilapidated
-appearance. Years must have gone by since that dwelling was the abode of
-comfort, for poverty and wretchedness seemed to have long marked it for
-their own. The exterior gave faithful promise of what was revealed
-within.
-
-In a large and gothic room, the broken and discolored walls of which
-betokened decay, an aged man was bending over a fire of charcoal, and
-busily engaged in some metallic preparation. His form was bent by age.
-The hair of his head, and the beard, which descended to his breast, were
-bleached by time to a silvery whiteness. His forehead was ample, but
-furrowed by a thousand wrinkles. His eyes, deep set, small, and still
-retaining much quickness and fire, yet at times their expression was
-wild, despairing, even fearful.
-
-A cap of peculiar and ancient form was upon his head, and his person was
-enveloped in a robe of russet, confined about the waist by a twisted
-girdle. His motions were tremulous and feeble, his countenance wan and
-death-like, his frame to the last degree emaciated.
-
-A bed stood in one corner of the room; a table, and two roughly made
-forms, were all the furniture of that miserable apartment; but around
-the small furnace, at which the old man had been lately employed, were
-gathered crucibles, minerals, chemical preparations, and tools of
-mysterious form and curious workmanship, but well understood by the
-artist. Once more the adept, for such was the inmate of this lonely
-dwelling, scanned with searching eye the contents of a crucible; while
-the pale flame which rose suddenly from the sullen fire, cast over his
-sunken features a hue still more livid and cadaverous.
-
-His labors had resulted in disappointment; he sighed heavily, and
-dropping his implements, abandoned his self-imposed task.
-
-“It is over,” he murmured, “my hour is almost come—and should I repine?
-No—no. Life!—wretched and misspent!—world! I have sacrificed thee, to
-thyself!—wonderful enigma, yet how true!”
-
-Turning his steps to the table, he took from thence a lamp, and walked
-feebly to a remote end of the room. Here, on a humble couch, lay a
-sleeping child; it was a boy, slender, pale, and bearing in his young
-face the indications of sorrow and of want—yet was he exquisitely
-beautiful. He slept still, and heavily. The adept gazed at him long and
-deeply.
-
-“He sleeps. Victim as he is, of his father’s errors, and his
-crimes—shunned by his fellows—hunted by the unfeeling—pinched with
-cold—and perishing with hunger—yet—he sleeps. Father of Heaven! such
-is the meed of innocence! _I_, shall never more know rest,—till the
-long sleep of death that knows no awakening!—No awakening—and is it
-so?” A blast of wind swept by, rocking the old pile to its foundation,
-the thunder rolled heavily above, and the keen blue lightning shone
-through every crevice.
-
-The old man looked fearfully around: a deeper paleness overspread his
-face, and cold drops stood on his brow and sallow temples.
-
-“The angel of death is surely abroad this night—he seeks his victim.”
-
-Tottering to the bed he sunk down upon it, and closing his eyes, an
-almost deadly sickness seized him. He called faintly for Adolf. The lad
-had already risen, for the storm had awakened him. He went to the
-bedside. The old man could not speak. The child was affrighted and gazed
-earnestly upon the face of his parent. The senses of the latter had not
-forsaken him, and he motioned with his hand toward the table, on which
-stood a small cup. Adolf brought it to his father, and moistened his
-lips with the liquid. The old man revived. After a few moments he spoke,
-but his voice was tremulous and low.
-
-“Adolf,” he said, “thy father is about to leave thee—dear object of my
-fond affection, thou art all that remains of my beloved Zillia—boy,” he
-continued exerting the last remains of strength, “thou must go hence.
-The moment thy father ceases to breathe thou must fly.”
-
-The child looked on his parent with alarm, and sorrow depicted in his
-young face.
-
-“Yes,” he repeated, “thou must quit this place. My enemies are on the
-alert. Me they would certainly destroy, and thy youth and
-innocence—will hardly save thee from their wrath. Long have they
-watched, and sought, and hunted me, from country to country, and from
-town to town. I have mingled in the crowd of cities, and hoped to be
-confounded with the multitude—to pass
-unmarked—unquestioned—unknown—in vain; the ever wakeful eye of
-suspicion followed me—danger dogged my footsteps. I sought the shelter
-of thick woods—of impenetrable forests, where the wolf howled, and the
-raven croaked—but the foot of my persecutor—Man—seldom came. Even
-there I was discovered. Imprisonment—famine—torture have been my
-portion—and yet I live. I live—but thy gentle spirit, Zillia, could
-not bear up under the pressure of so many woes. Adolf, thou wilt shortly
-be all that survives of the family of Zampieri.—I repeat, by the
-morning dawn _I_ shall be no more, and _thou_ must fly.”
-
-“No, no,” returned the boy, “urge me not to depart—father, I will
-remain and share thy fate.” He threw himself as he spoke upon the bosom
-of the old man who pressed him in his feeble arms.—“And oh! father, I
-_cannot_ go hence—I am weak—I am ill—father I die of hunger.”
-
-An expression of keen anguish passed over the face of Zampieri, and he
-pushed his child from him.
-
-“Boy,” he cried, “ask me not for bread—thou knowest I have it not. Have
-I not been laboring for thee—for thy wealth—for thy
-aggrandizement—ingrate—bread sayest thou—thou shalt have gold, boy,
-gold.”
-
-The intellect of the adept wandered, and he laughed wildly. The large,
-soft, lustrous eyes of Adolf swam in tears, and his heart trembled
-within his bosom. With weak steps he retreated to the foot of the bed,
-and kneeling there, hid his face on his folded arms, and wept.
-
-After a pause Zampieri again spoke.
-
-“Life!” he muttered, “how have I wasted thee. Time! Thou art no longer
-mine. Would that I could redeem thee—but it is too late. Zillia, my
-murdered love! Thou art avenged. I left thy fond and simple affections
-for the depths of mysterious research. I madly thought to realise the
-dreams of illimitable wealth. Vain and destructive ambition. For thy
-sake have I riven asunder every tie.”
-
-The voice of the old man ceased, and the sobs of the child too were
-silenced—perchance in sleep.
-
-The violence of the tempest had subsided, and all was still; save that
-the blast still shrieked at intervals by, making the old casements
-rattle as it passed—and the thunder muttered low at a distance.
-
-The hours rolled on. A faint grey light dawned in the east. The clouds
-broken in heavy masses, rolled rapidly onward obscuring and revealing,
-as they flew, the few bright stars that appeared far beyond this scene
-of petty turmoil, shining on, in their own unchanging, never ending
-harmony.
-
-And now the dawn strengthened, and the stars grew pale. The last blue
-flickering flame, that wandered _ignus-fatuus_ like, over the surface of
-the dying charcoal, had spent itself; and the wasting lamp looked
-ghastly in the beams of rising day.
-
-A noise was heard at the lonely portal. It was that of forcible
-entrance, and came harshly over the deep silence that reigned within.
-Footsteps approached, not such as told the drawing near of a friend, the
-light, soft step of sympathy with sorrow. No. They heralded force and
-violence—bond and imprisonment—racks and torture.
-
-Three Alguazils of the Inquisition entered the solitary apartment. They
-came to conduct Nicoli Zampieri to the holy office on a charge of
-performing or seeking to perform preternatural acts by unholy means—by
-conjuration and necromancy. Guilty or not guilty, suspicion had fallen
-upon him, and he had become amenable to the law. Their anticipated
-victim remained quiet. The Alguazils approached the bed on which he lay.
-The limbs were stark and stiff—the features immoveable. The Alchymist
-was dead.
-
-Yet the eyes—widely opened, glassy, fixed and staring, gave the
-startling idea, that the gloomy and reluctant soul had through them
-strained its last agonising gaze on some opening view—some unimaginable
-scene in the dread arena of the shadowy world beyond the grave.
-
-Silently they turned from the bed of death, for the power of the king of
-Terrors, thus displayed before them, quelled for a moment their iron
-nerves.
-
-A kneeling figure at the bed’s foot next drew their attention. It was
-Adolf. They spoke to him, but he answered not: they shook him, but the
-form immobile, gave no sign of warmth or elasticity. One of the men
-turned aside the rich curls that clustered above the boy’s fair brow,
-and gently raised his head. It was cold and pale. The suffering spirit
-of the young and innocent Adolf, had winged its way to a happier world.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- THE CIRCASSIAN BRIDE.
-
-
- BY ESTHER WETHERALD.
-
-
- “She walks in beauty, like the nights
- Of cloudless climes and starry skies.”
- _Byron._
-
-Nerinda was the daughter of a shepherd, who dwelt in one of the charming
-portions of Circassia. If beauty was a blessing, Nerinda was blessed
-beyond the ordinary lot of mortals, for the fame of her loveliness had
-extended through the neighboring vallies, and at the early age of
-fourteen her hand had been sought by many, with an earnestness which
-showed her parents what a treasure they possessed in their eldest born.
-But no one had been able to obtain her.
-
-Money is not so plentiful in the vales of Circassia, as in the mart of
-Constantinople; and few of the neighboring youths might venture
-therefore to aspire to her hand. There appeared, every day, less
-probability that the fair girl would be permitted to pass her life
-amidst scenes endeared to her by a thousand childish and tender
-recollections. Nerinda felt this and her eye became less bright, and her
-step less buoyant, than when she trod the flowery turf a few short
-months before, a happy careless child, attending those flocks now
-abandoned to the care of the younger children. She became pensive and
-melancholy. Her rich color faded, and her parents saw with surprise and
-concern that the dazzling beauty on which so much depended, would be
-tarnished by the very means they were taking to preserve it. What was to
-be done? She must resume her old employment, since healthful exercise
-was of such consequence to her appearance; she could do so in the
-neighboring meadows without danger, accompanied by her sister Leila. Oh!
-how happy was Nerinda, when she received this unlooked for indulgence;
-with what haste did she braid and arrange her beautiful hair, and fasten
-on the veil without which she must not be seen; then joining her sister,
-she visited every spot endeared to her by memory, and at length, seating
-herself on a mossy bank which separated her father’s possessions from
-those of a neighboring shepherd, began to arrange the many flowers she
-had culled into beautiful bouquets and chaplets, an occupation befitting
-one so young and lovely; but even whilst her hands were thus employed,
-it was evident her thoughts were far distant, for she fell into reveries
-so deep, that her sister, unable to arouse her from her abstraction,
-became weary of attempting it, and returned to her fleecy charge,
-leaving Nerinda to muse alone.
-
-Nerinda believed herself alone, but immediately after the departure of
-Leila, a finely formed youth had crossed the stream, and stood at the
-distance of a few paces, gazing on her with a passionate tenderness
-which betokened the strength of his attachment. Almost afraid to disturb
-her meditations, yet anxious to obtain a single word, a single glance,
-he remained motionless; waiting, hoping that she might raise her eyes,
-and give him permission to advance. She raised them at length, uttered
-an exclamation of surprise, and in a moment the youth was at her feet.
-“Nerinda!” “Hassan!” were the first words that escaped their lips.
-
-“Do I indeed see thee? and dost thou still love thy Nerinda?” said the
-maiden.
-
-“Love thee?” replied the youth in an impassioned tone, “thy image is
-entwined with every fibre of my heart. They may tear thee from me, they
-may destroy me if they will, but while life remains I cannot cease to
-love.”
-
-“Alas!” said Nerinda, “weeks have passed since I saw thee, and I
-feared—I—.” She stopped confused, for Hassan had seized her hand, and
-was pressing it to his lips with an energy which showed how well he
-understood what was passing in her mind.
-
-“Oh! Nerinda,” said he, “I have entreated, I have implored thy father to
-bestow thee on me, but in vain, for all the money I could offer was not
-one tenth of the sum he requires; yet do not despair,” he said, as the
-color faded from her cheek, “I still may hope if thou remainest
-constant.”
-
-“This very morning,” continued Hassan, “I sought thy father; at first he
-was unwilling to listen to me. At length I prevailed on him to hearken,
-even if he refused his assent to what I proposed: but he did not refuse.
-Pleased with my anxiety to obtain thee, he has promised that if in two
-years I can gain the required sum thou shalt be my wife; if I cannot he
-will wait no longer, but part with thee to him who will pay the highest
-price.”
-
-The voice of the youth faltered—he was scarcely able to continue, “in
-two days I am to take all the money my father can spare, and join the
-caravan which proceeds to the south; fear not,” said he, replying to the
-alarm expressed in her varying countenance, “there is no danger, the
-caravan is large, and if fortunate as a trader, I shall return before
-two years have passed to claim my plighted bride. Wilt thou be true? may
-I trust thee?” were questions the lover asked, though he felt sure the
-answers would be such as he could desire, and when the assurance was
-given, he for the first time ventured to impress a kiss on those
-beautiful lips. Long did they thus converse, but at length they parted;
-Nerinda promising to come to the same spot on the next evening to bid
-him farewell.
-
-They parted, Hassan vainly endeavoring to inspire Nerinda with his own
-hopes. She almost sank under the trial, and it was many days before she
-had strength to revisit the bank of turf, their accustomed trysting
-place. When she did, how changed did all appear; the flowers were still
-blooming around; the stream flowed on with its accustomed murmur; the
-birds carolled sweetly as of old; where then was the change? Alas! it
-was in her own heart: joy and happiness had fled with Hassan, and
-melancholy had taken their place.
-
-Two years and six months had passed since the departure of the youth,
-and there seemed little probability of his return; even his venerable
-father mourned him as dead, when a company of traders entered the
-mountains. One of them was an old acquaintance in the valley. He renewed
-his solicitations to the father of Nerinda, that she might be placed
-under his charge; offering the highest price, and promising that her
-future lot should be as brilliant and delightful as her past had been
-obscure. The shepherd was greatly disappointed by the non-appearance of
-Hassan, for he would have preferred keeping his daughter near him if he
-could have done so with advantage to himself, but being poor as well as
-avaricious, and imagining he should be perfectly happy if possessed of
-so much wealth as the trader offered, he consented to part with her, who
-had ever been his chief delight, and the pride of his heart.
-
-Language cannot paint the consternation of Nerinda when she learned her
-father’s determination. The delay of Hassan she accounted for by
-supposing he had not yet acquired the full amount necessary for his
-purpose, and hoped that after a while he would return to call her his.
-Now all hope was at an end. Hassan might still come, but she would be
-far distant, perhaps the wife of another. Her mother and sister too
-shared her grief, for they thought it would be impossible to live
-without Nerinda; but all entreaties and lamentations were vain, the
-shepherd had made the bargain and would abide by it; and she was hurried
-to the caravan in a state little short of insensibility.
-
-And where was Hassan? He had determined in the first place to proceed
-with the caravan to Mecca, whither it was bound, and laying out the
-money he possessed in merchandise, to trade at the different towns on
-their route. Before they arrived at the holy city he had consequently so
-greatly increased his store, that he felt no doubt he should be able to
-return before the time appointed; but meeting soon afterward with a
-heavy loss, he was thrown back when he least expected it, and at the end
-of two years had not more than half the amount required. To return
-without it was useless, and he set about repairing his loss with a heavy
-heart. Six months passed in this endeavor, at the end of which time he
-found himself rich enough to return, but it was necessary he should
-proceed to Constantinople to settle some business, and join a caravan
-which was going toward his native country. His anxiety increased every
-day: of what avail would be his wealth, if she, for whose sake it had
-been accumulated, was lost forever?
-
-The day before the one fixed for his departure from Constantinople, a
-company of traders arrived, bringing with them Circassian slaves. He
-happened to be passing by the slave-market, and impelled by sudden
-curiosity, entered the room. He had scarcely done so when he was struck
-by the graceful figure of one of the girls, which reminded him of
-Nerinda. He felt almost afraid to have her veil removed, then
-remembering that it would be impossible for her to recognise him in his
-present dress, and determining to suppress his emotions whatever the
-result, he made the request, which was instantly complied with. It was
-indeed Nerinda, but how changed! She stood before him pale as marble,
-with downcast eyes, looking as if no smile would ever again illumine
-those pensive features; once only a faint color tinged her cheek as he
-advanced toward her, then instantly gave place to more deathly paleness.
-The price was soon agreed upon, for the trader was now as anxious to get
-rid of his fair slave as he had been desirous to obtain her; having
-resigned the hope of making an immense profit in consequence of the
-continual dejection and grief she indulged, which had greatly impaired
-her health and beauty. Hassan ordered the trader to send her to his
-apartments immediately.
-
-When he entered the room to which she had been conducted, he gently
-raised her veil. She looked up, and recognised him instantly; her joy
-was as unbounded as his own, but was displayed in a different manner.
-She threw herself into his arms and sobbed and wept. She was, however,
-at length able to listen tranquilly to the account of his adventures,
-and to relate her own.
-
-The remembrance of his aged parent, doubly endeared by absence, and of
-his joyous childhood, were still alive in the breast of Hassan; and
-after a few days spent at Constantinople, he proposed to return to his
-native valley.
-
-They set out, the health and beauty of Nerinda improving, in spite of
-the fatigues of their journey. The joy with which they were greeted was
-unbounded. All had given Hassan up for dead, and Nerinda was regarded as
-lost to them forever. Even her father had repented of his avarice, and
-would willingly have returned his gold, could he have once more had
-Nerinda by his side. Her mother and sisters hung around her with tears
-of joy; and the whole valley welcomed her return with glad rejoicings.
-
-The young couple took up their residence with Hassan’s father; many a
-visit did they pay to that bank of turf, the scene of their former
-meetings, and never did they look on that spot without feeling their
-bosom swell with the emotions of gratitude to that kind Providence who
-had disposed all things for their good, and had watched over and
-protected them, even when they believed themselves deserted.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- THE MAIDEN’S ADVENTURE.
-
-
- A TALE OF THE EARLY SETTLERS OF VIRGINIA.
-
-
-“Well Kate,” said her bridesmaid, Lucy Cameron, “the clouds look very
-threatening, and you know it is said to be an unlucky omen for one’s
-wedding night to be stormy.”
-
-“Pshaw, Lucy, would you frighten me with some old grandmother’s tale, as
-if I were a child? I believe not in omens, and shall forget all unlucky
-presages, when the wife of Richard Gaston,” answered the lovely and
-smiling bride.
-
-“You treat it lightly, and I trust it may not be ominous of your
-conjugal life,” resumed Lucy; “but my Aunt Kitty says that’s the reason
-she never married; because it was raining in torrents the day she was to
-have been wedded, and she discarded her lover because it was unlucky.”
-
-“Ah, Lucy, I do not mean to doubt your good aunt’s word; but there must
-have been some more serious cause linked with the one you have
-mentioned. My life on it, _I_ do not lose a husband for so slight a
-cause. It must be something more than a common occurrence, that shall
-now break off the match with Dick and myself. But see, the company are
-beginning to arrive,” said Kate, as she looked from the window of her
-room, “and I must prepare for the ceremony.”
-
-The morning of the day of which we have spoken, had opened in unclouded
-splendor, and all seemed propitious to the nuptials that were to be
-solemnised in the evening. The inmates of the cabin in which the
-preceding conversation had been carried on, had arisen cheerfully with
-the first notes of the early robin, to prepare for the festival, to
-which the whole neighborhood, consisting of all within fifteen or twenty
-miles, (for neighborhoods were then large, and habitations scarce) were
-indiscriminately invited.
-
-Kate Lee was the only child of her parents, and had been born and raised
-in the humble cottage which her father had assisted to construct with
-his own hands. Mr. Lee had moved to his present residence, when few
-ventured thus far into the Indian territory; and by his own labors, and
-that of his two servants, had erected a double cabin, and cleared about
-fifty acres of land, upon a rich piece of high ground, a mile and a half
-from the James River. By his urbanity and kindness, he had gained the
-confidence of the Indians; and in all their depredations so far, he had
-gone unscathed. He was of good birth and education, and the most
-hospitable man in the settlement. The property which he held, and the
-style in which he lived, together with his superior knowledge, gave him
-a standing among the settlers superior to all. Ever ready to assist the
-needy, and always just in his opinions and actions, he was looked to for
-council, rather than treated as an equal.
-
-As we said before, Kate was his only child, and had been the solace of
-her parents for nineteen years. She had now attained to full-blown
-womanhood, and, from her beauty and intelligence, her hand had been
-often asked, by the hardy sons of the pioneers. Her heart was untouched,
-until young Gaston laid siege to it. To his eloquent appeals she lent a
-willing ear, and promised to be his bride.
-
-As Kate was the loveliest girl in the country, so was Richard Gaston the
-most to be envied among the youths. Of fine, manly stature, superior
-intellect, and unflagging energy, he was the best match in the
-settlement. He cultivated a little farm on the other side of the river,
-and when occasion offered, engaged in the practice of law, for which
-both education and nature fitted him. He had been in the settlement
-about seven years, and from his open and conciliatory manners, his bold
-and manly bearing, had become a favorite with all around him. He was
-always the first to take up his rifle, and sally against the hostile
-Indians, when necessity required it, and from his undoubted courage, was
-always chosen leader of the little bands, formed to repel the savage
-foe.
-
-When the toils of the week had passed, Gaston might be seen, with his
-rifle on his shoulder, moving toward the river where his canoe was
-fastened, and springing lightly into it, dashing through the foaming
-waters, and among the rocks, as safely and cheerfully, as if passing
-over a smooth and glassy lake; and on the following evening, he might be
-seen again, braving the rushing current, with the same careless ease,
-but more thoughtful brow; for who ever yet parted from the girl of his
-heart, with the same joyful aspect, which he wore when going to meet
-her? Let us now return to the wedding day.
-
-“Have you heard of the Indian that was found murdered on the bank of the
-creek this morning?” said a young man, after the company had assembled,
-to Mr. Lee.
-
-“No,” answered Mr. Lee, with surprise, “I had hoped from the long peace
-that has reigned, we should have no more such outrages against the poor
-Indians. But how is it possible, sir, if they are thus shot down, that
-we can expect them to be quiet?”
-
-“The body,” continued the first speaker, “was found by some of his
-tribe; and they immediately threatened vengeance if the murderers were
-not given up. But that is impossible; because we do not know them.”
-
-At this moment, a loud crash of thunder echoed through the woods, so
-suddenly as to make all start from their seats.
-
-“Well, my friends,” said Mr. Lee, as soon as all was again quiet, “we
-shall be as likely to suffer from this rashness as the offender, and
-must be prepared. I am glad you have brought your guns with you, for
-unless they come in too large a body we shall be able to hold out
-against them.”
-
-This was said with that calmness which a frequent recurrence of such
-circumstances will produce; and as he rehung his rifle, after preparing
-it for immediate use, the bride entered the room, in all the loveliness
-of graceful beauty. Few ornaments decked her person, because none could
-add to her natural grace and elegance. Her hair of jet black, was simply
-parted in front, drawn back, and fastened behind, displaying a forehead
-of marble whiteness; a wreath, mingling the wild rose with other forest
-flowers, was the only ornament on her head. Her skin was of transparent
-whiteness. Her large black eyes, peering through their long lashes,
-spoke a playful mischief in every glance. A perfectly Grecian nose;
-cherry lips; a beautiful row of pearly teeth; a dimple displaying itself
-in each cheek whenever a smile suffused itself over her features, and a
-complexion richer than the soft red of the tulip, completed a picture
-such as the mind can rarely imagine. Her neck and arms were perfectly
-bare, and seemed as if they, with her small fairy feet, and the rest of
-her figure, had been made in nature’s most perfect mould.
-
-The storm, which had before been heard but at a distance, seemed now to
-have attained its greatest violence, and to be concentrated over the
-house. Peal after peal of thunder, came ringing through the hollows,
-each succeeding one apparently louder and more crashing than the former.
-Flash upon flash, of the quick and vivid lightning, streamed out,
-resting awhile upon the surrounding scenery, and striking terror into
-the hearts of the more superstitious guests. The rain, which at first
-fell in large drops, that could be distinctly heard, amid the awful
-silence, save when the thunders echoed, now came down in torrents; and
-the thunder pealed out, louder and louder, quicker and quicker, leaving
-scarcely intermission enough, for the voice of Richard Gaston to be
-heard by his beautiful bride. He had impatiently awaited the invitation
-of Mr. Lee to meet his daughter, but no longer able, amid the war of
-elements, to restrain himself, he advanced to, and seated himself by the
-side of his beloved Kate, and gently taking her hand in his, inquired if
-she was alarmed by the storm? To his enquiry, she only smiled, and shook
-her head.
-
-“I see not then, why we may not proceed with the ceremony; the
-storm,”——here a keen and fearful crash, jarred the house to its
-foundation, leaving traces of fear on the countenances of all, but the
-lovers and the parson; Gaston continued, however, “the storm may last an
-hour, and that is longer, my Kate, than I would like to defer the
-consummation of my hopes.”
-
-“I am ready,” answered Kate, blushing, and without raising her eyes.
-
-They rose from their seats, and advanced to the parson, who immediately
-commenced the ceremony. It was impossible to tell, whether pleasure or
-fear predominated on the countenances of the guests, as they pressed
-forward, to witness the solemn ceremony of uniting two beings for life.
-In the intervals of the thunder, a faint smile would play upon their
-faces, but, as a rattling volley would strike their ears, their
-shrinking forms and bloodless lips, betrayed their terror. The tempest
-seemed for a moment to have held its breath, as if to witness the
-conclusion of the nuptials; but now as the parson concluded with,
-“salute your bride;” a peal of thunder, keener and more startling than
-any yet, struck such terror to their souls, that none, not even the
-parson, or Gaston himself, both of whom had been shocked, perceived that
-the chimney had fallen to the earth; until awakened to a sense of their
-situation, by the shrill war-whoop of the Indians, which now mingled in
-dreadful unison with the howling storm.
-
-All thought of the storm vanished at once—defence against the savages
-seemed to be the first idea of all, as each man, with determined look,
-grasped his rifle, and gathered around the females.
-
-The Indians, led on by their noted chief Eagle Eye, to avenge the death
-of their comrade, found in the morning, would perhaps have awaited the
-subsidence of the storm, had not the falling of the chimney displayed to
-them, the disorder and confusion within the cabin. Viewing it, as the
-most favorable time for an attack, they raised their dreaded war-whoop,
-and sprung to the breach. That whoop, however, served but to nerve the
-hardy pioneers, and chase from their bosoms the fears, which the wars of
-nature alone created. Richard Gaston, from custom, assumed the command;
-and with that coolness and self-possession, which indicates undaunted
-bravery, proceeded to give such orders as the time would allow.
-
-“Let the females,” said he, “go above, and lie upon the floor, and we,
-my brave boys, will show them what stout hearts and strong arms can do
-in defence of beauty. Six of you go in the next room, and see that the
-villains enter not, except over your dead bodies; the rest will remain,
-and defend this opening.”
-
-The reader must not suppose that all was still during this brief
-address. The Indians, whose numbers amounted to several hundred, had
-fired once, and not being able, on account of the rain, to load again,
-now attempted to enter over the ruins of the chimney, and through the
-windows. The lights had been extinguished at the first yell, and all was
-dark, save when the flashes of lightning revealed to the few within, the
-fearful odds against them without. Several volleys had meanwhile been
-poured into the Indians, and a momentary flash revealed the effects.
-Many were lying dead or dying, forming a sort of breastwork at the
-breach. Becoming more infuriated, as those who had gone before, fell,
-under the constant fire of the whites, the savages, now, in a compact
-body, attempted an entrance; and the whites, still cool, as if danger
-threatened not, waited until they reached the very breach, and then
-every man, with his muzzle almost touching the Indians, discharged his
-piece. The savages wavered and then fell back, amid the shouts of the
-victorious yeomen.
-
-The next flash of lightning discovered the Indians retreating to the
-woods, and dragging many of their dead with them. Another wild shout
-burst from the lips of the victorious whites. When all was again still,
-the voice of Mr. Lee was heard in thanksgiving, for their deliverance so
-far; and when he had concluded, he proposed a consultation upon the best
-means to be pursued, as it was certain the Indians had only retired to
-devise some other mode of attack. Some were for deserting their present
-situation, and flying to the woods for concealment; others, and the
-greater number, proposed remaining where they were, because the Indians
-had not certainly gone far, and if discovered, unprotected by the logs,
-they must fall an easy prey, to such superior numbers, while by
-remaining, they had some advantage, and a small chance to keep them off.
-
-In the meantime, the females, the firing having ceased, had left their
-hiding-place, and now mingled with the warriors. It was soon determined
-to hold on to their present situation, and defend it to the last, should
-they be again attacked. The better to add to its security, several of
-the stoutest commenced raising a barrier at the opening, with the logs
-that had been thrown down; while others, barricaded the doors and
-windows. This being finished, they began an enquiry into the injury they
-had received; and found six of their number were killed.
-
-The rain meanwhile had ceased, and the distant mutterings of the thunder
-could be heard only at intervals. All was silent in the cabin, awaiting
-the expected approach of the savages. Kate had approached Gaston when
-she first came into the room, and timidly asked if he was hurt. Having
-received a satisfactory answer, she had remained silently by his side,
-until all was prepared for action. Then, for a moment forgetting the
-dangers that surrounded him, Gaston yielded to the impulse of his heart,
-and drawing the lovely being, who was now his wedded wife, in all the
-ardor of passionate love, to his bosom, imprinted upon her ruby lips,
-the kiss of which he had been so suddenly deprived by the onset of the
-savages.
-
-“My own Kate,” said he, “if you find we are to be overcome, you must try
-and make your escape through the back door, and thence to the woods.
-Here is one of my pistols, take it, and if you are pursued, you know how
-to use it; shoot down the first foe who dares to lay a hand on you. Make
-for the river, you know where my canoe is; the current is rapid and
-dangerous, but, if you can reach the other bank you are safe. Farewell
-now, my own sweet love, and if I fall, may heaven shed its protection
-over you.”
-
-Gaston was not a man to melt at every circumstance, but to be thus
-separated from his bride, perhaps never to meet again, brought a tear to
-his manly cheek. Love, had for a moment, unmanned his firm and noble
-heart; but it had passed, and he was again a soldier; thinking only how
-best to defend, what he valued more than his life—his wife.
-
-At this instant the whoop of the Indians again sounded to the assault.
-Each man sprang to his post. The whites had been equally divided, and a
-party stationed in each room. The rooms were now simultaneously attacked
-by the foe; and with clubs and large stones, they endeavored to force
-the doors. The silence of death reigned within, while without all was
-tumult and confusion. The door at length yielded—one board and then
-another gave way, while yell upon yell rose at their success.
-
-“Hold on boys, until I give the word,” said Gaston, “and then stop your
-blows only with your lives.”
-
-The door and its whole support yielded, and in poured the savages like a
-whirlwind. “_Fire now_,” cried Gaston, “and club your guns.”
-
-Almost as one report, sounded the guns of every one in the house—the
-yells and cries of the wounded and infuriated foe, almost appalled the
-stoutest hearts; but this was no time to admit fear, if they felt it.
-The Indians were making every exertion to enter over the pile of dead
-bodies that blocked up the doorway; and the gun of each man within,
-clenched by the barrel, was lowered only to add another to the heap. For
-twenty minutes the fight had raged with unabated fury, and with
-unrelaxed exertions, when the moon, breaking forth in all her splendor,
-exhibited the combatants as plain as in the light of mid-day. One
-Indian, stouter and bolder than the rest, had gained an entrance, and
-fixing his eyes on Gaston, as he saw him encouraging and directing the
-others to their work of death, he gave a loud yell, and sprang at him
-like the tiger on his prey. The quick eye and arm of Gaston were too
-rapid for him; and in an instant he lay dead from a blow of the young
-man’s rifle.
-
-But the strength of the brave little band began at length to fail. Their
-numbers had diminished more than half. Before the enemy had, however,
-entered, it had been proposed and acceded to, as the only chance, that
-the females should attempt an escape from the back door, next the river,
-while the men should cover their retreat, as well as their diminished
-numbers would admit. Accordingly, the attempt was made, and an exit
-gained; the whole force of the Indians being collected at the front
-door, to overcome the stubborn resistance of the whites.
-
-The little phalanx stood firm to its post, until they saw the women had
-sufficient start to reach the woods before they could be overtaken; and
-then, pressed by such superior numbers, they slowly fell back to the
-same door, and the few that survived, made a rush, and drew the door
-close after them. They had now given way, and nothing but superior speed
-could possibly save them. If overtaken before reaching the woods, they
-were inevitably lost—if they could gain them they might escape. The
-delay caused by the closing of the door was short, and the enemy were
-now scarcely fifteen yards in the rear. Fear moved the one party almost
-to the speed of lightning—thirst for revenge gave additional strength
-to the other. The Indian, fresher than his chase, gained upon them
-rapidly. As they heard the savages close upon them, every nerve was
-excited, every muscle strained to the utmost. For a short distance
-indeed they maintained the same space between them, but alas! the
-strength of the whites failed, and too many of them overtaken, fell
-beneath the club of the savages. Gaston, who was equal in activity to
-any of his pursuers, had soon gained the lead; and with the speed of an
-arrow, had increased the distance between him and the Indians.
-
-He knew that his wife would make for the river, and in all probability,
-would be able to reach it, and it was his object to get there also, if
-possible, in time to assist her across the rocky and rapid current, or
-at least to see that she was safe beyond pursuit. The river was not far,
-and as he bounded down the rough hill sides, he could distinctly hear
-the rolling of its waters, over the rocky bed. He took the nearest
-course to the landing, and the yells of the Indians, scattered in every
-direction through the woods, strained him to the greatest exertions. He
-reached the river—his canoe was there—his wife was not—despair
-overcame his soul.
-
-“She must be taken, and I too will die,” he exclaimed, in bitter agony.
-
-At that moment, a light and bounding step, like that of a startled fawn,
-drew his attention to the top of the bank, and his wife, whom he had
-given up for lost—his darling Kate, bounded into his embrace. This was
-no time for love. He took but one embrace, and hurried her into his
-canoe; for the Indians were but a few yards behind. It was but the work
-of a moment, to cut loose the line that held his bark; but before he
-could spring into it, three stout Indians were close upon him.
-
-“Shove off, Kate, and trust to fortune to reach the other shore,” cried
-Gaston, distractedly, as he turned to engage the Indians, while his
-bride escaped. The devoted girl seemed doubtful whether to fly, or stay
-and die with her husband. Gaston, seeing her hesitation, again called
-frantically to her to escape, before the Indians were upon them. She now
-attempted to push her boat off, but she had remained a minute too
-long—a brawny and athletic savage seized the boat and sprang into it,
-within a few feet of the alarmed maiden. She quickly retreated to the
-other end, and faced about, despair painted in every lineament of her
-face. The Indian involuntarily stopped to gaze upon the beautiful being
-before him. That pause was fatal to him. Kate’s self-possession
-instantaneously returned, and as the savage sprang toward her she
-levelled her husband’s pistol and fired. The bullet entered the savage’s
-brain: he fell over the side of the boat, and disappeared beneath the
-bubbling waters; while instantly seizing the oar which had dropped from
-her hand on her first alarm, Kate turned the bow of her boat in the
-direction of the opposite shore, and began to stem the rapid current.
-
-During the few seconds that had thus elapsed, the canoe had shot below
-the place where her husband struggled with the remaining Indians; and
-she was now out of hearing of the combatants. Standing erect in the
-boat, her long hair hanging loosely on her uncovered neck, her white
-dress moving gently to the soft breeze, and her little bark avoiding the
-many rocks jutting their heads above the rushing waters, it gave to a
-beholder the idea of some fairy skiff, kept up, and guided by the
-superior power of its mistress. Steadily she moved on, until near the
-middle of the river, when she heard a splash, followed by a voice, some
-distance behind her. At first she thought it another Indian in pursuit,
-but soon the chilling thought was dispelled. Her own name, breathed in
-accents that had often thrilled her to the soul, was heard, sounding a
-thousand times more sweetly than ever on her ear. She quickly turned the
-head of her boat, and although she could not propel it against the
-stream, she kept it stationary, until Gaston, who had overcome his
-pursuers, reached it. His great exertions in the unequal struggle on the
-bank, his efforts to reach the boat, and the loss of blood from a deep
-cut on his arm, had left him so little of the powers of life, that he
-fainted a few moments after he had regained his wife. Kate knew the
-peril of permitting the boat to float with the current, and with all
-that courage and coolness, which woman possesses in times of danger, she
-did not stop to weep over him, but again seizing the oar, directed her
-bark to the opposite bank. Guided by the careful hand of love, how could
-the fragile skiff be lost, even amid the rushing whirlpools it had to
-pass. They safely reached the bank, and Gaston having returned to
-consciousness, supported by the arm of his wife, slowly wended his way
-to his farm.
-
-Their anxiety, however, was, for some time, almost intolerable to learn
-the fate of their friends whom they had left on the other side of the
-river. Whether the Indians had triumphed completely, whether a
-successful stand had been made by any of those they pursued, or whether
-all had been alike murdered by the relentless savages, were unknown to
-Kate and Gaston, and filled their minds with uneasy fears. While,
-however, they were thus in doubt as to the fate of their friends, a
-hurried footstep was heard approaching, and Mr. Lee, the next moment,
-was in his daughter’s arms. With about half of his visitors, he had
-escaped, and, in a few days, rallying around them their remaining border
-neighbors, they succeeded, finally, in driving the hostile savages from
-their vicinity.
-
-If any one will visit the hospitable mansion of the present proprietor
-of the estate, which has descended from our Kate, they may hear her
-story with increased interest, from the lips of some of her fair
-descendants; and upon taking a view of the place, where she crossed amid
-such perils, they will not be surprised to learn that the circumstance
-should have given to it the name of the “Maiden’s Adventure.”
-
- S.
-
- February, 1841.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- NAPOLEON.
-
-
- BY J. E. DOW.
-
-
- “About the twenty-second of January, 1821, Napoleon’s energies
- revived. He mounted his horse and galloped for the last time
- around Longwood, but nature was overcome by the effort.”
-
- Chained to a wild and sea-girt rock
- Where the volcano’s fires were dead;
- He woke to hear the surges mock
- The living thunder o’er his head.
-
- His charger spurned the mountain turf,
- For he o’er glaciered Alps had trod,—
- He scorned to bear the island serf,
- And only stood to Europe’s God.
-
- And now, the prisoner’s spirit soared,
- And fiercely glanced his eagle eye;
- He grasped again his crimson sword,
- And bade his silken eagle fly.
-
- High on a cliff, that braved the storm,
- And beat the thundering ocean back;
- He felt the life-blood coursing warm
- As oft in mountain bivouac.
-
- Around him bowed a bannered world:
- And lightnings played beneath his feet;
- The storm’s wild ensign o’er him curled,
- And ocean drums his grand march beat.
-
- Above the Alps’ eternal snows
- He led his freezing legions on:
- And when the morning sun arose—
- The land of deathless song was won.
-
- The desert waste before him rolled,
- And haughty Mam’lukes bit the ground;
- Old Cairo reared her mosques of gold,
- And Nile returned his bugle’s sound.
-
- The doors of centuries opened wide
- Before the master spirit’s blows,
- And flapped his eagles’ wings in pride
- Above the time-dried Pharoahs.
-
- Then northward moved his chainless soul,
- And Europe’s host in wrath he met,
- The Danube heard his drum’s wild roll,
- And Wagram dimmed his bayonet.
-
- On many a field his cannons rung,
- The Nations heard his wild hurrah:
- And brazen gates were open flung,
- To usher in the Conqueror.
-
- The Cossack yelled his dread advance,
- And legions bared their scymetars,
- When with the infantry of France
- He trampled on the sleeping Czars.
-
- And Moscow’s sea of fire arose
- Upon the dark and stormy sky,
- While cohorts, in their stirrups froze,
- Or pillowed on the snow to die.
-
- A merry strain the lancers blew
- When morning o’er his legions shone!
- But evening closed o’er Waterloo,
- And death, dread sentinel, watch’d alone.
-
- His eagles to the dust were hurled,
- And bright Marengo’s star grew dim,
- The conqueror of half the world,
- Had none to sooth or pity him.
-
- And he has come to view again
- The hills his flashing sword hath won:
- To hear the music of the main,
- And note the thunder’s evening gun.
-
- His heart is cold, his eye is dim,
- His burning brand shall blaze no more;
- The living world is dead to him,
- The sea’s wild dash, the tempest’s roar.
-
- Marengo’s cloak is round him cast,
- And Jena’s blade is by his side,
- But where is now his trumpet’s blast?
- And where the soldiers of his pride?
-
- They sleep by Nilus’ bull-rushed wave,
- They slumber on the Danube’s bed;
- The earth is but a common grave
- For gallant France’s immortal dead.
-
- His charger rushes from the height:
- The fitful dream of life is o’er,
- And oh! that eye that beamed so bright,
- Shall never wake to glory more.
-
- Beneath the mountain’s misty head,
- Where streamed the lava’s burning tide.
- They made the scourge of Europe’s bed,
- And laid his falchion by his side.
-
- He sleeps alone, as sweetly now
- As they who fell by Neva’s shore:
- And peasants near him guide the plough,
- And craven Europe fears no more.
-
- He sleeps alone—nor shall he start
- Till Time’s last trumpet rings the wave:
- For death has still’d the mighty heart
- Where fierce ambition made his grave.
-
- ’Tis sad to view, when day grows dim,
- The stone that closed o’er Europe’s fears:
- And listen to the waves’ wild hymn,
- That swallowed up the exile’s tears.
-
- The eagle screams his dirge by day,
- The tempest answers, and the sea,
- And streaming lightnings leap to play
- Above the man of Destiny.
-
- Washington, February, 1841.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- LINES.
-
-
- To the Author of the Requiem, “I See Thee Still.”
-
- BY E. CLEMENTINE STEDMAN.
-
-
- Oft when o’er my young being, shades of grief
- Have darkly gathered, and been spent in tears,
- Thy “spirit-stirring muse” hath brought relief,
- And called back images of other years!
- As from the world my soul removed her care,
- And sought the healing balm of Poesy to share.
-
- Perchance ’twas but some scraps that met my eye,
- Yet like a charm, it soothed an aching heart—
- Bidding it turn from hopes beneath the sky,
- To choose above the wise, unfailing part;
- And while I read, I blessed aloud thy name,
- And prayed that Heaven’s best gifts might mingle with its fame!
-
- And now, though stranger to thy form and face,
- Yet since familiar with thy spirit’s tone;
- Pardon this humble pen, which fain would trace
- Some thought, to cheer a heart bereaved and lone,
- Some sympathetic token, from a soul
- Which bleeds to know that thine is bowed ’neath grief’s control.
-
- The human heart, it hath been aptly said,
- Is like that tree, which must a wound receive,
- Ere yet the kindly balsam it will shed,
- Which to the sufferer’s wound doth healing give;
- Such as have seen their fondest hopes laid low,
- Can only feel for thee, or thy deep anguish know!
-
- This bosom bears a kindred stroke to thine.
- Yet owneth that the Hand which wounds can heal!
- May Gilead’s balm, as it hath brought to mine,
- So to thy wound restoring life reveal;
- Show thee a Father, in a chastening God,
- And bid thee meekly bow, and kiss his gentle rod.
-
- I knew her not, whose image blendeth yet
- With every dream of joy the night doth bring—
- Whose blessed features Love will ne’er forget,
- Nor of whose worth thy muse e’er cease to sing!
- But ’tis enough, that she was all _thy_ choice,
- To know that sorrow hath with thee a deep-toned voice.
-
- And is she not thy “guardian angel” _now_?
- Doth she not “live in beauty” _yet_, above,
- And oft descend, to watch thy steps below,
- And whisper in thy dreams sweet words of love?
- A spirit, ’twixt whose spotless charms, and thee,
- Hangs but the veil of Time, behind which, soon thou’lt see.
-
- Till then, look upward to her home of light—
- ’Twill chase the shadows from thy lonely hearth,
- And think of her, as of a being bright—
- _Still_ thy “beloved,” though not now of earth!
- Follow the traces of her heavenward feet,
- And soon in perfect love, to part no more, ye’ll meet.
-
- Cedar Brook, Plainfield, N. J., 1841.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- THE DESTROYER’S DOOM.
-
-
- For if we do but watch the hour,
- There never yet was human power
- Which could evade, if unforgiven,
- The patient search, and vigil long,
- Of him who treasures up a wrong.
- _Mazeppa._
-
-The night was waxing late, when the beautiful and witty Mrs. Anson was
-promenading at a party where all the _élite_ of the city were assembled,
-with an imposing looking man, who seemed to unite—rare
-combination—high fashion and dignity of bearing. His face was almost
-constantly turned toward the lady, and he seemed careful that his words
-should reach no ears but those for which he uttered them. His last
-remark, whatever it was, seemed to have offended the lady, for she
-stopped suddenly, and gazing full in his face, exhibited as dark a frown
-as those bright, beautiful eyes could be made to produce. It was but a
-passing cloud, however, for the next moment she said, laughingly, “Upon
-my word, Major Derode, you give your tongue strange license.” His peace
-was soon made, and drawing the arm of Mrs. Anson within his own, he
-asked her if she would dance any more.
-
-“No,” she replied, “if you’ll tell them to draw up, I’ll go home; the
-rooms are close; I am fatigued; besides, in the absence of my husband, I
-must keep good hours.”
-
-“Excuse me,” said the major, “if I am not anxious for his return. I
-should not dare to hope for so much of your precious society, were he to
-command it.”
-
-“He has the best right to it,” rejoined the lady, “but he never uses
-command with me;—I vow I am an ungrateful wretch, and love him much
-less than he deserves to be loved.”
-
-“That sentiment, my dear Mrs. Anson, is not founded on nature or truth.
-Gratitude and love are sensations as different in their natures, as your
-disposition and that of your husband; but for what should you be
-grateful to him? For having had the vanity to address, and the good
-fortune to win the loveliest creature that ever wildered human brain, or
-fired human heart? And how does he repay an affection which monarchs
-would value more than conquest?—by indifference,—nay, studied
-neglect.”
-
-“You wrong him,” said the wife, but with much less warmth than she would
-have defended her husband a fortnight before, “his passion for
-literature, it is true, estranges him from me more than many wives would
-like, but I have reason to know he loves me well. Alas! why should love
-be such a sickly flower, that needs constant culture to keep it from
-perishing! Time was, when the hour he passed from my side was fraught
-with anxiety,—now, days glide by, and I scarcely think of him!”
-
-“Think only of him,” returned the major, “whose love for you is as
-imperishable as it is ardent. Renounce the man who is unworthy of you,
-and—”
-
-“Render myself unworthy of any man,” continued the lady, “no, I implore
-you, urge me to this no more; spare me, dear Henry, I entreat you.” And
-I will spare the reader the remainder of a dialogue which evinced
-yielding virtue on one side, and seductive sophistry on the other. “The
-woman who hesitates is lost,” says the proverb.
-
-Charles Anson, a young man of high intellectual endowments, and fine
-personal appearance, had studied law in his native
-city—Philadelphia—and at an early age married the daughter of a
-merchant in moderate circumstances. The union was thought to have
-resulted from love on both sides, and indeed for four years the youthful
-pair enjoyed as much happiness as is allotted to mortals; when,
-depending on his professional exertions, no ambition disturbed their
-dreams, no envy of rank or grandeur poisoned their present blessings.
-
-In a luckless hour, a relation, living in England, from whom Anson had
-no expectations, died, leaving him a large fortune. This sudden
-acquisition of wealth enabled him, much to his satisfaction, to quit a
-profession in which he wanted several requisites for great success. He
-turned his attention to a science which has since become popular in this
-country, and became so devoted to its pursuit, that he spent large sums
-of money in prosecuting it. His wife launched at once into a mode of
-life which she said her husband’s altered circumstances justified. She
-plunged deeply into fashionable dissipation, and although Anson seldom
-accompanied her into the gay circles she frequented, he never objected
-to her giddy course. His only wish was to see her happy. He was on a
-visit to an eastern city, collecting materials for a work on his
-favorite science, at the time I introduced his wife to the reader, and
-spring advanced before he was ready to bend his steps homeward. He had
-travelled, as was usual then, by land from New York, and having taken a
-whole day to perform the journey, it was night when the lumbering mail
-coach, set Anson down at the door of his house. He had received no
-answer to the last two letters he had written to his wife, and he feared
-she was ill. If any one of my readers has been long absent from a happy
-home, he can understand the trembling eagerness with which the traveller
-placed his foot upon his door-stone. He pulled at the bell, and its
-clear sound came back upon his ear, as he stood in breathless anxiety
-waiting for an answer to the summons. No hasty footstep, however, no
-opening of inner doors, no audible bustle within, gave token of
-admittance. Almost convulsively, he grasped again at the handle of the
-bell, and its startling response pealed through the adjacent dwellings.
-Slowly a sash creaked up in an adjoining house, and a petulant female
-voice said,—
-
-“There’s no use of your disturbing the neighborhood by ringing
-there,—nobody lives in that house.”
-
-Anson staggered back from the step, and falteringly enquired,—
-
-“Has Mrs. Anson removed?”
-
-“Removed!” croaked the old woman, “aye, she has removed, far enough from
-this, I warrant.”
-
-“Where has she gone?” gasped the husband.
-
-“I know nothing about her,” was the reply, and the sash fell with a
-rattling sound that struck like clods upon a coffin upon the desolate
-heart of Anson. He stood upon the pavement with one foot resting on a
-trunk, and his eyes turned to the windows of his late dwelling, as if
-expecting the form of his wife to appear there. The voice of the
-watchman, calling the first hour of the night, aroused him from his
-abstraction, and suggested the necessity of present action. He
-remembered that he had a duplicate key of the street door, and if not
-fastened within, he could at least gain admittance. On applying the
-instrument, it was evident that the person who had last left the house,
-had egressed through the door, for no bar or bolt betrayed the caution
-of an inmate. Anson engaged the watchman to place his effects in the
-hall, and procure a light. Having once more secured the main entrance of
-the house, he wandered through its tenantless chambers, like a suffering
-ghost among scenes of its happier hours. The splendid paraphernalia
-which wealth and taste had spread throughout that happy mansion, were
-there yet. Not an ornament had been removed, nor had the most fragile
-article decayed,—nay, the very exotics in the bow-pots had begun to put
-forth their tender blossoms under the genial influence of the season.
-But human life was absent. She that had diffused joy, and hope, and a
-heaven-like halo round her, was gone.
-
-Mad with apprehension, Anson rushed to his wife’s bed-chamber, hoping
-there to find some clue to her mysterious departure. Her toilet was in
-confusion; ornaments lay scattered about; and a diamond ring, his gift
-to her on her last birth-day, shone, on the approach of the light, so
-like a living thing, that Anson, in the wildness of his brain, thought
-that its thousand eyes flashed with intelligence of its departed
-mistress. On a small writing desk lay some sheets of pure paper, and in
-the open drawer a sealed note caught the eye of Anson. He seized it with
-a trembling hand, but paused ere he opened it; a sickness, like that of
-death, settled down upon his heart. Unhappy man! What had he to hope or
-fear?—he read:
-
- “Husband:—We meet no more on earth. At the bar of eternal
- justice your curse will blast me! I am in the coils of a fiend,
- disguised like a god! As the fluttering bird, though conscious
- of destruction, obeys the fatal fascination of the serpent’s
- eye, so I, beholding in the future nought but despair, yield, a
- victim to a passion that has mocked my struggles to subdue it.
- You must be happy because you are virtuous, and in mercy forget
- the fallen,
-
- “Josephine.”
-
-Anson sat long with this letter in his hand, gazing firmly on a portrait
-of his wife, that hung over her escritoire. She had sat for that
-painting at a time when her health was delicate, and a sacred pledge of
-their happy love was expected. Heaven had—mercifully it seemed
-now—denied the boon. Memory struck the fountain of tears in the heart
-of that bereaved man, and he wept. Oh! it is fearful to see a strong man
-weep. Tears are natural in children, and beautiful in women;—in men,
-they often seem mysterious gushings from the stern soul—dread
-forebodings of evil to come. The deserted husband gazed upon the
-painting, until he thought some evil spirit had changed the sweet smile
-and mild eye into a scornful sneer. A change came over his spirit—his
-features gradually assumed a look of unutterable ferocity; his frame
-dilated as with the conception of awful deeds—strange whisperings of
-dark purposes whizzed, as from legions of fiends, through his brain, and
-he went forth REVENGE!
-
- * * * * *
-
-Major Derode, of the British army, was one of the most strikingly
-handsome men of the last age, and his address the most insinuating that
-a constant intercourse with the best society could confer. Although he
-had led a life of much dissipation, his fine constitution had withstood
-its ravages, and calling art to the aid of nature, he looked like a man
-of thirty, when he was really twelve years older. He had married in
-early life, and was the father of a son and daughter. The son had
-entered the navy, and had already obtained a lieutenancy,—to the
-daughter fell a large share of the singular beauty of her father,
-refined into feminine loveliness by the delicate graces of her mother.
-Mrs. Derode had been dead some years, and the major’s present visit to
-America was connected with some governmental mission to the
-commander-in-chief of the British forces in Canada. Viewing the cities
-of the United States on his return home, he became acquainted with the
-beautiful Mrs. Anson. He became at once her lover. He was a cold-hearted
-systematic seducer, and besieged her heart with a perseverance and
-address long accustomed to conquer. He imagined that his own callous
-heart was touched by her bright eyes, and he delayed his departure for
-two months, in order to accomplish her ruin.
-
-When I introduced him to the reader, in conversation with Mrs. Anson,
-the poison of his flattery had already tainted that weak woman’s heart.
-I will not follow his serpent-like course—it is sickening to mark the
-progress of such arts. We left him in a gay assembly in Walnut
-Street—we now find him in London, and, it pains me to write it, Mrs.
-Anson was with him. To dispel the gloom that had already overcast her
-features, and to feed his own inordinate vanity, Derode introduced his
-victim to much society, but her keen eye soon penetrated the equivocal
-character of those who visited her in her splendid apartments. With this
-discovery came the first deep sense of her utter degradation.
-
-“I will mix no more with these people,” said she to the major one day,
-after an unusually large party left the house.
-
-“As you please,” said he, “I was in hopes society would amuse you.”
-
-“Not _such_ society,” she replied with some dignity. The major observed
-the slight curl on her lip, and said, with something of a sneer,—
-
-“Your notions are elevated, my pretty republican; your visiters are
-people of fashion, and you know _we_ should not scrutinise character too
-severely.”
-
-This cruel remark pierced deeper than the base speaker intended. The
-deluded woman raised her eyes—those eyes, in repose so meek—to the
-face of Derode, and he quailed beneath their unnatural light.
-
-“True,” said she with a choking voice, “true, true!—the meanest wretch
-that ever bartered her soul for bread, should spurn my fellowship, and
-flee my infecting touch.” Her head fell on her lap, and a series of
-hysterical sobs threatened to end her brief career of guilt upon the
-spot.
-
-But it was not so to be. She recovered only to new miseries. Half tired
-of his new victim already, Major Derode hired a cottage a few miles from
-London, and, taking Mrs. Anson at her word, carried her down there to
-reside in lonely misery. His visits, at first frequent, soon became
-rare, and many days had now elapsed since she had seen him. She stood by
-the open casement watching the moonlight for his expected appearance,
-but he came not. A horseman emerged from the deep shadow of the trees,
-but seemed to pass on toward the turnpike. Hope sank within her, and she
-wished to die. She was now gathering the bitter fruits of her guilt. Her
-love for her destroyer was eating up her life—the scorching intensity
-of her passion was consuming the heart that gave it birth.
-
-“Great God!” she exclaimed with frantic impiety, “art thou just? Thou
-didst not endow me with strength to resist this destiny. Thou knowest it
-was not volition, but FATE! If for thine own unseen ends, thou hast
-selected me to work out thy great designs.—oh! for the love of thy meek
-son who was reviled on earth, make my innocence clear. I am but thy
-stricken agent, oh! God! I am innocent—innocent!”
-
-The suffering creature was on her knees, and when she had uttered this
-wild sophistry, she threw her head downward, until it almost touched the
-ground. Her temples throbbed till the bandage that confined her hair
-snapped, and the dark covering of her head enveloped her figure like a
-pall.
-
-“Innocent! ha! ha! ha!” shouted a hoarse voice, in a tone of wild
-mockery, that rung through the lonely house, and reverberated in the
-stillness of the night.
-
-Starting to her feet, Mrs. Anson gazed around the room with an
-indescribable awe, for she thought the sound bore a harsh resemblance to
-that of her forsaken husband. No one, however, was visible, and she
-began to think it was some creation of her excited fancy, when, turning
-her eye to the latticed casement that overlooked the garden, she plainly
-saw a man gliding away through the copse. Another moment, and the same
-horseman she had before observed, dashed into the shadow at furious
-speed, and disappeared.
-
- * * * * *
-
-Major Derode was holding high revel in London. There was a report that
-two marriages had been projected—those of himself and of his daughter.
-His fortune, never large, had been entirely dissipated at the gaming
-table, and he was deeply involved in debt. The contemplated alliances
-would, however, bring wealth into the family, and causing his
-expectations to be known, his creditors were patient. The object of his
-personal attentions was the Honorable Mrs. Torrance,—a widow of
-brilliant charms and large property. The handsome major had won her
-heart and received her troth before his visit to America, and but one
-obstacle existed to their immediate union. Rumor, with her hundred
-tongues had apprised the dashing widow that the gallant major had
-brought over with him an American beauty, who was now residing in the
-neighborhood of the metropolis. The major first denied, then confessed
-it, but declared she had returned to her native forests.
-
-“I scarce believe you,” said the widow, “but I will send down to-morrow
-to the cottage, which has been pointed out to me as her residence, and
-learn the truth.”
-
-“She must remove, then, before to-morrow,” said Derode to himself as he
-drove home. “Fool that I was to bring her here; however, I suppose I can
-ship her home again, consigned to her plodding Yankee husband, who will
-be rejoiced that his wife has seen the world free of expense.”
-
-Night had closed in when Derode arrived at the cottage. Mrs. Anson was
-ill. She had been in a high fever, as the abigail informed the major,
-and delirious. She was calmer now, however, and he approached her couch.
-
-“How unlucky you are ill at this time,” said he, “for circumstances
-render it necessary for you to quit this place immediately.”
-
-“Let me remain a few days longer,” replied the heart-broken woman, “and
-my next remove will be to the peaceful grave.”
-
-“It is impossible—to-morrow morning, the earlier the better, you _must_
-depart.”
-
-“And whither must I go?”
-
-“Why, reflection must have convinced you that it was an imprudent step
-to leave your husband; nay, tears are useless now,—the frolic was
-pleasant enough while it lasted, but it is time to think of more serious
-matters. My advice to you is, that you immediately return home, solicit
-your husband’s forgiveness, and no doubt that will be the end of the
-affair. For myself, you must know it—and it is best you should learn it
-at once—my pecuniary involvements make it imperative on me to marry
-immediately—the sale of this furniture will enable you—”
-
-But his voice fell on a dull ear. Mrs. Anson heard nothing after the
-word “marry,” and she lay in a death-like swoon. Finding she did not
-revive immediately, Derode consigned her to the care of her maid, and
-hastily wrote the following lines:—
-
- “Madam,—Our unfortunate connexion must be broken off at once. I
- can see you no more. I enclose you twenty pounds, a sum
- sufficient to bear your expenses to America. My last command is,
- that you quit this cottage to-morrow morning.
-
- “Yours,
- “Derode.”
-
-He gave the note to the girl, for her mistress, and left the house.
-
-“How do you feel now, madam?” enquired the maid, as Mrs. Anson opened
-her heavy eyes, and pressed her hands against her temples, as if
-endeavoring to collect her thoughts, “can I do anything for you, madam?”
-
-“Yes; assist me to rise; bring my bonnet and shawl;—thank you. You have
-been very kind to me my good girl; take this ring—it is of some
-value—keep it for the sake of her whom no living thing regards.”
-
-“But, dear madam,” affectionately enquired the girl, “for heaven’s sake,
-where are you going? You will not leave the house to-night? you are
-ill—weak—a storm threatens,—there—the thunder mutters already, and
-the rain is plashing in big drops on the broad leaves of that
-strange-looking tree at the window. It is midnight, and will be broad
-day before you can reach the nearest part of London. The major said you
-might stay till morning,—and, oh! I had forgot, here is a letter he
-left for you.”
-
-The hapless woman took the note mechanically; no ray of hope gave
-brightness to her eye—no emotion lighted up her features as she broke
-the seal. Misery had chilled her heart’s blood—despair had unstrung the
-chords of life. She glanced over the lines, and dropping the letter and
-bank note on the floor, supported herself for a moment by a chair. She
-rallied her strength, and saying, “farewell, my good Martha,” staggered
-forth into the dreary night.
-
-The sun had long risen, when Martha was startled from the deep sleep
-into which the last night’s watching had thrown her, by a loud knocking
-at the cottage door. A splendid carriage had driven up the narrow
-avenue, and a liveried footman enquired if a young lady, under the
-protection of Major Derode, lived there. Martha stated the manner in
-which Mrs. Anson had, on the previous night, left the cottage.
-
-“My mistress, the Hon. Mrs. Torrance,” said the footman, “seems so
-anxious to learn the particulars respecting this young woman, that I
-wish you would ride up to town with us, and give her whatever
-information you can.”
-
-Martha willingly complied, and the carriage had scarce accomplished
-seven miles of the journey, when the girl observed a female toiling
-slowly and painfully along the road. She called to the coachman to stop,
-for she recognised her mistress in the wanderer. They partly forced the
-passive creature into the carriage, and as she expressed no wish to be
-driven to any particular place, in less than an hour she was reposing
-her wearied limbs on an ottoman in the house of the Hon. Mrs. Torrance.
-All the servants who knew of the arrival of the strange lady, were
-forbidden by the Hon. Mrs. Torrance to reveal the circumstances, and
-Martha was instructed to tell the major she had seen nothing of Mrs.
-Anson after her departure from the cottage;—Derode, therefore, had no
-doubt that his victim had left the kingdom. Still he observed that the
-widow had altered her demeanor toward him. She received him coldly, and
-with something like mystery. He urged the hastening of the nuptials. She
-baffled him by trifling excuses, for she resolved the moment Mrs. Anson
-had recovered from the fever which seized her on the day she entered
-that hospitable abode, to confront her with the treacherous man.
-
- * * * * *
-
-“So, in three weeks more, my dear Isabel, I must give more form to my
-speech, for I shall address in you the bride of Lord Edward Fortescue;
-your elevation to the peerage will not change your heart toward us,
-Isabel?” said a sprightly girl to the daughter of Major Derode.
-
-“For shame, to think of such a thing,” answered the affianced, “but, as
-poor Juliet says in the play,
-
- ‘I have no joy in this contract to-night.’
-
-I have, my dear Emily, for a day or two past, felt a strange reluctance
-to marry his lordship. His title dazzled me at first, but I fear its
-novelty will wear off, and then where shall I seek for happiness?”
-
-“In the spending of his fortune, to be sure,” replied her companion,
-“and as his lordship’s way of life is fallen into the sere and yellow
-leaf, he surely cannot object to such a proceeding. Besides, if dame
-nature does you but common justice, you’ll be in weeds before you are
-thirty. But when was it your first objection started against his
-lordship?—last Thursday, was it not?—yes, Thursday it was: I remember
-it, because it was the morning after you danced with that young wild man
-of the woods. Where did they say he came from? New South Wales was
-it?—or Slave Lake—or the Ural Mountains? the Carrabee Islands—New
-Holland—or New Jersey? Why don’t you answer? You must know; for after
-he led you to a seat so gracefully, I observed you took a deep interest
-in his conversation during the rest of the night, and I have no doubt he
-was giving you lessons in Geography. Well, he is a handsome fellow,
-although his eyes have so wild an expression. Now, if he had a plume of
-eagle feathers on his head, and a tiger skin thrown over his shoulder,
-he would be irresistible. I think it entirely out of taste for these
-foreign monsters, when they come among us, to cast off their savage
-costume, and don our unpoetic garb.”
-
-“Peace, Emily, you talk absurdly,” exclaimed the now thoughtful Isabel.
-“I scarce attended to what he was saying—I only observed he seemed to
-be a man of general information and great conversational powers. He
-possesses refinement in an eminent degree, and the earnestness and
-evident candor of his politeness contrast favorably with the sickly,
-superficial, drawling sentiment that daily and nightly clogs our wearied
-ears.”
-
-“Ah! it is clear you scarce attended to what he said. I met him this
-morning at Mrs. Balford’s, and thinking you wished to resume your
-researches into ‘The History of the Earth and Animated Nature,’ I asked
-him to come here this evening.”
-
-“Heavens, Emily! you could not be so imprudent!”
-
-“Where can be the imprudence, Isabel, since you scarce attend to what he
-says? Hark! a cab; it is the American,—stay where you are—I’ll bring
-him up;” and away flew the giddy girl, leaving her companion in a state
-of flurried anxiety, scarce proper for the bride elect of Lord Edward
-Fortescue.
-
-The American prolonged his stay till a late hour, and that night Isabel
-Derode imbibed a deep, absorbing passion for the graceful foreigner.
-Lord Edward, feeling himself secure of his prize, troubled his betrothed
-but little with his company. He confined his attentions to sending her
-presents, and escorting her twice a week to the opera.
-
-The latitude which English society allows females of rank, caused the
-persevering assiduities of the American to be but little noticed, and
-one week before the intended nuptials of Lord Edward Fortescue and
-Isabel Derode, the fashionable circles were thrown into unutterable
-excitement by the following announcement in a morning paper:—
-
- “_Elopement in High Life._—On Wednesday last, the beautiful and
- accomplished daughter of a certain gallant major in —— Square,
- eloped with a young gentleman of fortune from the United States.
- This imprudent step, on the part of the young lady, is the more
- to be regretted, as she was under promise of marriage to a
- certain noble lord. As her flight was almost immediately
- discovered, hopes are entertained of overtaking the fugitives
- before they reach Gretna Green.”
-
-No such parties, however, as those described, had reached that
-matrimonial mart. Pursuit was made on almost every avenue leading from
-the metropolis, but in vain. The fugitives had an hour’s start, and the
-advantage of having _arranged_ their means of flight. The smoking horses
-were scarcely checked at the door of each inn, when fresh relays were
-springing in the harness, and Anson—for it was he—with his victim, was
-enjoying a hasty repast in Calais, at the moment the emissaries of
-Derode reached Dover.
-
-Lord Edward professed himself greatly shocked at the unhappy occurrence,
-but derived comfort from the reflection that his betrothed had eloped
-before, instead of after marriage; and having politely expressed to
-Derode his opinion that all the daughters of Eve were dangerous, if not
-useless members of the community, he, with the utmost _sangfroid_ wished
-him adieu.
-
-A month elapsed, and Derode pushed his suit with Mrs. Torrance with more
-vigor, from the unlucky circumstance of his daughter having frustrated
-his hopes of her high match with Lord Edward. All enquiries concerning
-the whereabout of the erring girl were fruitless, and what was singular,
-none knew the name or person of her seducer—until one night a hackney
-coach drew up at the door of Mrs. Torrance, and a gentleman handed, or
-rather lifted a drooping woman out of the carriage, and placed her on
-the steps of the house. The parties were Anson and his victim. He merely
-said to the servant who answered the knock, “take care of this lady: she
-is a friend of your mistress,” and hastily re-entering the vehicle,
-drove rapidly off. The benevolent mistress of the mansion received the
-forsaken wanderer with the utmost kindness, and overlooking her error,
-sought, with true Christian charity, to bind up her crushed spirit.
-Thus, by a strange coincidence, this amiable lady had under her roof at
-the same moment, two wretched outcasts—victims to man’s unhallowed
-passions.
-
-Mrs. Anson had been growing weaker every day since she entered this
-hospitable dwelling, and it was now evident she held her life by a frail
-tenure. Derode was a constant visitor, yet he knew not Mrs. Anson was an
-inmate of the house; he deemed she had complied with his wishes and
-crossed the Atlantic.
-
-“What motive can you have,” said he to Mrs. Torrance one day, “for
-deferring our happiness? You are too generous to allow so untoward an
-event as my daughter’s flight to influence your decision. Add not to the
-affliction of that blow, by cold procrastination. Speak, madam, have my
-misfortunes lost me your affection?”
-
-“No, major,” replied the lady, “but I fear your faults have lessened it.
-Where is the American lady?”
-
-“At home,” said he earnestly, “at home, with her husband. I, myself,
-placed her on board a packet bound to New York.”
-
-The lady regarded the utterer of this bold falsehood with ineffable
-contempt, and stepping into the middle of the room, she threw open a
-folding door, and pointed to Mrs. Anson, who was reclining on an
-ottoman.
-
-“Are there devils in league against me?” muttered Derode, “how came that
-wretched woman here, madam?—she is a maniac—but I will convey her to
-an asylum, whence she shall not escape,” and he was advancing toward
-her.
-
-“Stay,” exclaimed Mrs. Torrance, restraining him, “that lady is under
-the protection of my roof, and she leaves it only with her own free
-will.”
-
-“By heavens! madam,” said he, “she quits not my sight till I consign her
-to a mad house;” and, forgetting every thing in his wrath, he roughly
-removed the lady from before him, as the door abruptly opened, and a
-tall, stern looking man stood before him. The intruder was dressed in
-strict conformity with the fashion of the day, and, on removing his hat,
-he exhibited a forehead of high intelligence, but two or three strong
-lines were drawn across it; two deep furrows also descended between his
-heavy brows, giving, to his otherwise agreeable features, a fierce, if
-not a ferocious expression. His dark eyes, deeply set in his head,
-flashed with the fierceness, and yet fascination, of a serpent’s orbs,
-ere he makes his deadly spring. The stranger expanded his lofty figure,
-and throwing forward his ample chest, he crossed his arms upon it, and
-gazed intently on Derode.
-
-The major turned from his burning gaze, and advancing to the couch where
-lay the invalid, said, in a harsh voice, “rise, madam, and follow me,”
-at the same time laying his hand on her shoulder. Three strides brought
-the stranger to the spot, and seizing Derode, he whirled him against the
-opposite wall with the strength of a giant, exclaiming, “let your victim
-die in peace!” The expiring woman raised herself with her last collected
-strength, and articulating, “_my husband!_” sank back in a swoon.
-
-The moment Derode became aware of the relation in which the stranger
-stood to the fainting woman, he made an attempt to reach the door, but
-was intercepted by Anson.
-
-“Stay,” said the latter, “you stir not hence. Stay, and behold the
-consummation of your villainy. See! she breathes again. Let her curse
-you and expire!”
-
-The lamp of life had been long flickering in the poor patient, and was
-now giving forth its last brightness. She held out her hands imploringly
-to her husband, and said, “forgive me!” but before his lips could utter
-the pardon, she fell back in the arms of Mrs. Torrance—a corpse.
-
-The mysterious awe with which the presence of death fills the human
-heart, caused a silence as profound as that which had just fallen on the
-departed. Anson bent over the stiffening body and murmured: “Hadst thou
-died spotless, my wife, how joyfully would my spirit have journeyed with
-thine to the bar of God—and in the realms of peace, where the tempter
-comes not—where sin and shame, and sorrow enter not—we should forever
-have enjoyed that bliss—our foretaste of which on earth, was so rudely
-broken by the destroyer. But enough. The last tears these eyes shall
-ever shed, have fallen upon thy bier—and now again to my work of
-vengeance!” He arose, and bent on Derode a look of ineffable ferocity.
-“Look,” he said, “on the man you have ruined. _You_ beheld _me_ for the
-first time, yet my eyes have scarce lost sight of you for months—and
-henceforward will I be like your ever-present shadow. The solace of _my_
-life shall be to blight the joy of _yours_—in crowds or in
-solitude—amid the gay revel, and through the silent watches of the
-night, will I hover around you. I will become the living, embodied
-spirit of your remorse; walking with you in darkness and in light, and
-when a smile would mantle on your lips, I will dispel it with the sound
-of MURDERER!”
-
-“I’ll rid myself of such companionship,” said Derode,—“I have pistols
-here—follow me, sir, and seek a manly satisfaction at once.”
-
-The loud voices of Anson and her father, had been heard by Isabel, and
-the unhappy girl on entering the apartment—to the astonishment and
-horror of Derode—threw herself on the bosom of Anson, who, putting her
-aside, exclaimed—“that you may want no motive to _hate_ as well as
-_fear_ me, know that I am the seducer of your daughter. Thus have I
-_begun_ my work of destruction.” Driven to desperation by this taunt,
-Derode drew a pistol, aimed it at Anson, and fired. By a movement
-equally sudden, Isabel, with a scream, threw herself before her
-betrayer, and received the ball in her shoulder. The wretched father
-groaned in agony, and fled from the house, while Anson, consigning the
-wounded girl to the care of Mrs. Torrance, pursued the culprit.
-
-The same day on which Anson committed his wife to the earth, Isabel
-Derode yielded up her spirit—and a jury declared that she died from a
-wound inflicted by the hand of her father.
-
-Time passed slowly away, and Derode was preparing for his trial. The
-legal gentlemen whom he had employed, could perceive some palliating,
-but no justifiable points in his case. He vehemently declared he had no
-purpose of injuring his daughter—his object being to inflict a just
-punishment on her seducer. His counsel, however, sorrowfully assured
-him, that if the _intent_ and _attempt_ to kill could be proved, and a
-death resulted from such attempt, it mattered little who fell by his
-hand.
-
-The amiable Mrs. Torrance, resolving not to appear as a witness against
-him, had retired to the continent, and was now living in much seclusion
-at Dresden. But Anson remained; and the relentless heart of that altered
-man expanded with savage joy when he reflected that it was _his_
-evidence that would condemn his wronger. Some of the friends of the
-unhappy criminal waited on Anson, and besought him, in the most moving
-manner, not to appear against the wretched man, alleging that if no
-direct evidence were adduced, justice would wink, and the offender
-escape. The witness was inflexible. Derode himself sent a respectful
-request to see him. Anson entered his cell, and the despairing murderer
-begged for life like a very coward. Anson spurned the miserable
-suppliant from him:—“Villain! villain!” he said, “ten thousand dastard
-lives like yours would but poorly expiate your fiend-like crime, or glut
-my insatiate vengeance!”—and casting a look of inextinguishable hate on
-the prisoner, he left the cell.
-
-A few days after his commitment, Derode had written to his son who was
-stationed at Bermuda, an account of his misfortunes and imprisonment.
-The dutiful boy having obtained leave, had instantly sailed for England,
-and was now sitting in his father’s dismal apartment.
-
-“Cheer up, father,” said the young sailor,—“things will go well yet. No
-proof, you say, but that man’s evidence,—and that man the seducer of my
-sister?”
-
-“Even so,” replied the parent—“no prayers can touch him.”
-
-“I’ll touch him,” said the fiery young man, “but not with prayers.
-Farewell father! to-morrow I’ll be here to tell you I have stopped the
-mouth of the king’s witness.”
-
-Anson, promptly answering the challenge of young Derode, was at Chalk
-Farm at daylight. When he surveyed the slightly formed, but noble
-looking youth who stood before him, prepared for deadly contest, he
-remembered his unremitting pistol-practice, his unerring aim, and one
-human feeling, one pulsation of pity played around his heart. They were
-evanescent. He recalled his deserted home, his violated hearth, his vow
-for REVENGE, and at the fatal signal, his youthful antagonist lay on the
-frozen earth, with his life-blood bubbling out.
-
-Could Anson have seen Derode when his son’s death was communicated to
-him, he would have deemed the destroyer’s cup of bitterness full.
-
-Anson was arraigned for this murder, and underwent a trial, which was
-mere mockery, for having plied his gold freely—flaws, defective
-evidence, and questions of identity, as usual, in cases of dueling,
-hoodwinked justice.
-
- “Plate sin with gold, and the strong lance of justice hurtless
- breaks,
- Clothe it with rags, a pigmy’s straw will pierce it.”
-
-Well, the day of trial came. Public excitement was at its highest pitch.
-The jailor, accompanied by sheriffs and tipstaves, proceeded to the cell
-of the prisoner, to escort him to the tribunal of justice. But lo! the
-apartment was tenantless. The criminal had escaped. A brief survey of
-his cell revealed the means of his egress. The heavy stones forming the
-sides of his grated window, were displaced. Large tools lay scattered
-about—files, chisels, and other articles, plainly indicating a bold
-confederacy. And such was indeed the case:—for the officers belonging
-to the same regiment with Derode had contrived his escape.
-
-Words cannot depict Anson’s feelings of mingled rage and disappointment
-when he learned that his victim had fled. At his own expense, he
-instituted a search that pervaded the three kingdoms. He himself flew to
-the continent, and offered a thousand guineas for the capture of the
-murderer. His efforts were fruitless. The men who liberated Derode did
-not withdraw their protection until they had placed him in safety.
-
-For more than a year Anson wandered about Europe, in hopes to light upon
-the fugitive. Weary at length with the vain pursuit, and thinking that
-the fire in his heart was consuming his life, he returned home, as he
-thought, to die. He remained in Philadelphia a few months, during which
-time he conveyed a great part of the remainder of his property to some
-of our public charities, and then retired from the haunts of men to live
-and die alone. With a strong tinge of romance, he selected a wild,
-mountainous country, in the interior of our state, never leaving the
-precincts of the hovel where he dwelt, except to purchase a stock of the
-homeliest food.
-
-He had been living thus more than eight years without any thing
-occurring to disturb the monotony of his life, when one blustering
-night, a cry from a creature in distress reached his ear, as he sat in
-his mountain hut, poring over a black-letter folio. Surprised that any
-one should invade his dangerous premises, and on such a night, he
-ignited a fragment of resinous wood, and sallied forth. As he descended
-the path that left his door, and struck into that which wound round a
-precipitous ledge, the voice came nearer on the blast. Anson shouted
-loudly to the stranger not to approach, until he reached him, as another
-step in the dark might be certain destruction. Proceeding hastily
-onward, he found the traveller standing on the outermost edge of the
-fearful precipice. The torrent was heard boiling and dashing far below,
-and the wind swept in eddying blasts round the dizzy cliff. Anson
-extended his hand to the wanderer, and the blaze of the torch flashed
-brightly in the faces of both men. Anson riveted his eyes on the
-features of the stranger, and with a yell of demoniac joy fastened on
-his throat. It was the miserable Derode, who, in the last stage of
-poverty, was wandering from the far west, to the sea-board, on foot. In
-the darkness, he had mistaken the mountain path for a bye-road, which
-had been described to him as greatly shortening the distance to the
-village. He quailed beneath the iron grasp of Anson, and struggled to
-say:—“dreaded man! are you not surfeited with revenge? My ruined
-daughter!—my murdered son!”
-
-“No!” shouted the infuriated recluse, “my ruined—murdered wife! I see
-her pale face there—down in the black abyss! she demands the sacrifice!
-down!”
-
-He hurled the trembling seducer over the precipice, and laughed aloud as
-the wretch dashed from rock to rock in his descent. A heavy plunge! and
-the surging torrent closed over the hapless Derode forever!
-
- * * * * *
-
-Anson dwelt on in his gloomy solitude, until his hair became blanched,
-and the memory of passion and crime had furrowed deep channels in his
-face. In the summer of 1828, we one day followed a trout stream far up
-into the mountain, and encountered the old man. Giving him the fruits of
-our morning sport, and seating ourselves in his hut, we learned from
-himself the leading incidents of this melancholy story. His eye lighted
-up with unnatural fire, as he pointed with unsteady finger to the
-fearful cliff, and said, “there, sir, ’twas from yon projection, I
-dashed my destroyer into the chasm. The law would call it murder, and I
-live in daily expectation that the bloodhounds will drag me hence. Well,
-let them come when they will; from my youth, life has been to me one
-deep, enduring curse.” We saw him at least once in the summer for many
-years, and in our last interview with him, we said cheerfully,—“you
-look quite hale yet, Mr. Anson.” He regarded us steadily for a moment,
-and said, in a voice that reminded us of Shelley’s Ahasuerus, “I cannot
-die.” * *
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- THE EMPRESS.
-
-
- “Adieu, my lord—
- I never wished to see you sorry; now,
- I trust, I shall.”
- _Winter’s Tale._
-
-It was evening. The mass had been concluded in the royal chapel, and the
-Empress Josephine was returning to her apartments through the gallery
-that led thereto. As she was proceeding along, she felt a touch upon her
-arm, and, upon looking round, discovered the form of a man beside her.
-He made his obeisance, and she immediately recognised the Counsellor
-Fouché.
-
-“What would Monsieur Fouché?” she demanded.
-
-“A few moments private converse with you, if it please your majesty,” he
-replied, and, at the same time, pointing to the embrasure of a window
-near by.
-
-Josephine understood the motion, and made a sign that she would follow.
-He led the way; and when they arrived, she again demanded what he
-wanted.
-
-“I crave your majesty’s pardon for the liberty I have taken,” said the
-minister of police respectfully, yet boldly, “but I wish to make a
-communication, which, though it may not be of the most pleasing nature,
-yet, demands your majesty’s most serious attention.”
-
-“And what may it be? speak,” said the empress.
-
-“You are aware,” began the minister, “that I am much with the emperor,
-and have ample opportunity for learning his secret wishes and desires. I
-have become acquainted with one recently, which, of late, has much
-occupied his mind, and which he would fain gratify but for the love he
-bears your majesty. It is this: he wishes for an heir to inherit his
-title and power. Every man, you know, feels an inherent pride in
-transmitting his name to posterity; and it is but natural that the
-emperor should feel such a desire. I would, therefore, suggest to your
-majesty the necessity of a sacrifice, which will add to the interest of
-France, make his majesty happy, and which would be as equally sublime as
-it will be inevitable. Beg him to obtain a divorce.”
-
-During this disclosure, the empress betrayed excessive emotion. Her mild
-eyes were suffused with tears—her lips swelled—her bosom heaved—her
-face became deadly pale—and the tremor that took possession of her
-frame, told how deeply her feelings were agitated. But it was as the
-momentary cloud that obscures the noonday sun; in a moment it was past,
-and with a slightly tremulous voice, she asked—
-
-“And what authority has the duke of Otranto for holding such language?”
-
-“None,” he replied, “it is only from a conviction of what must most
-certainly come to pass, and a desire to turn your attention to what so
-nearly concerns your majesty’s glory and happiness, that I have dared to
-speak upon the subject. Nevertheless, if I have offended, I beg your
-majesty’s forgiveness. Permit me now to depart.”
-
-He stood silent for a few minutes, as if waiting for her assent. She
-waved her hand, and the boldest political intriguer of his time
-departed, conscious of having done that which none other in France would
-have presumed.
-
-Josephine turned away with a beating heart. She reached her apartments,
-and throwing herself on a sofa, gave vent to her over-burthened soul in
-a flood of tears. It was not long before dinner was announced; but she
-refused to appear at the table, on a plea of indisposition, and retired
-to her chamber.
-
-It was a short time afterward that the door of the chamber opened, and
-the emperor entered. He approached Josephine. Her eyes were red with
-weeping, and the tears yet moistened those bright orbs, in defiance of
-her efforts to appear calm. He seated himself beside her, and put his
-arm around her waist.
-
-“Josephine,” said he, in an affectionate tone, “what is the cause of
-this emotion?”
-
-“Nothing,” she answered, in a faltering voice, and scarcely audible.
-
-“Something has occurred to bring forth those tears. Tell me, what is
-it?” and he looked tenderly in her face.
-
-“I cannot,” she said, bitterly, whilst she leaned her head upon his
-shoulder, and gave vent to another flood of tears. “No, I cannot speak
-those fearful words.”
-
-“What words, Josephine? speak; what words?”
-
-She hesitated, and then faltered out,
-
-“That—that you—you do not love me as you used to.”
-
-“’Tis false!” he exclaimed.
-
-“Then why wish to be separated? why wish for a divorce? Oh! Napoleon, is
-it my fault that we have no children to bless our union? God has so
-willed it,” and her bosom heaved convulsively.
-
-He started as she pronounced the two first sentences, and compressed his
-lips as if to suppress the pang of conviction that shot through his
-heart.
-
-“Josephine,” said the emperor, tenderly, “some one has been poisoning
-your mind with idle tales. Who has it been?”
-
-She then related to him her interview with Fouché, and asked him to
-dismiss that minister as a penalty for his audacity in playing with her
-feelings. He strenuously denied the communication; but refused to
-dismiss him.
-
-“No,” said he, “circumstances compel me to retain him, though he well
-deserves my displeasure. But why give credit to such silly assertions,
-Josephine? Have I ever treated you but with affection? Have you
-discovered aught in my behaviour to warrant suspicion? No; believe me
-you are still dear to me. Banish those foolish fears from your breast
-then, and weep no more.” So saying, he imprinted a kiss upon her lips,
-and left the chamber to attend to the affairs of state.
-
-It was touching to hear such expressions of tenderness issue from the
-greatest monarch of his time, and to witness that act of devotion—to
-see that proud spirit unbent; but it was those tears of anguish, and the
-whisperings of that “still small voice” of conscience, that had humbled
-him, to whom kings and monarchs humbled themselves, and whose mighty
-mind aspired to the conquest of the world.
-
-The setting sun threw its parting rays over the earth, and pierced the
-windows of the imperial palace. The golden flood, softened by the
-crimson curtains, fell upon the charming features of the empress
-Josephine, as she sat in thoughtful attitude, with her head resting upon
-her hand, on a sofa of royal purple, near the centre of her chamber. A
-page, in waiting, stood near the door, carelessly humming a light ditty;
-his heart as sunny as his own native France. What a contrast with that
-which beat within the bosom of the empress! Care weighed heavily upon
-her breast. Long before her interview with Fouché she had, from the very
-cause hinted at by the minister, dreaded a withdrawal of her husband’s
-affections; but since that event her anxieties had doubly increased, and
-suspicion would take possession of her mind, amounting, at times, even
-to jealousy. Not that she apprehended his proceeding to that extreme at
-which the wily minister had hinted; no!—no person on earth could have
-persuaded her that he, whose joys and woes she had cheerfully shared,
-wished for a separation: but that some Syren would ensnare him with her
-charms, and usurp that place in his heart which she only should hold.
-All the powers she possessed were exerted by Josephine, in order to
-retain his love, and sometimes she fancied she had succeeded; for of
-late, in proportion as the sense of injustice he was about to do her,
-presented itself to his mind, he became more than usually kind and
-tender; but there were moments when a gloomy melancholy would settle
-upon her—an indefinable something that seemed to warn of approaching
-affliction.
-
-It was in one of those fits of abstraction, so foreign to her naturally
-cheerful nature, that she sat, as we have said, seemingly unconscious of
-all around, when the door opened, and Napoleon entered. He seemed
-disturbed, and trouble was vividly depicted in his expressive
-countenance. He motioned for the page to retire, and seated himself
-beside her.
-
-“Josephine!” he said.
-
-She started from her reverie, as he pronounced her name—for buried in
-thought, she had not observed his entrance—and bent upon him such a
-look, full of sweetness and affection, that it disarmed him; he could
-not proceed. He arose. He folded his arms upon his breast and paced to
-and fro; his brow was contracted,—his lips compressed; and the unquiet
-restlessness of his piercing eye, betokened the agitation he could
-scarce control. He thus continued for some moments. At length he stopped
-before her, as if his resolution was taken, and then again turned away,
-continuing to walk up and down the apartment with rapid and hasty
-strides. After a short time he stopped again.
-
-“It must be done,” he muttered, “I will acquaint her with it at once;
-delay but makes it still more difficult.”
-
-He made an effort to suppress his emotion, and seated himself beside
-her. But again his voice failed him, and he could only articulate,—
-
-“Josephine, prepare yourself for sad news.”
-
-Ever on the alarm, the purport of his words seemed anticipated by her,
-though not to their full extent, and she burst into a flood of tears,
-scarce knowing why.
-
-Dinner was now announced, and their majesties proceeded to the table.
-Silence prevailed throughout the meal, and the dishes were scarcely
-touched. They arose from their seats, and as they did so, the page on
-duty presented the emperor with his accustomed cup of coffee. He took
-it, but handed it back scarcely touched. He then proceeded to his
-chamber; the empress followed.
-
-They seated themselves when they had entered, and remained for some time
-silent. The emperor at length spoke.
-
-“There is no use in deferring the truth, Josephine,” said he, in a
-tremulous voice, “it must sooner or later be made known to you, and
-suspense is more cruel than certainty. The interests of France demand
-that we separate.”
-
-“What!” she exclaimed, placing both hands on his shoulders, and gazing
-with an eager and inquiring look in his face, “what? separate!”
-
-“Yes,” he answered, “France demands the sacrifice.”
-
-Her hands dropped heavily—her bosom heaved—and hot, burning tears,
-such only as flow from a surcharged heart, gushed forth in torrents from
-her eyes.
-
-“And I—oh! God!” she exclaimed, “I who have shared your joys and
-sorrows—who have been your companion for years—who loved you through
-weal and woe—who—but I will not upbraid you, Napoleon. Yet she who
-supplants me, Maria Louise, the daughter of the Emperor Francis, can
-never love you as I have done,—oh! no!”
-
-She buried her face in her hands; the emperor remained silent.
-
-“But,” she continued, starting suddenly, and throwing her arms around
-his neck, “you do not mean it. Oh! no! say you do not! speak,—you
-cannot mean it. Tell me, quick—say it is not so—that it cannot, must
-not be. Speak, Napoleon, and the blessing of God rest upon you!”
-
-“Alas! it is too true,” he said, his eyes suffused with tears. Oh! how
-keen was the pang of conscience that shot through his guilty heart.
-
-“True!” she exclaimed, “and you confirm it? Then Fouché was right. But I
-will never survive it—no! I will never survive it. Mon Dieu! mon Dieu!”
-
-She uttered a piercing scream, and reeled backward, for she had risen
-from her seat in her excitement. Napoleon caught her in his arms, and
-laid her gently upon the carpet. Her agony was too deep for words, and
-she could only weep and groan in bitterness of spirit. He stepped to the
-door and called de Bausset. They raised her in their arms, and bore her
-to her chamber. Her women were immediately summoned, and she was
-resigned to their care. Napoleon retired, greatly agitated. De Bausset
-followed; tears were also in his eyes; for Josephine, by her goodness,
-won all hearts. Napoleon stopped a moment outside to listen to her groan
-of anguish. He related what had occurred.
-
-“The interests of France:” he continued, addressing De Bausset, “and as
-my dynasty does violence to my heart, the divorce has become a rigorous
-duty. I am more afflicted by what has happened to Josephine, because,
-three days ago, she must have learned it from Hortensia. The unhappy
-obligation which condemns me to separate myself from her, I deplore with
-all my heart, but I thought she possessed more strength of character,
-and I was not prepared for these bursts of grief.”
-
-They hurried away. Conscience, ever-faithful conscience, was already
-performing its duty; he felt its just upbraidings. He essayed to stifle
-it. It was this that led him to utter such language to De Bausset—to
-assert that he thought she possessed strength of character enough to
-receive the announcement without those bursts of grief. What virtuous
-and affectionate woman could receive with calmness a sentence of
-repudiation; and that, too, by the tongue of a beloved husband? Her
-heart must have become as stone.
-
-On the sixteenth of December, 1809, the law, authorising the divorce,
-was enacted by the conservative senate. In the following March the
-nuptials between Napoleon and Marie Louise, were performed in Vienna;
-and on the first day of April, a little more than four months after the
-scene above described, they were joined in wedlock in the city of Paris,
-by his uncle, Cardinal Fesch.
-
-Thus was consummated that act which cast a stain upon the character of
-“the great Napoleon,” which time cannot efface. A blot, deep and
-indelible, that will remain whilst his name lives among men. It was an
-act contrary to the laws of God and of humanity.
-
-One wrong action will often tarnish a whole life. We may admire his
-bravery, and courage, his vast conception of mind, his gigantic
-intellect, his unparalleled energy, his perseverance, and his
-determination of character, but when we turn to this dark page in his
-history, admiration vanishes, and contempt and disgust usurp its place.
-It was indeed an act unworthy of the man, and one that admits of no
-palliation. It was not to France the sacrifice, as he termed it, was
-made; it was to ambition. And may we not surmise that the lowering
-fortunes which ever after were his, and the dark fate which closed his
-days in a lonely island, afar off on the bosom of the ocean, were, in
-some measure, acts of divine retribution, which this act of his called
-forth.
-
-Long years after the occurrence of the foregoing events, and when
-Napoleon was no more master of Europe,—when Louis XVIII. was seated on
-the throne of France, and “Le Grand Monarque,” was a prisoner, confined
-for life on the island of St. Helena—the lovely and accomplished
-Josephine,—the injured wife,—ended a virtuous life at the villa of
-Malmaison, near St. Germain, whither she had retired after the divorce.
-Her death was attributed to disease of the body; but it is likely it was
-not altogether that, or at least a secret sorrow had so weakened and
-enfeebled her mortal frame that the least rude touch of disease
-overthrew the structure. Differently died the repudiator and the
-repudiated.
-
- Sketcher.
-
- Philadelphia, 1841.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- LAKE GEORGE.
-
-
- There is a clear and bright blue lake
- Embosom’d in the rocky north;
- No murmurs e’er its silence break,
- As on its waves we sally forth;
- The mountain bird floats high aloft,
- Above his wild and craggy nest,
- And gazes from his towering throne,
- Upon the torrent’s sparkling breast;
- While far beneath, in light and shade,
- The bright green valleys frown and smile,
- And in the bed sweet nature made,
- The lake sleeps soft and sweet the while.
- O’er many a green and lovely wild,
- The golden sun-beams gaily smile;
- But ’mid them all he doth not break,
- As on his race he sallies forth,
- On fairer scene, or sweeter lake,
- Than that within the rocky north.
- M. T.
-
- Lake George, Feb., 1841.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- THE REEFER OF ’76.
-
-
- BY THE AUTHOR OF “CRUIZING IN THE LAST WAR.”
-
-
- PAUL JONES.
-
-“Steady, there, steady!” thundered the master of the merchantman, his
-voice seeming, however, in the fierce uproar of the gale, to die away
-into a whisper.
-
-I looked ahead. A giant wave, towering as high as the yard arm, its
-angry crest hissing above us, and its dark green bosom seeming to open
-to engulph our fated bark, was rolling down toward us, shutting out half
-the horizon from sight, and striking terror into the stoutest heart. It
-was a fearful spectacle. Involuntarily I glanced around the horizon. All
-was dark, lowering, and ominous. On every hand the mountain waves were
-heaving to the sky, while the roar of the hurricane was awfully sublime.
-Now we rose to the heavens: now sunk into a yawning abyss. But I had
-little time to gaze upon the fearful scene. Already the angry billow was
-rushing down upon our bows, when the master again sang out, as if with
-the voice of a giant.
-
-“_Hold on all!_” and as he spoke, the huge volume of waters came
-tumbling in upon us, sweeping our decks like a whirlwind, hissing,
-roaring, and foaming along, and making the merchantman quiver in every
-timber from bulwark to kelson. Not a moveable thing was left. The long
-boat was swept from the decks like chaff before a hurricane. For an
-instant the merchantman lay powerless beneath the blow, as if a
-thunderbolt had stunned her; but gradually recovering from the shock,
-she shook the waters gallantly from her bows, emerged from the deluge,
-and rolling her tall masts heavily to starboard, once more breasted the
-storm.
-
-We had been a week at sea without meeting a single sail. During that
-time we had enjoyed a succession of favorable breezes, until within the
-last few days, when the gale, which now raged, had overtaken us, and
-driven us out into the Atlantic, somewhere, as near as we could guess,
-between the Bermudas and our port of destination. Within the last few
-hours we had been lying-to, under a close-reefed foresail; but every
-succeeding wave had seemed to become more dangerous than the last, until
-it was now evident that our craft could not much longer endure the
-continued surges which breaking over her bows, threatened momentarily to
-engulph us. The master stood by my side, holding on to a rope, his
-weather-beaten countenance drenched with spray, but his keen, anxious
-eye changing continually from the bow of his craft, to the wild scene
-around him.
-
-“She can’t stand it much longer, Mr. Parker,” said the old man, “many a
-gale have I weathered in her, but none like this. God help us!”
-
-“Meet it with the helm—hold on all,” came faintly from the forecastle,
-and before the words had whizzed past upon the gale, another mountain
-wave was hurled in upon us, and I felt myself, the next instant, borne
-away, as in the arms of a giant, upon its bosom. The rope by which I
-held had parted. There was a hissing in my ears—a rapid shooting like
-an arrow—a desperate effort to stay my progress by catching at a rope,
-I missed—and then I felt myself whirled away astern of the merchantman,
-my eyes blinded with the spray, my ears ringing with a strange, wild
-sound, and a feeling of sudden, utter hopelessness at my heart, such as
-they only can know who have experienced a fate as terrible as mine, at
-that moment, threatened to be.
-
-“A man overboard!” came faintly from the fast-receding ship.
-
-“Ahoy!” I shouted.
-
-“Hillo—hil—lo—o,” was answered back.
-
-“Ahoy—a—a—hoy!”
-
-“Throw over that spar.”
-
-“Toll the bell that he may know where we are.”
-
-“Hillo—hi—il—lo!”
-
-“Who is it?”
-
-“Bring a lantern here.”
-
-“Hil—l—o—o—o—o!”
-
-“Can you see him?”
-
-“It’s as dark as death.”
-
-“God have mercy then upon his soul.”
-
-I could hear every word of the conversation, as the excited tones of the
-speakers came borne to leeward upon the gale, but although I shouted
-back with desperate strength, I felt that my cries were unheard by my
-shipmates to windward. The distance between myself and the merchantman
-was meanwhile rapidly increasing, and every moment her dark figure
-became more and more shadowy. With that presence of mind which is soon
-acquired in a life of peril, I had begun to tread water the instant I
-had gone overboard; but I felt that my strength would soon fail me, and
-that I must sink, unaided, into the watery abyss. Oh! who can tell my
-feelings as I saw the figure of the merchantman gradually becoming more
-dim in the distance, and heard the voices of my friends, at first loud
-and distinct, dying away into indistinct murmurs. Alone on the ocean! My
-breath came quick; my heart beat wildly; I felt the blood rushing in
-torrents to my brain. The scene meanwhile grew darker around me. The
-faint hope I had entertained that the ship would be put about, gradually
-died away; and even while I looked, she suddenly vanished from my
-vision. I strained my eyes to catch a sight of her as I rose upon a
-billow. Alas! she was not to be seen. Was there then no hope? Young;
-full of life; in the heyday of love—oh! God it was too much to endure!
-I felt that my last hour had come. Already the waters seemed roaring
-through my ears, and strange, fantastic figures to dance before my eyes.
-In that hour every event of my life whirled through my memory! I thought
-of my childhood; of my mother in her weeds; of her prayers over her only
-child; and of the cold wintry day when they laid her in her grave, and
-told me that I was an orphan. I thought too of my boyhood; of my college
-life; of my early days at sea; of the eventful months which had just
-passed; of my hopes of a bright career or a glorious death, thus to be
-quenched forever; and of Beatrice, my own Beatrice, whom I was to see no
-more. Wild with the agony of that thought, I tossed my arms aloft, and
-invoked a dying blessing on her head. At that instant something came
-shooting past me, borne on the bosom of a towering wave. It was a
-lumbering chest, doubtless one of those thrown overboard from the
-merchantman. I grasped it with a desperate effort: I clambered up upon
-it; and as I felt its frail planks beneath me, a revulsion came over my
-bosom. The fisherman by his fireside, when the tempest howls around his
-dwelling, could not have felt more confident of safety than I now did,
-with nothing but this simple chest between me and the yawning abyss.
-Quick, gushing emotions swept through my bosom; I burst into tears; and
-lifting up my voice, there, alone, on the wide ocean, I poured forth my
-thanksgivings to God.
-
-It was with no little difficulty I maintained my position on the chest,
-during the long hours which elapsed before the morning dawned. Now borne
-to the heavens, now hurried into the abyss below; now drenched with the
-surge, now whirled wildly onward, on the bosom of some wave, I passed
-the weary moments, in alternate efforts to maintain my hold, and ardent
-longings for the morning’s light. The gale, meantime, gradually
-diminished. At length the long looked-for dawn appeared, creeping slowly
-and ominously over the horizon, and revealing to my eager sight nothing
-but the white surges, the agitated deep, and the leaden colored sky on
-every hand. My heart sank within me. All through the weary watches of
-that seemingly interminable night, I had cheered my drooping hopes with
-the certainty of seeing the merchantman in the morning, and now, as I
-scanned the frowning horizon; and saw only that stormy waste on every
-hand, my heart once more died within me, and I almost despaired.
-Suddenly, however, I thought I perceived something flashing on the
-weather seaboard like the wing of a water-fowl, and straining my eyes in
-that direction, whenever I rose upon a wave, I beheld at length, to my
-joy, that the object was a sail. Oh! the overpowering emotions of that
-moment. The vessel was evidently one of considerable size, and coming
-down right toward me. As she approached I made her out to be a sloop of
-war, driving under close-reefed courses before the gale. Her hull of
-glossy black; her snowy canvass; and her trim jaunty finish were in
-remarkable contrast with the usual slovenly appearance of a mere
-merchantman. No jack was at her mast-head; no ensign fluttered at her
-gaff. But I cared not to what nation she belonged, in that moment of
-hope and fear. To me she was a messenger of mercy. I had watched her
-eagerly until she had approached within almost a pistol-shot of me,
-trembling momentarily lest she should alter her course. I now shouted
-with all my strength. No one, however, seemed to hear me. Onward she
-came, swinging with the surges, and driving a cataract of foam along
-before her bows. A look-out was idly leaning on the bowsprit. As the
-huge fabric surged down toward me another danger arose. I might be run
-down. Nerved to supernatural strength by the immanency of the peril, I
-raised myself half up upon my chest, and placing my hand to my mouth,
-shouted with desperate energy,
-
-“Ahoy! a—a—hoy!”
-
-“Hillo!” said the look-out, turning sharply in the direction of my
-voice.
-
-“Ahoy! ship _a—ho—o—y_!”
-
-“Starboard your helm,” thundered the seaman, discovering me upon my
-little raft, “heave a rope here—easy—easy—God bless you, shipmate,”
-and with the rapidity with which events are transacted in a dream, I was
-hoisted on board, and clasped in the arms of the warm-hearted old
-fellow, before he saw, by my uniform, that I was an officer. When he
-perceived this, however, he started back, and hastily touching his hat,
-said, with humorous perplexity,
-
-“Beg pardon, sir—didn’t see you belonged aft——”
-
-“An American officer in this extremity,” said a deep voice at my elbow,
-with startling suddenness, and as the speaker advanced, the group of
-curious seamen fell away from around me, as if by magic; while I felt,
-at once, that I was in the presence of the commanding officer of the
-ship.
-
-“You are among friends,” said the speaker, in a voice slightly tinged
-with the Scotch accent, “we bear the flag of the Congress—but walk
-aft—you are drenched, exhausted—you need rest—I must delay my
-inquiries until you have been provided for—send the doctor to my
-cabin—and steward mix us a rummer of hot grog.”
-
-During these rapid remarks the speaker, taking me by the arm, had
-conducted, or rather led me to a neat cabin aft, and closing the door
-with his last remarks, he opened a locker, and producing a suit of dry
-clothes, bid me array myself in them, and then vanished from the
-apartment.
-
-In a few minutes, however, he re-appeared, followed by the steward,
-bearing a huge tumbler of hot brandy, which he made me drink off,
-nothing loth, at a draught.
-
-From the first instant of his appearance, I had felt a strange, but
-unaccountable awe in the presence of the commanding officer, and I now
-sought to account for it by a rigid, but hasty scrutiny of his person,
-as he stood before me.
-
-He was a short, thick-set, muscular man, apparently about thirty years
-of age, drest in a blue, tight-fitting naval frock coat, with an
-epaulette upon one shoulder, and a sword hanging by his side. But his
-face was the most striking part of him. Such a countenance I never saw.
-It had a fire in the eye, a compression about the lips, a distention of
-the nostrils, and a sternness in its whole appearance, which betokened a
-man, not only of strong passions, but of inflexible decision of
-character. That brow, bold, massy, and threatening, might have shaped
-the destinies of a nation. I could not withdraw my eyes from it. He
-appeared to read my thoughts, for smiling faintly, he courteously signed
-to the steward to take my glass, and when the door had closed upon him,
-said,
-
-“But to what brother officer am I indebted for this honor?”
-
-I mentioned my name, and the schooner in which I had sailed from New
-York.
-
-“The Fire-Fly!” he said, with some surprise, “ah! I have heard of your
-gallantry in that brush with the pirates—” and then, half
-unconsciously, as if musing, he continued, “and so your name is Parker.”
-
-“And yours?” I asked, with a nod of assent.
-
-“Paul Jones!”
-
-For a moment we stood silently gazing on each other—he seeming to wish
-to pierce my very soul with his small, grey eye, and I regarding with a
-feeling akin to fascination, the wonderful man whose after career was
-even then foreshadowed in my mind.
-
-“I see you are of the right stuff,” exclaimed this singular being,
-breaking the silence, “we shall yet make those haughty English weep in
-blood for their tyranny.”
-
-I know not how it was; but from that moment I felt certain my companion
-would make his name a terror to his enemies, and a wonder to the world.
-
-For some days we continued our course, with but little deviation; and
-every day I became more and more interested in the commander of the
-man-of-war. Although my situation as his guest brought me into closer
-contact with him than any one except his lieutenant, yet, after the
-first few hours of our intercourse, he became reserved and silent,
-though without any diminution of courtesy. His former career was little
-known even in the ward-room. He had been brought up, it was said, by the
-earl of Selkirk, but had left his patron’s house at the age of fifteen,
-and embarked in a seafaring life. Dark hints were whispered about as to
-the causes of his sudden departure, and it was said that the dishonor of
-one of his family had driven him forth from the roof of his patron. Upon
-these subjects, however, I made no ungenerous enquiries; but learned
-that he had subsequently been engaged in the West India trade as master,
-and that he had, on the breaking out of the war, come to America, and
-offered himself to Congress for a commission in our navy. Some deep,
-but, as yet unknown, cause of hatred toward the English, was said to
-have prompted him to this act.
-
-As time passed on, however, I enjoyed many opportunities of studying his
-singular character, which, had I not felt my curiosity aroused, might
-have passed by unused. Often would I, in our slight conversations,
-endeavor to pierce into his bosom, and read there the history of all
-those dark emotions which slumbered there. But he seemed generally to
-suspect my purpose—at least he appeared always on his guard. He was
-ever the same courteous but unfathomable being.
-
-We had run down as far south as the Bermudas, when, one day the look-out
-made five sail; and in an instant every eye was directed toward the
-quarter where the strangers appeared, to see if there was any chance of
-a prize.
-
-“How bear they?” asked Paul Jones quickly, to the look-out at the
-mast-head.
-
-“I can’t make out but one, and she seems a large merchantman, on a taut
-bowline.”
-
-“Watch her sharp.”
-
-“Ay, ay, sir.”
-
-For some time, every eye was fastened upon the approaching sail, which,
-apparently unconscious of an enemy so near, kept blindly approaching us.
-At length her royals began to lift, her topsails followed rapidly, and
-directly the heads of her courses loomed up on the horizon. Every eye
-sparkled with the certainty of a rich prize.
-
-“She’s a fat Indiaman, by St. George,” said our lieutenant, who had not
-yet so far forgot the country of his ancestors, as to swear by any saint
-but her patron one.
-
-“I guess we’d better not be too sure,” said a cautious old
-quarter-master from Cape Cod, as he levelled a much worn spy-glass, and
-prepared to take a long squint at the stranger.
-
-“By St. Pathrick,” said an Irish midshipman, in a whisper to one of his
-comrades, “but wont she make a beautiful prize—with the rale Jamaica,
-my boys, by the hogshead in her, and we nothing to do afther the
-capture, but to drink it up, to be shure.”
-
-“The strange sail is a frigate,” said the look-out at the mast head,
-with startling earnestness.
-
-“Too true, by G—d,” muttered the lieutenant, shutting his glass with a
-jerk; and as he spoke, the hull of the stranger loomed up above the
-horizon, presenting a row of yawning teeth that boded us little good,
-for we knew that our own little navy boasted no vessel with so large an
-armament.
-
-“That fellow is an English frigate,” calmly said Paul Jones, closing his
-telescope leisurely, “we shall have to try our heels.”
-
-Every thing that could draw was soon set, and we went off upon a wind,
-hoping to distance our pursuer by superior sailing. But though, for a
-while, we deluded ourselves with this hope, it soon became apparent that
-the enemy was rapidly gaining upon us, and with a heavy cross sea to
-contend against, we found ourselves, in less than four hours, within
-musket shot of the frigate, upon her weather bow. During all this time
-the Englishman had been firing her chase guns after us, but not one of
-them, as yet, had touched us. The game, however, was now apparently
-over. Every one gave themselves up as lost, to die, perhaps, the death
-of rebels. Resistance would only inflame our captors. How astonished
-then, were we all to hear the captain exclaim,—
-
-“Beat to quarters!”
-
-The high discipline of the crew brought every man to his post at the
-first tap of the drum, though not a countenance but exhibited amazement
-at the order.
-
-“Open the magazine!” said Paul Jones in the same stern, collected tone.
-
-The order was obeyed, and then all was silent again. It was a moment of
-exciting interest. As I looked along the deck at the dark groups
-gathered at the guns, and then at the calm, but iron-like countenance of
-the daring commander, I felt strange doubts as to whether it might not
-be his intention to sink beneath the broadside of the frigate, or,
-grappling with the foe, blow himself and the Englishman up. My reverie,
-however, was soon cut short by a shot from the frigate whizzing
-harmlessly past us, overhead. The eye of the singular being standing
-beside me, flashed lightning, as he thundered,—
-
-“Show him the bunting. Let drive at him, gunner,” and at the same
-instant our flag shot up to the gaff, unrolled, and then whipt in the
-wind; while a shot from one of our four pounders, cut through and
-through the fore-course of the enemy.
-
-“Keep her away a point or two, quarter-master,” said the captain, again
-breaking in upon the ominous silence, now interrupted only by the report
-of the cannon, or the fierce dashing of the waves against the sloop’s
-bows.
-
-“Does he mean to have us all strung up at the yard arm?” whispered the
-lieutenant to me, as he beheld this perilous bravado, yet felt himself
-restrained as much by the awe in which he held his superior, as by his
-own rigid notions of discipline, from remonstrating against the
-manœuvre.
-
-Meantime, the frigate was slowly gaining upon us, and had her batteries
-been better served, would have soon riddled us to pieces; but the want
-of skill in her crew, as well as the violence of the cross sea,
-prevented her shot from taking effect. The distance between us, however,
-gradually lessened. We saw no hope of escape. Every resort had been
-tried, but in vain. Already the frigate was dashing on to us in
-dangerous proximity, and we could see the eager countenances of her
-officers apparently exulting over their prize. Our crew, meanwhile,
-began to murmur. Despair was in many faces: despondency in all. Only our
-commander maintained the same inflexible demeanor which had
-characterised him throughout the chase. He had kept his eye steadily
-fixed upon the frigate for the last ten minutes in silence, only
-speaking now and then to order the sloop to be kept away another point
-or two. By this means the relative positions of the two vessels had been
-changed so as to bring us upon the lee-bow of the enemy. Suddenly his
-eye kindled, and turning quickly around to his lieutenant, he said,—
-
-“Order all hands to be ready to make sail,” and as soon as the men had
-sprung to their stations, he shouted—
-
-“Up with your helm; hard,—harder. Man the clew garnets—board
-tacks—topsails, royals—and flying jib,—merrily all, my men.”
-
-And as sheet after sheet of canvass was distended to the wind, we came
-gallantly around, and catching the breeze over our taffrail, went off
-dead before the wind, passing, however, within pistol shot of the enemy.
-
-“Have you any message for Newport?” said Paul Jones, springing into the
-mizzen-rigging, and hailing the infuriated English captain, as we shot
-past him.
-
-“Give it to him with the grape—all hands make sail—fire!” came
-hoarsely down from the frigate, in harsh and angry tones.
-
-“Good day, and many thanks for your present,” said our imperturbable
-commander, as the discharge swept harmlessly by; and then leaping upon
-the deck, he ran his eye aloft.
-
-“Run aft with that sheet—send out the kites aloft there, more
-merrily—we shall drop the rascals now, my gallant fellows,” shouted the
-elated captain, as we swept like a sea-gull away from the foe; while the
-men, inspired by the boldness and success of the manœuvre, worked with a
-redoubled alacrity, which promised soon to place us without reach of the
-enemy’s fire. The desperate efforts of the frigate to regain her
-advantage, were, meanwhile, of no avail. Taken completely by surprise,
-she could neither throw out her light sails sufficiently quick, nor
-direct her fiery broadsides with any precision. Not a grape-shot struck
-us, although the water to larboard was ploughed up with the iron hail.
-We soon found that we outsailed her before the wind, and in less than an
-hour we had drawn beyond range of her shot.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- THE DEPARTED.
-
-
- Her parents are weeping, she sheds not a tear,
- Loved voices are calling, alas! can she hear?—
- The hyacinth blossom is plucked from its stem,
- The casket is broken, and scattered the gem.
-
- Pale Death! the grim archer, hath bended his bow,
- The arrow hath vanished, the dove is laid low;
- Ah! fair was the victim thus fated to bleed,
- And well might the spoiler exult in his deed.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- THE MAJOR’S WEDDING.
-
-
- A VERITABLE STORY TOLD BY JEREMY SHORT, ESQ.
-
-
-“Ah! Mr. Editor, glad to see you in this cramped hole—no air, hot as a
-furnace—egad, I’m almost baked; and as for smoking one’s meerschaum, or
-drinking claret in a stage coach, you might as well dream of heaven in
-the paws of a prairie bear. Ah! you’ve got a cigar, I see—God bless the
-man that first invented tobacco. But hark ’e, who was that tall, slim,
-low-shouldered gentleman, with the long neck, that sat in the bar-room
-corner, in a semi-animated state, and hadn’t spoke for a half an hour
-until he growled back your salutation?”
-
-“Who? Jeremy—that was a poet.”
-
-“A poet! heaven protect us from such madness. Is he married?”
-
-“No—he swears he’ll never wed any one but a poetess; and you know
-they’re a scarce article in the market.”
-
-“Egad, I thought he was a bachelor, for who ever heard of a married man
-writing poetry? Flummery, sir, flummery—whipt cream and sugar—away
-with your poetry! Give me the real solid prose, your regular beefsteak,
-with a spice of wit to make it palatable, boy. Now there’s Oliver
-Oldfellow, he used to be as poetical as a scissors grinder before he got
-married, but after that he came to his senses, and—Lord love you!—he
-hasn’t written a line these twenty years.”
-
-“You’re savage on the poets. But if what you say is true, there ought to
-be a law against poets marrying.”
-
-“And what’s the use of law, to stop what one can’t help? No man—let me
-tell you—ever got married in his senses. No, no, my boy, they are
-crazy, bewitched, ‘_non compos mentis_.’ Did you ever meet a girl that
-didn’t say she’d never get married, and why then should she do it if she
-didn’t get possessed? But the poor victims are to be pitied more than
-blamed. It’s not their fault. It’s destiny, sir, destiny. When a thief’s
-hour comes he’s got to be hung—and when a man’s time is up he’s got to
-suffer matrimony. There’s no escape. Let him double like a hare, turn to
-the right or left, dive like a duck, or pretend to be dead like a
-dormouse, he’ll be sure to be found out at every trick, and made a
-Benedict of—even if it’s done by spirits—before he’s aware of it. Let
-me tell you a story to prove my position.
-
-“Major Compton was a hale, hearty old fellow when I knew him in the last
-war, though I believe gout and morning drams have long since driven the
-nails in his coffin. He had been a gay chap when young—a soldier, a
-beau, a bit of a fop, and then—egad, sir—a poet of no little fashion.
-He could knock you off a sonnet on a lady’s charms sooner than old Tom
-the blacksmith could knock off a horse-shoe. But after a while he fell
-in love, and—to cut short my story—was married. Ah! many and many a
-time have I heard him tell me how he felt it coming on him as if he was
-bewitched; how he struggled against the malady but could not prevail;
-and how he shuddered when he found himself writing poetry, because, like
-the sight of water in the hydrophobia, he knew then that it was all over
-with him. But this happened years before we met. When I knew him he was
-a jolly, red-faced widower, and had a horror of all poets, women, and
-cold water—the last of which he used to say made men effeminate, in
-proof of which he said all savages who used nothing else, like the
-Tahitians, were cowards. Betwixt you and I, he must have married a
-Tartar.
-
-“Well—he’d been out one night at a supper, and the bottle had passed
-around so frequently that every soul of the company, except the major,
-got under the table,—so, after amusing himself by blacking their faces
-with burnt cork, and moralising, as a gentleman ought to, over their
-deplorable condition, he set out to find his way home to his quarters.
-As he emerged into the cool air he felt his head getting light as if it
-were going up, balloon-like, with himself for a parachute; but holding
-his hat down with both hands, as he remembered to have seen them keep
-down an inflated balloon, he managed to get along pretty well, though he
-couldn’t keep his head from swinging about with the wind, which made
-him, he said, walk as crooked as if he had been drunk, though he was
-never soberer in his life.
-
-“It was a wild, gusty night, and the clouds were drifting like
-snow-flakes overhead, when the major sallied out into the street, and
-began his journey to his lodgings. The wind roared around the corners,
-or whistled down the chimneys of the old houses around, whose tall,
-dark, chilly figures rose up against the November sky, until they
-seemed, to the major’s vision, fairly to shiver with cold. The stars,
-high up, were winking through the drift, except now and then a sturdy
-old fellow who stared right into the major’s face. One of these seemed
-determined to abash him whether or no. Go where he would it followed
-him, so that if he looked up he would be sure to see it staring full
-upon him with its dull yellow eye. It made him think, he said, of his
-spouse of blessed memory, when she would stick her arms a-kimbo, and
-make faces at him. Now the major was a good-humored soul, but there are
-some things, even Job couldn’t endure. The major bore it, however, until
-he reached a wild common, when taking a seat upon a heap of stones, he
-planted his elbows on his knees, buried his chin in his hands, and
-looking right at the saucy star, said,
-
-“‘Hillo! up there—now take a good look, and let’s see who’ll give over
-first.’
-
-“‘Hillo!’ said a voice close behind him.
-
-“‘Hillo it is, you old mocking curmudgeon, say that again and I’ll pound
-your face into a jelly,’ said the major, turning wrathfully around; but,
-though he looked every where, not a bit of a man could he see even as
-big as the fabled Tom Thumb. It was, as I have said, a wide, open
-common, with not a tree or a house upon it, and if any living thing had
-been moving across its surface he would have been sure to have detected
-it. What could it have been? He thought of all the stories of goblins he
-had ever read, and his hair almost stood on end as he remembered them.
-But rallying himself, he began to whistle aloud, and stare again at the
-saucy star overhead. The sky, however, had grown darker during the
-interruption; and in a few moments the clouds obscured the provoking
-star. For a moment he closed his eyes, and feeling sleepy, dozed; but
-his head suddenly pitching forward, aroused him, and he once more looked
-up. What a sight was there! Dark, frowning masses of vapor swept wildly
-across the firmament; while the wind now wailed out in unearthly tones,
-and then went shrieking across the common like the laughter of a troop
-of malignant fiends. A wood, some distance off, skirting the common,
-tossed its gray, leafless branches wantonly in the winds; and anon a
-loud, shrill whistle, as of an army of hunters, rung out, down in the
-very heart of the forest. The major almost started from his feet, and
-rubbed his eyes to rouse himself from his drowsiness. The clouds were
-once more drifting swiftly across the sky, now rolling together into
-huge, dark masses, and now separating, and then weaving together again
-into a thousand fantastic shapes. Just at that instant the provoking
-star gleamed once more through the drift, and this time it stared at him
-more like his spouse than ever. The major could stand it no longer.
-Forgetting the fearful things around him, he shook his clenched fist at
-it, and said,
-
-“‘Hillo! you old, wry-faced vixen, how dare you squint at
-me—Ma—a—a—jor—Com—Compt—Compton—how dare you, I say? Do you want
-to remind me that I was once fool enough to get married?—I’d like to
-see the woman I’d have now: all the powers above or below couldn’t force
-me to get married again—no, no, you old crab-apple!—I—I—say—’
-
-“They couldn’t—couldn’t they?” quietly said a voice at his elbow.
-
-“And who the deuce are you?” said the major, turning sharply around.
-
-“‘Who do you think?’ said one of the oddest looking beings the major
-ever beheld—a short, mis-shapen man, with great goggle eyes, a roguish
-leer on his face, legs that were doubled up under him like a
-pocket-rule, and long, bony fingers, one of which was stuck knowingly
-aside his nose, while his eyes alternately were winking at the
-astonished major; for the little fellow seemed to be in high glee at the
-wonder he occasioned.
-
-“For some minutes they stood looking at each other without a word—the
-major’s eyes growing larger and larger with astonishment; while the odd
-little fellow kept winking away, with his finger at his nose, to his own
-apparent glee. At length he said,
-
-“‘Well—what d’ y’e think, old carbuncle?’
-
-“Now the major was a valiant man, and had any mortal thing called him by
-such a nick name, he would have first run him through and then almost
-eaten him alive; but he has told me a hundred times that his heart went
-like a forge-hammer to be addressed by a being of another world. So he
-only stammered,
-
-“‘I—I—don’t know—’
-
-“‘Speak up, man, speak up—why your voice is as thin and weak as if
-you’d been doctored for the quinzy a month.’
-
-“‘Lord bless you, sir, I never had it in my life,’ said the major, with
-sudden boldness.
-
-“‘Uh—uh—uh,’ interrupted the little fellow, menacingly, ‘none of
-that—none of that. No strange names if you please.’
-
-“The major’s heart again went like a fulling mill, and his throat felt
-as if he was about to choke; for he had no doubt it was the devil
-himself who stood before him.
-
-“‘I—I—beg pardon—your majesty—I—I.’
-
-“‘What! Strange names again,’ sternly interposed the goggle-eyed little
-fellow, and then, seeing how he had frightened his companion, he said,
-to re-assure him, ‘come, come, Major, this will never do. Let’s proceed
-to business.’
-
-“The major bowed, for he could not speak. The odd little fellow arose
-with the word, and taking the major’s hand, gave a spring from the
-ground, and in an instant they were sailing away through the air, over
-wood, river, hill, and valley, until they alighted at the door of a
-lone, solitary house, at the foot of a mountain. His companion pushed
-open the door, without ceremony, and they stood in the presence of a
-large company, apparently assembled to witness a marriage, for the
-bride, with her bridemaids, was sitting at the head of the room, and the
-company, especially the young ladies, were smiling and smirking as they
-always do on such occasions. The only thing wanting was a groom, and
-when the major took a second look at the bride, he did not wonder that
-he delayed his coming to the last moment. She was an old, withered
-beldame, sixty years of age, at the least, with a yellow skin, a hook
-nose, a sharp protruding chin, and little sunken grey eyes that leered
-on the major, as the door opened, with most provoking familiarity. Her
-ugliness was more apparent from the extreme beauty of the bridemaids,
-who seemed as if they might have been Houris from Paradise. As the major
-entered, the bridal company arose simultaneously. The parson stepped
-forward and opened his book. Every eye was turned upon the new-comers.
-
-“‘You are very late, my love,’ said the old hag, turning to the major.
-
-“‘Late!—my love!’ said he, starting back, and turning with
-astonishment, from his conductor, to the bride.
-
-“‘I have brought you to your wedding, you see,’ said the odd little
-fellow composedly, with a tantalising grin, ‘didn’t I hear you say, on
-the common, “that you’d like to see the woman you’d marry,” didn’t I?’
-and he grinned again.
-
-“‘Yes—my duck,’ simpered the hateful bride, leering on the major, ‘and
-I’ve been so alarmed lest you might have met with an accident to detain
-you. _Why_ were you so long?’ and she placed her hand fondly on the
-major’s arm.
-
-“‘Hands off,’ thundered the major, springing back, and again turning
-bewildered from one to another of his tormenters.
-
-“‘Come, come, now, major,’ said his conductor, with a malicious grin,
-‘it’s no use to resist, for _that_,’ said he with emphasis, pointing to
-the old hag, ‘is your bride. It is fate; and what is written, is written
-you know. I’ve no doubt,’ and here he gave another malicious grin, ‘that
-your married life in future will be one of unmitigated felicity.
-Come,—don’t you see the parson’s waiting?’
-
-“‘Yes, dear,’ said the bride, distorting her withered jaws into what was
-meant for a smile, ‘and don’t let us think, by any more hard words,’ and
-here she tried to sob, ‘that your fatigues have thrown you into a fever
-and delirium.’
-
-“Cold drops of sweat were on the major’s brow, as he looked around the
-room, and saw every eye bent upon him, some with amazement, some with
-contempt, but most with indignation. There was a menacing air on the
-brow of his conductor, which made him shake as if he had an ague chill.
-The major, moreover, was unarmed. But he made a desperate effort, and
-said piteously—
-
-“‘Marry! I didn’t want to get married—’
-
-“‘Not want to get married, when it’s your destiny!’ broke in his
-conductor, with a voice of thunder, striding up to the major, whose very
-teeth chattered with fright at his peril.
-
-“‘Why—why—y—I’ve no particular objection—that is to say,’ exclaimed
-the major with another desperate effort, ‘if I must get married, I’d
-sooner take one of these pretty, blue-eyed bridemaids here.’
-
-“‘You would—would you!’ said his conductor with a threatening look,
-‘dare but to think of it, and I’ll make you rue it to the last day of
-your existence,’ and again he scowled upon the major with a brow blacker
-than midnight, and which had a fearful indentation—the major used to
-say—as of a gigantic spear head, right in the centre.
-
-“The major always said that he resisted stoutly for a long time, even
-after his tormentor had fairly prostrated him with only a tap of his
-finger, and until strange figures, of unearthly shape, uttering terrible
-cries of anger, and attended by a strong smell of brimstone, came
-rushing into the room, without any apparent way of ingress, and
-surrounding him in a body, awaited the signal of his conductor to bear
-him off, he knew not whither, and inflict on him unheard of
-torments;—but as I knew the major was sometimes given to vaporing in
-his cups, I always set the better part of it down for exaggeration.
-However, at length he gave in, even according to his own account, and
-signified his willingness, though not without some qualms as he looked
-at the bride, to have the ceremony performed.
-
-“‘I knew it, major—a brave man never should struggle against fate,’
-said the little fellow with goggle eyes.
-
-“‘Needs must, when the—’
-
-“‘Sir,’ said the little fellow, turning fiercely around.
-
-“‘I beg pardon,’ said the major meekly.
-
-“But to wind up my story—for, egad, I believe you’re asleep—the major
-was married, had kissed the bride, and was actually performing the same
-duty on the bridemaids, when the little fellow with the goggle-eyes,
-perceiving what he was at, seized him angrily by the arm, whisked him up
-the chimney, bore him swiftly through the air, and with a roar of
-malicious laughter, that might have been heard a mile, exclaiming,—
-
-“‘There—wait, and your wife will pop in on you when you least expect
-it,’—let him drop to the earth, on the very common, and aside of the
-very pile of stones, where he had been sitting when he first saw the
-little, old fellow. But meantime the night had passed, and it was broad
-morning. The birds were singing in the neigboring woods,—the sound of
-the village clock striking the hour, boomed clear upon the air,—and a
-few cattle, with the monotonous tinkle of their bells, were leisurely
-crossing the commons, under the charge of a herd boy. For some minutes
-the major could not persuade himself but what it had all been a dream;
-but the damp sweat was still upon his brow, and every limb ached with
-the fall. So he couldn’t comfort himself with that assurance, but set
-himself down, on the contrary, as one of the most luckless men alive.
-
-“From that hour, sir, the major was a firm believer in destiny, and used
-to sigh whenever any one would talk of matrimony. He lived in constant
-fear lest his wife should find him out, and at last threw up his
-commission, only, I believe, that he might go to Europe, for better
-security. Some used to say it was only a drunken dream, out of which he
-had been awakened by falling upon the stones, but if the major heard it
-he was sure to challenge the slanderer, so that, in course of time, his
-story got to be believed by general consent. And now—you old
-curmudgeon—who’ll say marriages ain’t fixed by fate?”
-
-“But, Jeremy, to credit your ghost story requires rather a good deal of
-credulity.”
-
-“Credulity! Ghost story! what, egad, is life without a touch of romance,
-and what romance is so glorious as the one which deals in _diablerie_?
-Ah! my good fellow if I didn’t know that the major was generally
-credible, and therefore in this instance to be believed, I’d endorse his
-story just because it proves my assertion. Answer that, if you can!”
-
- J. S.
-
- February, 1841.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- THE FATHER’S BLESSING.
-
-
- BY MRS. S. A. WHELPLEY.
-
-
-The wind moaned in low and fitful gusts around the mansion, sounding at
-times, as if the wailings of departed spirits were borne upon the blast,
-when Mary Levingston sat alone in the solitude of her chamber. Her lamp
-was hid in a recess at a distance, and casting its pale and feeble beams
-across the darkened room, scarcely disclosed her drooping figure, or the
-tears upon her cheek. It was not that the fearful tumult without had
-affected her imagination, nor the thought that her only brother might be
-exposed to all the dangers of the coast. Something that more deeply
-touched her happiness awoke her grief. Wild, tumultuous thoughts
-agitated her bosom, and mocked the storm that shook her casement, and
-roared in all its fury around her.
-
-The substantial mansion of Mr. Levingston was situated in a delightful
-town in New Jersey. Here he had trained up an interesting and lovely
-family. Four of his daughters were married; three of them were settled
-in the same town with their father; the other resided in the city of New
-York. His only son, possessing many virtues, but a wild and roving
-disposition had, in opposition to his father’s advice, gone to sea, and
-had not been seen by any of his family for four years. Mary Levingston
-was the sole remaining daughter at home. She was the sun that lit up her
-father’s dwelling. Swift and light as the fawn had been her footstep
-till of late; when a cloud had passed over her gentle bosom, and
-obscured its brightness. A blast had swept over the flower and it was
-changed; but neither the cloud had been seen, nor the blast heard. Then
-wherefore this change?
-
-It was well known to Mr. Levingston’s family, that a strong and bitter
-alienation of feeling existed between himself and Mr. James, an early,
-and once dear friend, who, at the time of which we speak, resided in New
-York. So exasperated had Mr. L. become by a series of ungrateful acts on
-the part of this early friend, that on pain of his everlasting
-displeasure, he had forbidden his children ever associating with the
-family. Unfortunately for Mary, during a visit to the city, she had met
-with a son of Mr. James, and it was not until her affections were
-unchangeably fixed, that she had discovered his relationship to the most
-bitter enemy of her father. Admiring Mary at first sight, and conscious
-of the enmity between the families, her lover had sought an introduction
-to her under a false name, and it was long before she discovered the
-truth.
-
-When she did so, however, her determination was soon made. Obedience had
-been the law of her life, and she resolved at once to sacrifice her own
-feelings, in preference to that of her kind father’s wishes. She felt
-pained, moreover, that her lover should have deceived her even to win
-her affections. She fled from the scene of danger; but she could not fly
-from herself. In her own bosom she carried the image she had so fondly
-cherished, and which had been the object of her waking and sleeping
-dreams. It was after a long struggle, in which she had almost conquered,
-that she received a letter—which had caused her present grief—written
-by her sister, and informing her that her lover was about to sail for
-Europe, and asked for a last interview, if only to beg her forgiveness,
-and bid her farewell forever.
-
-“I will see him,” said Mary, “and convince him there is no hope, and
-then I will return and confess all to my beloved father, and throw
-myself upon his mercy. He will not cast me off when he finds I did not
-err knowingly.”
-
-She rose from her chair, as she thus spoke, arranged her dress, and
-descended to the parlor, with a countenance from which, except to a
-suspicious eye, every trace of grief had vanished.
-
-“You must not leave us so long again, my daughter,” said her venerable
-father, as she entered the room. “My home appears almost cheerless,
-unless I hear your voice. Sing to us one of your sweet songs.”
-
-“What shall I sing, dear father? Shall it be your favorite, Grace
-Darling?”
-
-“Not Grace Darling to-night, my love, it is mournful and tells of
-shipwreck and death.”
-
-“Well, I will sing my own favorite,” said Mary, seating herself at the
-piano, “it shall be
-
- ‘My heart’s in the Highlands,
- My heart is not here.’”
-
-The parents looked at each other and smiled, as their beautiful daughter
-struck the keys; for they felt that few beings were as lovely as their
-own Mary.
-
-“Dear papa!” said she at length, suddenly stopping, and turning around,
-“I want to ask a favor of _you_,—I am sure mamma will grant it. Let me
-go to New York next week. There now, I knew you would,—you are always
-such a kind and indulgent papa,” and throwing her arms around his neck,
-she kissed him tenderly.
-
-“Well, if mamma gives her consent, I suppose I must give mine. But, dear
-Mary, don’t come home this time so down-hearted as you did from the last
-visit you paid your sister. There now, since you have got your boon,
-play me another song.”
-
-Mary felt the blood rush to her very brow at this chance remark of her
-father; but turning around to her piano, she struck into a march, to
-hide her emotion.
-
-In a few days she set forth to New York, with a heart, vacillating
-between duty and love,—determined, however, to permit only one
-interview, and then to bid her lover adieu forever.
-
-“You will have a strong advocate in my wife,” said Mr. M—— to Mr.
-James, who sat on the sofa by Mary Levingston the evening of her
-arrival. “She is resolved, she says, to return home with her sister
-hoping she may be enabled to soften the feelings of Mr. Levingston
-toward your father.”
-
-“I hope she may prove a successful pleader,” said the lover, “and
-prepare the way for my casting myself at his feet when I return. Since I
-have obtained my sweet Mary’s forgiveness, I feel that I can now with
-courage brave the hardships of the deep. The thought that she loves me,
-will be the sun that will light my path in a distant clime. The thought
-that she is my advocate with her father fills me with the conviction
-that the ancient enmity will be buried in oblivion and that all will
-soon be well.”
-
-“You are far more sanguine, as to the result, dear Edward, than I am,”
-said Mary: “I have little hope myself of succeeding with my father. I
-know his feelings so well on this point, that I tremble lest I have
-sinned beyond forgiveness. One thing, here, in the presence of those
-that are so dear, I solemnly declare, though my heart may be crushed,
-never to unite my destiny to one his judgment disapproves. I should feel
-a solitary outcast, even with him I so tenderly love, without a father’s
-blessing.”
-
-“We shall have it, dear Mary, we shall have your father’s blessing,”
-exclaimed Edward, pressing her to his bosom, “for God will reward so
-filial and dutiful a daughter. I should feel myself to be a wretch were
-I to corrupt such purity, or wish you, for my sake, to sacrifice his
-peace.”
-
-We pass over the last two or three hours the lovers passed together. The
-clock had told the departure of midnight before they separated. Who
-could blame them for lengthening out an interview that was to be their
-last for months and perhaps forever?
-
-“I leave you, dear Mary,” said Edward, at length rising to go, “in
-obedience to the commands of my father. If God prospers me I shall soon
-again be with you. Cheer up my love, and remember my motto is ‘Brighter
-days will come.’”
-
-When Edward arrived in London, he hastened to fulfil the object of his
-voyage and put his business in a train for speedy adjustment. Days
-seemed to him weeks, and Mary could not have doubted his love had she
-known there was none in that great metropolis who could eclipse her
-beauty in the eyes of him she so fondly loved. In about three weeks the
-business which took him to London was settled, Mr. James was preparing
-to return home, when one night, at a late hour, the cry of “_fire_”
-resounded through the long halls of the Hotel in which he lodged. In an
-instant all was alarm and confusion. He enquired what part of the
-building was on fire, and was told that the eastern wing was all in
-flames. He hastened to the scene of danger, which appeared to be
-entirely forsaken. Nearly suffocated with smoke, he turned to retrace
-his steps, when a wild scream arrested his attention, and the next
-instant he beheld a young and beautiful female in her night dress
-rushing through the flames.
-
-“Save, oh! save him, for heaven’s sake,” she exclaimed, “save my sick
-husband, he is perishing! who, who will rescue him?”
-
-“I will,” said Mr. James, “but do not on your peril attempt to follow
-me.”
-
-In an instant he was lost to sight, but directly reappeared, bearing in
-a blanket the body of the helpless being he had been the means of
-snatching from an untimely death. He hastened to his own room and
-deposited his burden on the bed, and was administering restoratives,
-when his servant informed him that the firemen had succeeded in pulling
-down the eastern wing and were rapidly extinguishing the flames.
-
-“We have nothing now to fear,” said Mr. James, addressing the young
-female, who had partly shrunk behind the curtains to conceal her thinly
-clad person—“but you are cold,” said he, as he threw his own cloak
-around her, “pardon my neglect.”
-
-“Oh,” she exclaimed, bursting into tears: “talk not of neglect. You have
-been every thing to us. You have saved the life of my beloved husband,
-and an age of gratitude is ours.”
-
-Edward now left the room to seek for rest in another apartment. To sleep
-was impossible. The excitement of the past hour had been so great, that
-his nervous system was completely unstrung, and he passed the night in
-listening for some alarm. After breakfast, he hastened to the room of
-the invalid, to enquire for his health. Most joyfully was he greeted by
-both husband and wife, who now appeared to have recovered from the alarm
-of the past night. In the course of conversation, Mr. James mentioned
-that he was on the eve of starting for America.
-
-“When does the vessel sail?” inquired the lady anxiously.
-
-“This afternoon, at four o’clock,” replied Mr. J——, “and I should like
-before I say adieu, to become acquainted with the name of those I feel
-so deep an interest in.”
-
-“Our name is Levingston,” said the gentleman. “And yours, sir?”
-
-“James.”
-
-“Well, this is remarkable. A Levingston and a James to meet under
-circumstances that have bound them together by cords that death alone
-can sever!”
-
-Long and interesting was the communion of that morning. All was told.
-The gentleman he had rescued was the long absent brother of his own
-Mary. The tale of love was revealed, and Edward persuaded to wait one
-week longer, that they might return together to their native land.
-
-“I shall send despatches to my father by the vessel in which you
-expected to sail, this afternoon,” said Mr. Levingston, “and if he has
-any love for his only son, he must receive us as brothers.”
-
-We now hasten back to Mary Levingston. After the departure of Edward,
-New York had lost its attractions for her. Mr. M—— returned home with
-Mary. She indulged strong hopes of influencing her father in favor of
-Mr. James, and inducing him to consent to his union with her sister. But
-she was destined to be disappointed. Mr. Levingston would not even
-listen to her. Ringing the bell, he ordered Mary to be summoned to his
-presence.
-
-When Mary entered the room, her eye fell instantly beneath the steady
-gaze of her father.
-
-“I have sent for you,” said he, “to express my deep displeasure at your
-conduct, and my utter abhorrence for the man who could impose upon such
-a child as you. Your sister says you love the son of one that has
-insulted and abused me. Can it be so, Mary, my child?” said he, bursting
-into tears.
-
-In a moment Mary was on her knees before him. “Forgive me, dear father,
-I have sinned ignorantly. Forgive me,” she exclaimed, “for I here
-promise to renounce him forever.”
-
-“If this is your determination,” said Mr. Levingston, “rise and receive
-your father’s blessing. May you long enjoy the consolation of knowing
-you rendered the last days of your father peaceful and happy.”
-
-From that hour, Mary Levingston was calm and happy. Innocence and an
-approving conscience supported her.
-
-“Never,” said Mary, to her sister, Mrs. M——, on the morning of her
-departure, “mention in your letters the name of Mr. James, who in future
-must be as one dead to me. Tell him, when he returns, that my
-determination is unalterable, and bid him seek some more congenial
-alliance.”
-
-Weeks rolled round and found the calm quiet of the Levingston’s
-unbroken. The rose was still blooming on the cheek of Mary. No change
-had taken place in any except Mr. Levingston. It was very evident to all
-his friends that he rapidly failed. Every step of the hill he was
-descending seemed to fatigue him, and the only cordial that revived his
-fainting spirit, was the presence of his youngest child. Was not Mary
-Levingston, as she gazed on his pale face and feeble frame, rejoiced at
-the sacrifice she had made to secure his peace? Yes, the happiness she
-now felt was of a calm, enduring nature. She could lie down and rise up
-without listening to the upbraidings of a guilty conscience, without
-having to reflect that it was her rebellion which had dimmed the eye and
-paralyzed the step of her father. Every night before she retired, she
-received his embrace, and heard him say, “God bless you Mary, you have
-been a dutiful child.”
-
-Late one evening, in the latter part of October, a servant entered the
-parlor where the family was sitting with a package of letters. He
-delivered them to Mr. Levingston, and retired. The hand trembled that
-broke the seal.
-
-“This is from our dear son,” said he, turning to his wife, and holding
-up a letter, “and here is one for each of his sisters. Let me see, two
-of them are directed to Mary, here they are, take them.”
-
-He now commenced reading the letter aloud, which told of the prosperity
-and marriage of his son, and his intention of leaving England for home
-the following week. Then came the description of the fire. The
-peril—the rescue; the name of him who had exposed his own life to
-snatch a stranger from the flames. At this part of the letter Mr.
-Levingston suddenly stopped and left the room. In his study he finished
-its perusal.
-
-“What does this mean?” he exclaimed, rapidly walking the floor, “It
-seems as though the hand of God was in this thing. I would that some
-other one had saved him. He asks me to receive his deliverer as my son.
-Bold request—and yet I will do it. I will receive him as a son, for he
-has saved the life of my Walter at the risk of his own. For so generous,
-so noble an act, I here bury my enmity forever.”
-
-Mr. Levingston, with a lighter heart than he had felt for months,
-returned to the parlor. Mary met him at the door.
-
-“This letter, dear papa,” said she, “I return to you. I have not read
-it, neither do I desire to. It is written by one I have renounced
-forever.”
-
-“Keep it, Mary,” said Mr. Levingston, “and cherish the memory of the
-writer. I have buried my resentment forever toward that family. From
-this hour shall we not bless the deliverer of our son?”
-
-Mary was astonished. She could scarcely persuade herself that all was
-not a dream. Still holding the letter toward her father, and gazing
-immoveably in his face, she seemed rather a statue than a human being.
-
-“Do you think I am trifling?” said he, as he pressed her to his bosom.
-“No, Mary, I love you too well for that. From this moment you have my
-consent to become the wife of him, who, although so tenderly loved, you
-felt willing to sacrifice to the peace of your aged father.”
-
-The intervening days, preceding the arrival of Walter, rapidly glided
-away in busy preparation. Suddenly, however, Mr. Levingston was taken
-dangerously ill at midnight. His symptoms were so alarming that a
-council of physicians was called before morning, when an express was
-sent to New York for his children.
-
-Calm and collected, Mary Levingston might be seen noiselessly moving
-about her father’s chamber. No hand but hers could administer his
-medicine, or smooth his pillow. The thought of death—the death of her
-father—had not once crossed her mind. His life seemed so necessary to
-his family, that such an event appeared impossible.
-
-“Has he come, Mary?”
-
-“Who, dear father?” she gently asked, stooping and kissing his brow.
-
-“Walter, my son, has he come?”
-
-“It is too soon yet to expect him.”
-
-“Too soon,” said he, faintly, “I fear then I shall never see him. The
-hand of death is on me, my child, I feel its chill.”
-
-“You will kill me, dear father, if you talk so. You will soon be better.
-I thought this was to be the happiest week of my life,” said she,
-bursting into tears.
-
-“Mary,” observed Mr. Levingston, “I wish you to be calm and listen to
-me. If I should not live to see my son, tell him he was his father’s
-idol. Tell him to transmit the name of Levingston, unsullied, to
-posterity, and to be the comfort and support of his widowed mother. One
-more message and I am done,” said he, wiping the cold sweat from off his
-brow. “Hark!” he exclaimed, hearing a noise, “perhaps that is Walter.”
-Finding himself disappointed, he proceeded—“request Edward James to
-tell his father that I die in peace with all men, and joyfully entrust
-the happiness of my daughter to his son. I had hoped to have given away
-the treasure with my own hand, but that is all over. Leave me now for a
-few moments, I wish to see your mother.”
-
-That interview over there was a solemn silence for a few moments, when
-he exclaimed, “Did you say he had come? Oh my son, receive my blessing.”
-
-“You were dreaming, dear father,” said Mary, “Walter is not here.”
-
-“Well, well, it is all right,” he replied. He never spoke more: in a few
-hours his spirit took its final flight.
-
-It was late in the evening when the mournful intelligence of Mr.
-Levingston’s illness reached his children in New York. They instantly
-set forth to gain, if possible, his dying couch in time to obtain his
-blessing.
-
-“Where is my father?” exclaimed Walter on his arrival at the mansion,
-rushing by his mother and sisters who had hastened to the door to meet
-them. “Lead me to my father,” said he, catching hold of Mary.
-
-As she went toward the room, he rushed by her; and entered, closed, and
-locked the door. Mary stood without listening to his wild outbursts of
-grief.
-
-In anguish he called upon him once more to speak to him. It was the
-lamentation of the prodigal yearning in vain to hear his father’s voice.
-It was the pleading of the wanderer who had returned with the hope of
-cheering his last days.
-
-“Mary,” said a gentle, well known voice, “My beloved Mary, we meet with
-your father’s blessing resting upon us.”
-
-In an instant she was in the arms of Edward James, and weeping upon his
-bosom. Walter Levingston at this moment entered the apartment.
-
-“Did my father ask for me, Mary?” said he.
-
-“Oh yes,” she replied, “often. Almost his last words were, ‘My son
-receive my blessing.’ And he told me to request you, Edward, to say to
-your father, ‘I die in peace with all men, and willingly entrust the
-happiness of my daughter to your son.’”
-
-“Forever blessed be his memory,” said Edward. “Never shall his
-confidence be misplaced, or that daughter have reason to doubt my
-trust.”
-
-The door now opened, and Mrs. Levingston, leaning on the arm of one of
-her daughters, entered. “Beloved mother,” said Walter, embracing her,
-“from this hour it shall be my first care and study to promote your
-comfort. Here by the corpse of my father, I resolve to do all in my
-power to fill his place, and render your last days peaceful and happy.”
-
-Some months from this period, a party was seen to alight from a carriage
-early one morning in front of Saint Paul’s Church. The blessings of many
-were heard in low murmurs from the crowd that filled the vestibule. “She
-was the pride of her father,” said an aged female who stood leaning
-against the wall, “and I know she will be a blessing to her husband.”
-
-Early as was the hour, the Church was crowded with spectators. Many had
-risen to get a more perfect view of the fine manly form of him that was
-about to bear away the sweet Mary Levingston from her maiden home. The
-silence was intense as the impressive marriage ceremony of the Episcopal
-Church was read; and fervent were the responses of those who promised
-through weal and wo to be faithful to each other. As the party turned to
-leave the Church, a hearty “God bless them,” resounded from many. Mrs.
-James was greatly affected as she cast a farewell glance on these
-familiar faces. Her husband hurried her to the carriage.
-
-“The blessing of many has rested on you, dear Mary, to-day,” said he, as
-they were borne to their new home.
-
-“Yes,” said she, “and I thought as I stood before the bridal altar, I
-heard the voice of my departed father saying, ‘God bless you.’”
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- I AM YOUR PRISONER.
-
-
- BY THOMAS DUNN ENGLISH, M. D.
-
-
- Lady! I bow before thee
- A captive to thy will,
- A spell of thine is o’er me,
- But joy is with me still.
-
- I yield me, not to beauty,
- Though thou, indeed art fair;
- I yield me—not to lightness,
- Though thou art light as air.
-
- I yield me, not to wisdom,
- Thou wisest of thy kind,
- But, rescue, or no rescue,
- To thy purity of mind.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- A SKETCH FROM LIFE.
-
-
- BY J. TOMLIN.
-
-
-The subject of the present sketch has had in time, the most sincere
-friendship of the writer. One act, and one alone, has made them
-enemies—irreconcilably, forever. It is to be regretted that it is so,
-yet it cannot be otherwise, and the honor of both be preserved. There is
-in any and every one, that aspires to greatness, a tameless absurdity,
-when suffering a reprehensible action of an associate to pass away like
-the morning mist on the flower, without noticing it, or giving the
-admonitory reproof, that often corrects and finally subdues the evil. We
-are not such isolated creatures on the surface of a world passing away,
-as to require a more powerful impulse in the correction of an evil, than
-the blessings it gives to our fellow beings.
-
-Gordon De Severn was my senior by some several years;—but in all of his
-actions, there was a freshness and youthfulness, so akin to what I did,
-and what I felt myself, that I could not keep away from him. He was a
-scholar, but not of the schools, therefore none ever complained of his
-dullness. His Aristotelian capacity grasped almost intuitively, what
-others could scarcely get by the most diligent researches; and with the
-perception of a Byron, he disclosed every beautiful thought that ever
-swept along the labyrinth of mind. He was a mighty genius, free, bold,
-and daring! He liked to see the bubbles of time vanish, and others
-coming in their places, but did not recollect, that soon, very soon, the
-vapour that supported his adolescent spirits, would dissolve, and be no
-more forever! He was an observer on the world—a spy on the tumultuous
-feelings that agitate, and corrupt the heart;—and he boasted that he
-was of the world, but a being removed beyond its temptations.
-
-Six summers ago, Eliza Wharton was young, happy, and full of innocence.
-How altered now is this creature, from what she was when I first knew
-her. Time often makes worse havoc with the reputation, than with the
-body. A little while ago, Eliza Wharton was not more fair than she was
-innocent; but now at the heart the canker-worm preys voraciously, as is
-evidenced by the deep lines that mark the cheek. Retired beyond the
-precincts of the bustle of the multitude; lost to friends that once
-loved her,—she lives a solitary creature, ruined in reputation by the
-very being she once loved;—penitent in seclusion, she has wept her sins
-forgiven, and will win her way to heaven, in spite of a cold—cold
-world.
-
-Being in affluent circumstances, she moved in the first circles of
-society in the little town that gave her birth. She was intellectual and
-beautiful, which made her an object of envy to the many. Women envy the
-beauty they see in every one of their sex, and man, the rich endowment
-of mind, that makes his fellow being more distinguished than himself.
-How apt are we to despise any noble capacity that we see in others, when
-we possess it not ourself—and the good qualities that show themselves
-most splendidly in our neighbor, are a bright mark, at which we level in
-bitterness, the wrath of our envy. Those that have but the most common
-endowments of our nature, are generally the most happy, and almost
-always move in a path, that leads to a peaceful destiny. Had Eliza
-Wharton been one of the common, ordinary creatures that move in humble
-life, in her fall, she would have had the sympathies of the world. But
-being of a superior mould both in body and mind,—her fall was
-unregretted, unwept.
-
-In an evil hour there came along a being in the shape of man, like
-herself of towering intellect, but unlike her in goodness of heart and
-benevolence of feeling. She loved him! She thought that she saw in him
-something superior to any thing that she had ever seen before in others.
-Nobleness of mien he certainly had—and the ways of the world he was
-familiar with, for he had travelled much. He had studied, but not from
-books. The volume of nature as it lay spread out before him, in gorgeous
-robes of mixed colors, dyed with the richest tints the every avenue to
-the soul, and he became a poet in feeling. His was the philosophy of
-feeling and not of reason—therefore he erred. Every emotion of the
-heart, he mistook for inspiration of the soul—and he fed the keen
-appetites of his nature from every stream that rippled his path. What to
-him was good, he never considered might be poison to others. His was the
-mighty ocean of mind, not cramped by _this_ usage, or _that_ custom—but
-free, bold and daring! He visited fountains that could not be reached by
-every one, and drank of waters that inspired different sensations from
-what were felt by the world in which he lived.
-
-I do well recollect the time when these two beings first met. It was on
-the eighteenth anniversary of Eliza’s birth—and at a _fête_, given by
-her father, in honor of the occasion. It was in May, the month of
-flowers; and though a moonless night, yet the bright stars looked down
-in myriads on the happy earth. Eliza was all joy and animation. Before
-her lay the rich fields of pleasure, and she seized on every moment as
-one of gladness, and of happiness. She did not know that in her path,
-there lay a serpent that would soon destroy her. Gordon De Severn, like
-some fiery comet, attracted every eye, and spell-bound the poor maiden
-that happened to come within the hearing of his magic words. Exclusively
-on that night, did he appropriate Eliza to himself. She listened,
-enraptured at every word he spoke, and fell at last a victim, to the
-snare he then laid. He played his part so well on that night, that he
-fairly captured the fair one’s heart—and for the first time in her
-life, she retired, to a sleepless pillow, bedewed with tears. De Severn
-admired her, but he was not in love.
-
-For several months after their first interview, he was almost a daily
-visitor at her house. He courted her—and he won her. She believed him,
-when he told her, that he would be her friend. She believed him when he
-said, that he loved her. She trusted, when he deceived. She fell because
-she loved one too much, that proved himself a villain, and not because
-she was base. She departed from virtue, not because she was in love with
-vice, but to oblige one that she loved much. She fell—and this vile
-seducer is now sporting in the sunshine of wealth—and has friends, and
-is received into the houses of the honorable, and is caressed, and is
-smiled upon; while the poor injured one—Eliza Wharton, is abandoned by
-the world, and by her relations, to pine in some sequestered spot, and
-die of a broken heart.
-
-How often does it happen in this world of ours, that the betrayer
-receives honor from the hands of the people, and the betrayed is scoffed
-at and reviled, for being so credulous as to believe even a tale
-of—Love.
-
- Jackson, Tenn.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- THE INVITATION.
-
-
- BY E. G. MALLERY.
-
-
- Come, altho’ fair is thy southern clime,
- Where the sea-breeze fanneth thy cheek,
- And the stars come forth at the vesper chime,
- With a beauty no tongue may speak;
- Tho’ the moon-beam slumbers upon thy brow
- As it slumbered in hours of yore;
- And the night bird’s song has the same tone now
- In thy life’s bright spring that it bore;
- Come, tho’ from streamlet, from hill, and from plain,
- Rush a thousand fond memories forth,
- And cluster around thy light step to detain—
- Oh! come to our home in the North!
-
- They tell you how bleak is our northern sky
- When the storm-spirit spreadeth his wings;
- How his shout is heard from the mountain high,
- How in glee thro’ the valley it rings:
- How his strong hand bows the proud old oak,
- And in sport uprooteth the pine;
- How he folds the hills in his spotless cloak,
- And the groves with his brilliants shine:
- How his breath enchaineth the rolling tide,
- And bids the chaf’d torrent be still,
- Then dashes away in his might and his pride,
- And laughs that they heeded his will!
-
- They tell you our birds at the Autumn’s breath,
- When the flow’rs droop over their tomb,
- Are off to the land where they meet no death,
- And the orange-trees ever more bloom.
- Tell them we ask not affection so slight
- That at fortune’s first frown it is o’er,
- And we’re certain again when our skies become bright
- They’ll flutter around us once more,
- And tell them there grows on our mountain crest
- A plant which no winter can fade—
- And, as changeless, the love of a northern breast,
- Blooms ever in sunshine and shade!
-
- Come, and we’ll teach you when Summer is fled,
- And the rich robe of Autumn withdrawn,
- To welcome old Winter, whose hoary head
- Is bow’d ’neath his sparkling crown;
- For soon as his whistle is heard from afar
- Commanding the winds round his throne,
- And echoes in distance the roll of his car,
- We encircle the joyous hearth-stone;
- And eyes brighter flash, and cheeks deeper glow,—
- The voice of the song gushes forth,
- And ceaseless and light is each heart’s happy flow—
- Oh! come to our home in the North!
-
- Wyoming, 1841.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- YOU NEVER KNEW ANNETTE.—BALLAD.
-
-
- Written by T. Haynes Bayly, Esq.—The Music composed by C. M. Sola.
-
- Geo. W. Hewitt & Co., No. 184 Chesnut Street, Philadelphia.
-
-[Illustration: musical score]
-
- You praise each youthful form you see,
- And love is still your theme;
- And when you win no praise from me,
- You say how cold I seem:
- You know not what it is to pine
- With
-
-[Illustration: musical score continued]
-
- ceaseless vain regret;
- You never felt a love like mine,
- You never knew Annette,
- You never felt a love like mine,
- You never, never knew Annette.
-
- For ever changing, still you rove,
- As I in boyhood roved;
- But when you tell me this is love,
- It proves you never loved!
- To many idols you have knelt,
- And therefore soon forget;
- But what I feel you never felt,
- You never knew Annette.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- SPORTS AND PASTIMES.
-
-
-When the shooter has been long accustomed to a dog, he can tell by the
-dog’s proceeding, whether game is near or not when pointed, or whether
-the birds are running before the dog. If he suspect them to be running,
-he must walk up quickly before his dog, for if he stop or appear to look
-about him, the birds instantly rise. Whenever it is practicable, unless
-the birds be very tame and his dogs young ones, the shooter should place
-himself so that the birds may be between him and the dogs. They will
-then lie well. The moment a dog points, the first thing to be done is to
-cast a glance round to ascertain in which direction the covers and
-corn-fields lie; the next is to learn the point of the wind; the shooter
-will then use his endeavor to gain the wind of the birds, and to place
-himself between them and the covers, or otherwise avail himself of other
-local circumstances.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- PARTRIDGE SHOOTING.
-
-
-[Illustration: partridge]
-
-We commence our notice of feathered game with the partridge, as shooting
-that bird is generally the young sportsman’s first lesson, although in
-the order of the season grouse shooting takes precedence.
-
-The partridge may be termed a home bird, for the shooter who resides in
-the country, finds it almost at his door, while it is requisite to
-undertake a journey, perchance a very long one, before he arrives at the
-grounds frequented by grouse. As it requires neither woods, nor marshes,
-nor heaths to afford them shelter, they are found more widely scattered
-than the pheasant, the woodcock, or the grouse, and hence the pursuit of
-them is one of the chief sources of recreation to the shooter. Though
-not so highly prized by the sportsman as the birds last mentioned, the
-abundance in which partridges are found, wherever they are preserved,
-renders the sport sufficiently attractive. At the commencement of the
-season, when they have not been much disturbed by persons breaking dogs,
-they are as tame as could be wished by the most inexpert sportsman, and
-at that time afford capital diversion to the young shooter, and to those
-rheumatic and gouty old gentlemen who—too fond of their ease to brush
-the covers or range the mountains—in the lowland valleys, “shoulder
-their crutch, and show how fields were won.” Partridges are most
-plentiful in those countries where much grain, buckwheat, and white
-crops are grown. While the corn is standing, it is very rare that many
-shots can be obtained, for the coveys, on being disturbed, wing their
-way to the nearest cornfield, where it is forbidden the shooter to
-follow them, or to send his dogs in after them.
-
-The habits of the partridge should be studied by the shooter. In the
-early part of the season, partridges will be found, just before sunrise,
-running to a brook, a spring, or marsh, to drink; from which place they
-almost immediately fly to some field where they can find abundance of
-insects, or else to the nearest corn-field or stubble field, where they
-will remain, according to the state of the weather, or other
-circumstances, until nine or ten o’clock, when they go to bask. The
-basking-place is commonly on a sandy bank-side facing the sun, where the
-whole covey sits huddled together for several hours. About four or five
-o’clock they return to the stubbles to feed, and about six or seven they
-go to their jucking-place, a place of rest for the night, which is
-mostly an aftermath, or in a rough pasture field, where they remain
-huddled together until morning. Such are their habits during the early
-part of the season; but their time of feeding and basking varies much
-with the length of the days. While the corn is standing, unless the
-weather be very fine or very wet, partridges will often remain in it all
-day; when fine, they bask on the out-skirts; when wet, they run to some
-bare place in a sheltered situation, where they will be found crowded
-together as if basking, for they seldom remain long in corn or grass
-when it is wet. Birds lie best on a hot day. They are wildest on a damp
-or boisterous day.
-
-The usual way of proceeding in search of partridges in September is to
-try the stubbles first. It not unfrequently happens that potatoes or
-turnips are grown on a headland in a corn-field; in that case the
-headland will be a favorite resort of birds.
-
-After the middle of October, it is ever uncertain where birds will be
-found; the stubbles having been pretty well gleaned, birds do not remain
-in them so long as in the early part of the season. When disturbed at
-this time, they will sometimes take shelter in woods, where they are
-flushed one by one. The best shots that can be obtained at partridges,
-in winter, are when the birds are driven into woods.
-
-When a covey separates, the shooter will generally be able to kill many
-birds, but late in the season it is seldom that the covey can be broken.
-In November and December the shooter must not expect to have his birds
-pointed, but must remain content with firing at long distances. In the
-early part of the season, when the shooter _breaks_ a covey, he should
-proceed without loss of time in search of the dispersed birds, for the
-parent birds begin to call almost immediately on their alighting, the
-young ones answer, and in less than half an hour, if not prevented by
-the presence of the shooter and his dogs, the whole covey will be
-re-assembled, probably in security in some snug corner, where the
-shooter least thinks of looking for them. As the season advances, birds
-are longer in re-assembling after being dispersed. It is necessary to
-beat very closely for dispersed birds, as they do not stir for some time
-after alighting, on which account dogs cannot wind them until nearly
-upon them, especially as they resort to the roughest places when
-dispersed. Birds dispersed afford the primest sport. The pointing is
-often beautiful, the bird being generally in a patch of rushes, or tuft
-of grass or fern, and close to the dog. When a bird has been running
-about some time, dogs easily come upon the scent of it; but when it has
-not stirred since alighting, and has perhaps crept into a drain, or run
-into a hedge-bottom, or the sedgy side of a ditch, no dog can wind it
-until close upon it, and the very best dogs will sometimes flush a
-single bird. In the month of October, and afterward, the shooter will
-find it difficult to approach within gun-shot of a covey, nor can he
-disperse them, except by firing at them when he chances to come close
-upon them. Should he then be so fortunate as to disperse a covey, he may
-follow them leisurely, for they will then lie several hours in their
-lurking-place, which is chosen with much tact, as a patch of rushes, a
-gorse bush, a holly bush, the bottom of a double bank fence, or a
-coppice of wood. The length of time that will transpire before a
-dispersed covey will re-assemble, depends too on the time of the day,
-and state of the weather. In hot weather, they will lie still for
-several hours. A covey dispersed early in the morning, or late at night,
-will soon re-assemble. A covey dispersed between the hours of ten and
-two, will be some time in re-assembling. A covey found in the morning in
-a stubble-field, and dispersed, will next assemble near the
-basking-place. A covey dispersed after two o’clock, will next assemble
-in the stubble-field at feeding time. A covey disturbed and dispersed
-late in the afternoon, or evening, will next re-assemble near the
-jucking-place. A covey being disturbed on or near to their
-jucking-place, will seek a fresh one, perhaps about two fields distant;
-and if often disturbed at night on their jucking-place, they will seek
-another stubble-field to feed in, and change their quarters altogether.
-The most certain method of driving partridges from a farm, is to disturb
-them night after night at their jucking-place, which is usually in a
-meadow, where the aftermath is suffered to grow, or in a field rough
-with rushes, fern, thistles, or heather, adjoining to a corn-field. When
-a covey is dispersed on a dry hot day, it is necessary to search much
-longer, and beat closer, for the dispersed birds, than when the day is
-cool and the ground moist. A dog should be only slightly rated for
-running up a bird on a hot day.
-
-The shooter, on entering a field, should make it a general rule,
-provided the wind or nature of the ground do not lead him to decide on a
-contrary course, to beat that side which is nearest the covers; or, if
-there be no neighboring covers, he should beat round the field, leaving
-the centre of the field to the last. In hot weather birds frequent bare
-places, sunny hill-sides, or sandy banks, at the root of a tree, or
-hedge-bottom, where there is plenty of loose loam or sand which they can
-scratch up. In cold weather they will be found in sheltered places. In
-cold windy weather those fields only which lie under the wind should be
-beaten. The warm valleys, the briary cloughs, and glens not over-wooded,
-but abounding in fern, underwood, and holly trees, and also those steep
-hill-sides which lie under the wind, are then places of resort. Heights
-and flats must be avoided, except where there are small enclosures well
-protected by double hedges, under the shelter of which birds will
-remain. The shooter who beats the south or west side of a hedge, will
-generally obtain more shots than he who beats the north or east side.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- REVIEW OF NEW BOOKS.
-
-
- _“The Tower of London.” A Historical Romance. By W. H.
- Ainsworth. Author of Jack Sheppard. 1 vol. Lea & Blanchard:
- Philada. 1841._
-
-The authorship of this work does a little, and but a little more credit
-to Mr. Ainsworth than that of Jack Sheppard. It is in no spirit of
-cavilling that we say, that it is rarely our lot to review a work more
-utterly destitute of every ingredient requisite to a good romance.
-
-We would premise, however, in the outset of our remarks, that the
-popularity of this work in London is no proof of its merits. Its
-success, in fact, reminds us how nearly akin its author, in his
-treatment of the public, is to Dr. Sangrado. Blood-letting, and warm
-water was the making of the latter—and bombast and clap-trap is the
-Alpha and Omega of the former. In the present volume we have it
-plentifully administered in descriptions of the Tower of London, and the
-plots of the bloody Mary’s reign. It is this local interest which has
-given Mr. Ainsworth’s romance such a run in London, just as a family
-picture, in which a dozen ugly urchins, and sundry as ugly angels in the
-clouds, is the delight of the parents, and the envy of all aunts.
-
-The Tower of London is, at once, forced and uninteresting. It is such a
-novel as sets one involuntarily to nodding. With plenty of incident,
-considerable historical truth, and a series of characters, such as an
-author can rarely command, it is yet, excepting a chapter here and
-there, “flat, stale, and unprofitable.” The incidents want piquancy; the
-characters too often are destitute of truth. The misfortunes of Lady
-Jane are comparatively dull to any one who remembers Mr. Millar’s late
-romance; and Simon Reynard is under another name, the same dark,
-remorseless villain as Jonathan Wild. The introduction of the giants
-would grate harshly on the reader’s feelings, if the author had not
-failed to touch them by his mock-heroics. Were it not for the tragic
-interest attached to Lady Jane Grey, and the pride that every Englishman
-feels in the oldest surviving palace of his kings, this novel would have
-fallen stillborn from the press in London, as completely it has ruined
-the author’s reputation in America.
-
-We once, in reviewing Jack Sheppard, expressed our admiration of the
-author’s talents, although we condemned their perversion in the novel
-then before us. This duplicate of that worthless romance, and
-scandalously demoralising novel, proves either that the author is
-incorrigible, or that the public taste is vitiated. We rather think the
-former. We almost recant our eulogy on Mr. Ainsworth’s talents. If he
-means to earn a name, one whit loftier than that of a mere book-maker,
-let him at once betake himself to a better school of romance. Such
-libels on humanity; such provocatives to crime; such worthless, inane,
-disgraceful romances as Jack Sheppard and its successors, are a blot on
-our literature, and a curse to our land.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _“Visits to Remarkable Places, Battle-Fields, Cathedrals,
- Castles, &c.” By W. Howitt. 2 vols. Carey & Hart, Philada._
-
- _“The Rural Life of England.” By W. Howitt. 1 vol. Carey & Hart,
- Philada._
-
-Next after Professor Wilson comes Howitt. The same genial spirit, the
-same soul-breathing poetry, the same intense love for what is beautiful
-in nature, and often the same involution of style, and the same
-excursive ideas, characterise the editor of Blackwood, and the brother
-of the Quaker poet.
-
-The latter of the productions above, is, as its name imports, a
-description of the rural life of England, whether found under the
-gipsey’s hedge, in the peasant’s cottage, or amid the wide parks and
-lordly castles of the aristocracy. It is a picture of which England may
-be proud. The author has omitted nothing which could make his subject
-interesting, and in presenting it suitably to his reader he has
-surpassed himself, and almost equalled North. The old, but now decaying
-customs of “merrie England;” the winter and summer life of peasant and
-noble in the country; the sports of every kind, and every class, from
-milling to horse-racing; and the forest and landscape scenery of every
-portion of Great Britain are described with a graphic pen, and a fervor
-of language, which cannot fail to make “The Rural Life of England”
-popular every where.
-
-Among the most interesting chapters of this work are those on the
-Gipsies, and that respecting Mayday, and Christmas. The description of
-Grouse-Shooting, both in the north of England, and the Highlands is
-highly graphic; while the visits to Newstead and Annesley Hall are
-narrated with much vivacity.
-
-It was the popularity of these two last chapters which suggested the
-preceding volumes above, entitled “Visits to Remarkable Places.” Nothing
-can be simpler than the design of this latter work. With a taste for
-antiquarian research, and a soul all-glowing with poetry, the author has
-gone forth into the quiet dells, and amid the time-worn cities of
-England, and visiting every old castle, or battle-field, known in
-history, and peopling them with the heroic actors of the past, he has
-produced a work of unrivalled interest. We wish we had room for a
-chapter from the second of these two volumes, entitled “A Day-Dream at
-Tintangel.” It is one of the most poetical pieces of prose we have ever
-met with. The old castle of King Arthur seems once more to lift its
-massy battlements, above the thundering surf below, and from its portals
-go forth the heroes of the Round Table, with hound and hawk, and many a
-fair demoiselle.
-
-Next, certainly, to a visit to any remarkable place, is a graphic
-description of its appearance. This, in every instance, where the author
-has attempted it, is presented in the “Visits to Remarkable Places.”
-Stratford on the Avon; Anne Hathaway’s cottage; the ancestral home of
-the Sidneys; Culloden battlefield; the old regal town of Winchester,
-formerly the abode of the Saxon kings, and where their monuments still
-remain; Flodden-field; Hampton Court; and in short, most of the
-remarkable places in England, are brought vividly before the reader’s
-mind. Indeed, many a traveller, who has seen these celebrated places,
-might be put to the blush by one who had attentively perused this work,
-and who yet had never crossed the Atlantic.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _“The Kinsmen, or the Black Riders of the Congaree.” A Romance.
- By the author of Guy Rivers, &c. 2 vols.—Lea & Blanchard,
- Philada. 1841._
-
-A good novel is always welcome; and a good one from an American pen is
-doubly so. Since the publication of the Pathfinder, we have seen nothing
-equal to the Kinsmen.
-
-The story is laid at the period of the Revolution, and Clarence Conway,
-the hero, is a prominent actor in the partizan war, which then raged in
-the Carolinas. Many of the characters are well drawn, and the interest
-is kept up throughout. Flora Middleton is an exquisite creation of the
-novelist’s pen. She deserves to be placed alongside of James’s finest
-female characters.
-
-We have room for only a short extract. In it, however, the interest is
-worked up to a pitch of the most intense excitement. The hero, be it
-remembered, having fallen into the hands of the Black Riders, has
-irritated their ruffian leader. To the outlaw’s threats he replies:
-
- “I am Colonel Conway, and, dog of a tory, I defy you. Do your
- worst. I know you dare do nothing of the sort you threaten. I
- defy and spit upon you.”
-
- The face of the outlaw blackened:—Clarence rose to his feet.
-
- “Ha! think you so? We shall see. Shumway, Frink, Gasson!—you
- three are enough to saddle this fiery rebel to his last horse.
- Noose him, you slow moving scoundrels, to the nearest sapling,
- and let him grow wiser in the wind. To your work,
- villains—away!”
-
- The hands of more than one of the ruffians were already on the
- shoulders of the partizan. Though shocked at the seeming
- certainty of a deed which he had not been willing to believe
- they would venture to execute, he yet preserved the fearless
- aspect which he had heretofore shown. His lips still uttered the
- language of defiance. He made no concessions, he asked for no
- delay—he simply denounced against them the vengeance of his
- command, and that of his reckless commander, whose fiery energy
- of soul and rapidity of execution they well knew. His language
- tended still farther to exasperate the person who acted in the
- capacity of the outlaw chief. Furiously, as if to second the
- subordinates in the awful duty in which they seemed to him to
- linger, he grasped the throat of Clarence Conway with his own
- hands, and proceeded to drag him forward. There was evidently no
- faltering in his fearful purpose. Every thing was serious. He
- was too familiar with such deeds to make him at all heedful of
- consequences; and the proud bearing of the youth; the
- unmitigated scorn in his look and language; the hateful words
- which he had used, and the threats which he had denounced; while
- they exasperated all around, almost maddened the ruffian in
- command, to whom such defiance was new, and with whom the taking
- of life was a circumstance equally familiar and unimportant.
-
- “_Three_ minutes for prayer is all the grace I give him!” he
- cried, hoarsely, as he helped the subordinates to drag the
- destined victim toward the door. He himself was not suffered
- _one_. The speech was scarcely spoken, when he fell prostrate on
- his face, stricken in the mouth by a rifle-bullet, which entered
- through an aperture in the wall opposite. His blood and brains
- bespattered the breast of Clarence Conway, whom his falling body
- also bore to the floor of the apartment. A wild shout from
- without followed the shot, and rose, strong and piercing, above
- all the clamor within. In that shout Clarence could not doubt
- that he heard the manly voice of the faithful Jack Bannister,
- and the deed spoke for itself. It could have been the deed of a
- friend only.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _“The Hour and the Man.” A novel. By Harriet Martineau. 2 vols.
- Harper & Brothers, New York, 1841._
-
-We do not belong to the admirers of Miss Martineau, though barring her
-ear-trumpet, and a few foolish notions, she is a very respectable and
-inoffensive old lady. Her present work is founded on the career of the
-celebrated negro chieftain, whom Napoleon had conveyed to France, and
-who there died. The good old spinster has taken up the Orthodox English
-account of this transaction, and as Napoleon was always a monster in the
-eyes of the Cockneys, Touissant, according to their story and Miss
-Martineau’s, was murdered. Nothing can be more ridiculous. Bonaparte
-never committed a crime where it could be avoided, and having once
-secured Touissant in a state prison in France, what farther had the
-first consul to fear from the negro chieftain?
-
-The story is, in some parts, well told. It has been apparently prepared
-with much care. But it fails, totally fails, in its main object; and
-though as men, we sympathise with a persecuted man, we cannot, as
-critics, overlook the glaring faults of the novel, or, as partizans of
-truth, forgive the historical inaccuracies of the narrative.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _“The History of England from the Earliest Period to 1839.” By
- Thomas Keightley. 5 vols. Harper & Brothers, New York._
-
-This is an edition, containing the same matter, with the two large
-octavo volumes lately published under the same title. We have it now
-presented in this cheap and portable form, as a portion of the
-celebrated Family Library. A copious index has been added, which is not
-found in the larger edition. The history is a work of merit; but to both
-the American editions we object, in the name of all justice. The
-alterations made from the London edition are scandalous. It is not, in
-its present shape, the author’s production. Good or bad, give us _his_
-work, and not that of an American editor, however talented, or an
-American publisher, however discerning.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _“Applications of the Science of Mechanics to Practical
- Purposes.” By J. Renwick, L.L.D. 1 vol. 18 mo. Harper &
- Brothers, New York._
-
-The present is a practical age. Literature, science, learning, even the
-fine arts are popular, only as they can be rendered useful. Every
-department of knowledge is ransacked to advance the interests, and
-elevate the character of the age.
-
-Enfield’s Natural Philosophy, and the present work illustrate this
-remark. The former belongs to the past age; to the days of theory; to
-the men of profound philosophy: the latter is adapted more to the
-present time; to a practical generation; to men of excursive rather than
-deep, and available rather than profound science. Not a principle is
-stated which is not applied to some mechanical contrivance of the day.
-The action of the screw, the wedge, the lever, the spring, are described
-as they are adapted to mining, navigation, rail-roads, and the various
-species of manufactures. But, on the other hand, the knowledge imparted
-is not profound. Sufficient, as it is, however, for all practical
-purposes, the student leaves the work with a more thorough understanding
-of the principles of his study, than more elaborate, but less skilful
-treatises could afford.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _“Hope on, Hope Ever.” 1 vol. 16 mo. “Strive and Thrive.” 1 vol.
- 16 mo. “Sowing and Reaping.” 1 vol. 16 mo. By Mary Howitt. J.
- Munro & Co. Boston._
-
-These are three excellent tales from the pen of one of the most
-delightful of female writers. A chaste style; a love for the oppressed;
-a practical moral in her writings render them at once beautiful,
-popular, and useful.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _“History of the United States.” By Selma Hale. 2 vols. Harper &
- Brothers, New York._
-
-A compendious manual. It brings our history down to the end of Madison’s
-administration.
-
- * * * * *
-
- _“Life of John Wickliffe, D.D.” By Margaret Coxe. Columbus.
- Isaac N. Whiting._
-
-This is an interesting, though scanty biography of the first of the
-Reformers. It does not pretend to give a philosophic account of his
-times, but simply to present a chronicle of the principal events of his
-life.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-
-
- FASHIONS FOR MARCH, 1841.
-
-
- EVENING DRESS.
-
-Fig. 1.—Of plaid _Mous de Laine_. The head dress of buff crape, trimmed
-with roses.
-
-
- FULL DRESS.
-
-Fig. 2.—Crimson velvet robe, a low _corsage_, it is trimmed with a row
-of _dentille d’or_ in the heart style. Short sleeves, composed of two
-_bouffants_, with _manchettes_ of _dentille d’or_, looped by gold and
-jewelled ornaments, corresponding with that in the centre of the
-_corsage_. The _tablier_ and flounce that encircles the skirt are also
-of _dentille d’or_ of the most superb kind. The head-dress is a _toquet_
-of white satin, embroidered in gold, and trimmed with a profusion of
-white ostrich feathers.
-
-
- DINNER DRESS.
-
-Fig. 3.—Of plain white; the apron slightly ornamented. This is the
-prevailing style for the month.
-
-[Illustration: FASHIONS FOR MARCH 1841. FOR GRAHAM’S MAGAZINE.]
-
- * * * * *
-
-Transcriber’s Notes:
-
-Table of Contents has been added for reader convenience. Archaic
-spellings and hyphenation have been retained. Obvious punctuation and
-typesetting errors have been corrected without note. Other errors have
-been corrected as noted below. For illustrations, some caption text may
-be missing or incomplete due to condition of the originals available for
-preparation of the eBook. A cover was created for this ebook and is
-placed in the public domain.
-
-page 100, Calm, Heré-eyed Callirhöe?, ==> Calm, Hebé-eyed Callirhöe?,
-page 121, reminded us of Shelly’s ==> reminded us of Shelley’s
-page 144, The _tabiier_ and flounce ==> The _tablier_ and flounce
-
-[End of _Graham’s Magazine, Vol. XVIII, No. 3, March 1841_, George R.
-Graham, Editor]
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Graham's Magazine, Vol. XVIII, No. 3,
-March 1841, by Various
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Graham's Magazine, Vol. XVIII, No. 3, March
-1841, 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: Graham's Magazine, Vol. XVIII, No. 3, March 1841
-
-Author: Various
-
-Editor: George R. Graham
-
-Release Date: November 8, 2020 [EBook #63685]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GRAHAM'S MAGAZINE, MARCH 1841 ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Mardi Desjardins & the online Distributed
-Proofreaders Canada team at https://www.pgdpcanada.net
-from page images generously made available by the Internet
-Archive (https://archive.org)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0000' style='width:50%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-top:1.5em;font-size:1.9em;font-weight:bold;page-break-before: avoid;'>GRAHAM’S MAGAZINE.</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-top:0.5em;font-size:1.2em;font-weight:bold;'><span class='sc'>Vol. XVIII.</span> &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;March, 1841. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;No. 3.</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-top:0.5em;margin-bottom:1em;font-size:1.2em;font-weight:bold;'>Contents</p>
-
-<table id='tab1' summary='' class='center'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 25em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 1em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tab1c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'><span class='bold'><span style='font-size:larger'>Fiction, Literature and Articles</span></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><a href='#ladyi'>The Lady Isabel</a></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><a href='#conf'>The Confessions of a Miser</a> (continued)</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><a href='#alch'>The Alchymist</a></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><a href='#circ'>The Circassian Bride</a></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><a href='#maid'>The Maiden’s Adventure</a></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><a href='#dest'>The Destroyer’s Doom</a></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><a href='#empr'>The Empress</a></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><a href='#reef'>The Reefer of ’76</a> (continued)</td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><a href='#majo'>The Major’s Wedding</a></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><a href='#fath'>The Father’s Blessing</a></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><a href='#aske'>A Sketch from Life</a></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><a href='#spor'>Sports and Pastimes</a></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><a href='#part'>Partridge Shooting</a></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'><a href='#rev'>Review of New Books</a></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab1c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab1c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<table id='tab2' summary='' class='center'>
-<colgroup>
-<col span='1' style='width: 25em;'/>
-<col span='1' style='width: 1em;'/>
-</colgroup>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tab2c1-col2 tdStyle0' colspan='2'><span class='bold'><span style='font-size:larger'>Poetry, Music and Fashion</span></span></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle1'><a href='#call'>Callirhöe</a></td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle1'><a href='#napo'>Napoleon</a></td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle1'><a href='#lines'>Lines</a></td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle1'><a href='#lake'>Lake George</a></td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle1'><a href='#depa'>The Departed</a></td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle1'><a href='#iamy'>I Am Your Prisoner</a></td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle1'><a href='#invi'>The Invitation</a></td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle1'><a href='#youn'>You Never Knew Annette.—Ballad</a></td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle1'><a href='#fash'>Fashions for March, 1841</a></td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle2'></td></tr>
-<tr><td class='tab2c1 tdStyle1'></td><td class='tab2c2 tdStyle2'>&nbsp;</td></tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-top:1.5em;'><a href='#notes'>Transcriber’s Notes</a> can be found at the end of this eBook.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/i001.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0001' style='width:100%;height:auto;page-break-before: always;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='it'><span style='font-size:smaller'>Eng<sup>d</sup>. by J. Sartain</span></span></p> <br/><span style='font-size:larger'><span class='it'>Why don’t he come?</span></span><br/> <br/><span style='font-size:smaller'><span class='it'>Engraved for Graham’s Magazine from the Original Picture by Leutze, in the possession of Charles Toppan, Esq<sup>r</sup>.</span></span>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-top:1.5em;font-size:1.9em;font-weight:bold;page-break-before: always;'>GRAHAM’S MAGAZINE.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk100'/>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;font-size:1.2em;font-weight:bold;'><span class='sc'>Vol.</span> XVIII. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;March, 1841. &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<span class='sc'>No. 3.</span></p>
-
-<hr class='tbk101'/>
-
-<div><h1 class='nobreak'><a id='ladyi'></a>THE LADY ISABEL.</h1></div>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:1.5em;font-weight:bold;'>A TALE OF THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY.</p>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'><span class='sc'>Chapter I.</span></h2>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:1em;'><span class='it'>Why don’t he come?</span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>It</span> was a splendid landscape. Far away before
-the eye stretched a wide, undulating country, checkered
-with lordly mansions, extensive woodlands, and
-here and there a quiet little village peeping out from
-amidst the verdant hills; while away on the verge
-of the horizon glittered a majestic river, which,
-winding hither and thither among the uplands, burst
-at length into view in a flood of glorious light, that
-lay like a shield of burnished silver in the distance.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nor was the foreground of the scene less beautiful.
-Art had there been taxed to rival nature in
-loveliness. Terraces sinking one beneath another;
-a verdant lawn that seemed like velvet; rich, old
-lordly balustrades skirting the garden at your feet;
-and beyond, open glades, and clumps of forest trees
-thrown together in apparent confusion, but to
-produce which the utmost skill had been tasked,
-evinced at once the taste and opulence, of Lord
-Deraine, the owner of that rich domain. Such
-was the scene upon which two beings gazed on a
-lovely summer afternoon, in the year 16—.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>One of these was a youth, just verging into
-manhood, dressed in a dark, plain suit, with a deep
-lace collar, and cuffs of the same material. He
-had apparently been singing, and accompanying
-himself on the guitar; for his instrument was still
-held idly in his hand, as he sat at the feet of a lady,
-into whose face he was looking up with a rapt
-intensity of gaze, which told that the soul of the
-page—for such he seemed—was in every glance.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And well might his emotion toward that lovely
-being be one of unmixed love; for never did a
-more beautiful creature gaze upon a summer landscape.
-Tall, stately, with dark lustrous eyes, and
-a port that might have become a queen, Isabel
-Mowbray, was a being formed to be loved with an
-intensity such as this world rarely witnesses. As
-she now stood gazing out upon the landscape, with
-one hand shading her brow, and the other thrown
-back, and resting on the balustrade, thus displaying
-her snowy neck and bust, and her matchless figure
-to the best advantage, she seemed a being too
-beautiful for aught but a poet’s imagination.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You are silent, this afternoon, cousin,” at last
-said the youth, breaking a silence which had lasted
-for several minutes, “what are you looking at,
-Isabel?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The maiden made no reply, but still gazed down
-the park. She was apparently lost in thought.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Shall I sing again for you?” said the boy, in
-his low, sweet voice, looking up more devotedly
-than ever into the maiden’s face, “you used to like
-to hear me sing, you know, Isabel.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh! Henry is it you?” said the beauty, looking
-down, and half blushing, as if detected in something
-she wished to conceal, “sing by all means, my
-pretty page and coz. Sing me that old lay of the
-troubadour, and here Wyn,” and she called playfully
-to a beautiful greyhound reposing at the feet
-of the boy, “come here and let me talk to you,
-while Henry sings.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>An expression of gratified joy—of joy such as is
-rarely seen, except in the countenances of those who
-love—illumined the whole face of the boy as the
-maiden thus spoke—and taking up his guitar, he
-sang the words of an olden lay, which has now
-passed, with many a fair lip that once warbled it,
-into oblivion.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Gazing up into the face of the maiden as he
-sang, the youth appeared to have forgotten that
-aught else existed on earth besides the object of
-his adoration,—while the caresses lavished upon
-his greyhound, but more than all the occasional
-smiles which Isabel bestowed upon himself, filled
-his whole soul with a delicious emotion, such as is
-known only to us when we fancy our first love is
-returned. But had he not been misled by his own
-blind admiration, he might have seen much in her
-conduct to dissipate his delusion; for scarcely a
-minute would elapse, without Isabel casting an
-anxious glance, down the avenue of the park, and
-once her lips moved unconsciously, and even the
-page might have heard her murmur, had he listened,
-“I wonder where he can be?” But appearing to
-awake to her indiscretion, the maiden suddenly
-ceased gazing, and turning to Henry, said,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A thousand, thousand thanks, sweet coz. You
-sing, to-night, sweeter than ever. But there if
-Wyn—the saucy fellow—has not run off with my
-shawl.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The eyes of the youth lighted up with pleasure,
-and the blood mounted even to his brow, at this
-encomium,—and exclaiming,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Stay—I will win back the truant,” he bounded
-gaily down the terrace after the playful hound.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The maiden followed him with her eyes, and
-sighed, “Poor Henry.” In those two words what
-a volume of hopeless love and years of anguish for
-the youth were spoken.</p>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'><span class='sc'>Chapter II.</span></h2>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:1em;'><span class='it'>The Page: The Lovers.</span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Henry De Lorraine was the only son of a once
-proud, but now decayed lineage, and, being left an
-orphan at an early age, had been reared in the
-house of his cousin, Lord Deraine. His life there
-had been that of most noble youths of his day,
-who, either through necessity, or for the purposes
-of advancement, were brought up as pages in the
-establishments of the wealthier nobility. Lorraine,
-however, possessed one advantage over the other
-pages of his cousin: he had from the first been the
-companion of the Lady Isabel, the only child of
-his patron. Although a year or two older than
-himself, the want of either brother or sister, had
-induced Isabel to confide in him all her little difficulties;
-and they had grown up thus, more on the
-footing of children of the same parent, than as a
-wealthy heiress, and a poor dependant.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>During the last year of their lives, however, a
-change had silently, and almost imperceptibly, come
-over their feelings toward each other. An absence
-of nearly a twelvemonth with his patron at a
-foreign court, had in part altered the sentiments
-of Lorraine from those of a devoted brother to
-the emotions of love. He left Isabel, when both
-thought as children; he returned and found her
-already a woman. During that interval new scenes,
-new thoughts, new emotions had successively occupied
-the heart of the page; and though when he
-came back he was still a boy in years, he had
-already began to feel the intenser passions of the
-man. Never had he seen such beauty as burst
-upon him when Isabel entered the room on his
-return. It was as if a goddess of olden Greece
-had been ushered into his presence, as if the inanimate
-statue of Pygmalion had flushed, all at once,
-into a breathing being. Lorraine had dreamed of
-loveliness, but he had never, in his brightest visions,
-pictured aught so fair. He had expected Isabel to
-be improved, although he had left her the loveliest
-being of the riding; but he had not imagined that
-she would bud forth into a flower of such surpassing,
-such transcendent beauty. He was awed; he
-was filled as if with the presence of a divinity, to
-which he bowed irresistibly, but in strange delight.
-From that hour the bosom of the warm, high-souled
-boy, was ruled by a passion that devoured his very
-existence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But we said Isabel had changed. She too had
-learned to love, though not her cousin. As yet
-she scarcely knew it herself; the secret lay hidden
-in the recesses of her own bosom; and though her
-heart would beat more wildly, and the blood rush
-in deeper tints to her cheek, whenever the steed of
-her lover, the young Lord De Courtenay, was seen
-approaching her father’s gate, yet the Lady Isabel
-had never asked herself whence arose her emotion.
-Perhaps she feared to institute the inquiry. Certain
-it is, that like every other delicate female, she almost
-shrank from owning, even to herself, that her affections
-had strayed from their pure resting-place in her
-own bosom.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was well for Lorraine’s present, though unfortunate
-for his future, happiness, that De Courtenay
-had left the country a few days prior to the page’s
-return. By this means he was prevented from
-learning, what, otherwise would have checked his
-growing affection even in its bud, and suffered to
-go on in his dreams of love, until the very existence
-of the endeared object became almost a part
-of his being.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was some time before Isabel perceived the
-change which had been wrought in her cousin’s
-feelings toward herself, and when she did, the
-knowledge served more than aught else, to reveal
-to her the state of her own heart. She saw she
-could not return her cousin’s passion, though she
-still loved him with the same sisterly affection as
-ever, and with this discovery came that of her own
-love for De Courtenay. Although her equal in rank,
-and even her superior in wealth, there was a romantic
-gallantry in her lover which had forbade him
-to woo her as others of like elevated station would
-have done. Though, therefore, her parent would
-have sanctioned the alliance at once, he was yet
-ignorant of the love the only son of his neighbor,
-the earl of Wardour, bore to his daughter. And
-though the lady Isabel thought of her absent
-lover daily, there was something—it might be maiden
-modesty, which made her shun breathing
-De Courtenay’s name.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Several weeks had now elapsed, and months
-were beginning to pass away, since the departure of
-De Courtenay for Flanders. The time for his return
-had nearly arrived, and Isabel had even received
-a hasty note from him, breathing a thousand delicate
-flatteries, such as lovers only know how to pay
-and to receive, telling her to expect him at Deraine
-Hall, on this very afternoon—yet he came not.
-Why did he tarry? It was this knowledge which
-had made the lady Isabel watch so long from the
-terrace, down the avenue of her father’s park. Little
-did Lorraine think, as he gazed so devotedly into
-her face, that her thoughts even then were wandering
-upon another.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Let it not be fancied that the lady Isabel trifled
-with her cousin’s feelings. Deeply, daily was she
-pained at his too evident love. She longed to tell
-him the truth, and yet she shrank from it. She
-could not inflict such agony upon his heart. She
-would have given worlds to have had the power of
-returning his love, but that had long since passed
-from her, and like the pitying executioner, she loathed
-striking the blow, which she knew must eventually
-be struck. And thus the story of those two
-beings went on, and while both were full of joy and
-hope, one, at least, had before him to drink, a cup,
-as yet unseen, of the bitterest agony. Alas! for the
-disappointments, the worse than utter wo, which
-a devoted heart experiences, when it discovers that
-its first deep love is in vain.</p>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'><span class='sc'>Chapter III.</span></h2>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:1em;'><span class='it'>The Letter: The Discovery.</span></p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She loves me—she loves me,” exclaimed the
-page joyfully, as he stood in a sequestered alley in
-the garden, a few hours later than when she first
-saw him, “yes!” he exclaimed, as if he could not
-too often repeat the glad tidings, “she loves me;
-and, poor, as I am, I may yet win her.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As he spoke his whole countenance lighted up;
-his slender figure dilated; his chest heaved; and all
-the lofty spirit of his sires shone in the boy’s eyes,
-and spoke in his tones.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes! she loves me,” he repeated, “she called
-me ‘sweet coz,’ and thanked me a ‘thousand
-times’—these were the very words—and she played
-so with Wyn, and said I sang better than ever.
-Yes! yes! I cannot be mistaken—she loves me,
-me only.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The page suddenly ceased, for he heard a rustling
-as of some one walking slowly up an adjacent path,
-separated from his own by a narrow belt of shrubbery.
-His heart fluttered, and the blood rushed into
-his cheek. He wanted nothing to tell him that the
-intruder was the lady Isabel.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She was evidently reading something, though in
-a low voice, as if to herself. For a minute the
-page hesitated whether he should join her, but then
-he reflected that she could be perusing nothing that
-she would not wish him to hear, when something
-in her glad tones, something in the words she read,
-induced him, the next instant, to pause. The lady
-Isabel was apparently repeating a letter, but from
-whom? Did he dream? Could those terms of endearment
-be addressed to her? Was it her voice
-which lingered upon them in such apparent pleasure?
-She was now directly opposite to the page; not
-more than a few feet distant; and the sense which
-hitherto had only reached him in broken fragments,
-now came in continuous sentences to his ear. The
-letter ran thus:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Dearest Isabel</span>:—I write this in haste, and with
-a sad heart, for instead of being on my journey to see
-your sweet face once more, I am suddenly ordered
-back to Flanders with despatches for the commander
-in chief. You may judge of your Edward’s feelings,
-to have the cup of bliss thus dashed from his lips at
-the very moment when he had thought a disappointment
-impossible. Oh! if I knew that you still thought
-of me, love, as you once said with your own sweet
-lips that you did, I would depart with a lighter heart.
-God only knows when I shall see you. But the king’s
-messenger has come for me, and I must go. Farewell,
-dearest. I have kissed the paper over and over
-again. Farewell, again, and again.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Here the words of the reader became once more
-undistinguishable; but had they continued audible,
-Lorraine could have heard no more. A fearful
-truth was breaking in upon him. His brain was
-like fire: his heart beat as if it would snap its
-bonds asunder. He staggered to a tree, for a faintness
-was coming over him. Big drops of agony
-rolled from his brow, and he placed his hand to his
-forehead, like one awaking from delirium. At
-length he found words for his woe.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No no, it cannot be,” he exclaimed “it was all
-a dream. Yes! it is too, too true. But I will not,
-cannot believe it, unless I hear it from her own
-lips,” and starting forward, with sudden energy, the
-page placed his hand upon the shrubbery, and pushing
-it aside with superhuman strength, he stood the
-next instant panting before his cousin.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Astonished at his unexpected appearance, Isabel
-started back with a suppressed shriek; but on recognising
-the intruder, her fear gave way to confusion.
-The blood mounted in torrents over brow,
-neck, and bosom; and hastily crushing the letter in
-her hands, and concealing it in her dress, she paused
-hesitatingly before her cousin. His quick eye
-detected the movement, and rushing forward, he
-flung himself at the feet of Isabel.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It is then true—true—true,” he exclaimed
-passionately, “my ears are not deceived, and you
-love another. Is it not so Isabel?” The maiden
-averted her head, for she saw at once that she had
-been overheard, and she could not endure the boy’s
-agonised look. “Oh! Isabel, dear, dear Isabel, say
-it is untrue. Only say I was mistaken, that it was
-all a dream, that you still love me as you used to
-love me.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I do love you still,” murmured Isabel, in broken
-accents, “as I ever did, as my dearest, nearest
-cousin.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Is that all!” said the boy, whose eyes for a
-moment had lighted up with wild unchecked joy,
-but which now shewed the depth of his returning
-agony in every look, “is that all?” he continued in
-a tone of disappointment. “Oh Isabel,” and the
-tears gushed into his eyes, “is there no hope?
-Speak—only one word, dear Isabel. I have dared
-to love you—I might have known better—and now
-you spurn me. Well—the dream is over,” and
-dropping the hands which he had seized, he gazed a
-minute wildly into her face, to see if there was one
-last gleam of hope. But no response came back to
-dispel his agony. The lady Isabel was violently
-agitated, and though her look was one of pity, it
-was not, alas! one of encouragement. She burst
-into tears, and turned her head partially away.
-Striking his brow wildly with his hands, the page
-rushed from her presence, and when she murmured
-his name and looked up, he was gone.</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-top:0.5em;'>(To be continued.)</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><h1><a id='call'></a>CALLIRHÖE.</h1></div>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;'>———</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;font-size:0.8em;font-weight:bold;'>BY H. PERCEVAL.</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:1.5em;'>———</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'><span class='sc'>Whence</span> art thou bright Callirhöe,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Calm, <a id='hebe'></a>Hebé-eyed Callirhöe?</p>
-<p class='line0'>Art thou a daughter of this earth,</p>
-<p class='line0'>That, like myself, had life and birth.</p>
-<p class='line0'>And who will die like me?</p>
-<p class='line0'>Methinks a soul so pure and clear</p>
-<p class='line0'>Must breathe another atmosphere,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Of thought more heavenly and high,</p>
-<p class='line0'>More full of deep serenity,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Than circles round this world of ours;</p>
-<p class='line0'>I dare not think that thou shouldst die,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Unto my soul, like summer showers</p>
-<p class='line0'>To thirsty leaves thou art,—like May</p>
-<p class='line0'>To the slow-budding woodbine bowers.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Oh no! thou canst pass away.</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>No hand shall strew thy bier with flowers!</p>
-<p class='line0'>Those eyes, as fair as Eve’s, when they,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Untearful yet, were raised to pray,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Fronting the mellow sunset glow</p>
-<p class='line0'>Of summer eve in Paradise,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Those bright founts whence forever flow</p>
-<p class='line0'>Nepenthe-streams of ecstacies.</p>
-<p class='line0'>It cannot be that Death</p>
-<p class='line0'>Shall chill them with his winter breath,—</p>
-<p class='line0'>What hath Death to do with thee,</p>
-<p class='line0'>My seraph-winged Callirhöe?</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>Whence art thou? From some other sphere,</p>
-<p class='line0'>On which, throughout the moonless night,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Gazing, we dream of beings bright,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Such as we long for here,—</p>
-<p class='line0'>Or art thou but a joy Elysian,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Of my own inward sight,</p>
-<p class='line0'>A glorious and fleeting vision,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Habited in robes of light,</p>
-<p class='line0'>The image of a blessed thing,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Whom I might love with wondering,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Yet feeling not a shade of doubt,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And who would give her love to me,</p>
-<p class='line0'>To twine my inmost soul about?</p>
-<p class='line0'>No, no, these would not be like thee,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Bright one, with auburn hair disparted</p>
-<p class='line0'>On thy meek forehead maidenly,</p>
-<p class='line0'>No, not like thee, my woman-hearted,</p>
-<p class='line0'>My warm, my true Callirhöe!</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>How may I tell the sunniness</p>
-<p class='line0'>Of thy thought-beaming smile?</p>
-<p class='line0'>Or how the soothing spell express,</p>
-<p class='line0'>That bindeth me the while,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Forth from thine eyes and features bright,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Gusheth that flood of golden light?</p>
-<p class='line0'>Like a sun-beam to my soul,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Comes that trusting smile of thine,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Lighting up the clouds of doubt,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Till they shape themselves, and roll</p>
-<p class='line0'>Like a glory all about</p>
-<p class='line0'>The messenger divine.—</p>
-<p class='line0'>For divine that needs must be</p>
-<p class='line0'>That bringeth messages from thee.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Madonna, gleams of smiles like this,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Like a stream of music fell,</p>
-<p class='line0'>In the silence of the night,</p>
-<p class='line0'>On the soul of Raphael.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Musing with a still delight,</p>
-<p class='line0'>How meekly thou did’st bend and kiss</p>
-<p class='line0'>The baby on thy knee,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Who sported with the golden hair</p>
-<p class='line0'>That fell in showers o’er him there,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Looking up contentedly.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Only the greatest souls can speak</p>
-<p class='line0'>As much by smiling as by tears.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Thine strengthens me when I am weak,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And gladdens into hopes my fears.</p>
-<p class='line0'>The path of life seems plain and sure,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Thy purity doth make me pure</p>
-<p class='line0'>And holy, when thou let’st arise</p>
-<p class='line0'>That mystery divine,</p>
-<p class='line0'>That silent music in thine eyes.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Seldom tear visits cheek of thine,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Seldom a tear escapes from thee,</p>
-<p class='line0'>My Hebé, my Callirhöe!</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>Sometimes in waking dreams divine,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Wandering, my spirit meets with thine,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And while, made dumb with ecstacy,</p>
-<p class='line0'>I pause in a delighted trance,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Thine, like a squirrel caught at play,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Just gives one startled look askance,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And darteth suddenly away,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Swifter than a phosphor glance</p>
-<p class='line0'>At night upon the lonely sea,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Wayward-souled Callirhöe.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Sometimes, in mockery of care,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Thy playful thought will never rest,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Darting about, now here, now there,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Like sun-beams on a river’s breast,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Shifting with each breath of air,</p>
-<p class='line0'>By its very unrest fair.</p>
-<p class='line0'>As a bright and summer stream,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Seen in childhood’s happy dream,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Singing nightly, singing daily,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Trifling with each blade of grass</p>
-<p class='line0'>That breaks his ripples as they pass,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And going on its errand gaily,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Singing with the self-same leap</p>
-<p class='line0'>Wherewith it merges in the deep.</p>
-<p class='line0'>So shall thy spirit glide along,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Breaking, when troubled, into song,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And leave an echo floating by</p>
-<p class='line0'>When thou art gone forth utterly.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Seeming-cheerful souls there be,</p>
-<p class='line0'>That flutter with a living sound</p>
-<p class='line0'>As dry leaves rustle on the ground;</p>
-<p class='line0'>But they are sorrowful to me,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Because they make me think of thee,</p>
-<p class='line0'>My bird-like, wild Callirhöe!</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>Thy mirth is like the flickering ray</p>
-<p class='line0'>Forthshooting from the steadfast light</p>
-<p class='line0'>Of a star, which through the night</p>
-<p class='line0'>Moves glorious on its way,</p>
-<p class='line0'>With a sense of moveless might.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Thine inner soul flows calm forever;</p>
-<p class='line0'>Dark and calm without a sound,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Like that strange and trackless river</p>
-<p class='line0'>That rolls its waters underground.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Early and late at thy soul’s gate</p>
-<p class='line0'>Sits Chastity in maiden wise,</p>
-<p class='line0'>No thought unchallenged, small or great,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Goes thence into thine eyes;</p>
-<p class='line0'>Nought evil can that warder win,</p>
-<p class='line0'>To pass without or enter in.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Before thy pure eyes guilt doth shrink,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Meanness doth blush and hide its head,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Down through the soul their light will sink,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And cannot be extinguished.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Far up on poiséd wing</p>
-<p class='line0'>Thou floatest, far from all debate,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Thine inspirations are too great</p>
-<p class='line0'>To tarry questioning;</p>
-<p class='line0'>No murmurs of our earthly air,</p>
-<p class='line0'>God’s voice alone can reach thee there;</p>
-<p class='line0'>Downlooking on the stream of Fate,</p>
-<p class='line0'>So high thou sweepest in thy flight,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Thou knowest not of pride or hate,</p>
-<p class='line0'>But gazing from thy lark-like height,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Forth o’er the waters of To be,</p>
-<p class='line0'>The first gleam of Truth’s morning light</p>
-<p class='line0'>Round thy broad forehead floweth bright,</p>
-<p class='line0'>My Pallas-like Callirhöe.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>Thy mouth is Wisdom’s gate, wherefrom,</p>
-<p class='line0'>As from the Delphic cave,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Great sayings constantly do come,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Wave melting into wave;</p>
-<p class='line0'>Rich as the shower of Danäe,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Rains down thy golden speech;</p>
-<p class='line0'>My soul sits waiting silently,</p>
-<p class='line0'>When eye or tongue sends thought to me,</p>
-<p class='line0'>To comfort or to teach.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>Calm is thy being as a lake</p>
-<p class='line0'>Nestled within a quiet hill,</p>
-<p class='line0'>When clouds are not, and winds are still,</p>
-<p class='line0'>So peaceful calm, that it doth take</p>
-<p class='line0'>All images upon its breast,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Yet change not in its queenly rest,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Reflecting back the bended skies</p>
-<p class='line0'>Till you half doubt where Heaven lies.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Deep thy nature is, and still,</p>
-<p class='line0'>How dark and deep! and yet so clear</p>
-<p class='line0'>Its inmost depths seem near;</p>
-<p class='line0'>Not moulding all things to its will,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Moulding its will to all,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Ruling them with unfelt thrall.</p>
-<p class='line0'>So gently flows thy life along</p>
-<p class='line0'>It makes e’en discord musical,</p>
-<p class='line0'>So that nought can pass thee by</p>
-<p class='line0'>But turns to wond’rous melody,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Like a full, clear, ringing song.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Sweet the music of its flow,</p>
-<p class='line0'>As of a river in a dream,</p>
-<p class='line0'>A river in a sunny land,</p>
-<p class='line0'>A deep and solemn stream</p>
-<p class='line0'>Moving over silver sand,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Majestical and slow.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>I sometimes think that thou wert given</p>
-<p class='line0'>To be a bright interpreter</p>
-<p class='line0'>Of the pure mysteries of Heaven,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And cannot bear</p>
-<p class='line0'>To think Death’s icy hand should stir</p>
-<p class='line0'>One ringlet of thy hair;</p>
-<p class='line0'>But thou must die like us,—</p>
-<p class='line0'>Yet not like us,—for can it be</p>
-<p class='line0'>That one so bright and glorious</p>
-<p class='line0'>Should sink into the dust as we,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Who could but wonder at thy purity?</p>
-<p class='line0'>Not oft I dwell in thoughts of thine,</p>
-<p class='line0'>My earnest-souled Callirhöe;</p>
-<p class='line0'>And yet thy life is part of mine.</p>
-<p class='line0'>What should I love in place of thee?</p>
-<p class='line0'>Sweet is thy voice, as that of streams</p>
-<p class='line0'>To me, or as a living sound</p>
-<p class='line0'>To one who starts from fev’rous sleep,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Scared by the shapes of ghastly dreams,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And on the darkness stareth round,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Fancying dim terrors in the gloomy deep.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Then if it must be so,</p>
-<p class='line0'>That thou from us shalt go,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Linger yet a little while;</p>
-<p class='line0'>Oh! let me once more feel thy grace,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Oh! let me once more drink thy smile!</p>
-<p class='line0'>I am as nothing if thy face</p>
-<p class='line0'>Is turned from me!</p>
-<p class='line0'>But if it needs must be,</p>
-<p class='line0'>That I must part from thee,</p>
-<p class='line0'>That the silver cord be riven</p>
-<p class='line0'>That holds thee down from Heaven,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Not yet, not yet, Callirhöe,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Unfold thine angel wings to flee,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Oh! no, not yet, Callirhöe!</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span style='font-size:smaller'>Cambridge, Mass., 1841.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><h1><a id='conf'></a>THE CONFESSIONS OF A MISER.</h1></div>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;'>———</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;font-size:0.8em;font-weight:bold;'>BY J. ROSS BROWNE.</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:1.5em;'>———</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:1em;'><span class='sc'>Continued from Page 87.</span></p>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'><span class='sc'>Part II.</span></h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>That</span> irrevocable passion which sprung up between
-Marco Da Vinci and Valeria, during the
-hours of mutual communion which they enjoyed
-while preparations were in progress for the annual
-exhibition at the Academy of Arts, was not destined
-to wither in its infancy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Scarcely had the portrait been finished, when
-notice was conveyed to the candidates to send in
-their productions; and of course my anxiety was
-great to ascertain what impression my daughter’s
-beauty should make in public. Completely blinded
-by those deep and damning schemes which have
-proved my ruin, I meantime suspected nothing of
-what was in progress between the young and ardent
-lovers. They were bound heart and soul to each
-other; but except by those involuntary signs,
-which none but the victims of passion can understand,
-their love was unuttered. Hourly was this
-misplaced flame acquiring an increasing degree of
-vigor, from the very means taken to suppress it.
-I saw not, in my blindness, that in spite of the respectful
-and irreproachable conduct of Da Vinci
-toward the idol of my mercenary dreams, his tender
-flame, his ill-disguised sentiments of admiration,
-his involuntary devotion, were all returned in the
-same manner by Valeria.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In due time the exhibition took place. A week
-of thrilling excitement passed away. On the evening
-the premiums were to be awarded, I sallied out
-to await the decisions, persuaded that Valeria’s
-beauty, and not the skill of Marco Da Vinci, must
-make serious impressions in favor of the portrait.
-How describe my delight, when the premium was
-bestowed on the limner of my daughter’s charms!
-Her fame, I well knew, would now rapidly spread,
-and my fortune was sure!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the excitement of the moment, I hurried from
-the Academy, and sought to drown my feeling in
-deep potations. While under the influence of an
-unusual quantity of the stimulant, the time flew rapidly
-past; and it was late in the night before I
-recovered myself sufficiently to stagger home. To
-account for the sight which there paralyzed my eyes,
-it is necessary to touch upon what happened during
-my inebriation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Marco Da Vinci, on learning the decision made
-in favor of his work, proceeded with haste to pour
-out his feelings of gratitude to Valeria, whom he
-regarded as the instrument of his success. In the
-passionate eloquence of his temperament, he dwelt
-upon all, save that which was consuming his vitals,
-and which he dared not avow. They who pass
-any portion of their time in a state of beatitude,
-can alone say how swiftly it flies. Valeria and Da Vinci,
-entranced with their own dreamy visions of
-future happiness and of present joy, noted not that
-the hour of midnight had approached. At length
-the “iron tongue” of the town clock warned them
-to part; and with a deep sigh Valeria murmured a
-request that Da Vinci would visit the house again
-and frequently.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My determination,” said Marco, “can no longer
-be suppressed.” In a voice of the deepest agitation
-he proceeded: “I had hoped, Valeria, that we
-might part without a word of regret on either side;
-but your kindness and friendship toward me, render
-it a duty that I should make some explanations in
-defence of my refusal of your hospitable invitation.
-I must speak, whatever be the penalty. Your
-beauty and charms of person—your mental fascination—render
-it too dangerous for me to continue
-my visits! We must part—forever!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In a hurried and agitated manner the young
-painter rushed toward the door.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Stay!” cried Valeria, in whom the struggle
-between love and duty was for a moment so violent
-as to deprive her of her faculties, “Da Vinci, why
-must we part thus? Why are we never again to
-meet? I am sure it is no harm for us to enjoy the
-pleasure of each other’s society.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This was said in a voice of such warmth and
-artlessness, that, for a moment, he was unnerved in
-his resolution. The danger, however, was too great;
-and he resisted the temptation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Valeria,” said Marco Da Vinci, endeavoring to
-answer calmly, “I am an outcast—a beggar!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But I do not think less of you for that!” cried
-Valeria, passionately.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hear me!” cried Da Vinci, in a hurried and
-choaking voice, “you know me not! I have dared—I
-still dare—to love you!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Valeria might have suspected, and probably did
-suspect, that this declaration was inevitable; but
-there is a great deal of deceit in the female heart;
-and she evinced much astonishment at the words of
-her lover. She endeavored to frown—to look serious—to
-speak of <span class='it'>my</span> authority—but love was the
-conqueror!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That resource which woman is ever prone to
-make use of, was at hand; and Valeria wept. Her
-beauty had always been a subject of dangerous interest
-to Marco Da Vinci: it was now heightened
-in his mind by the consciousness that she loved him.
-No longer able to control those feelings, which
-from the moment of their meeting, had taken
-possession of Da Vinci’s heart, the enthusiastic
-lover sprang forward and clasped Valeria to his
-bosom. He pressed her lips to his own, and imprinted
-on them the burning kiss of first-love.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At this critical moment I entered. Unable to
-believe my senses, I stood gasping for breath, and
-transfixed with doubt and astonishment. Convinced
-at length that I was not deceived, I sprang forward
-to wreak my vengeance on the villain who had so
-basely abused my confidence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Monster!” cried Da Vinci, confronting me face
-to face, and darting from his fine expressive eyes
-the most deadly hatred, “Monster! you are known!
-whatever obligations I may have formerly considered
-myself under to you, I now look upon them as
-entirely cancelled by your hypocrisy toward myself,
-and your base conduct toward your daughter.
-Know, hoary villain, that no later than to day, I
-received a letter from Don Ferdinand Ruzzina,
-warning me to be on my guard in any of my transactions
-with you. Nor was this all! He openly
-exposed your villainy, and revealed the unnatural
-and cruel schemes you have concerted for the disposal
-of your daughter’s honor. Behold, wretch, in
-<span class='it'>me</span> her protector! You have forfeited the title, and
-by the God that made me, your baseness shall not
-triumph!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>So struck was I at this change in the conduct of
-Da Vinci, that for several moments I stood transfixed
-to the spot. Still stupified with rage and
-shame, I staggered back, and flung myself on a
-bench. Valeria, with that filial affection, which I
-had never known her to violate, sprang toward me
-in an agony of remorse; and kneeling at my feet,
-earnestly avowed her determination to remain forever
-obedient to my will; and craved forgiveness for
-her instrumentality in causing me such shame and
-misery. Already goaded to desperation by the
-taunts of young Da Vinci, and the reproaches of my
-own conscience, I was not prepared for this act of
-unmerited constancy. In the bitterness of my own
-self-detestation, I rushed from the room, striking
-my temples with my clenched hands, and uttering
-imprecations on those who gave me life. I hastily
-mounted the ladder, leading to my miserable garret;
-and darting through the trap-door, threw myself
-head-long on the squalid and tattered pallet.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Ruzzina had not forgotten me! Awed by the
-unconquerable virtue of my daughter, he had no desire
-to renew visits which he well knew were alike
-useless and unwelcome. But I had exacted large
-sums from him. He was my dupe! Even in <span class='it'>that</span>,
-there was a pleasure. Aye, such a pleasure as a
-miser can feel when avarice triumphs over conscience,
-and vice over virtue!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Early on the following morning, I indited a
-note to Don Ferdinand, which, in the plenitude of
-my craft, I looked upon as relieving me from all
-claims whatever on his part. It ran thus:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If you have any intention of consummating your
-designs on my daughter’s virtue—a thing which I
-regard as a mere misnomer—you must do so immediately.
-The advance-money hitherto received from
-you, I consider fairly my own; and if you think proper
-to neglect the chance I now give you of achieving
-your wishes, I am sure it is your own fault.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Be so good as to let me have a definite answer,
-when it suits your convenience; and believe me,</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:right;margin-right:2em;margin-top:0.25em;'><span class='sc'>Catruccio Faliri</span>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It afforded me much gratification to anticipate
-the wrath and indignation Ruzzina should evince on
-reading this. To gloat over the dark traits of men’s
-characters, has ever been my choicest amusement;
-and I well knew that he would either make a desperate
-attempt to retrieve his imprudence by
-recovering the money, or desist altogether and keep
-silent to avoid the shafts of satire and ridicule.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I suffered much uneasiness, and had much to
-fear on account of the ardent and fiery temperament
-of Valeria. The passion she had betrayed for
-Marco Da Vinci was no childish fancy; but a deep-rooted,
-irrevocable love, which nothing could eradicate
-or assuage. Her pure Italian blood permitted
-no medium between passion and indifference. She
-loved him once, and was destined to love, or hate
-him forever after. Of this I quickly had a most
-satisfactory proof.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Enraged one day at the obstinate manner in
-which she rejected the advances of every suitor I
-thought proper to introduce into my house, I bitterly
-reproached her for her disobedience; and in the
-excess of my anger, struck her a violent blow. Her
-proud spirit was instantly up.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Father,” said she, “you have struck me for the
-first, and for the last time. In defiance of your
-cruel and unnatural machinations for the disposal of
-my honor, you shall never reproach me with their
-success. I have hitherto mildly resisted your iniquitous
-designs; and I now boldly put myself out of
-your power. This roof shall never more shelter
-your daughter!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In scarcely any gradation of human depravity is
-man totally callous to the qualms of conscience.
-I have before remarked that I anticipated with joy
-the hour of death; but this was merely a fiendish
-delirium, wrought by the recollection of past iniquities:
-a kind of bravo, which, in the hour of cool
-contemplation, would be regarded with fear and
-horror.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I confess I was much staggered at the justice
-of Valeria’s reproaches, and the firmness and
-dignity of her demeanor. Whatever might have
-been the nature of my former conduct toward her,
-I <span class='it'>did</span> feel, at that moment, a sense of my baseness.
-Her fine, expressive eyes were eloquent with determination;
-and her beautiful figure, as she glided
-steadily from my presence, seemed to acquire a
-queenliness from passion and indignation. She
-spoke no more; and I was too relentless to
-excuse myself, or break the silence. I had pride—ay,
-the pride of a demon. I would not humble it
-by confessing my cruelty, or soliciting her forgiveness.
-Thus originated a disunion, which was soon
-destined to lead to the most tragical effects.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I follow, for a moment, the fortunes of Valeria.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>During her residence in that part of Venice, in
-which we had latterly lived, she had, by the merest
-accident, become acquainted with the daughter of
-a neighboring officer, and had cultivated the society
-of this young lady, more from a natural fondness
-for association with the educated of her sex, than
-from any particular liking to her new acquaintance.
-Signora Almeda—the lady’s name—was not unusually
-prepossessing in her person or manners; but
-she had a vigorous and masculine mind, and possessed
-no small share of sound knowledge, both
-literary and scientific. She had, from the beginning,
-regarded my daughter with peculiar favor.
-Their acquaintance had latterly become quite intimate;
-and on the strength of this intimacy, and
-the dependance of her situation, Valeria resolved
-to claim the hospitality of her friend, until fortune
-should place it in her power to earn a livelihood
-by her own exertions. Signora Almeda accepted,
-with pleasure, the proposition of her accomplished
-acquaintance.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For several months a sisterly harmony was
-observed between the friends. Though Valeria
-steadily refused to enter into society, yet it soon
-became obvious to her entertainer that she had
-the ascendency in the social circle. Of all stings
-prone to penetrate the female heart, none is so
-poisonous or painful as that which wounds vanity.
-Signora Almeda was piqued to discover that the
-suitors, who had before paid her the utmost devotion,
-now eagerly transferred their addresses to her
-guest. From learning to view her as a rival, she
-presently looked upon her as an ungrateful and
-disagreeable dependant. Every opportunity was
-now taken advantage of, both publicly and privately,
-by Signora Almeda, to vent her envy toward
-Valeria. The innocent cause of this disquietude,
-meantime wondered at the change. It was true,
-her entertainer still continued to treat her with
-formal hospitality; but all intimacy and friendship
-were at an end. This state of things was destined
-to be speedily brought to a close.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Signora Almeda had among other suitors, one
-who really admired her, and for whom she had
-evinced much respect. This gentleman, inspired by
-the superiority of Valeria, physically if not mentally,
-forgot for a moment his promises and devotions
-toward Signora Almeda. The blow was not to be
-borne. A proud Italian spirit was roused. Revenge
-was now the sole subject of her thought.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Valeria one evening, soon after this, retired to
-her chamber to enjoy a few moments of solitude.
-In searching a small drawer for some article of
-habiliment, she accidentally discovered a note,
-directed to herself and handsomely sealed. It was
-inscribed in a bold, masculine hand; and ran thus:—</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Bewitching girl!—In accordance with your repeated
-desire, I shall to-night gently tap at your
-chamber-window. O raptures! how I shall—but
-why anticipate.</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:right;margin-right:3em;'>“<span class='it'>Votre roturiex</span></p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:right;margin-right:1em;'>“<span class='sc'>Caius Pazzio</span>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Astonished and indignant, Valeria was about to
-tear this insulting epistle to atoms, when the door
-gently opened; and Signora Almeda glided in.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ah! my charming guest,” she whispered, with
-forced friendship, “what now? Mercy, you seem
-like one who had just caught sight of an apparition!
-Dear me! what’s the matter?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Matter!” cried Valeria, fired with shame and
-indignation, “read!—but no—the insult must not
-be known!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Heavens! a letter—Ah, I guess the contents!”
-She snatched it playfully, and read with apparent
-surprise—what she had herself written!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The result was such as might be expected. Valeria
-was peremptorily forbidden the house. Her
-character was blasted—her happiness destroyed!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In this melancholy situation, Marco Da Vinci
-found her, when after a long and indefatigable
-search, he succeeded in tracing her to the residence
-of Signora Almeda. With all the ardor and sincerity
-of his character, Da Vinci had determined on
-bringing his fate to a speedy close, either by wedding
-the object of his affection, or by bidding her
-farewell forever. The critical situation in which he
-found her, immediately determined him to adopt the
-former course, if possible. He had, since his
-triumph at the Academy of Arts, attained some
-eminence; and his circumstances were now in a
-favorable condition.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Valeria had many objections to the course proposed;
-but on the one hand poverty—perhaps beggary
-would be her lot; while on the other the
-importunities of Da Vinci were so urgent as to
-remove most of the remaining obstacles. After
-much hesitation she consented to acquiesce in
-his wishes. The young and loving couple were
-immediately united. I now return to my own
-narrative.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nearly a year had elapsed since I was left alone
-and desolate; when one evening I was astonished
-to see a female, closely muffled, enter my house.
-My mind had that day been peculiarly embittered
-against my daughter, and she was even now the
-subject of my thoughts. Great, indeed, was my
-astonishment, when the apparent stranger flung
-herself in a kneeling posture before me, and casting
-off her disguise revealed to my sight the faded
-lineaments of Valeria!</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Father!” she cried, “forgive me!—forgive the
-partner of my misery! We are ruined by a reverse
-of fortune—we are beggars! Distress has deprived
-us of pride! We seek your pardon!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Curse you!” I shouted, spurning her with my
-foot, “you demand pardon do you? Begone! Pardon,
-eh? Begone!” I thundered; and I pushed her
-violently toward the door. She fell. Her head
-struck a bureau; and the warm blood spouted from
-the gash. Had I reflected on the delicacy of her
-situation, it is probable I might have felt compassion
-enough to let her pass unmolested; but the deed
-was done. I did not regret it. My vengeance for
-the series of disappointments she had caused me
-was satiated.</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-top:0.5em;'>(To be Continued.)</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span style='font-size:smaller'>Louisville, Kentucky, February, 1841.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><h1><a id='alch'></a>THE ALCHYMIST.</h1></div>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;'>———</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;font-size:0.8em;font-weight:bold;'>BY MRS. LAMBERT.</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:1.5em;'>———</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The machine of human life, though constituted of a thousand parts, is in all its parts systematically
-connected; nor is it easy to insert an additional member, the spuriousness of which an accurate observation
-will not readily detect.”—<span class='it'>Godwin.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>It</span> was midnight. Darkness, deep as the sable
-of a funeral pall, hung over the streets of Madrid.
-The wind blew in strong gusts, and the rain fell in
-torrents. The lightning, which, at brief intervals,
-rent the clouds, and flashed across the gloom,
-revealed no living, moving thing. For an instant
-only, the livid sheets lit up the streets and squares,
-and glared over the Plaza Mayon, so often the
-scene of savage bull-fights, of cruel executions,
-and, in former years, of the horrible <span class='it'>Auto de fé</span>.
-And again, as it seemed, a tenfold blackness
-enveloped every object; convents, colleges and
-hospitals, closed at every aperture, were shrouded
-in the general gloom. Man, though the noblest
-work of his Creator—glorying in his wisdom and
-in his might—towering in the battle-field—great
-in council—overweening, arrogant, boastful; in
-such a night learns to feel his own insignificance.
-He, who adorned with all the pageantry of wealth,
-elevates himself far above the lowly individual that
-seeks his daily bread by daily labor—who looks
-down as from an immeasurable height upon the
-poor peasant of the soil—even he, so rich, so
-powerful, sheltered within his stately walls, listens
-to the war of the elements that rage without—and
-inwardly congratulating himself on his rich and
-comfortable asylum, yet shrinks involuntarily as the
-blast shrieks by—and silently acknowledges his
-own impotence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I have said no living thing moved in the street,
-and every building was closed against the storm;
-but in the outskirts of the city, in a narrow and
-solitary lane, built up at intervals with a few houses
-of mean and wretched appearance—a faint light
-shone through the gloom. It proceeded from the
-casement of a house of antique structure, and dilapidated
-appearance. Years must have gone by
-since that dwelling was the abode of comfort, for
-poverty and wretchedness seemed to have long
-marked it for their own. The exterior gave faithful
-promise of what was revealed within.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In a large and gothic room, the broken and
-discolored walls of which betokened decay, an
-aged man was bending over a fire of charcoal,
-and busily engaged in some metallic preparation.
-His form was bent by age. The hair of his head,
-and the beard, which descended to his breast,
-were bleached by time to a silvery whiteness. His
-forehead was ample, but furrowed by a thousand
-wrinkles. His eyes, deep set, small, and still retaining
-much quickness and fire, yet at times their
-expression was wild, despairing, even fearful.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A cap of peculiar and ancient form was upon
-his head, and his person was enveloped in a robe
-of russet, confined about the waist by a twisted
-girdle. His motions were tremulous and feeble, his
-countenance wan and death-like, his frame to the
-last degree emaciated.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A bed stood in one corner of the room; a table,
-and two roughly made forms, were all the furniture
-of that miserable apartment; but around the small
-furnace, at which the old man had been lately
-employed, were gathered crucibles, minerals, chemical
-preparations, and tools of mysterious form and
-curious workmanship, but well understood by the
-artist. Once more the adept, for such was the
-inmate of this lonely dwelling, scanned with searching
-eye the contents of a crucible; while the pale
-flame which rose suddenly from the sullen fire, cast
-over his sunken features a hue still more livid and
-cadaverous.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>His labors had resulted in disappointment; he
-sighed heavily, and dropping his implements, abandoned
-his self-imposed task.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It is over,” he murmured, “my hour is almost
-come—and should I repine? No—no. Life!—wretched
-and misspent!—world! I have sacrificed
-thee, to thyself!—wonderful enigma, yet how true!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Turning his steps to the table, he took from
-thence a lamp, and walked feebly to a remote end
-of the room. Here, on a humble couch, lay a
-sleeping child; it was a boy, slender, pale, and
-bearing in his young face the indications of sorrow
-and of want—yet was he exquisitely beautiful. He
-slept still, and heavily. The adept gazed at him
-long and deeply.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He sleeps. Victim as he is, of his father’s
-errors, and his crimes—shunned by his fellows—hunted
-by the unfeeling—pinched with cold—and
-perishing with hunger—yet—he sleeps. Father of
-Heaven! such is the meed of innocence! <span class='it'>I</span>, shall
-never more know rest,—till the long sleep of
-death that knows no awakening!—No awakening—and
-is it so?” A blast of wind swept by, rocking
-the old pile to its foundation, the thunder rolled
-heavily above, and the keen blue lightning shone
-through every crevice.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The old man looked fearfully around: a deeper
-paleness overspread his face, and cold drops stood
-on his brow and sallow temples.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The angel of death is surely abroad this night—he
-seeks his victim.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Tottering to the bed he sunk down upon it,
-and closing his eyes, an almost deadly sickness
-seized him. He called faintly for Adolf. The lad
-had already risen, for the storm had awakened him.
-He went to the bedside. The old man could not
-speak. The child was affrighted and gazed earnestly
-upon the face of his parent. The senses of the
-latter had not forsaken him, and he motioned with
-his hand toward the table, on which stood a small
-cup. Adolf brought it to his father, and moistened
-his lips with the liquid. The old man revived.
-After a few moments he spoke, but his voice was
-tremulous and low.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Adolf,” he said, “thy father is about to leave
-thee—dear object of my fond affection, thou art
-all that remains of my beloved Zillia—boy,” he
-continued exerting the last remains of strength,
-“thou must go hence. The moment thy father
-ceases to breathe thou must fly.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The child looked on his parent with alarm, and
-sorrow depicted in his young face.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes,” he repeated, “thou must quit this place.
-My enemies are on the alert. Me they would certainly
-destroy, and thy youth and innocence—will
-hardly save thee from their wrath. Long have they
-watched, and sought, and hunted me, from country
-to country, and from town to town. I have mingled
-in the crowd of cities, and hoped to be confounded
-with the multitude—to pass unmarked—unquestioned—unknown—in
-vain; the ever wakeful eye of
-suspicion followed me—danger dogged my footsteps.
-I sought the shelter of thick woods—of
-impenetrable forests, where the wolf howled, and
-the raven croaked—but the foot of my persecutor—Man—seldom
-came. Even there I was discovered.
-Imprisonment—famine—torture have been
-my portion—and yet I live. I live—but thy gentle
-spirit, Zillia, could not bear up under the pressure
-of so many woes. Adolf, thou wilt shortly be all
-that survives of the family of Zampieri.—I repeat,
-by the morning dawn <span class='it'>I</span> shall be no more, and <span class='it'>thou</span>
-must fly.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, no,” returned the boy, “urge me not to
-depart—father, I will remain and share thy fate.”
-He threw himself as he spoke upon the bosom of
-the old man who pressed him in his feeble arms.—“And
-oh! father, I <span class='it'>cannot</span> go hence—I am weak—I
-am ill—father I die of hunger.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>An expression of keen anguish passed over the
-face of Zampieri, and he pushed his child from him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Boy,” he cried, “ask me not for bread—thou
-knowest I have it not. Have I not been laboring
-for thee—for thy wealth—for thy aggrandizement—ingrate—bread
-sayest thou—thou shalt have
-gold, boy, gold.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The intellect of the adept wandered, and he
-laughed wildly. The large, soft, lustrous eyes of
-Adolf swam in tears, and his heart trembled within
-his bosom. With weak steps he retreated to the
-foot of the bed, and kneeling there, hid his face on
-his folded arms, and wept.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After a pause Zampieri again spoke.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Life!” he muttered, “how have I wasted thee.
-Time! Thou art no longer mine. Would that I
-could redeem thee—but it is too late. Zillia, my
-murdered love! Thou art avenged. I left thy fond
-and simple affections for the depths of mysterious
-research. I madly thought to realise the dreams of
-illimitable wealth. Vain and destructive ambition.
-For thy sake have I riven asunder every tie.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The voice of the old man ceased, and the
-sobs of the child too were silenced—perchance in
-sleep.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The violence of the tempest had subsided, and all
-was still; save that the blast still shrieked at intervals
-by, making the old casements rattle as it passed—and
-the thunder muttered low at a distance.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The hours rolled on. A faint grey light dawned
-in the east. The clouds broken in heavy masses,
-rolled rapidly onward obscuring and revealing, as
-they flew, the few bright stars that appeared far
-beyond this scene of petty turmoil, shining on, in
-their own unchanging, never ending harmony.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And now the dawn strengthened, and the stars
-grew pale. The last blue flickering flame, that
-wandered <span class='it'>ignus-fatuus</span> like, over the surface of the
-dying charcoal, had spent itself; and the wasting
-lamp looked ghastly in the beams of rising day.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A noise was heard at the lonely portal. It was
-that of forcible entrance, and came harshly over the
-deep silence that reigned within. Footsteps approached,
-not such as told the drawing near of a
-friend, the light, soft step of sympathy with sorrow.
-No. They heralded force and violence—bond and
-imprisonment—racks and torture.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Three Alguazils of the Inquisition entered the
-solitary apartment. They came to conduct Nicoli
-Zampieri to the holy office on a charge of performing
-or seeking to perform preternatural acts by
-unholy means—by conjuration and necromancy.
-Guilty or not guilty, suspicion had fallen upon him,
-and he had become amenable to the law. Their
-anticipated victim remained quiet. The Alguazils
-approached the bed on which he lay. The limbs
-were stark and stiff—the features immoveable.
-The Alchymist was dead.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Yet the eyes—widely opened, glassy, fixed and
-staring, gave the startling idea, that the gloomy and
-reluctant soul had through them strained its last
-agonising gaze on some opening view—some unimaginable
-scene in the dread arena of the shadowy
-world beyond the grave.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Silently they turned from the bed of death, for the
-power of the king of Terrors, thus displayed before
-them, quelled for a moment their iron nerves.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A kneeling figure at the bed’s foot next drew
-their attention. It was Adolf. They spoke to
-him, but he answered not: they shook him, but the
-form immobile, gave no sign of warmth or elasticity.
-One of the men turned aside the rich curls
-that clustered above the boy’s fair brow, and gently
-raised his head. It was cold and pale. The suffering
-spirit of the young and innocent Adolf, had
-winged its way to a happier world.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><h1><a id='circ'></a>THE CIRCASSIAN BRIDE.</h1></div>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;'>———</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;font-size:0.8em;font-weight:bold;'>BY ESTHER WETHERALD.</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:1.5em;'>———</p>
-
-<div class='literal-container' style=''><div class='literal'> <!-- rend=';fs:0.9em;' -->
-<p class='line' style='font-size:0.9em;'>“She walks in beauty, like the nights</p>
-<p class='line' style='font-size:0.9em;'>Of cloudless climes and starry skies.”</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:right;margin-right:0em;margin-bottom:0.75em;font-size:0.9em;'><span class='it'>Byron.</span></p>
-</div></div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Nerinda</span> was the daughter of a shepherd, who
-dwelt in one of the charming portions of Circassia.
-If beauty was a blessing, Nerinda was blessed beyond
-the ordinary lot of mortals, for the fame of her
-loveliness had extended through the neighboring
-vallies, and at the early age of fourteen her hand
-had been sought by many, with an earnestness
-which showed her parents what a treasure they
-possessed in their eldest born. But no one had been
-able to obtain her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Money is not so plentiful in the vales of Circassia,
-as in the mart of Constantinople; and few of the
-neighboring youths might venture therefore to aspire
-to her hand. There appeared, every day, less
-probability that the fair girl would be permitted to
-pass her life amidst scenes endeared to her by a
-thousand childish and tender recollections. Nerinda
-felt this and her eye became less bright, and
-her step less buoyant, than when she trod the flowery
-turf a few short months before, a happy careless
-child, attending those flocks now abandoned to the
-care of the younger children. She became pensive
-and melancholy. Her rich color faded, and her
-parents saw with surprise and concern that the
-dazzling beauty on which so much depended, would
-be tarnished by the very means they were taking to
-preserve it. What was to be done? She must resume
-her old employment, since healthful exercise
-was of such consequence to her appearance; she
-could do so in the neighboring meadows without
-danger, accompanied by her sister Leila. Oh! how
-happy was Nerinda, when she received this unlooked
-for indulgence; with what haste did she braid
-and arrange her beautiful hair, and fasten on the
-veil without which she must not be seen; then joining
-her sister, she visited every spot endeared to her
-by memory, and at length, seating herself on a
-mossy bank which separated her father’s possessions
-from those of a neighboring shepherd, began to
-arrange the many flowers she had culled into beautiful
-bouquets and chaplets, an occupation befitting
-one so young and lovely; but even whilst her hands
-were thus employed, it was evident her thoughts
-were far distant, for she fell into reveries so deep,
-that her sister, unable to arouse her from her abstraction,
-became weary of attempting it, and
-returned to her fleecy charge, leaving Nerinda to
-muse alone.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Nerinda believed herself alone, but immediately
-after the departure of Leila, a finely formed youth
-had crossed the stream, and stood at the distance of
-a few paces, gazing on her with a passionate tenderness
-which betokened the strength of his attachment.
-Almost afraid to disturb her meditations,
-yet anxious to obtain a single word, a single glance,
-he remained motionless; waiting, hoping that she
-might raise her eyes, and give him permission to
-advance. She raised them at length, uttered an
-exclamation of surprise, and in a moment the youth
-was at her feet. “Nerinda!” “Hassan!” were the first
-words that escaped their lips.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Do I indeed see thee? and dost thou still love
-thy Nerinda?” said the maiden.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Love thee?” replied the youth in an impassioned
-tone, “thy image is entwined with every fibre
-of my heart. They may tear thee from me, they may
-destroy me if they will, but while life remains I
-cannot cease to love.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Alas!” said Nerinda, “weeks have passed since
-I saw thee, and I feared—I—.” She stopped confused,
-for Hassan had seized her hand, and was pressing
-it to his lips with an energy which showed how
-well he understood what was passing in her mind.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh! Nerinda,” said he, “I have entreated, I have
-implored thy father to bestow thee on me, but in
-vain, for all the money I could offer was not one
-tenth of the sum he requires; yet do not despair,”
-he said, as the color faded from her cheek, “I
-still may hope if thou remainest constant.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This very morning,” continued Hassan, “I
-sought thy father; at first he was unwilling to listen
-to me. At length I prevailed on him to hearken,
-even if he refused his assent to what I proposed:
-but he did not refuse. Pleased with my anxiety to
-obtain thee, he has promised that if in two years
-I can gain the required sum thou shalt be my wife;
-if I cannot he will wait no longer, but part with
-thee to him who will pay the highest price.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The voice of the youth faltered—he was scarcely
-able to continue, “in two days I am to take all the
-money my father can spare, and join the caravan
-which proceeds to the south; fear not,” said he,
-replying to the alarm expressed in her varying
-countenance, “there is no danger, the caravan is
-large, and if fortunate as a trader, I shall return
-before two years have passed to claim my plighted
-bride. Wilt thou be true? may I trust thee?”
-were questions the lover asked, though he felt sure
-the answers would be such as he could desire, and
-when the assurance was given, he for the first time
-ventured to impress a kiss on those beautiful lips.
-Long did they thus converse, but at length they
-parted; Nerinda promising to come to the same
-spot on the next evening to bid him farewell.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They parted, Hassan vainly endeavoring to inspire
-Nerinda with his own hopes. She almost sank
-under the trial, and it was many days before she
-had strength to revisit the bank of turf, their accustomed
-trysting place. When she did, how changed
-did all appear; the flowers were still blooming
-around; the stream flowed on with its accustomed
-murmur; the birds carolled sweetly as of old; where
-then was the change? Alas! it was in her own
-heart: joy and happiness had fled with Hassan, and
-melancholy had taken their place.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Two years and six months had passed since the
-departure of the youth, and there seemed little probability
-of his return; even his venerable father
-mourned him as dead, when a company of traders
-entered the mountains. One of them was an old
-acquaintance in the valley. He renewed his solicitations
-to the father of Nerinda, that she might
-be placed under his charge; offering the highest
-price, and promising that her future lot should be as
-brilliant and delightful as her past had been obscure.
-The shepherd was greatly disappointed by the non-appearance
-of Hassan, for he would have preferred
-keeping his daughter near him if he could have
-done so with advantage to himself, but being poor
-as well as avaricious, and imagining he should be
-perfectly happy if possessed of so much wealth as
-the trader offered, he consented to part with her,
-who had ever been his chief delight, and the pride
-of his heart.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Language cannot paint the consternation of
-Nerinda when she learned her father’s determination.
-The delay of Hassan she accounted for by
-supposing he had not yet acquired the full amount
-necessary for his purpose, and hoped that after a
-while he would return to call her his. Now all
-hope was at an end. Hassan might still come, but
-she would be far distant, perhaps the wife of another.
-Her mother and sister too shared her grief,
-for they thought it would be impossible to live
-without Nerinda; but all entreaties and lamentations
-were vain, the shepherd had made the bargain
-and would abide by it; and she was hurried to the
-caravan in a state little short of insensibility.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And where was Hassan? He had determined
-in the first place to proceed with the caravan to
-Mecca, whither it was bound, and laying out the
-money he possessed in merchandise, to trade at the
-different towns on their route. Before they arrived
-at the holy city he had consequently so greatly
-increased his store, that he felt no doubt he should
-be able to return before the time appointed; but
-meeting soon afterward with a heavy loss, he was
-thrown back when he least expected it, and at the
-end of two years had not more than half the
-amount required. To return without it was useless,
-and he set about repairing his loss with a
-heavy heart. Six months passed in this endeavor,
-at the end of which time he found himself rich
-enough to return, but it was necessary he should
-proceed to Constantinople to settle some business,
-and join a caravan which was going toward his
-native country. His anxiety increased every day:
-of what avail would be his wealth, if she, for whose
-sake it had been accumulated, was lost forever?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The day before the one fixed for his departure
-from Constantinople, a company of traders arrived,
-bringing with them Circassian slaves. He happened
-to be passing by the slave-market, and impelled
-by sudden curiosity, entered the room. He
-had scarcely done so when he was struck by the
-graceful figure of one of the girls, which reminded
-him of Nerinda. He felt almost afraid to have her
-veil removed, then remembering that it would be
-impossible for her to recognise him in his present
-dress, and determining to suppress his emotions
-whatever the result, he made the request, which
-was instantly complied with. It was indeed
-Nerinda, but how changed! She stood before
-him pale as marble, with downcast eyes, looking
-as if no smile would ever again illumine those
-pensive features; once only a faint color tinged
-her cheek as he advanced toward her, then instantly
-gave place to more deathly paleness. The
-price was soon agreed upon, for the trader was now
-as anxious to get rid of his fair slave as he had
-been desirous to obtain her; having resigned the
-hope of making an immense profit in consequence
-of the continual dejection and grief she indulged,
-which had greatly impaired her health and beauty.
-Hassan ordered the trader to send her to his apartments
-immediately.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When he entered the room to which she had
-been conducted, he gently raised her veil. She
-looked up, and recognised him instantly; her joy
-was as unbounded as his own, but was displayed in
-a different manner. She threw herself into his
-arms and sobbed and wept. She was, however, at
-length able to listen tranquilly to the account of his
-adventures, and to relate her own.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The remembrance of his aged parent, doubly
-endeared by absence, and of his joyous childhood,
-were still alive in the breast of Hassan; and after
-a few days spent at Constantinople, he proposed to
-return to his native valley.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They set out, the health and beauty of Nerinda
-improving, in spite of the fatigues of their journey.
-The joy with which they were greeted was unbounded.
-All had given Hassan up for dead, and
-Nerinda was regarded as lost to them forever. Even
-her father had repented of his avarice, and would
-willingly have returned his gold, could he have once
-more had Nerinda by his side. Her mother and
-sisters hung around her with tears of joy; and the
-whole valley welcomed her return with glad rejoicings.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The young couple took up their residence with
-Hassan’s father; many a visit did they pay to that
-bank of turf, the scene of their former meetings,
-and never did they look on that spot without feeling
-their bosom swell with the emotions of gratitude to
-that kind Providence who had disposed all things
-for their good, and had watched over and protected
-them, even when they believed themselves deserted.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><h1><a id='maid'></a>THE MAIDEN’S ADVENTURE.</h1></div>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:1.5em;font-weight:bold;'>A TALE OF THE EARLY SETTLERS OF VIRGINIA.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='sc'>Well</span> Kate,” said her bridesmaid, Lucy Cameron,
-“the clouds look very threatening, and you
-know it is said to be an unlucky omen for one’s
-wedding night to be stormy.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Pshaw, Lucy, would you frighten me with
-some old grandmother’s tale, as if I were a child?
-I believe not in omens, and shall forget all unlucky
-presages, when the wife of Richard Gaston,” answered
-the lovely and smiling bride.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You treat it lightly, and I trust it may not
-be ominous of your conjugal life,” resumed Lucy;
-“but my Aunt Kitty says that’s the reason she
-never married; because it was raining in torrents
-the day she was to have been wedded, and she
-discarded her lover because it was unlucky.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ah, Lucy, I do not mean to doubt your good
-aunt’s word; but there must have been some more
-serious cause linked with the one you have mentioned.
-My life on it, <span class='it'>I</span> do not lose a husband for
-so slight a cause. It must be something more
-than a common occurrence, that shall now break
-off the match with Dick and myself. But see, the
-company are beginning to arrive,” said Kate, as
-she looked from the window of her room, “and I
-must prepare for the ceremony.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The morning of the day of which we have
-spoken, had opened in unclouded splendor, and all
-seemed propitious to the nuptials that were to be
-solemnised in the evening. The inmates of the
-cabin in which the preceding conversation had
-been carried on, had arisen cheerfully with the
-first notes of the early robin, to prepare for the
-festival, to which the whole neighborhood, consisting
-of all within fifteen or twenty miles, (for
-neighborhoods were then large, and habitations
-scarce) were indiscriminately invited.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Kate Lee was the only child of her parents, and
-had been born and raised in the humble cottage
-which her father had assisted to construct with his
-own hands. Mr. Lee had moved to his present
-residence, when few ventured thus far into the
-Indian territory; and by his own labors, and that
-of his two servants, had erected a double cabin,
-and cleared about fifty acres of land, upon a rich
-piece of high ground, a mile and a half from the
-James River. By his urbanity and kindness, he
-had gained the confidence of the Indians; and in all
-their depredations so far, he had gone unscathed.
-He was of good birth and education, and the most
-hospitable man in the settlement. The property
-which he held, and the style in which he lived,
-together with his superior knowledge, gave him a
-standing among the settlers superior to all. Ever
-ready to assist the needy, and always just in his
-opinions and actions, he was looked to for council,
-rather than treated as an equal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As we said before, Kate was his only child, and
-had been the solace of her parents for nineteen
-years. She had now attained to full-blown womanhood,
-and, from her beauty and intelligence,
-her hand had been often asked, by the hardy sons
-of the pioneers. Her heart was untouched, until
-young Gaston laid siege to it. To his eloquent
-appeals she lent a willing ear, and promised to be
-his bride.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As Kate was the loveliest girl in the country, so
-was Richard Gaston the most to be envied among
-the youths. Of fine, manly stature, superior intellect,
-and unflagging energy, he was the best match
-in the settlement. He cultivated a little farm on
-the other side of the river, and when occasion
-offered, engaged in the practice of law, for which
-both education and nature fitted him. He had been
-in the settlement about seven years, and from his
-open and conciliatory manners, his bold and manly
-bearing, had become a favorite with all around him.
-He was always the first to take up his rifle, and
-sally against the hostile Indians, when necessity
-required it, and from his undoubted courage, was
-always chosen leader of the little bands, formed
-to repel the savage foe.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When the toils of the week had passed, Gaston
-might be seen, with his rifle on his shoulder, moving
-toward the river where his canoe was fastened, and
-springing lightly into it, dashing through the foaming
-waters, and among the rocks, as safely and
-cheerfully, as if passing over a smooth and glassy
-lake; and on the following evening, he might be
-seen again, braving the rushing current, with the
-same careless ease, but more thoughtful brow; for
-who ever yet parted from the girl of his heart, with
-the same joyful aspect, which he wore when going
-to meet her? Let us now return to the wedding
-day.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Have you heard of the Indian that was found
-murdered on the bank of the creek this morning?”
-said a young man, after the company had assembled,
-to Mr. Lee.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No,” answered Mr. Lee, with surprise, “I had
-hoped from the long peace that has reigned, we
-should have no more such outrages against the
-poor Indians. But how is it possible, sir, if they
-are thus shot down, that we can expect them to be
-quiet?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The body,” continued the first speaker, “was
-found by some of his tribe; and they immediately
-threatened vengeance if the murderers were not
-given up. But that is impossible; because we do
-not know them.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At this moment, a loud crash of thunder echoed
-through the woods, so suddenly as to make all start
-from their seats.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, my friends,” said Mr. Lee, as soon as
-all was again quiet, “we shall be as likely to suffer
-from this rashness as the offender, and must be prepared.
-I am glad you have brought your guns
-with you, for unless they come in too large a body
-we shall be able to hold out against them.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This was said with that calmness which a frequent
-recurrence of such circumstances will produce;
-and as he rehung his rifle, after preparing it
-for immediate use, the bride entered the room, in
-all the loveliness of graceful beauty. Few ornaments
-decked her person, because none could add
-to her natural grace and elegance. Her hair of
-jet black, was simply parted in front, drawn back,
-and fastened behind, displaying a forehead of marble
-whiteness; a wreath, mingling the wild rose with
-other forest flowers, was the only ornament on her
-head. Her skin was of transparent whiteness.
-Her large black eyes, peering through their long
-lashes, spoke a playful mischief in every glance.
-A perfectly Grecian nose; cherry lips; a beautiful
-row of pearly teeth; a dimple displaying itself in
-each cheek whenever a smile suffused itself over
-her features, and a complexion richer than the soft
-red of the tulip, completed a picture such as the
-mind can rarely imagine. Her neck and arms
-were perfectly bare, and seemed as if they, with
-her small fairy feet, and the rest of her figure, had
-been made in nature’s most perfect mould.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The storm, which had before been heard but at
-a distance, seemed now to have attained its greatest
-violence, and to be concentrated over the house.
-Peal after peal of thunder, came ringing through
-the hollows, each succeeding one apparently louder
-and more crashing than the former. Flash upon
-flash, of the quick and vivid lightning, streamed
-out, resting awhile upon the surrounding scenery,
-and striking terror into the hearts of the more
-superstitious guests. The rain, which at first fell
-in large drops, that could be distinctly heard, amid
-the awful silence, save when the thunders echoed,
-now came down in torrents; and the thunder pealed
-out, louder and louder, quicker and quicker, leaving
-scarcely intermission enough, for the voice of
-Richard Gaston to be heard by his beautiful bride.
-He had impatiently awaited the invitation of Mr.
-Lee to meet his daughter, but no longer able, amid
-the war of elements, to restrain himself, he advanced
-to, and seated himself by the side of his beloved
-Kate, and gently taking her hand in his, inquired if
-she was alarmed by the storm? To his enquiry,
-she only smiled, and shook her head.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I see not then, why we may not proceed with
-the ceremony; the storm,”——here a keen and
-fearful crash, jarred the house to its foundation,
-leaving traces of fear on the countenances of all,
-but the lovers and the parson; Gaston continued,
-however, “the storm may last an hour, and that is
-longer, my Kate, than I would like to defer the
-consummation of my hopes.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I am ready,” answered Kate, blushing, and
-without raising her eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They rose from their seats, and advanced to the
-parson, who immediately commenced the ceremony.
-It was impossible to tell, whether pleasure or fear
-predominated on the countenances of the guests, as
-they pressed forward, to witness the solemn ceremony
-of uniting two beings for life. In the intervals
-of the thunder, a faint smile would play upon
-their faces, but, as a rattling volley would strike
-their ears, their shrinking forms and bloodless lips,
-betrayed their terror. The tempest seemed for a
-moment to have held its breath, as if to witness
-the conclusion of the nuptials; but now as the
-parson concluded with, “salute your bride;” a peal
-of thunder, keener and more startling than any yet,
-struck such terror to their souls, that none, not
-even the parson, or Gaston himself, both of whom
-had been shocked, perceived that the chimney had
-fallen to the earth; until awakened to a sense of
-their situation, by the shrill war-whoop of the Indians,
-which now mingled in dreadful unison with
-the howling storm.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>All thought of the storm vanished at once—defence
-against the savages seemed to be the first
-idea of all, as each man, with determined look,
-grasped his rifle, and gathered around the females.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Indians, led on by their noted chief Eagle
-Eye, to avenge the death of their comrade, found
-in the morning, would perhaps have awaited the
-subsidence of the storm, had not the falling of the
-chimney displayed to them, the disorder and confusion
-within the cabin. Viewing it, as the most
-favorable time for an attack, they raised their
-dreaded war-whoop, and sprung to the breach.
-That whoop, however, served but to nerve the
-hardy pioneers, and chase from their bosoms the
-fears, which the wars of nature alone created.
-Richard Gaston, from custom, assumed the command;
-and with that coolness and self-possession,
-which indicates undaunted bravery, proceeded to
-give such orders as the time would allow.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Let the females,” said he, “go above, and lie
-upon the floor, and we, my brave boys, will show
-them what stout hearts and strong arms can do
-in defence of beauty. Six of you go in the next
-room, and see that the villains enter not, except
-over your dead bodies; the rest will remain, and
-defend this opening.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The reader must not suppose that all was still
-during this brief address. The Indians, whose
-numbers amounted to several hundred, had fired
-once, and not being able, on account of the rain,
-to load again, now attempted to enter over the
-ruins of the chimney, and through the windows.
-The lights had been extinguished at the first yell,
-and all was dark, save when the flashes of lightning
-revealed to the few within, the fearful odds
-against them without. Several volleys had meanwhile
-been poured into the Indians, and a momentary
-flash revealed the effects. Many were lying
-dead or dying, forming a sort of breastwork at the
-breach. Becoming more infuriated, as those who
-had gone before, fell, under the constant fire of the
-whites, the savages, now, in a compact body, attempted
-an entrance; and the whites, still cool, as
-if danger threatened not, waited until they reached
-the very breach, and then every man, with his
-muzzle almost touching the Indians, discharged his
-piece. The savages wavered and then fell back,
-amid the shouts of the victorious yeomen.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The next flash of lightning discovered the Indians
-retreating to the woods, and dragging many
-of their dead with them. Another wild shout burst
-from the lips of the victorious whites. When all
-was again still, the voice of Mr. Lee was heard in
-thanksgiving, for their deliverance so far; and when
-he had concluded, he proposed a consultation upon
-the best means to be pursued, as it was certain the
-Indians had only retired to devise some other mode
-of attack. Some were for deserting their present
-situation, and flying to the woods for concealment;
-others, and the greater number, proposed remaining
-where they were, because the Indians had not
-certainly gone far, and if discovered, unprotected
-by the logs, they must fall an easy prey, to such
-superior numbers, while by remaining, they had
-some advantage, and a small chance to keep them
-off.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In the meantime, the females, the firing having
-ceased, had left their hiding-place, and now mingled
-with the warriors. It was soon determined to hold
-on to their present situation, and defend it to the
-last, should they be again attacked. The better to
-add to its security, several of the stoutest commenced
-raising a barrier at the opening, with the
-logs that had been thrown down; while others,
-barricaded the doors and windows. This being
-finished, they began an enquiry into the injury they
-had received; and found six of their number were
-killed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The rain meanwhile had ceased, and the distant
-mutterings of the thunder could be heard only at
-intervals. All was silent in the cabin, awaiting the
-expected approach of the savages. Kate had approached
-Gaston when she first came into the
-room, and timidly asked if he was hurt. Having
-received a satisfactory answer, she had remained
-silently by his side, until all was prepared for action.
-Then, for a moment forgetting the dangers that surrounded
-him, Gaston yielded to the impulse of his
-heart, and drawing the lovely being, who was now
-his wedded wife, in all the ardor of passionate love,
-to his bosom, imprinted upon her ruby lips, the kiss
-of which he had been so suddenly deprived by the
-onset of the savages.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My own Kate,” said he, “if you find we are
-to be overcome, you must try and make your escape
-through the back door, and thence to the woods.
-Here is one of my pistols, take it, and if you are
-pursued, you know how to use it; shoot down the
-first foe who dares to lay a hand on you. Make
-for the river, you know where my canoe is; the
-current is rapid and dangerous, but, if you can
-reach the other bank you are safe. Farewell now,
-my own sweet love, and if I fall, may heaven shed
-its protection over you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Gaston was not a man to melt at every circumstance,
-but to be thus separated from his bride,
-perhaps never to meet again, brought a tear to his
-manly cheek. Love, had for a moment, unmanned
-his firm and noble heart; but it had passed, and he
-was again a soldier; thinking only how best to
-defend, what he valued more than his life—his
-wife.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At this instant the whoop of the Indians again
-sounded to the assault. Each man sprang to his
-post. The whites had been equally divided, and a
-party stationed in each room. The rooms were
-now simultaneously attacked by the foe; and with
-clubs and large stones, they endeavored to force
-the doors. The silence of death reigned within,
-while without all was tumult and confusion. The
-door at length yielded—one board and then another
-gave way, while yell upon yell rose at their
-success.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hold on boys, until I give the word,” said
-Gaston, “and then stop your blows only with your
-lives.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The door and its whole support yielded, and in
-poured the savages like a whirlwind. “<span class='it'>Fire now</span>,”
-cried Gaston, “and club your guns.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Almost as one report, sounded the guns of every
-one in the house—the yells and cries of the
-wounded and infuriated foe, almost appalled the
-stoutest hearts; but this was no time to admit fear,
-if they felt it. The Indians were making every
-exertion to enter over the pile of dead bodies that
-blocked up the doorway; and the gun of each man
-within, clenched by the barrel, was lowered only to
-add another to the heap. For twenty minutes the
-fight had raged with unabated fury, and with unrelaxed
-exertions, when the moon, breaking forth in
-all her splendor, exhibited the combatants as plain
-as in the light of mid-day. One Indian, stouter
-and bolder than the rest, had gained an entrance,
-and fixing his eyes on Gaston, as he saw him encouraging
-and directing the others to their work of
-death, he gave a loud yell, and sprang at him like
-the tiger on his prey. The quick eye and arm of
-Gaston were too rapid for him; and in an instant
-he lay dead from a blow of the young man’s rifle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But the strength of the brave little band began
-at length to fail. Their numbers had diminished
-more than half. Before the enemy had, however,
-entered, it had been proposed and acceded to, as
-the only chance, that the females should attempt an
-escape from the back door, next the river, while
-the men should cover their retreat, as well as their
-diminished numbers would admit. Accordingly,
-the attempt was made, and an exit gained; the
-whole force of the Indians being collected at the
-front door, to overcome the stubborn resistance of
-the whites.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The little phalanx stood firm to its post, until
-they saw the women had sufficient start to reach
-the woods before they could be overtaken; and
-then, pressed by such superior numbers, they slowly
-fell back to the same door, and the few that survived,
-made a rush, and drew the door close after
-them. They had now given way, and nothing but
-superior speed could possibly save them. If overtaken
-before reaching the woods, they were inevitably
-lost—if they could gain them they might
-escape. The delay caused by the closing of the
-door was short, and the enemy were now scarcely
-fifteen yards in the rear. Fear moved the one
-party almost to the speed of lightning—thirst for
-revenge gave additional strength to the other.
-The Indian, fresher than his chase, gained upon
-them rapidly. As they heard the savages close
-upon them, every nerve was excited, every muscle
-strained to the utmost. For a short distance indeed
-they maintained the same space between them, but
-alas! the strength of the whites failed, and too
-many of them overtaken, fell beneath the club of
-the savages. Gaston, who was equal in activity to
-any of his pursuers, had soon gained the lead; and
-with the speed of an arrow, had increased the distance
-between him and the Indians.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He knew that his wife would make for the river,
-and in all probability, would be able to reach it,
-and it was his object to get there also, if possible,
-in time to assist her across the rocky and rapid
-current, or at least to see that she was safe beyond
-pursuit. The river was not far, and as he bounded
-down the rough hill sides, he could distinctly hear
-the rolling of its waters, over the rocky bed. He
-took the nearest course to the landing, and the
-yells of the Indians, scattered in every direction
-through the woods, strained him to the greatest
-exertions. He reached the river—his canoe was
-there—his wife was not—despair overcame his
-soul.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She must be taken, and I too will die,” he
-exclaimed, in bitter agony.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>At that moment, a light and bounding step, like
-that of a startled fawn, drew his attention to the
-top of the bank, and his wife, whom he had given
-up for lost—his darling Kate, bounded into his
-embrace. This was no time for love. He took
-but one embrace, and hurried her into his canoe;
-for the Indians were but a few yards behind. It
-was but the work of a moment, to cut loose the line
-that held his bark; but before he could spring into
-it, three stout Indians were close upon him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Shove off, Kate, and trust to fortune to reach
-the other shore,” cried Gaston, distractedly, as he
-turned to engage the Indians, while his bride escaped.
-The devoted girl seemed doubtful whether
-to fly, or stay and die with her husband. Gaston,
-seeing her hesitation, again called frantically to her
-to escape, before the Indians were upon them.
-She now attempted to push her boat off, but she
-had remained a minute too long—a brawny and
-athletic savage seized the boat and sprang into it,
-within a few feet of the alarmed maiden. She
-quickly retreated to the other end, and faced about,
-despair painted in every lineament of her face. The
-Indian involuntarily stopped to gaze upon the beautiful
-being before him. That pause was fatal to
-him. Kate’s self-possession instantaneously returned,
-and as the savage sprang toward her she
-levelled her husband’s pistol and fired. The bullet
-entered the savage’s brain: he fell over the side
-of the boat, and disappeared beneath the bubbling
-waters; while instantly seizing the oar which had
-dropped from her hand on her first alarm, Kate
-turned the bow of her boat in the direction of the
-opposite shore, and began to stem the rapid current.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>During the few seconds that had thus elapsed,
-the canoe had shot below the place where her
-husband struggled with the remaining Indians; and
-she was now out of hearing of the combatants.
-Standing erect in the boat, her long hair hanging
-loosely on her uncovered neck, her white dress
-moving gently to the soft breeze, and her little
-bark avoiding the many rocks jutting their heads
-above the rushing waters, it gave to a beholder the
-idea of some fairy skiff, kept up, and guided by the
-superior power of its mistress. Steadily she moved
-on, until near the middle of the river, when she
-heard a splash, followed by a voice, some distance
-behind her. At first she thought it another Indian
-in pursuit, but soon the chilling thought was dispelled.
-Her own name, breathed in accents that had
-often thrilled her to the soul, was heard, sounding
-a thousand times more sweetly than ever on her
-ear. She quickly turned the head of her boat, and
-although she could not propel it against the stream,
-she kept it stationary, until Gaston, who had overcome
-his pursuers, reached it. His great exertions
-in the unequal struggle on the bank, his efforts to
-reach the boat, and the loss of blood from a deep
-cut on his arm, had left him so little of the powers
-of life, that he fainted a few moments after he had
-regained his wife. Kate knew the peril of permitting
-the boat to float with the current, and with all
-that courage and coolness, which woman possesses
-in times of danger, she did not stop to weep over
-him, but again seizing the oar, directed her bark to
-the opposite bank. Guided by the careful hand of
-love, how could the fragile skiff be lost, even amid
-the rushing whirlpools it had to pass. They safely
-reached the bank, and Gaston having returned to
-consciousness, supported by the arm of his wife,
-slowly wended his way to his farm.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Their anxiety, however, was, for some time,
-almost intolerable to learn the fate of their friends
-whom they had left on the other side of the river.
-Whether the Indians had triumphed completely,
-whether a successful stand had been made by any
-of those they pursued, or whether all had been
-alike murdered by the relentless savages, were unknown
-to Kate and Gaston, and filled their minds
-with uneasy fears. While, however, they were
-thus in doubt as to the fate of their friends, a hurried
-footstep was heard approaching, and Mr. Lee,
-the next moment, was in his daughter’s arms.
-With about half of his visitors, he had escaped,
-and, in a few days, rallying around them their remaining
-border neighbors, they succeeded, finally,
-in driving the hostile savages from their vicinity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>If any one will visit the hospitable mansion of
-the present proprietor of the estate, which has descended
-from our Kate, they may hear her story
-with increased interest, from the lips of some of
-her fair descendants; and upon taking a view of
-the place, where she crossed amid such perils, they
-will not be surprised to learn that the circumstance
-should have given to it the name of the
-“<span class='sc'>Maiden’s Adventure</span>.”</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:right;margin-right:3em;margin-top:0.5em;'>S.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span style='font-size:smaller'>February, 1841.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><h1><a id='napo'></a>NAPOLEON.</h1></div>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;'>———</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;font-size:0.8em;font-weight:bold;'>BY J. E. DOW.</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:1.5em;'>———</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“About the twenty-second of January, 1821, Napoleon’s energies revived. He mounted his horse
-and galloped for the last time around Longwood, but nature was overcome by the effort.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>Chained to a wild and sea-girt rock</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Where the volcano’s fires were dead;</p>
-<p class='line0'>He woke to hear the surges mock</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;The living thunder o’er his head.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>His charger spurned the mountain turf,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;For he o’er glaciered Alps had trod,—</p>
-<p class='line0'>He scorned to bear the island serf,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;And only stood to Europe’s God.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>And now, the prisoner’s spirit soared,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And fiercely glanced his eagle eye;</p>
-<p class='line0'>He grasped again his crimson sword,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And bade his silken eagle fly.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>High on a cliff, that braved the storm,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And beat the thundering ocean back;</p>
-<p class='line0'>He felt the life-blood coursing warm</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;As oft in mountain bivouac.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>Around him bowed a bannered world:</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And lightnings played beneath his feet;</p>
-<p class='line0'>The storm’s wild ensign o’er him curled,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And ocean drums his grand march beat.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>Above the Alps’ eternal snows</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;He led his freezing legions on:</p>
-<p class='line0'>And when the morning sun arose—</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;The land of deathless song was won.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>The desert waste before him rolled,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And haughty Mam’lukes bit the ground;</p>
-<p class='line0'>Old Cairo reared her mosques of gold,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And Nile returned his bugle’s sound.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>The doors of centuries opened wide</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Before the master spirit’s blows,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And flapped his eagles’ wings in pride</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Above the time-dried Pharoahs.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>Then northward moved his chainless soul,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And Europe’s host in wrath he met,</p>
-<p class='line0'>The Danube heard his drum’s wild roll,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And Wagram dimmed his bayonet.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>On many a field his cannons rung,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;The Nations heard his wild hurrah:</p>
-<p class='line0'>And brazen gates were open flung,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;To usher in the Conqueror.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>The Cossack yelled his dread advance,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And legions bared their scymetars,</p>
-<p class='line0'>When with the infantry of France</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;He trampled on the sleeping Czars.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>And Moscow’s sea of fire arose</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Upon the dark and stormy sky,</p>
-<p class='line0'>While cohorts, in their stirrups froze,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Or pillowed on the snow to die.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>A merry strain the lancers blew</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;When morning o’er his legions shone!</p>
-<p class='line0'>But evening closed o’er Waterloo,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And death, dread sentinel, watch’d alone.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>His eagles to the dust were hurled,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And bright Marengo’s star grew dim,</p>
-<p class='line0'>The conqueror of half the world,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Had none to sooth or pity him.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>And he has come to view again</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;The hills his flashing sword hath won:</p>
-<p class='line0'>To hear the music of the main,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And note the thunder’s evening gun.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>His heart is cold, his eye is dim,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;His burning brand shall blaze no more;</p>
-<p class='line0'>The living world is dead to him,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;The sea’s wild dash, the tempest’s roar.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>Marengo’s cloak is round him cast,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And Jena’s blade is by his side,</p>
-<p class='line0'>But where is now his trumpet’s blast?</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And where the soldiers of his pride?</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>They sleep by Nilus’ bull-rushed wave,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;They slumber on the Danube’s bed;</p>
-<p class='line0'>The earth is but a common grave</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;For gallant France’s immortal dead.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>His charger rushes from the height:</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;The fitful dream of life is o’er,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And oh! that eye that beamed so bright,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Shall never wake to glory more.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>Beneath the mountain’s misty head,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Where streamed the lava’s burning tide.</p>
-<p class='line0'>They made the scourge of Europe’s bed,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And laid his falchion by his side.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>He sleeps alone, as sweetly now</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;As they who fell by Neva’s shore:</p>
-<p class='line0'>And peasants near him guide the plough,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And craven Europe fears no more.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>He sleeps alone—nor shall he start</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Till Time’s last trumpet rings the wave:</p>
-<p class='line0'>For death has still’d the mighty heart</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Where fierce ambition made his grave.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>’Tis sad to view, when day grows dim,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;The stone that closed o’er Europe’s fears:</p>
-<p class='line0'>And listen to the waves’ wild hymn,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;That swallowed up the exile’s tears.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>The eagle screams his dirge by day,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;The tempest answers, and the sea,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And streaming lightnings leap to play</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Above the man of Destiny.</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span style='font-size:smaller'>Washington, February, 1841.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><h1><a id='lines'></a>LINES.</h1></div>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:1em;'>To the Author of the Requiem, “<span class='sc'>I See Thee Still.</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;'>———</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;font-size:0.8em;font-weight:bold;'>BY E. CLEMENTINE STEDMAN.</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:1.5em;'>———</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'><span class='sc'>Oft</span> when o’er my young being, shades of grief</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Have darkly gathered, and been spent in tears,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Thy “spirit-stirring muse” hath brought relief,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And called back images of other years!</p>
-<p class='line0'>As from the world my soul removed her care,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And sought the healing balm of Poesy to share.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>Perchance ’twas but some scraps that met my eye,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Yet like a charm, it soothed an aching heart—</p>
-<p class='line0'>Bidding it turn from hopes beneath the sky,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;To choose above the wise, unfailing part;</p>
-<p class='line0'>And while I read, I blessed aloud thy name,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And prayed that Heaven’s best gifts might mingle with its fame!</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>And now, though stranger to thy form and face,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Yet since familiar with thy spirit’s tone;</p>
-<p class='line0'>Pardon this humble pen, which fain would trace</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Some thought, to cheer a heart bereaved and lone,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Some sympathetic token, from a soul</p>
-<p class='line0'>Which bleeds to know that thine is bowed ’neath grief’s control.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>The human heart, it hath been aptly said,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Is like that tree, which must a wound receive,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Ere yet the kindly balsam it will shed,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Which to the sufferer’s wound doth healing give;</p>
-<p class='line0'>Such as have seen their fondest hopes laid low,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Can only feel for thee, or thy deep anguish know!</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>This bosom bears a kindred stroke to thine.</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Yet owneth that the Hand which wounds can heal!</p>
-<p class='line0'>May Gilead’s balm, as it hath brought to mine,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;So to thy wound restoring life reveal;</p>
-<p class='line0'>Show thee a Father, in a chastening God,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And bid thee meekly bow, and kiss his gentle rod.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>I knew her not, whose image blendeth yet</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;With every dream of joy the night doth bring—</p>
-<p class='line0'>Whose blessed features Love will ne’er forget,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Nor of whose worth thy muse e’er cease to sing!</p>
-<p class='line0'>But ’tis enough, that she was all <span class='it'>thy</span> choice,</p>
-<p class='line0'>To know that sorrow hath with thee a deep-toned voice.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>And is she not thy “guardian angel” <span class='it'>now</span>?</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Doth she not “live in beauty” <span class='it'>yet</span>, above,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And oft descend, to watch thy steps below,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And whisper in thy dreams sweet words of love?</p>
-<p class='line0'>A spirit, ’twixt whose spotless charms, and thee,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Hangs but the veil of Time, behind which, soon thou’lt see.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>Till then, look upward to her home of light—</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;’Twill chase the shadows from thy lonely hearth,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And think of her, as of a being bright—</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;<span class='it'>Still</span> thy “beloved,” though not now of earth!</p>
-<p class='line0'>Follow the traces of her heavenward feet,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And soon in perfect love, to part no more, ye’ll meet.</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span style='font-size:smaller'>Cedar Brook, Plainfield, N. J., 1841.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><h1><a id='dest'></a>THE DESTROYER’S DOOM.</h1></div>
-
-<div class='literal-container' style=''><div class='literal'> <!-- rend=';fs:0.9em;' -->
-<p class='line' style='font-size:0.9em;'>For if we do but watch the hour,</p>
-<p class='line' style='font-size:0.9em;'>There never yet was human power</p>
-<p class='line' style='font-size:0.9em;'>Which could evade, if unforgiven,</p>
-<p class='line' style='font-size:0.9em;'>The patient search, and vigil long,</p>
-<p class='line' style='font-size:0.9em;'>Of him who treasures up a wrong.</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:right;margin-right:0em;margin-bottom:0.75em;font-size:0.9em;'><span class='it'>Mazeppa.</span></p>
-</div></div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>The</span> night was waxing late, when the beautiful
-and witty Mrs. Anson was promenading at a party
-where all the <span class='it'>élite</span> of the city were assembled, with
-an imposing looking man, who seemed to unite—rare
-combination—high fashion and dignity of
-bearing. His face was almost constantly turned
-toward the lady, and he seemed careful that his
-words should reach no ears but those for which he
-uttered them. His last remark, whatever it was,
-seemed to have offended the lady, for she stopped
-suddenly, and gazing full in his face, exhibited as
-dark a frown as those bright, beautiful eyes could
-be made to produce. It was but a passing cloud,
-however, for the next moment she said, laughingly,
-“Upon my word, Major Derode, you give your
-tongue strange license.” His peace was soon
-made, and drawing the arm of Mrs. Anson within
-his own, he asked her if she would dance any more.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No,” she replied, “if you’ll tell them to draw
-up, I’ll go home; the rooms are close; I am
-fatigued; besides, in the absence of my husband, I
-must keep good hours.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Excuse me,” said the major, “if I am not
-anxious for his return. I should not dare to hope
-for so much of your precious society, were he to
-command it.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“He has the best right to it,” rejoined the lady,
-“but he never uses command with me;—I vow I
-am an ungrateful wretch, and love him much less
-than he deserves to be loved.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That sentiment, my dear Mrs. Anson, is not
-founded on nature or truth. Gratitude and love
-are sensations as different in their natures, as your
-disposition and that of your husband; but for what
-should you be grateful to him? For having had
-the vanity to address, and the good fortune to win
-the loveliest creature that ever wildered human brain,
-or fired human heart? And how does he repay an
-affection which monarchs would value more than
-conquest?—by indifference,—nay, studied neglect.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You wrong him,” said the wife, but with much
-less warmth than she would have defended her
-husband a fortnight before, “his passion for literature,
-it is true, estranges him from me more than
-many wives would like, but I have reason to know
-he loves me well. Alas! why should love be such
-a sickly flower, that needs constant culture to keep
-it from perishing! Time was, when the hour he
-passed from my side was fraught with anxiety,—now,
-days glide by, and I scarcely think of him!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Think only of him,” returned the major,
-“whose love for you is as imperishable as it is
-ardent. Renounce the man who is unworthy of
-you, and—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Render myself unworthy of any man,” continued
-the lady, “no, I implore you, urge me to
-this no more; spare me, dear Henry, I entreat
-you.” And I will spare the reader the remainder
-of a dialogue which evinced yielding virtue on one
-side, and seductive sophistry on the other. “The
-woman who hesitates is lost,” says the proverb.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Charles Anson, a young man of high intellectual
-endowments, and fine personal appearance, had
-studied law in his native city—Philadelphia—and
-at an early age married the daughter of a merchant
-in moderate circumstances. The union was thought
-to have resulted from love on both sides, and indeed
-for four years the youthful pair enjoyed as much
-happiness as is allotted to mortals; when, depending
-on his professional exertions, no ambition disturbed
-their dreams, no envy of rank or grandeur
-poisoned their present blessings.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In a luckless hour, a relation, living in England,
-from whom Anson had no expectations, died, leaving
-him a large fortune. This sudden acquisition
-of wealth enabled him, much to his satisfaction, to
-quit a profession in which he wanted several
-requisites for great success. He turned his attention
-to a science which has since become popular in
-this country, and became so devoted to its pursuit,
-that he spent large sums of money in prosecuting
-it. His wife launched at once into a mode of life
-which she said her husband’s altered circumstances
-justified. She plunged deeply into fashionable
-dissipation, and although Anson seldom accompanied
-her into the gay circles she frequented, he
-never objected to her giddy course. His only wish
-was to see her happy. He was on a visit to an
-eastern city, collecting materials for a work on his
-favorite science, at the time I introduced his wife
-to the reader, and spring advanced before he was
-ready to bend his steps homeward. He had travelled,
-as was usual then, by land from New York,
-and having taken a whole day to perform the journey,
-it was night when the lumbering mail coach,
-set Anson down at the door of his house. He had
-received no answer to the last two letters he had
-written to his wife, and he feared she was ill. If
-any one of my readers has been long absent from
-a happy home, he can understand the trembling
-eagerness with which the traveller placed his foot
-upon his door-stone. He pulled at the bell, and its
-clear sound came back upon his ear, as he stood
-in breathless anxiety waiting for an answer to the
-summons. No hasty footstep, however, no opening
-of inner doors, no audible bustle within, gave token
-of admittance. Almost convulsively, he grasped
-again at the handle of the bell, and its startling
-response pealed through the adjacent dwellings.
-Slowly a sash creaked up in an adjoining house,
-and a petulant female voice said,—</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There’s no use of your disturbing the neighborhood
-by ringing there,—nobody lives in that
-house.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Anson staggered back from the step, and falteringly
-enquired,—</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Has Mrs. Anson removed?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Removed!” croaked the old woman, “aye, she
-has removed, far enough from this, I warrant.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Where has she gone?” gasped the husband.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I know nothing about her,” was the reply, and
-the sash fell with a rattling sound that struck like
-clods upon a coffin upon the desolate heart of
-Anson. He stood upon the pavement with one
-foot resting on a trunk, and his eyes turned to the
-windows of his late dwelling, as if expecting the
-form of his wife to appear there. The voice of the
-watchman, calling the first hour of the night,
-aroused him from his abstraction, and suggested the
-necessity of present action. He remembered that
-he had a duplicate key of the street door, and if
-not fastened within, he could at least gain admittance.
-On applying the instrument, it was evident
-that the person who had last left the house, had
-egressed through the door, for no bar or bolt betrayed
-the caution of an inmate. Anson engaged
-the watchman to place his effects in the hall, and
-procure a light. Having once more secured the
-main entrance of the house, he wandered through
-its tenantless chambers, like a suffering ghost among
-scenes of its happier hours. The splendid paraphernalia
-which wealth and taste had spread throughout
-that happy mansion, were there yet. Not an ornament
-had been removed, nor had the most fragile
-article decayed,—nay, the very exotics in the bow-pots
-had begun to put forth their tender blossoms
-under the genial influence of the season. But human
-life was absent. She that had diffused joy,
-and hope, and a heaven-like halo round her, was
-gone.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mad with apprehension, Anson rushed to his
-wife’s bed-chamber, hoping there to find some clue
-to her mysterious departure. Her toilet was in
-confusion; ornaments lay scattered about; and a
-diamond ring, his gift to her on her last birth-day,
-shone, on the approach of the light, so like a living
-thing, that Anson, in the wildness of his brain,
-thought that its thousand eyes flashed with intelligence
-of its departed mistress. On a small writing
-desk lay some sheets of pure paper, and in the open
-drawer a sealed note caught the eye of Anson. He
-seized it with a trembling hand, but paused ere he
-opened it; a sickness, like that of death, settled
-down upon his heart. Unhappy man! What had
-he to hope or fear?—he read:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Husband:—We meet no more on earth. At the
-bar of eternal justice your curse will blast me! I am
-in the coils of a fiend, disguised like a god! As the
-fluttering bird, though conscious of destruction, obeys
-the fatal fascination of the serpent’s eye, so I, beholding
-in the future nought but despair, yield, a victim to a
-passion that has mocked my struggles to subdue it.
-You must be happy because you are virtuous, and in
-mercy forget the fallen,</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:right;margin-right:2em;'>“<span class='sc'>Josephine</span>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Anson sat long with this letter in his hand,
-gazing firmly on a portrait of his wife, that hung
-over her escritoire. She had sat for that painting
-at a time when her health was delicate, and a sacred
-pledge of their happy love was expected. Heaven
-had—mercifully it seemed now—denied the boon.
-Memory struck the fountain of tears in the heart
-of that bereaved man, and he wept. Oh! it is
-fearful to see a strong man weep. Tears are natural
-in children, and beautiful in women;—in men,
-they often seem mysterious gushings from the stern
-soul—dread forebodings of evil to come. The deserted
-husband gazed upon the painting, until he
-thought some evil spirit had changed the sweet
-smile and mild eye into a scornful sneer. A change
-came over his spirit—his features gradually assumed
-a look of unutterable ferocity; his frame dilated as
-with the conception of awful deeds—strange whisperings
-of dark purposes whizzed, as from legions
-of fiends, through his brain, and he went forth
-<span style='font-size:smaller'>REVENGE</span>!</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk102'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Major Derode, of the British army, was one of
-the most strikingly handsome men of the last age,
-and his address the most insinuating that a constant
-intercourse with the best society could confer.
-Although he had led a life of much dissipation, his
-fine constitution had withstood its ravages, and
-calling art to the aid of nature, he looked like a
-man of thirty, when he was really twelve years
-older. He had married in early life, and was the
-father of a son and daughter. The son had entered
-the navy, and had already obtained a lieutenancy,—to
-the daughter fell a large share of the singular
-beauty of her father, refined into feminine loveliness
-by the delicate graces of her mother. Mrs. Derode
-had been dead some years, and the major’s present
-visit to America was connected with some governmental
-mission to the commander-in-chief of the
-British forces in Canada. Viewing the cities of
-the United States on his return home, he became
-acquainted with the beautiful Mrs. Anson. He became
-at once her lover. He was a cold-hearted
-systematic seducer, and besieged her heart with a
-perseverance and address long accustomed to conquer.
-He imagined that his own callous heart
-was touched by her bright eyes, and he delayed his
-departure for two months, in order to accomplish
-her ruin.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When I introduced him to the reader, in conversation
-with Mrs. Anson, the poison of his flattery
-had already tainted that weak woman’s heart. I
-will not follow his serpent-like course—it is sickening
-to mark the progress of such arts. We left
-him in a gay assembly in Walnut Street—we now
-find him in London, and, it pains me to write it,
-Mrs. Anson was with him. To dispel the gloom
-that had already overcast her features, and to feed
-his own inordinate vanity, Derode introduced his
-victim to much society, but her keen eye soon
-penetrated the equivocal character of those who
-visited her in her splendid apartments. With this
-discovery came the first deep sense of her utter
-degradation.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I will mix no more with these people,” said
-she to the major one day, after an unusually large
-party left the house.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“As you please,” said he, “I was in hopes
-society would amuse you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not <span class='it'>such</span> society,” she replied with some dignity.
-The major observed the slight curl on her lip, and
-said, with something of a sneer,—</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Your notions are elevated, my pretty republican;
-your visiters are people of fashion, and you
-know <span class='it'>we</span> should not scrutinise character too severely.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This cruel remark pierced deeper than the base
-speaker intended. The deluded woman raised her
-eyes—those eyes, in repose so meek—to the face
-of Derode, and he quailed beneath their unnatural
-light.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“True,” said she with a choking voice, “true,
-true!—the meanest wretch that ever bartered her
-soul for bread, should spurn my fellowship, and flee
-my infecting touch.” Her head fell on her lap, and
-a series of hysterical sobs threatened to end her
-brief career of guilt upon the spot.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But it was not so to be. She recovered only to
-new miseries. Half tired of his new victim already,
-Major Derode hired a cottage a few miles from
-London, and, taking Mrs. Anson at her word, carried
-her down there to reside in lonely misery. His
-visits, at first frequent, soon became rare, and many
-days had now elapsed since she had seen him. She
-stood by the open casement watching the moonlight
-for his expected appearance, but he came not. A
-horseman emerged from the deep shadow of the
-trees, but seemed to pass on toward the turnpike.
-Hope sank within her, and she wished to die. She
-was now gathering the bitter fruits of her guilt.
-Her love for her destroyer was eating up her life—the
-scorching intensity of her passion was consuming
-the heart that gave it birth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Great God!” she exclaimed with frantic impiety,
-“art thou just? Thou didst not endow me
-with strength to resist this destiny. Thou knowest
-it was not volition, but <span style='font-size:smaller'>FATE</span>! If for thine own
-unseen ends, thou hast selected me to work out thy
-great designs.—oh! for the love of thy meek son
-who was reviled on earth, make my innocence
-clear. I am but thy stricken agent, oh! God! I am
-innocent—innocent!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The suffering creature was on her knees, and
-when she had uttered this wild sophistry, she threw
-her head downward, until it almost touched the
-ground. Her temples throbbed till the bandage that
-confined her hair snapped, and the dark covering
-of her head enveloped her figure like a pall.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Innocent! ha! ha! ha!” shouted a hoarse
-voice, in a tone of wild mockery, that rung through
-the lonely house, and reverberated in the stillness of
-the night.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Starting to her feet, Mrs. Anson gazed around
-the room with an indescribable awe, for she thought
-the sound bore a harsh resemblance to that of her
-forsaken husband. No one, however, was visible,
-and she began to think it was some creation of her
-excited fancy, when, turning her eye to the latticed
-casement that overlooked the garden, she plainly
-saw a man gliding away through the copse. Another
-moment, and the same horseman she had
-before observed, dashed into the shadow at furious
-speed, and disappeared.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk103'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Major Derode was holding high revel in London.
-There was a report that two marriages had been
-projected—those of himself and of his daughter.
-His fortune, never large, had been entirely dissipated
-at the gaming table, and he was deeply involved in
-debt. The contemplated alliances would, however,
-bring wealth into the family, and causing his expectations
-to be known, his creditors were patient.
-The object of his personal attentions was the Honorable
-Mrs. Torrance,—a widow of brilliant
-charms and large property. The handsome major
-had won her heart and received her troth before his
-visit to America, and but one obstacle existed to
-their immediate union. Rumor, with her hundred
-tongues had apprised the dashing widow that the
-gallant major had brought over with him an American
-beauty, who was now residing in the neighborhood
-of the metropolis. The major first denied,
-then confessed it, but declared she had returned to
-her native forests.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I scarce believe you,” said the widow, “but I
-will send down to-morrow to the cottage, which
-has been pointed out to me as her residence, and
-learn the truth.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She must remove, then, before to-morrow,” said
-Derode to himself as he drove home. “Fool that
-I was to bring her here; however, I suppose I can
-ship her home again, consigned to her plodding
-Yankee husband, who will be rejoiced that his wife
-has seen the world free of expense.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Night had closed in when Derode arrived at the
-cottage. Mrs. Anson was ill. She had been in a
-high fever, as the abigail informed the major, and
-delirious. She was calmer now, however, and he
-approached her couch.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How unlucky you are ill at this time,” said he,
-“for circumstances render it necessary for you to
-quit this place immediately.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Let me remain a few days longer,” replied the
-heart-broken woman, “and my next remove will be
-to the peaceful grave.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It is impossible—to-morrow morning, the earlier
-the better, you <span class='it'>must</span> depart.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And whither must I go?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Why, reflection must have convinced you that
-it was an imprudent step to leave your husband;
-nay, tears are useless now,—the frolic was pleasant
-enough while it lasted, but it is time to think of
-more serious matters. My advice to you is, that
-you immediately return home, solicit your husband’s
-forgiveness, and no doubt that will be the end of
-the affair. For myself, you must know it—and it
-is best you should learn it at once—my pecuniary
-involvements make it imperative on me to marry
-immediately—the sale of this furniture will enable
-you—”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>But his voice fell on a dull ear. Mrs. Anson
-heard nothing after the word “marry,” and she lay
-in a death-like swoon. Finding she did not revive
-immediately, Derode consigned her to the care of
-her maid, and hastily wrote the following lines:—</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Madam,—Our unfortunate connexion must be
-broken off at once. I can see you no more. I enclose
-you twenty pounds, a sum sufficient to bear your expenses
-to America. My last command is, that you
-quit this cottage to-morrow morning.</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:right;margin-right:4em;'>“Yours,</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:right;margin-right:1em;'>“<span class='sc'>Derode</span>.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He gave the note to the girl, for her mistress,
-and left the house.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How do you feel now, madam?” enquired the
-maid, as Mrs. Anson opened her heavy eyes, and
-pressed her hands against her temples, as if endeavoring
-to collect her thoughts, “can I do anything
-for you, madam?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes; assist me to rise; bring my bonnet and
-shawl;—thank you. You have been very kind to
-me my good girl; take this ring—it is of some
-value—keep it for the sake of her whom no living
-thing regards.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But, dear madam,” affectionately enquired the
-girl, “for heaven’s sake, where are you going?
-You will not leave the house to-night? you are
-ill—weak—a storm threatens,—there—the thunder
-mutters already, and the rain is plashing in big
-drops on the broad leaves of that strange-looking
-tree at the window. It is midnight, and will be
-broad day before you can reach the nearest part of
-London. The major said you might stay till morning,—and,
-oh! I had forgot, here is a letter he left
-for you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The hapless woman took the note mechanically;
-no ray of hope gave brightness to her eye—no
-emotion lighted up her features as she broke the
-seal. Misery had chilled her heart’s blood—despair
-had unstrung the chords of life. She glanced
-over the lines, and dropping the letter and bank
-note on the floor, supported herself for a moment
-by a chair. She rallied her strength, and saying,
-“farewell, my good Martha,” staggered forth into
-the dreary night.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The sun had long risen, when Martha was
-startled from the deep sleep into which the last
-night’s watching had thrown her, by a loud knocking
-at the cottage door. A splendid carriage had
-driven up the narrow avenue, and a liveried footman
-enquired if a young lady, under the protection
-of Major Derode, lived there. Martha stated the
-manner in which Mrs. Anson had, on the previous
-night, left the cottage.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“My mistress, the Hon. Mrs. Torrance,” said
-the footman, “seems so anxious to learn the particulars
-respecting this young woman, that I wish
-you would ride up to town with us, and give her
-whatever information you can.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Martha willingly complied, and the carriage had
-scarce accomplished seven miles of the journey,
-when the girl observed a female toiling slowly and
-painfully along the road. She called to the coachman
-to stop, for she recognised her mistress in the
-wanderer. They partly forced the passive creature
-into the carriage, and as she expressed no wish to
-be driven to any particular place, in less than an
-hour she was reposing her wearied limbs on an
-ottoman in the house of the Hon. Mrs. Torrance.
-All the servants who knew of the arrival of the
-strange lady, were forbidden by the Hon. Mrs.
-Torrance to reveal the circumstances, and Martha
-was instructed to tell the major she had seen nothing
-of Mrs. Anson after her departure from the
-cottage;—Derode, therefore, had no doubt that his
-victim had left the kingdom. Still he observed that
-the widow had altered her demeanor toward him.
-She received him coldly, and with something like
-mystery. He urged the hastening of the nuptials.
-She baffled him by trifling excuses, for she resolved
-the moment Mrs. Anson had recovered from the
-fever which seized her on the day she entered that
-hospitable abode, to confront her with the treacherous
-man.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk104'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“So, in three weeks more, my dear Isabel, I must
-give more form to my speech, for I shall address in
-you the bride of Lord Edward Fortescue; your
-elevation to the peerage will not change your heart
-toward us, Isabel?” said a sprightly girl to the
-daughter of Major Derode.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“For shame, to think of such a thing,” answered
-the affianced, “but, as poor Juliet says in the play,</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'>‘I have no joy in this contract to-night.’</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='noindent'>I have, my dear Emily, for a day or two past, felt
-a strange reluctance to marry his lordship. His
-title dazzled me at first, but I fear its novelty will
-wear off, and then where shall I seek for happiness?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“In the spending of his fortune, to be sure,” replied
-her companion, “and as his lordship’s way of
-life is fallen into the sere and yellow leaf, he surely
-cannot object to such a proceeding. Besides, if
-dame nature does you but common justice, you’ll
-be in weeds before you are thirty. But when was
-it your first objection started against his lordship?—last
-Thursday, was it not?—yes, Thursday it was:
-I remember it, because it was the morning after
-you danced with that young wild man of the woods.
-Where did they say he came from? New South
-Wales was it?—or Slave Lake—or the Ural
-Mountains? the Carrabee Islands—New Holland—or
-New Jersey? Why don’t you answer? You
-must know; for after he led you to a seat so
-gracefully, I observed you took a deep interest in
-his conversation during the rest of the night, and I
-have no doubt he was giving you lessons in Geography.
-Well, he is a handsome fellow, although
-his eyes have so wild an expression. Now, if he
-had a plume of eagle feathers on his head, and a
-tiger skin thrown over his shoulder, he would be
-irresistible. I think it entirely out of taste for
-these foreign monsters, when they come among us,
-to cast off their savage costume, and don our unpoetic
-garb.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Peace, Emily, you talk absurdly,” exclaimed
-the now thoughtful Isabel. “I scarce attended to
-what he was saying—I only observed he seemed
-to be a man of general information and great conversational
-powers. He possesses refinement in an
-eminent degree, and the earnestness and evident
-candor of his politeness contrast favorably with the
-sickly, superficial, drawling sentiment that daily and
-nightly clogs our wearied ears.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ah! it is clear you scarce attended to what he
-said. I met him this morning at Mrs. Balford’s,
-and thinking you wished to resume your researches
-into ‘The History of the Earth and Animated Nature,’
-I asked him to come here this evening.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Heavens, Emily! you could not be so imprudent!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Where can be the imprudence, Isabel, since
-you scarce attend to what he says? Hark! a cab;
-it is the American,—stay where you are—I’ll
-bring him up;” and away flew the giddy girl, leaving
-her companion in a state of flurried anxiety,
-scarce proper for the bride elect of Lord Edward
-Fortescue.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The American prolonged his stay till a late hour,
-and that night Isabel Derode imbibed a deep, absorbing
-passion for the graceful foreigner. Lord
-Edward, feeling himself secure of his prize, troubled
-his betrothed but little with his company. He confined
-his attentions to sending her presents, and
-escorting her twice a week to the opera.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The latitude which English society allows females
-of rank, caused the persevering assiduities of the
-American to be but little noticed, and one week
-before the intended nuptials of Lord Edward Fortescue
-and Isabel Derode, the fashionable circles
-were thrown into unutterable excitement by the
-following announcement in a morning paper:—</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Elopement in High Life.</span>—On Wednesday last,
-the beautiful and accomplished daughter of a certain
-gallant major in —— Square, eloped with a young
-gentleman of fortune from the United States. This
-imprudent step, on the part of the young lady, is the
-more to be regretted, as she was under promise of
-marriage to a certain noble lord. As her flight was
-almost immediately discovered, hopes are entertained
-of overtaking the fugitives before they reach Gretna
-Green.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>No such parties, however, as those described, had
-reached that matrimonial mart. Pursuit was made
-on almost every avenue leading from the metropolis,
-but in vain. The fugitives had an hour’s
-start, and the advantage of having <span class='it'>arranged</span> their
-means of flight. The smoking horses were scarcely
-checked at the door of each inn, when fresh relays
-were springing in the harness, and Anson—for it
-was he—with his victim, was enjoying a hasty repast
-in Calais, at the moment the emissaries of
-Derode reached Dover.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Lord Edward professed himself greatly shocked
-at the unhappy occurrence, but derived comfort
-from the reflection that his betrothed had eloped
-before, instead of after marriage; and having politely
-expressed to Derode his opinion that all the
-daughters of Eve were dangerous, if not useless
-members of the community, he, with the utmost
-<span class='it'>sangfroid</span> wished him adieu.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A month elapsed, and Derode pushed his suit
-with Mrs. Torrance with more vigor, from the unlucky
-circumstance of his daughter having frustrated
-his hopes of her high match with Lord Edward.
-All enquiries concerning the whereabout of the
-erring girl were fruitless, and what was singular,
-none knew the name or person of her seducer—until
-one night a hackney coach drew up at the
-door of Mrs. Torrance, and a gentleman handed, or
-rather lifted a drooping woman out of the carriage,
-and placed her on the steps of the house. The
-parties were Anson and his victim. He merely
-said to the servant who answered the knock, “take
-care of this lady: she is a friend of your mistress,”
-and hastily re-entering the vehicle, drove rapidly off.
-The benevolent mistress of the mansion received
-the forsaken wanderer with the utmost kindness,
-and overlooking her error, sought, with true Christian
-charity, to bind up her crushed spirit. Thus,
-by a strange coincidence, this amiable lady had
-under her roof at the same moment, two wretched
-outcasts—victims to man’s unhallowed passions.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mrs. Anson had been growing weaker every day
-since she entered this hospitable dwelling, and it
-was now evident she held her life by a frail tenure.
-Derode was a constant visitor, yet he knew not
-Mrs. Anson was an inmate of the house; he deemed
-she had complied with his wishes and crossed the
-Atlantic.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What motive can you have,” said he to Mrs.
-Torrance one day, “for deferring our happiness?
-You are too generous to allow so untoward an
-event as my daughter’s flight to influence your decision.
-Add not to the affliction of that blow, by
-cold procrastination. Speak, madam, have my
-misfortunes lost me your affection?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No, major,” replied the lady, “but I fear your
-faults have lessened it. Where is the American
-lady?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“At home,” said he earnestly, “at home, with
-her husband. I, myself, placed her on board a
-packet bound to New York.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The lady regarded the utterer of this bold falsehood
-with ineffable contempt, and stepping into the
-middle of the room, she threw open a folding door,
-and pointed to Mrs. Anson, who was reclining on
-an ottoman.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Are there devils in league against me?” muttered
-Derode, “how came that wretched woman
-here, madam?—she is a maniac—but I will convey
-her to an asylum, whence she shall not escape,”
-and he was advancing toward her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Stay,” exclaimed Mrs. Torrance, restraining
-him, “that lady is under the protection of my roof,
-and she leaves it only with her own free will.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“By heavens! madam,” said he, “she quits not
-my sight till I consign her to a mad house;” and,
-forgetting every thing in his wrath, he roughly removed
-the lady from before him, as the door
-abruptly opened, and a tall, stern looking man stood
-before him. The intruder was dressed in strict
-conformity with the fashion of the day, and, on removing
-his hat, he exhibited a forehead of high
-intelligence, but two or three strong lines were
-drawn across it; two deep furrows also descended
-between his heavy brows, giving, to his otherwise
-agreeable features, a fierce, if not a ferocious expression.
-His dark eyes, deeply set in his head,
-flashed with the fierceness, and yet fascination, of a
-serpent’s orbs, ere he makes his deadly spring. The
-stranger expanded his lofty figure, and throwing
-forward his ample chest, he crossed his arms upon
-it, and gazed intently on Derode.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The major turned from his burning gaze, and
-advancing to the couch where lay the invalid, said,
-in a harsh voice, “rise, madam, and follow me,” at
-the same time laying his hand on her shoulder.
-Three strides brought the stranger to the spot, and
-seizing Derode, he whirled him against the opposite
-wall with the strength of a giant, exclaiming, “let
-your victim die in peace!” The expiring woman
-raised herself with her last collected strength, and
-articulating, “<span class='it'>my husband!</span>” sank back in a swoon.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The moment Derode became aware of the relation
-in which the stranger stood to the fainting
-woman, he made an attempt to reach the door,
-but was intercepted by Anson.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Stay,” said the latter, “you stir not hence.
-Stay, and behold the consummation of your villainy.
-See! she breathes again. Let her curse
-you and expire!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The lamp of life had been long flickering in the
-poor patient, and was now giving forth its last
-brightness. She held out her hands imploringly to
-her husband, and said, “forgive me!” but before
-his lips could utter the pardon, she fell back in the
-arms of Mrs. Torrance—a corpse.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The mysterious awe with which the presence of
-death fills the human heart, caused a silence as profound
-as that which had just fallen on the departed.
-Anson bent over the stiffening body and murmured:
-“Hadst thou died spotless, my wife, how joyfully
-would my spirit have journeyed with thine to the
-bar of God—and in the realms of peace, where
-the tempter comes not—where sin and shame, and
-sorrow enter not—we should forever have enjoyed
-that bliss—our foretaste of which on earth, was
-so rudely broken by the destroyer. But enough.
-The last tears these eyes shall ever shed, have
-fallen upon thy bier—and now again to my work
-of vengeance!” He arose, and bent on Derode a
-look of ineffable ferocity. “Look,” he said, “on
-the man you have ruined. <span class='it'>You</span> beheld <span class='it'>me</span> for the
-first time, yet my eyes have scarce lost sight of
-you for months—and henceforward will I be like
-your ever-present shadow. The solace of <span class='it'>my</span> life
-shall be to blight the joy of <span class='it'>yours</span>—in crowds or
-in solitude—amid the gay revel, and through the
-silent watches of the night, will I hover around you.
-I will become the living, embodied spirit of your
-remorse; walking with you in darkness and in light,
-and when a smile would mantle on your lips, I will
-dispel it with the sound of <span style='font-size:smaller'>MURDERER</span>!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ll rid myself of such companionship,” said
-Derode,—“I have pistols here—follow me, sir,
-and seek a manly satisfaction at once.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The loud voices of Anson and her father, had
-been heard by Isabel, and the unhappy girl on
-entering the apartment—to the astonishment and
-horror of Derode—threw herself on the bosom of
-Anson, who, putting her aside, exclaimed—“that
-you may want no motive to <span class='it'>hate</span> as well as <span class='it'>fear</span>
-me, know that I am the seducer of your daughter.
-Thus have I <span class='it'>begun</span> my work of destruction.”
-Driven to desperation by this taunt, Derode drew
-a pistol, aimed it at Anson, and fired. By a movement
-equally sudden, Isabel, with a scream, threw
-herself before her betrayer, and received the ball
-in her shoulder. The wretched father groaned in
-agony, and fled from the house, while Anson,
-consigning the wounded girl to the care of Mrs.
-Torrance, pursued the culprit.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The same day on which Anson committed his
-wife to the earth, Isabel Derode yielded up her
-spirit—and a jury declared that she died from a
-wound inflicted by the hand of her father.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Time passed slowly away, and Derode was preparing
-for his trial. The legal gentlemen whom
-he had employed, could perceive some palliating,
-but no justifiable points in his case. He vehemently
-declared he had no purpose of injuring his
-daughter—his object being to inflict a just punishment
-on her seducer. His counsel, however, sorrowfully
-assured him, that if the <span class='it'>intent</span> and <span class='it'>attempt</span>
-to kill could be proved, and a death resulted from
-such attempt, it mattered little who fell by his hand.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The amiable Mrs. Torrance, resolving not to
-appear as a witness against him, had retired to the
-continent, and was now living in much seclusion
-at Dresden. But Anson remained; and the relentless
-heart of that altered man expanded with savage
-joy when he reflected that it was <span class='it'>his</span> evidence that
-would condemn his wronger. Some of the friends
-of the unhappy criminal waited on Anson, and
-besought him, in the most moving manner, not to
-appear against the wretched man, alleging that if
-no direct evidence were adduced, justice would
-wink, and the offender escape. The witness was
-inflexible. Derode himself sent a respectful request
-to see him. Anson entered his cell, and the despairing
-murderer begged for life like a very coward.
-Anson spurned the miserable suppliant from
-him:—“Villain! villain!” he said, “ten thousand
-dastard lives like yours would but poorly expiate
-your fiend-like crime, or glut my insatiate vengeance!”—and
-casting a look of inextinguishable
-hate on the prisoner, he left the cell.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A few days after his commitment, Derode had
-written to his son who was stationed at Bermuda,
-an account of his misfortunes and imprisonment.
-The dutiful boy having obtained leave, had instantly
-sailed for England, and was now sitting in his father’s
-dismal apartment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Cheer up, father,” said the young sailor,—“things
-will go well yet. No proof, you say, but
-that man’s evidence,—and that man the seducer of
-my sister?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Even so,” replied the parent—“no prayers can
-touch him.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I’ll touch him,” said the fiery young man,
-“but not with prayers. Farewell father! to-morrow
-I’ll be here to tell you I have stopped the
-mouth of the king’s witness.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Anson, promptly answering the challenge of
-young Derode, was at Chalk Farm at daylight.
-When he surveyed the slightly formed, but noble
-looking youth who stood before him, prepared for
-deadly contest, he remembered his unremitting pistol-practice,
-his unerring aim, and one human feeling,
-one pulsation of pity played around his heart.
-They were evanescent. He recalled his deserted
-home, his violated hearth, his vow for <span style='font-size:smaller'>REVENGE</span>, and
-at the fatal signal, his youthful antagonist lay on
-the frozen earth, with his life-blood bubbling out.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Could Anson have seen Derode when his son’s
-death was communicated to him, he would have
-deemed the destroyer’s cup of bitterness full.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Anson was arraigned for this murder, and underwent
-a trial, which was mere mockery, for having
-plied his gold freely—flaws, defective evidence, and
-questions of identity, as usual, in cases of dueling,
-hoodwinked justice.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>“Plate sin with gold, and the strong lance of justice hurtless breaks,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Clothe it with rags, a pigmy’s straw will pierce it.”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Well, the day of trial came. Public excitement
-was at its highest pitch. The jailor, accompanied
-by sheriffs and tipstaves, proceeded to the cell of
-the prisoner, to escort him to the tribunal of justice.
-But lo! the apartment was tenantless. The criminal
-had escaped. A brief survey of his cell revealed
-the means of his egress. The heavy stones forming
-the sides of his grated window, were displaced.
-Large tools lay scattered about—files, chisels, and
-other articles, plainly indicating a bold confederacy.
-And such was indeed the case:—for the officers
-belonging to the same regiment with Derode had
-contrived his escape.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Words cannot depict Anson’s feelings of mingled
-rage and disappointment when he learned that his
-victim had fled. At his own expense, he instituted
-a search that pervaded the three kingdoms. He
-himself flew to the continent, and offered a thousand
-guineas for the capture of the murderer. His
-efforts were fruitless. The men who liberated Derode
-did not withdraw their protection until they
-had placed him in safety.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For more than a year Anson wandered about
-Europe, in hopes to light upon the fugitive. Weary
-at length with the vain pursuit, and thinking that
-the fire in his heart was consuming his life, he
-returned home, as he thought, to die. He remained
-in Philadelphia a few months, during which
-time he conveyed a great part of the remainder of
-his property to some of our public charities, and
-then retired from the haunts of men to live and die
-alone. With a strong tinge of romance, he selected
-a wild, mountainous country, in the interior of our
-state, never leaving the precincts of the hovel where
-he dwelt, except to purchase a stock of the homeliest
-food.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He had been living thus more than eight years
-without any thing occurring to disturb the monotony
-of his life, when one blustering night, a cry from a
-creature in distress reached his ear, as he sat in
-his mountain hut, poring over a black-letter folio.
-Surprised that any one should invade his dangerous
-premises, and on such a night, he ignited a fragment
-of resinous wood, and sallied forth. As he
-descended the path that left his door, and struck
-into that which wound round a precipitous ledge,
-the voice came nearer on the blast. Anson
-shouted loudly to the stranger not to approach,
-until he reached him, as another step in the dark
-might be certain destruction. Proceeding hastily
-onward, he found the traveller standing on the
-outermost edge of the fearful precipice. The torrent
-was heard boiling and dashing far below, and
-the wind swept in eddying blasts round the dizzy
-cliff. Anson extended his hand to the wanderer,
-and the blaze of the torch flashed brightly in the
-faces of both men. Anson riveted his eyes on the
-features of the stranger, and with a yell of demoniac
-joy fastened on his throat. It was the miserable
-Derode, who, in the last stage of poverty, was wandering
-from the far west, to the sea-board, on foot.
-In the darkness, he had mistaken the mountain
-path for a bye-road, which had been described to
-him as greatly shortening the distance to the village.
-He quailed beneath the iron grasp of Anson, and
-struggled to say:—“dreaded man! are you not
-surfeited with revenge? My ruined daughter!—my
-murdered son!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No!” shouted the infuriated recluse, “my
-ruined—murdered wife! I see her pale face
-there—down in the black abyss! she demands
-the sacrifice! down!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He hurled the trembling seducer over the precipice,
-and laughed aloud as the wretch dashed from
-rock to rock in his descent. A heavy plunge! and
-the surging torrent closed over the hapless Derode
-forever!</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk105'/>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Anson dwelt on in his gloomy solitude, until his
-hair became blanched, and the memory of passion
-and crime had furrowed deep channels in his face.
-In the summer of 1828, we one day followed a
-trout stream far up into the mountain, and encountered
-the old man. Giving him the fruits of our
-morning sport, and seating ourselves in his hut, we
-learned from himself the leading incidents of this
-melancholy story. His eye lighted up with unnatural
-fire, as he pointed with unsteady finger to the
-fearful cliff, and said, “there, sir, ’twas from yon
-projection, I dashed my destroyer into the chasm.
-The law would call it murder, and I live in daily
-expectation that the bloodhounds will drag me
-hence. Well, let them come when they will; from my
-youth, life has been to me one deep, enduring curse.”
-We saw him at least once in the summer for
-many years, and in our last interview with him, we
-said cheerfully,—“you look quite hale yet, Mr.
-Anson.” He regarded us steadily for a moment,
-and said, in a voice that reminded us of <a id='shel'></a>Shelley’s
-Ahasuerus, “I cannot die.” &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;* &nbsp;&nbsp;*</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><h1><a id='empr'></a>THE EMPRESS.</h1></div>
-
-<div class='literal-container' style=''><div class='literal'> <!-- rend=';fs:0.9em;' -->
-<p class='line' style='font-size:0.9em;'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;“Adieu, my lord—</p>
-<p class='line' style='font-size:0.9em;'>I never wished to see you sorry; now,</p>
-<p class='line' style='font-size:0.9em;'>I trust, I shall.”</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:right;margin-right:0em;margin-bottom:0.75em;font-size:0.9em;'><span class='it'>Winter’s Tale.</span></p>
-</div></div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>It</span> was evening. The mass had been concluded
-in the royal chapel, and the Empress Josephine was
-returning to her apartments through the gallery that
-led thereto. As she was proceeding along, she felt
-a touch upon her arm, and, upon looking round,
-discovered the form of a man beside her. He
-made his obeisance, and she immediately recognised
-the Counsellor Fouché.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What would Monsieur Fouché?” she demanded.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A few moments private converse with you, if
-it please your majesty,” he replied, and, at the same
-time, pointing to the embrasure of a window near by.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Josephine understood the motion, and made a
-sign that she would follow. He led the way; and
-when they arrived, she again demanded what he
-wanted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I crave your majesty’s pardon for the liberty I
-have taken,” said the minister of police respectfully,
-yet boldly, “but I wish to make a communication,
-which, though it may not be of the most pleasing
-nature, yet, demands your majesty’s most serious
-attention.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And what may it be? speak,” said the empress.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You are aware,” began the minister, “that I
-am much with the emperor, and have ample opportunity
-for learning his secret wishes and desires.
-I have become acquainted with one recently, which,
-of late, has much occupied his mind, and which he
-would fain gratify but for the love he bears your
-majesty. It is this: he wishes for an heir to inherit
-his title and power. Every man, you know,
-feels an inherent pride in transmitting his name to
-posterity; and it is but natural that the emperor
-should feel such a desire. I would, therefore, suggest
-to your majesty the necessity of a sacrifice,
-which will add to the interest of France, make his
-majesty happy, and which would be as equally
-sublime as it will be inevitable. Beg him to obtain
-a divorce.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>During this disclosure, the empress betrayed excessive
-emotion. Her mild eyes were suffused
-with tears—her lips swelled—her bosom heaved—her
-face became deadly pale—and the tremor that
-took possession of her frame, told how deeply her
-feelings were agitated. But it was as the momentary
-cloud that obscures the noonday sun; in a
-moment it was past, and with a slightly tremulous
-voice, she asked—</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And what authority has the duke of Otranto
-for holding such language?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“None,” he replied, “it is only from a conviction
-of what must most certainly come to pass, and
-a desire to turn your attention to what so nearly
-concerns your majesty’s glory and happiness, that
-I have dared to speak upon the subject. Nevertheless,
-if I have offended, I beg your majesty’s
-forgiveness. Permit me now to depart.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He stood silent for a few minutes, as if waiting
-for her assent. She waved her hand, and the
-boldest political intriguer of his time departed,
-conscious of having done that which none other
-in France would have presumed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Josephine turned away with a beating heart.
-She reached her apartments, and throwing herself
-on a sofa, gave vent to her over-burthened soul in
-a flood of tears. It was not long before dinner
-was announced; but she refused to appear at the
-table, on a plea of indisposition, and retired to her
-chamber.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was a short time afterward that the door of
-the chamber opened, and the emperor entered. He
-approached Josephine. Her eyes were red with
-weeping, and the tears yet moistened those bright
-orbs, in defiance of her efforts to appear calm. He
-seated himself beside her, and put his arm around
-her waist.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Josephine,” said he, in an affectionate tone,
-“what is the cause of this emotion?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Nothing,” she answered, in a faltering voice,
-and scarcely audible.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Something has occurred to bring forth those
-tears. Tell me, what is it?” and he looked tenderly
-in her face.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I cannot,” she said, bitterly, whilst she leaned
-her head upon his shoulder, and gave vent to another
-flood of tears. “No, I cannot speak those
-fearful words.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What words, Josephine? speak; what words?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She hesitated, and then faltered out,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That—that you—you do not love me as you
-used to.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ’Tis false!” he exclaimed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Then why wish to be separated? why wish for
-a divorce? Oh! Napoleon, is it my fault that we
-have no children to bless our union? God has so
-willed it,” and her bosom heaved convulsively.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He started as she pronounced the two first sentences,
-and compressed his lips as if to suppress the
-pang of conviction that shot through his heart.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Josephine,” said the emperor, tenderly, “some
-one has been poisoning your mind with idle tales.
-Who has it been?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She then related to him her interview with
-Fouché, and asked him to dismiss that minister
-as a penalty for his audacity in playing with her
-feelings. He strenuously denied the communication;
-but refused to dismiss him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No,” said he, “circumstances compel me to
-retain him, though he well deserves my displeasure.
-But why give credit to such silly assertions, Josephine?
-Have I ever treated you but with affection?
-Have you discovered aught in my behaviour to warrant
-suspicion? No; believe me you are still dear
-to me. Banish those foolish fears from your breast
-then, and weep no more.” So saying, he imprinted
-a kiss upon her lips, and left the chamber to attend
-to the affairs of state.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was touching to hear such expressions of tenderness
-issue from the greatest monarch of his
-time, and to witness that act of devotion—to see
-that proud spirit unbent; but it was those tears of
-anguish, and the whisperings of that “still small
-voice” of conscience, that had humbled him, to
-whom kings and monarchs humbled themselves,
-and whose mighty mind aspired to the conquest of
-the world.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The setting sun threw its parting rays over the
-earth, and pierced the windows of the imperial
-palace. The golden flood, softened by the crimson
-curtains, fell upon the charming features of the
-empress Josephine, as she sat in thoughtful attitude,
-with her head resting upon her hand, on a sofa of
-royal purple, near the centre of her chamber. A
-page, in waiting, stood near the door, carelessly
-humming a light ditty; his heart as sunny as his
-own native France. What a contrast with that
-which beat within the bosom of the empress! Care
-weighed heavily upon her breast. Long before
-her interview with Fouché she had, from the
-very cause hinted at by the minister, dreaded a
-withdrawal of her husband’s affections; but since
-that event her anxieties had doubly increased,
-and suspicion would take possession of her mind,
-amounting, at times, even to jealousy. Not that
-she apprehended his proceeding to that extreme
-at which the wily minister had hinted; no!—no
-person on earth could have persuaded her that he,
-whose joys and woes she had cheerfully shared,
-wished for a separation: but that some Syren
-would ensnare him with her charms, and usurp
-that place in his heart which she only should hold.
-All the powers she possessed were exerted by
-Josephine, in order to retain his love, and sometimes
-she fancied she had succeeded; for of late,
-in proportion as the sense of injustice he was about
-to do her, presented itself to his mind, he became
-more than usually kind and tender; but there were
-moments when a gloomy melancholy would settle
-upon her—an indefinable something that seemed
-to warn of approaching affliction.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was in one of those fits of abstraction, so
-foreign to her naturally cheerful nature, that she
-sat, as we have said, seemingly unconscious of all
-around, when the door opened, and Napoleon entered.
-He seemed disturbed, and trouble was vividly
-depicted in his expressive countenance. He motioned
-for the page to retire, and seated himself
-beside her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Josephine!” he said.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She started from her reverie, as he pronounced
-her name—for buried in thought, she had not observed
-his entrance—and bent upon him such a
-look, full of sweetness and affection, that it disarmed
-him; he could not proceed. He arose. He folded
-his arms upon his breast and paced to and fro; his
-brow was contracted,—his lips compressed; and
-the unquiet restlessness of his piercing eye, betokened
-the agitation he could scarce control. He
-thus continued for some moments. At length he
-stopped before her, as if his resolution was taken,
-and then again turned away, continuing to walk up
-and down the apartment with rapid and hasty
-strides. After a short time he stopped again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It must be done,” he muttered, “I will acquaint
-her with it at once; delay but makes it still more
-difficult.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He made an effort to suppress his emotion, and
-seated himself beside her. But again his voice
-failed him, and he could only articulate,—</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Josephine, prepare yourself for sad news.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Ever on the alarm, the purport of his words
-seemed anticipated by her, though not to their full
-extent, and she burst into a flood of tears, scarce
-knowing why.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Dinner was now announced, and their majesties
-proceeded to the table. Silence prevailed throughout
-the meal, and the dishes were scarcely touched.
-They arose from their seats, and as they did so,
-the page on duty presented the emperor with his
-accustomed cup of coffee. He took it, but handed
-it back scarcely touched. He then proceeded to
-his chamber; the empress followed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They seated themselves when they had entered,
-and remained for some time silent. The emperor
-at length spoke.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“There is no use in deferring the truth, Josephine,”
-said he, in a tremulous voice, “it must sooner
-or later be made known to you, and suspense is
-more cruel than certainty. The interests of France
-demand that we separate.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What!” she exclaimed, placing both hands on
-his shoulders, and gazing with an eager and inquiring
-look in his face, “what? separate!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes,” he answered, “France demands the
-sacrifice.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Her hands dropped heavily—her bosom heaved—and
-hot, burning tears, such only as flow from a
-surcharged heart, gushed forth in torrents from her
-eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And I—oh! God!” she exclaimed, “I who
-have shared your joys and sorrows—who have been
-your companion for years—who loved you through
-weal and woe—who—but I will not upbraid you,
-Napoleon. Yet she who supplants me, Maria
-Louise, the daughter of the Emperor Francis, can
-never love you as I have done,—oh! no!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She buried her face in her hands; the emperor
-remained silent.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But,” she continued, starting suddenly, and
-throwing her arms around his neck, “you do not
-mean it. Oh! no! say you do not! speak,—you
-cannot mean it. Tell me, quick—say it is not
-so—that it cannot, must not be. Speak, Napoleon,
-and the blessing of God rest upon you!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Alas! it is too true,” he said, his eyes suffused
-with tears. Oh! how keen was the pang of
-conscience that shot through his guilty heart.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“True!” she exclaimed, “and you confirm it?
-Then Fouché was right. But I will never survive
-it—no! I will never survive it. Mon Dieu! mon
-Dieu!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She uttered a piercing scream, and reeled backward,
-for she had risen from her seat in her excitement.
-Napoleon caught her in his arms, and laid
-her gently upon the carpet. Her agony was too
-deep for words, and she could only weep and groan
-in bitterness of spirit. He stepped to the door and
-called de Bausset. They raised her in their arms,
-and bore her to her chamber. Her women were
-immediately summoned, and she was resigned to
-their care. Napoleon retired, greatly agitated.
-De Bausset followed; tears were also in his eyes;
-for Josephine, by her goodness, won all hearts.
-Napoleon stopped a moment outside to listen to her
-groan of anguish. He related what had occurred.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The interests of France:” he continued, addressing
-De Bausset, “and as my dynasty does violence
-to my heart, the divorce has become a rigorous
-duty. I am more afflicted by what has happened
-to Josephine, because, three days ago, she must
-have learned it from Hortensia. The unhappy
-obligation which condemns me to separate myself
-from her, I deplore with all my heart, but I
-thought she possessed more strength of character,
-and I was not prepared for these bursts of grief.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>They hurried away. Conscience, ever-faithful
-conscience, was already performing its duty; he
-felt its just upbraidings. He essayed to stifle it. It
-was this that led him to utter such language to De
-Bausset—to assert that he thought she possessed
-strength of character enough to receive the announcement
-without those bursts of grief. What
-virtuous and affectionate woman could receive with
-calmness a sentence of repudiation; and that, too,
-by the tongue of a beloved husband? Her heart
-must have become as stone.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>On the sixteenth of December, 1809, the law,
-authorising the divorce, was enacted by the conservative
-senate. In the following March the nuptials
-between Napoleon and Marie Louise, were performed
-in Vienna; and on the first day of April,
-a little more than four months after the scene above
-described, they were joined in wedlock in the city
-of Paris, by his uncle, Cardinal Fesch.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Thus was consummated that act which cast a
-stain upon the character of “the great Napoleon,”
-which time cannot efface. A blot, deep and indelible,
-that will remain whilst his name lives among
-men. It was an act contrary to the laws of God
-and of humanity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>One wrong action will often tarnish a whole life.
-We may admire his bravery, and courage, his vast
-conception of mind, his gigantic intellect, his unparalleled
-energy, his perseverance, and his determination
-of character, but when we turn to this dark
-page in his history, admiration vanishes, and contempt
-and disgust usurp its place. It was indeed
-an act unworthy of the man, and one that admits
-of no palliation. It was not to France the sacrifice,
-as he termed it, was made; it was to ambition.
-And may we not surmise that the lowering fortunes
-which ever after were his, and the dark fate which
-closed his days in a lonely island, afar off on the
-bosom of the ocean, were, in some measure, acts of
-divine retribution, which this act of his called forth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Long years after the occurrence of the foregoing
-events, and when Napoleon was no more master of
-Europe,—when Louis XVIII. was seated on the
-throne of France, and “Le Grand Monarque,” was
-a prisoner, confined for life on the island of St.
-Helena—the lovely and accomplished Josephine,—the
-injured wife,—ended a virtuous life at the villa
-of Malmaison, near St. Germain, whither she had
-retired after the divorce. Her death was attributed
-to disease of the body; but it is likely it was not
-altogether that, or at least a secret sorrow had so
-weakened and enfeebled her mortal frame that the
-least rude touch of disease overthrew the structure.
-Differently died the repudiator and the repudiated.</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:right;margin-right:3em;margin-top:0.5em;'><span class='sc'>Sketcher.</span></p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span style='font-size:smaller'>Philadelphia, 1841.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><h1><a id='lake'></a>LAKE GEORGE.</h1></div>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'><span class='sc'>There</span> is a clear and bright blue lake</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Embosom’d in the rocky north;</p>
-<p class='line0'>No murmurs e’er its silence break,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;As on its waves we sally forth;</p>
-<p class='line0'>The mountain bird floats high aloft,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Above his wild and craggy nest,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And gazes from his towering throne,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Upon the torrent’s sparkling breast;</p>
-<p class='line0'>While far beneath, in light and shade,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;The bright green valleys frown and smile,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And in the bed sweet nature made,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;The lake sleeps soft and sweet the while.</p>
-<p class='line0'>O’er many a green and lovely wild,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;The golden sun-beams gaily smile;</p>
-<p class='line0'>But ’mid them all he doth not break,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;As on his race he sallies forth,</p>
-<p class='line0'>On fairer scene, or sweeter lake,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Than that within the rocky north.</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;&ensp;M. T.</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span style='font-size:smaller'>Lake George, Feb., 1841.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class='tbk106'/>
-
-<div><h1><a id='reef'></a>THE REEFER OF ’76.</h1></div>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;'>———</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;font-size:0.8em;font-weight:bold;'>BY THE AUTHOR OF “CRUIZING IN THE LAST WAR.”</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:1.5em;'>———</p>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>PAUL JONES.</h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>“Steady</span>, there, steady!” thundered the master
-of the merchantman, his voice seeming, however,
-in the fierce uproar of the gale, to die away into a
-whisper.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I looked ahead. A giant wave, towering as
-high as the yard arm, its angry crest hissing above
-us, and its dark green bosom seeming to open to
-engulph our fated bark, was rolling down toward
-us, shutting out half the horizon from sight, and
-striking terror into the stoutest heart. It was a
-fearful spectacle. Involuntarily I glanced around
-the horizon. All was dark, lowering, and ominous.
-On every hand the mountain waves were heaving
-to the sky, while the roar of the hurricane was
-awfully sublime. Now we rose to the heavens:
-now sunk into a yawning abyss. But I had little
-time to gaze upon the fearful scene. Already the
-angry billow was rushing down upon our bows,
-when the master again sang out, as if with the
-voice of a giant.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Hold on all!</span>” and as he spoke, the huge
-volume of waters came tumbling in upon us,
-sweeping our decks like a whirlwind, hissing, roaring,
-and foaming along, and making the merchantman
-quiver in every timber from bulwark to kelson.
-Not a moveable thing was left. The long boat was
-swept from the decks like chaff before a hurricane.
-For an instant the merchantman lay powerless beneath
-the blow, as if a thunderbolt had stunned
-her; but gradually recovering from the shock, she
-shook the waters gallantly from her bows, emerged
-from the deluge, and rolling her tall masts heavily
-to starboard, once more breasted the storm.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We had been a week at sea without meeting a
-single sail. During that time we had enjoyed a
-succession of favorable breezes, until within the
-last few days, when the gale, which now raged,
-had overtaken us, and driven us out into the Atlantic,
-somewhere, as near as we could guess, between
-the Bermudas and our port of destination. Within
-the last few hours we had been lying-to, under a
-close-reefed foresail; but every succeeding wave
-had seemed to become more dangerous than the
-last, until it was now evident that our craft could
-not much longer endure the continued surges which
-breaking over her bows, threatened momentarily
-to engulph us. The master stood by my side, holding
-on to a rope, his weather-beaten countenance
-drenched with spray, but his keen, anxious eye
-changing continually from the bow of his craft,
-to the wild scene around him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She can’t stand it much longer, Mr. Parker,”
-said the old man, “many a gale have I weathered
-in her, but none like this. God help us!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Meet it with the helm—hold on all,” came
-faintly from the forecastle, and before the words
-had whizzed past upon the gale, another mountain
-wave was hurled in upon us, and I felt myself, the
-next instant, borne away, as in the arms of a giant,
-upon its bosom. The rope by which I held had
-parted. There was a hissing in my ears—a rapid
-shooting like an arrow—a desperate effort to stay
-my progress by catching at a rope, I missed—and
-then I felt myself whirled away astern of the
-merchantman, my eyes blinded with the spray, my
-ears ringing with a strange, wild sound, and a feeling
-of sudden, utter hopelessness at my heart, such
-as they only can know who have experienced a
-fate as terrible as mine, at that moment, threatened
-to be.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A man overboard!” came faintly from the fast-receding
-ship.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ahoy!” I shouted.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hillo—hil—lo—o,” was answered back.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ahoy—a—a—hoy!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Throw over that spar.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Toll the bell that he may know where we are.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hillo—hi—il—lo!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Who is it?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Bring a lantern here.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hil—l—o—o—o—o!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Can you see him?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It’s as dark as death.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“God have mercy then upon his soul.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I could hear every word of the conversation, as
-the excited tones of the speakers came borne to
-leeward upon the gale, but although I shouted back
-with desperate strength, I felt that my cries were
-unheard by my shipmates to windward. The distance
-between myself and the merchantman was
-meanwhile rapidly increasing, and every moment
-her dark figure became more and more shadowy.
-With that presence of mind which is soon acquired
-in a life of peril, I had begun to tread water the
-instant I had gone overboard; but I felt that my
-strength would soon fail me, and that I must sink,
-unaided, into the watery abyss. Oh! who can tell
-my feelings as I saw the figure of the merchantman
-gradually becoming more dim in the distance, and
-heard the voices of my friends, at first loud and
-distinct, dying away into indistinct murmurs. Alone
-on the ocean! My breath came quick; my heart
-beat wildly; I felt the blood rushing in torrents
-to my brain. The scene meanwhile grew darker
-around me. The faint hope I had entertained that
-the ship would be put about, gradually died away;
-and even while I looked, she suddenly vanished
-from my vision. I strained my eyes to catch a
-sight of her as I rose upon a billow. Alas! she
-was not to be seen. Was there then no hope?
-Young; full of life; in the heyday of love—oh!
-God it was too much to endure! I felt that my
-last hour had come. Already the waters seemed
-roaring through my ears, and strange, fantastic
-figures to dance before my eyes. In that hour
-every event of my life whirled through my memory!
-I thought of my childhood; of my mother in her
-weeds; of her prayers over her only child; and of
-the cold wintry day when they laid her in her
-grave, and told me that I was an orphan. I
-thought too of my boyhood; of my college life;
-of my early days at sea; of the eventful months
-which had just passed; of my hopes of a bright
-career or a glorious death, thus to be quenched
-forever; and of Beatrice, my own Beatrice, whom
-I was to see no more. Wild with the agony of
-that thought, I tossed my arms aloft, and invoked
-a dying blessing on her head. At that instant
-something came shooting past me, borne on the
-bosom of a towering wave. It was a lumbering
-chest, doubtless one of those thrown overboard
-from the merchantman. I grasped it with a desperate
-effort: I clambered up upon it; and as I felt
-its frail planks beneath me, a revulsion came over
-my bosom. The fisherman by his fireside, when
-the tempest howls around his dwelling, could not
-have felt more confident of safety than I now did,
-with nothing but this simple chest between me
-and the yawning abyss. Quick, gushing emotions
-swept through my bosom; I burst into tears; and
-lifting up my voice, there, alone, on the wide ocean,
-I poured forth my thanksgivings to God.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was with no little difficulty I maintained my
-position on the chest, during the long hours which
-elapsed before the morning dawned. Now borne
-to the heavens, now hurried into the abyss below;
-now drenched with the surge, now whirled wildly
-onward, on the bosom of some wave, I passed the
-weary moments, in alternate efforts to maintain my
-hold, and ardent longings for the morning’s light.
-The gale, meantime, gradually diminished. At
-length the long looked-for dawn appeared, creeping
-slowly and ominously over the horizon, and revealing
-to my eager sight nothing but the white surges,
-the agitated deep, and the leaden colored sky on
-every hand. My heart sank within me. All through
-the weary watches of that seemingly interminable
-night, I had cheered my drooping hopes with the
-certainty of seeing the merchantman in the morning,
-and now, as I scanned the frowning horizon;
-and saw only that stormy waste on every hand,
-my heart once more died within me, and I almost
-despaired. Suddenly, however, I thought I perceived
-something flashing on the weather seaboard
-like the wing of a water-fowl, and straining my
-eyes in that direction, whenever I rose upon a
-wave, I beheld at length, to my joy, that the object
-was a sail. Oh! the overpowering emotions of
-that moment. The vessel was evidently one of
-considerable size, and coming down right toward
-me. As she approached I made her out to be a
-sloop of war, driving under close-reefed courses
-before the gale. Her hull of glossy black; her
-snowy canvass; and her trim jaunty finish were in
-remarkable contrast with the usual slovenly appearance
-of a mere merchantman. No jack was at
-her mast-head; no ensign fluttered at her gaff.
-But I cared not to what nation she belonged, in
-that moment of hope and fear. To me she was a
-messenger of mercy. I had watched her eagerly
-until she had approached within almost a pistol-shot
-of me, trembling momentarily lest she should alter
-her course. I now shouted with all my strength.
-No one, however, seemed to hear me. Onward
-she came, swinging with the surges, and driving a
-cataract of foam along before her bows. A look-out
-was idly leaning on the bowsprit. As the
-huge fabric surged down toward me another danger
-arose. I might be run down. Nerved to supernatural
-strength by the immanency of the peril, I
-raised myself half up upon my chest, and placing
-my hand to my mouth, shouted with desperate
-energy,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ahoy! a—a—hoy!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Hillo!” said the look-out, turning sharply in
-the direction of my voice.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ahoy! ship <span class='it'>a—ho—o—y</span>!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Starboard your helm,” thundered the seaman,
-discovering me upon my little raft, “heave a rope
-here—easy—easy—God bless you, shipmate,” and
-with the rapidity with which events are transacted
-in a dream, I was hoisted on board, and clasped in
-the arms of the warm-hearted old fellow, before he
-saw, by my uniform, that I was an officer. When
-he perceived this, however, he started back, and
-hastily touching his hat, said, with humorous perplexity,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Beg pardon, sir—didn’t see you belonged
-aft——”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“An American officer in this extremity,” said
-a deep voice at my elbow, with startling suddenness,
-and as the speaker advanced, the group of
-curious seamen fell away from around me, as if by
-magic; while I felt, at once, that I was in the presence
-of the commanding officer of the ship.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You are among friends,” said the speaker, in
-a voice slightly tinged with the Scotch accent, “we
-bear the flag of the Congress—but walk aft—you
-are drenched, exhausted—you need rest—I must
-delay my inquiries until you have been provided for—send
-the doctor to my cabin—and steward mix
-us a rummer of hot grog.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>During these rapid remarks the speaker, taking
-me by the arm, had conducted, or rather led me to
-a neat cabin aft, and closing the door with his last
-remarks, he opened a locker, and producing a suit
-of dry clothes, bid me array myself in them, and
-then vanished from the apartment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In a few minutes, however, he re-appeared, followed
-by the steward, bearing a huge tumbler of
-hot brandy, which he made me drink off, nothing
-loth, at a draught.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From the first instant of his appearance, I had
-felt a strange, but unaccountable awe in the presence
-of the commanding officer, and I now sought
-to account for it by a rigid, but hasty scrutiny of
-his person, as he stood before me.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He was a short, thick-set, muscular man, apparently
-about thirty years of age, drest in a blue,
-tight-fitting naval frock coat, with an epaulette
-upon one shoulder, and a sword hanging by his
-side. But his face was the most striking part of
-him. Such a countenance I never saw. It had a
-fire in the eye, a compression about the lips, a distention
-of the nostrils, and a sternness in its whole
-appearance, which betokened a man, not only of
-strong passions, but of inflexible decision of character.
-That brow, bold, massy, and threatening,
-might have shaped the destinies of a nation. I
-could not withdraw my eyes from it. He appeared
-to read my thoughts, for smiling faintly, he courteously
-signed to the steward to take my glass, and
-when the door had closed upon him, said,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But to what brother officer am I indebted for
-this honor?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I mentioned my name, and the schooner in which
-I had sailed from New York.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The Fire-Fly!” he said, with some surprise,
-“ah! I have heard of your gallantry in that brush
-with the pirates—” and then, half unconsciously,
-as if musing, he continued, “and so your name is
-Parker.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And yours?” I asked, with a nod of assent.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='sc'>Paul Jones!</span>”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For a moment we stood silently gazing on each
-other—he seeming to wish to pierce my very soul
-with his small, grey eye, and I regarding with a
-feeling akin to fascination, the wonderful man
-whose after career was even then foreshadowed
-in my mind.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I see you are of the right stuff,” exclaimed
-this singular being, breaking the silence, “we shall
-yet make those haughty English weep in blood for
-their tyranny.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I know not how it was; but from that moment
-I felt certain my companion would make his name
-a terror to his enemies, and a wonder to the world.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For some days we continued our course, with
-but little deviation; and every day I became more
-and more interested in the commander of the man-of-war.
-Although my situation as his guest brought
-me into closer contact with him than any one except
-his lieutenant, yet, after the first few hours
-of our intercourse, he became reserved and silent,
-though without any diminution of courtesy. His
-former career was little known even in the ward-room.
-He had been brought up, it was said, by
-the earl of Selkirk, but had left his patron’s house
-at the age of fifteen, and embarked in a seafaring
-life. Dark hints were whispered about as to the
-causes of his sudden departure, and it was said that
-the dishonor of one of his family had driven him
-forth from the roof of his patron. Upon these
-subjects, however, I made no ungenerous enquiries;
-but learned that he had subsequently been engaged
-in the West India trade as master, and that he had,
-on the breaking out of the war, come to America,
-and offered himself to Congress for a commission
-in our navy. Some deep, but, as yet unknown,
-cause of hatred toward the English, was said to
-have prompted him to this act.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As time passed on, however, I enjoyed many
-opportunities of studying his singular character,
-which, had I not felt my curiosity aroused, might
-have passed by unused. Often would I, in our
-slight conversations, endeavor to pierce into his
-bosom, and read there the history of all those
-dark emotions which slumbered there. But he
-seemed generally to suspect my purpose—at least
-he appeared always on his guard. He was ever
-the same courteous but unfathomable being.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We had run down as far south as the Bermudas,
-when, one day the look-out made five sail; and in
-an instant every eye was directed toward the
-quarter where the strangers appeared, to see if there
-was any chance of a prize.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“How bear they?” asked Paul Jones quickly, to
-the look-out at the mast-head.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I can’t make out but one, and she seems a
-large merchantman, on a taut bowline.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Watch her sharp.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ay, ay, sir.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For some time, every eye was fastened upon the
-approaching sail, which, apparently unconscious of
-an enemy so near, kept blindly approaching us. At
-length her royals began to lift, her topsails followed
-rapidly, and directly the heads of her courses loomed
-up on the horizon. Every eye sparkled with the
-certainty of a rich prize.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“She’s a fat Indiaman, by St. George,” said our
-lieutenant, who had not yet so far forgot the country
-of his ancestors, as to swear by any saint but her
-patron one.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I guess we’d better not be too sure,” said a
-cautious old quarter-master from Cape Cod, as he
-levelled a much worn spy-glass, and prepared to
-take a long squint at the stranger.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“By St. Pathrick,” said an Irish midshipman, in
-a whisper to one of his comrades, “but wont she
-make a beautiful prize—with the rale Jamaica, my
-boys, by the hogshead in her, and we nothing to do
-afther the capture, but to drink it up, to be shure.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The strange sail is a frigate,” said the look-out
-at the mast head, with startling earnestness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Too true, by G—d,” muttered the lieutenant,
-shutting his glass with a jerk; and as he spoke, the
-hull of the stranger loomed up above the horizon,
-presenting a row of yawning teeth that boded us
-little good, for we knew that our own little navy
-boasted no vessel with so large an armament.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“That fellow is an English frigate,” calmly said
-Paul Jones, closing his telescope leisurely, “we
-shall have to try our heels.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Every thing that could draw was soon set, and
-we went off upon a wind, hoping to distance our
-pursuer by superior sailing. But though, for a
-while, we deluded ourselves with this hope, it soon
-became apparent that the enemy was rapidly gaining
-upon us, and with a heavy cross sea to contend
-against, we found ourselves, in less than four hours,
-within musket shot of the frigate, upon her weather
-bow. During all this time the Englishman had
-been firing her chase guns after us, but not one of
-them, as yet, had touched us. The game, however,
-was now apparently over. Every one gave themselves
-up as lost, to die, perhaps, the death of
-rebels. Resistance would only inflame our captors.
-How astonished then, were we all to hear the captain
-exclaim,—</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Beat to quarters!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The high discipline of the crew brought every
-man to his post at the first tap of the drum, though
-not a countenance but exhibited amazement at the
-order.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Open the magazine!” said Paul Jones in the
-same stern, collected tone.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The order was obeyed, and then all was silent
-again. It was a moment of exciting interest. As
-I looked along the deck at the dark groups gathered
-at the guns, and then at the calm, but iron-like
-countenance of the daring commander, I felt strange
-doubts as to whether it might not be his intention
-to sink beneath the broadside of the frigate, or,
-grappling with the foe, blow himself and the Englishman
-up. My reverie, however, was soon cut
-short by a shot from the frigate whizzing harmlessly
-past us, overhead. The eye of the singular
-being standing beside me, flashed lightning, as he
-thundered,—</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Show him the bunting. Let drive at him,
-gunner,” and at the same instant our flag shot up
-to the gaff, unrolled, and then whipt in the wind;
-while a shot from one of our four pounders, cut
-through and through the fore-course of the enemy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Keep her away a point or two, quarter-master,”
-said the captain, again breaking in upon the ominous
-silence, now interrupted only by the report of
-the cannon, or the fierce dashing of the waves
-against the sloop’s bows.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Does he mean to have us all strung up at the
-yard arm?” whispered the lieutenant to me, as he
-beheld this perilous bravado, yet felt himself restrained
-as much by the awe in which he held his
-superior, as by his own rigid notions of discipline,
-from remonstrating against the manœuvre.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Meantime, the frigate was slowly gaining upon
-us, and had her batteries been better served, would
-have soon riddled us to pieces; but the want of
-skill in her crew, as well as the violence of the
-cross sea, prevented her shot from taking effect.
-The distance between us, however, gradually lessened.
-We saw no hope of escape. Every resort
-had been tried, but in vain. Already the frigate
-was dashing on to us in dangerous proximity, and
-we could see the eager countenances of her officers
-apparently exulting over their prize. Our crew,
-meanwhile, began to murmur. Despair was in
-many faces: despondency in all. Only our commander
-maintained the same inflexible demeanor
-which had characterised him throughout the chase.
-He had kept his eye steadily fixed upon the frigate
-for the last ten minutes in silence, only speaking
-now and then to order the sloop to be kept away
-another point or two. By this means the relative
-positions of the two vessels had been changed so as
-to bring us upon the lee-bow of the enemy. Suddenly
-his eye kindled, and turning quickly around
-to his lieutenant, he said,—</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Order all hands to be ready to make sail,” and
-as soon as the men had sprung to their stations, he
-shouted—</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Up with your helm; hard,—harder. Man the
-clew garnets—board tacks—topsails, royals—and
-flying jib,—merrily all, my men.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>And as sheet after sheet of canvass was distended
-to the wind, we came gallantly around, and
-catching the breeze over our taffrail, went off dead
-before the wind, passing, however, within pistol
-shot of the enemy.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Have you any message for Newport?” said Paul
-Jones, springing into the mizzen-rigging, and hailing
-the infuriated English captain, as we shot past him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Give it to him with the grape—all hands make
-sail—fire!” came hoarsely down from the frigate, in
-harsh and angry tones.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Good day, and many thanks for your present,”
-said our imperturbable commander, as the discharge
-swept harmlessly by; and then leaping upon the
-deck, he ran his eye aloft.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Run aft with that sheet—send out the kites
-aloft there, more merrily—we shall drop the rascals
-now, my gallant fellows,” shouted the elated captain,
-as we swept like a sea-gull away from the foe;
-while the men, inspired by the boldness and success
-of the manœuvre, worked with a redoubled alacrity,
-which promised soon to place us without reach of
-the enemy’s fire. The desperate efforts of the
-frigate to regain her advantage, were, meanwhile, of
-no avail. Taken completely by surprise, she could
-neither throw out her light sails sufficiently quick,
-nor direct her fiery broadsides with any precision.
-Not a grape-shot struck us, although the water to
-larboard was ploughed up with the iron hail. We
-soon found that we outsailed her before the wind,
-and in less than an hour we had drawn beyond
-range of her shot.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><h1><a id='depa'></a>THE DEPARTED.</h1></div>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>Her parents are weeping, she sheds not a tear,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Loved voices are calling, alas! can she hear?—</p>
-<p class='line0'>The hyacinth blossom is plucked from its stem,</p>
-<p class='line0'>The casket is broken, and scattered the gem.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>Pale Death! the grim archer, hath bended his bow,</p>
-<p class='line0'>The arrow hath vanished, the dove is laid low;</p>
-<p class='line0'>Ah! fair was the victim thus fated to bleed,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And well might the spoiler exult in his deed.</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><h1><a id='majo'></a>THE MAJOR’S WEDDING.</h1></div>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;'>———</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;font-size:0.8em;font-weight:bold;'>A VERITABLE STORY TOLD BY JEREMY SHORT, ESQ.</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:1.5em;'>———</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>“Ah!</span> Mr. Editor, glad to see you in this cramped
-hole—no air, hot as a furnace—egad, I’m almost
-baked; and as for smoking one’s meerschaum, or
-drinking claret in a stage coach, you might as well
-dream of heaven in the paws of a prairie bear. Ah!
-you’ve got a cigar, I see—God bless the man that
-first invented tobacco. But hark ’e, who was that
-tall, slim, low-shouldered gentleman, with the long
-neck, that sat in the bar-room corner, in a semi-animated
-state, and hadn’t spoke for a half an hour
-until he growled back your salutation?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Who? Jeremy—that was a poet.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“A poet! heaven protect us from such madness.
-Is he married?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“No—he swears he’ll never wed any one but a
-poetess; and you know they’re a scarce article in
-the market.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Egad, I thought he was a bachelor, for who
-ever heard of a married man writing poetry? Flummery,
-sir, flummery—whipt cream and sugar—away
-with your poetry! Give me the real solid
-prose, your regular beefsteak, with a spice of wit to
-make it palatable, boy. Now there’s Oliver Oldfellow,
-he used to be as poetical as a scissors grinder
-before he got married, but after that he came
-to his senses, and—Lord love you!—he hasn’t
-written a line these twenty years.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You’re savage on the poets. But if what you
-say is true, there ought to be a law against poets
-marrying.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And what’s the use of law, to stop what
-one can’t help? No man—let me tell you—ever
-got married in his senses. No, no, my boy, they
-are crazy, bewitched, ‘<span class='it'>non compos mentis</span>.’ Did
-you ever meet a girl that didn’t say she’d never
-get married, and why then should she do it if she
-didn’t get possessed? But the poor victims are
-to be pitied more than blamed. It’s not their
-fault. It’s destiny, sir, destiny. When a thief’s
-hour comes he’s got to be hung—and when a
-man’s time is up he’s got to suffer matrimony.
-There’s no escape. Let him double like a hare,
-turn to the right or left, dive like a duck, or pretend
-to be dead like a dormouse, he’ll be sure to be
-found out at every trick, and made a Benedict of—even
-if it’s done by spirits—before he’s aware of it.
-Let me tell you a story to prove my position.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Major Compton was a hale, hearty old fellow
-when I knew him in the last war, though I believe
-gout and morning drams have long since driven
-the nails in his coffin. He had been a gay chap
-when young—a soldier, a beau, a bit of a fop,
-and then—egad, sir—a poet of no little fashion.
-He could knock you off a sonnet on a lady’s
-charms sooner than old Tom the blacksmith could
-knock off a horse-shoe. But after a while he fell
-in love, and—to cut short my story—was married.
-Ah! many and many a time have I heard him tell
-me how he felt it coming on him as if he was bewitched;
-how he struggled against the malady but
-could not prevail; and how he shuddered when he
-found himself writing poetry, because, like the sight
-of water in the hydrophobia, he knew then that it
-was all over with him. But this happened years
-before we met. When I knew him he was a jolly,
-red-faced widower, and had a horror of all poets,
-women, and cold water—the last of which he used
-to say made men effeminate, in proof of which he
-said all savages who used nothing else, like the
-Tahitians, were cowards. Betwixt you and I, he
-must have married a Tartar.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well—he’d been out one night at a supper,
-and the bottle had passed around so frequently that
-every soul of the company, except the major, got
-under the table,—so, after amusing himself by
-blacking their faces with burnt cork, and moralising,
-as a gentleman ought to, over their deplorable
-condition, he set out to find his way home to
-his quarters. As he emerged into the cool air he
-felt his head getting light as if it were going up,
-balloon-like, with himself for a parachute; but
-holding his hat down with both hands, as he remembered
-to have seen them keep down an inflated
-balloon, he managed to get along pretty well, though
-he couldn’t keep his head from swinging about with
-the wind, which made him, he said, walk as crooked
-as if he had been drunk, though he was never soberer
-in his life.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It was a wild, gusty night, and the clouds were
-drifting like snow-flakes overhead, when the major
-sallied out into the street, and began his journey to
-his lodgings. The wind roared around the corners,
-or whistled down the chimneys of the old houses
-around, whose tall, dark, chilly figures rose up
-against the November sky, until they seemed, to
-the major’s vision, fairly to shiver with cold. The
-stars, high up, were winking through the drift, except
-now and then a sturdy old fellow who stared
-right into the major’s face. One of these seemed
-determined to abash him whether or no. Go where
-he would it followed him, so that if he looked up
-he would be sure to see it staring full upon him
-with its dull yellow eye. It made him think, he
-said, of his spouse of blessed memory, when she
-would stick her arms a-kimbo, and make faces at
-him. Now the major was a good-humored soul, but
-there are some things, even Job couldn’t endure.
-The major bore it, however, until he reached a
-wild common, when taking a seat upon a heap of
-stones, he planted his elbows on his knees, buried
-his chin in his hands, and looking right at the saucy
-star, said,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘Hillo! up there—now take a good look, and
-let’s see who’ll give over first.’</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘Hillo!’ said a voice close behind him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘Hillo it is, you old mocking curmudgeon, say
-that again and I’ll pound your face into a jelly,’
-said the major, turning wrathfully around; but,
-though he looked every where, not a bit of a man
-could he see even as big as the fabled Tom Thumb.
-It was, as I have said, a wide, open common, with
-not a tree or a house upon it, and if any living
-thing had been moving across its surface he would
-have been sure to have detected it. What could it
-have been? He thought of all the stories of goblins
-he had ever read, and his hair almost stood on
-end as he remembered them. But rallying himself,
-he began to whistle aloud, and stare again at the
-saucy star overhead. The sky, however, had
-grown darker during the interruption; and in a
-few moments the clouds obscured the provoking
-star. For a moment he closed his eyes, and feeling
-sleepy, dozed; but his head suddenly pitching
-forward, aroused him, and he once more looked up.
-What a sight was there! Dark, frowning masses
-of vapor swept wildly across the firmament; while
-the wind now wailed out in unearthly tones, and
-then went shrieking across the common like the
-laughter of a troop of malignant fiends. A wood,
-some distance off, skirting the common, tossed its
-gray, leafless branches wantonly in the winds; and
-anon a loud, shrill whistle, as of an army of hunters,
-rung out, down in the very heart of the forest.
-The major almost started from his feet, and rubbed
-his eyes to rouse himself from his drowsiness. The
-clouds were once more drifting swiftly across the
-sky, now rolling together into huge, dark masses,
-and now separating, and then weaving together
-again into a thousand fantastic shapes. Just at
-that instant the provoking star gleamed once more
-through the drift, and this time it stared at him
-more like his spouse than ever. The major could
-stand it no longer. Forgetting the fearful things
-around him, he shook his clenched fist at it, and
-said,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘Hillo! you old, wry-faced vixen, how dare you
-squint at me—Ma—a—a—jor—Com—Compt—Compton—how
-dare you, I say? Do you want to
-remind me that I was once fool enough to get married?—I’d
-like to see the woman I’d have now: all
-the powers above or below couldn’t force me to
-get married again—no, no, you old crab-apple!—I—I—say—’</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“They couldn’t—couldn’t they?” quietly said
-a voice at his elbow.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“And who the deuce are you?” said the major,
-turning sharply around.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘Who do you think?’ said one of the oddest
-looking beings the major ever beheld—a short,
-mis-shapen man, with great goggle eyes, a roguish
-leer on his face, legs that were doubled up under
-him like a pocket-rule, and long, bony fingers, one
-of which was stuck knowingly aside his nose,
-while his eyes alternately were winking at the
-astonished major; for the little fellow seemed to
-be in high glee at the wonder he occasioned.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“For some minutes they stood looking at each
-other without a word—the major’s eyes growing
-larger and larger with astonishment; while the odd
-little fellow kept winking away, with his finger at
-his nose, to his own apparent glee. At length he
-said,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘Well—what d’ y’e think, old carbuncle?’</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Now the major was a valiant man, and had
-any mortal thing called him by such a nick name,
-he would have first run him through and then
-almost eaten him alive; but he has told me a hundred
-times that his heart went like a forge-hammer
-to be addressed by a being of another world. So
-he only stammered,</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘I—I—don’t know—’</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘Speak up, man, speak up—why your voice is
-as thin and weak as if you’d been doctored for the
-quinzy a month.’</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘Lord bless you, sir, I never had it in my life,’
-said the major, with sudden boldness.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘Uh—uh—uh,’ interrupted the little fellow,
-menacingly, ‘none of that—none of that. No
-strange names if you please.’</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The major’s heart again went like a fulling
-mill, and his throat felt as if he was about to
-choke; for he had no doubt it was the devil himself
-who stood before him.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘I—I—beg pardon—your majesty—I—I.’</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘What! Strange names again,’ sternly interposed
-the goggle-eyed little fellow, and then, seeing
-how he had frightened his companion, he said, to
-re-assure him, ‘come, come, Major, this will never
-do. Let’s proceed to business.’</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The major bowed, for he could not speak. The
-odd little fellow arose with the word, and taking the
-major’s hand, gave a spring from the ground, and in
-an instant they were sailing away through the air,
-over wood, river, hill, and valley, until they alighted
-at the door of a lone, solitary house, at the foot of
-a mountain. His companion pushed open the door,
-without ceremony, and they stood in the presence
-of a large company, apparently assembled to witness
-a marriage, for the bride, with her bridemaids, was
-sitting at the head of the room, and the company,
-especially the young ladies, were smiling and smirking
-as they always do on such occasions. The
-only thing wanting was a groom, and when the
-major took a second look at the bride, he did not
-wonder that he delayed his coming to the last moment.
-She was an old, withered beldame, sixty
-years of age, at the least, with a yellow skin, a hook
-nose, a sharp protruding chin, and little sunken
-grey eyes that leered on the major, as the door
-opened, with most provoking familiarity. Her
-ugliness was more apparent from the extreme beauty
-of the bridemaids, who seemed as if they might have
-been Houris from Paradise. As the major entered,
-the bridal company arose simultaneously. The parson
-stepped forward and opened his book. Every
-eye was turned upon the new-comers.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘You are very late, my love,’ said the old hag,
-turning to the major.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘Late!—my love!’ said he, starting back, and
-turning with astonishment, from his conductor, to
-the bride.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘I have brought you to your wedding, you see,’
-said the odd little fellow composedly, with a tantalising
-grin, ‘didn’t I hear you say, on the common,
-“that you’d like to see the woman you’d marry,”
-didn’t I?’ and he grinned again.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘Yes—my duck,’ simpered the hateful bride,
-leering on the major, ‘and I’ve been so alarmed
-lest you might have met with an accident to detain
-you. <span class='it'>Why</span> were you so long?’ and she placed her
-hand fondly on the major’s arm.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘Hands off,’ thundered the major, springing
-back, and again turning bewildered from one to
-another of his tormenters.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘Come, come, now, major,’ said his conductor,
-with a malicious grin, ‘it’s no use to resist, for
-<span class='it'>that</span>,’ said he with emphasis, pointing to the old hag,
-‘is your bride. It is fate; and what is written, is
-written you know. I’ve no doubt,’ and here he gave
-another malicious grin, ‘that your married life in
-future will be one of unmitigated felicity. Come,—don’t
-you see the parson’s waiting?’</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘Yes, dear,’ said the bride, distorting her withered
-jaws into what was meant for a smile, ‘and
-don’t let us think, by any more hard words,’ and
-here she tried to sob, ‘that your fatigues have thrown
-you into a fever and delirium.’</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Cold drops of sweat were on the major’s brow,
-as he looked around the room, and saw every eye
-bent upon him, some with amazement, some with
-contempt, but most with indignation. There was a
-menacing air on the brow of his conductor, which
-made him shake as if he had an ague chill. The
-major, moreover, was unarmed. But he made a
-desperate effort, and said piteously—</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘Marry! I didn’t want to get married—’</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘Not want to get married, when it’s your destiny!’
-broke in his conductor, with a voice of thunder,
-striding up to the major, whose very teeth
-chattered with fright at his peril.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘Why—why—y—I’ve no particular objection—that
-is to say,’ exclaimed the major with
-another desperate effort, ‘if I must get married, I’d
-sooner take one of these pretty, blue-eyed bridemaids
-here.’</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘You would—would you!’ said his conductor
-with a threatening look, ‘dare but to think of it,
-and I’ll make you rue it to the last day of your
-existence,’ and again he scowled upon the major
-with a brow blacker than midnight, and which had
-a fearful indentation—the major used to say—as of
-a gigantic spear head, right in the centre.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The major always said that he resisted stoutly
-for a long time, even after his tormentor had fairly
-prostrated him with only a tap of his finger, and
-until strange figures, of unearthly shape, uttering
-terrible cries of anger, and attended by a strong
-smell of brimstone, came rushing into the room,
-without any apparent way of ingress, and surrounding
-him in a body, awaited the signal of his conductor
-to bear him off, he knew not whither, and
-inflict on him unheard of torments;—but as I knew
-the major was sometimes given to vaporing in his
-cups, I always set the better part of it down for
-exaggeration. However, at length he gave in, even
-according to his own account, and signified his
-willingness, though not without some qualms as he
-looked at the bride, to have the ceremony performed.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘I knew it, major—a brave man never should
-struggle against fate,’ said the little fellow with
-goggle eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘Needs must, when the—’</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘Sir,’ said the little fellow, turning fiercely
-around.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘I beg pardon,’ said the major meekly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But to wind up my story—for, egad, I believe
-you’re asleep—the major was married, had kissed
-the bride, and was actually performing the same
-duty on the bridemaids, when the little fellow with
-the goggle-eyes, perceiving what he was at, seized
-him angrily by the arm, whisked him up the chimney,
-bore him swiftly through the air, and with a
-roar of malicious laughter, that might have been
-heard a mile, exclaiming,—</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“ ‘There—wait, and your wife will pop in on
-you when you least expect it,’—let him drop to the
-earth, on the very common, and aside of the very
-pile of stones, where he had been sitting when he
-first saw the little, old fellow. But meantime the
-night had passed, and it was broad morning. The
-birds were singing in the neigboring woods,—the
-sound of the village clock striking the hour, boomed
-clear upon the air,—and a few cattle, with the monotonous
-tinkle of their bells, were leisurely crossing
-the commons, under the charge of a herd boy. For
-some minutes the major could not persuade himself
-but what it had all been a dream; but the damp
-sweat was still upon his brow, and every limb ached
-with the fall. So he couldn’t comfort himself with
-that assurance, but set himself down, on the contrary,
-as one of the most luckless men alive.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“From that hour, sir, the major was a firm
-believer in destiny, and used to sigh whenever any
-one would talk of matrimony. He lived in constant
-fear lest his wife should find him out, and at
-last threw up his commission, only, I believe, that
-he might go to Europe, for better security. Some
-used to say it was only a drunken dream, out of
-which he had been awakened by falling upon the
-stones, but if the major heard it he was sure to
-challenge the slanderer, so that, in course of time,
-his story got to be believed by general consent. And
-now—you old curmudgeon—who’ll say marriages
-ain’t fixed by fate?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“But, Jeremy, to credit your ghost story requires
-rather a good deal of credulity.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Credulity! Ghost story! what, egad, is life
-without a touch of romance, and what romance is
-so glorious as the one which deals in <span class='it'>diablerie</span>?
-Ah! my good fellow if I didn’t know that the
-major was generally credible, and therefore in this
-instance to be believed, I’d endorse his story just
-because it proves my assertion. Answer that, if
-you can!”</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:right;margin-right:3em;margin-top:0.5em;'>J. S.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span style='font-size:smaller'>February, 1841.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><h1><a id='fath'></a>THE FATHER’S BLESSING.</h1></div>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;'>———</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;font-size:0.8em;font-weight:bold;'>BY MRS. S. A. WHELPLEY.</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:1.5em;'>———</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>The</span> wind moaned in low and fitful gusts around
-the mansion, sounding at times, as if the wailings
-of departed spirits were borne upon the blast, when
-Mary Levingston sat alone in the solitude of her
-chamber. Her lamp was hid in a recess at a distance,
-and casting its pale and feeble beams across
-the darkened room, scarcely disclosed her drooping
-figure, or the tears upon her cheek. It was not
-that the fearful tumult without had affected her
-imagination, nor the thought that her only brother
-might be exposed to all the dangers of the coast.
-Something that more deeply touched her happiness
-awoke her grief. Wild, tumultuous thoughts agitated
-her bosom, and mocked the storm that shook her
-casement, and roared in all its fury around her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The substantial mansion of Mr. Levingston was
-situated in a delightful town in New Jersey. Here
-he had trained up an interesting and lovely family.
-Four of his daughters were married; three of them
-were settled in the same town with their father;
-the other resided in the city of New York. His
-only son, possessing many virtues, but a wild and
-roving disposition had, in opposition to his father’s
-advice, gone to sea, and had not been seen by any
-of his family for four years. Mary Levingston was
-the sole remaining daughter at home. She was the
-sun that lit up her father’s dwelling. Swift and
-light as the fawn had been her footstep till of late;
-when a cloud had passed over her gentle bosom,
-and obscured its brightness. A blast had swept
-over the flower and it was changed; but neither the
-cloud had been seen, nor the blast heard. Then
-wherefore this change?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was well known to Mr. Levingston’s family,
-that a strong and bitter alienation of feeling existed
-between himself and Mr. James, an early, and once
-dear friend, who, at the time of which we speak,
-resided in New York. So exasperated had Mr. L.
-become by a series of ungrateful acts on the part of
-this early friend, that on pain of his everlasting displeasure,
-he had forbidden his children ever associating
-with the family. Unfortunately for Mary,
-during a visit to the city, she had met with a son
-of Mr. James, and it was not until her affections
-were unchangeably fixed, that she had discovered
-his relationship to the most bitter enemy of her
-father. Admiring Mary at first sight, and conscious
-of the enmity between the families, her lover had
-sought an introduction to her under a false name,
-and it was long before she discovered the truth.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When she did so, however, her determination
-was soon made. Obedience had been the law of
-her life, and she resolved at once to sacrifice her
-own feelings, in preference to that of her kind
-father’s wishes. She felt pained, moreover, that her
-lover should have deceived her even to win her
-affections. She fled from the scene of danger; but
-she could not fly from herself. In her own bosom
-she carried the image she had so fondly cherished,
-and which had been the object of her waking and
-sleeping dreams. It was after a long struggle, in
-which she had almost conquered, that she received
-a letter—which had caused her present grief—written
-by her sister, and informing her that her
-lover was about to sail for Europe, and asked for a
-last interview, if only to beg her forgiveness, and
-bid her farewell forever.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I will see him,” said Mary, “and convince him
-there is no hope, and then I will return and confess
-all to my beloved father, and throw myself upon his
-mercy. He will not cast me off when he finds I
-did not err knowingly.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>She rose from her chair, as she thus spoke,
-arranged her dress, and descended to the parlor,
-with a countenance from which, except to a suspicious
-eye, every trace of grief had vanished.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You must not leave us so long again, my
-daughter,” said her venerable father, as she entered
-the room. “My home appears almost cheerless,
-unless I hear your voice. Sing to us one of your
-sweet songs.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What shall I sing, dear father? Shall it be
-your favorite, Grace Darling?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Not Grace Darling to-night, my love, it is
-mournful and tells of shipwreck and death.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, I will sing my own favorite,” said Mary,
-seating herself at the piano, “it shall be</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>‘My heart’s in the Highlands,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;My heart is not here.’ ”</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The parents looked at each other and smiled, as
-their beautiful daughter struck the keys; for they
-felt that few beings were as lovely as their own
-Mary.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Dear papa!” said she at length, suddenly stopping,
-and turning around, “I want to ask a favor
-of <span class='it'>you</span>,—I am sure mamma will grant it. Let me
-go to New York next week. There now, I knew
-you would,—you are always such a kind and
-indulgent papa,” and throwing her arms around his
-neck, she kissed him tenderly.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, if mamma gives her consent, I suppose I
-must give mine. But, dear Mary, don’t come home
-this time so down-hearted as you did from the last
-visit you paid your sister. There now, since you
-have got your boon, play me another song.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mary felt the blood rush to her very brow at this
-chance remark of her father; but turning around to
-her piano, she struck into a march, to hide her
-emotion.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In a few days she set forth to New York, with a
-heart, vacillating between duty and love,—determined,
-however, to permit only one interview, and then
-to bid her lover adieu forever.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You will have a strong advocate in my wife,”
-said Mr. M—— to Mr. James, who sat on the sofa
-by Mary Levingston the evening of her arrival.
-“She is resolved, she says, to return home with her
-sister hoping she may be enabled to soften the feelings
-of Mr. Levingston toward your father.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I hope she may prove a successful pleader,”
-said the lover, “and prepare the way for my casting
-myself at his feet when I return. Since I have obtained
-my sweet Mary’s forgiveness, I feel that I can
-now with courage brave the hardships of the deep.
-The thought that she loves me, will be the sun that
-will light my path in a distant clime. The thought
-that she is my advocate with her father fills me with
-the conviction that the ancient enmity will be buried
-in oblivion and that all will soon be well.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You are far more sanguine, as to the result,
-dear Edward, than I am,” said Mary: “I have
-little hope myself of succeeding with my father. I
-know his feelings so well on this point, that I tremble
-lest I have sinned beyond forgiveness. One
-thing, here, in the presence of those that are so
-dear, I solemnly declare, though my heart may be
-crushed, never to unite my destiny to one his judgment
-disapproves. I should feel a solitary outcast,
-even with him I so tenderly love, without a father’s
-blessing.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We shall have it, dear Mary, we shall have your
-father’s blessing,” exclaimed Edward, pressing her
-to his bosom, “for God will reward so filial and
-dutiful a daughter. I should feel myself to be a
-wretch were I to corrupt such purity, or wish you,
-for my sake, to sacrifice his peace.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We pass over the last two or three hours the
-lovers passed together. The clock had told the
-departure of midnight before they separated. Who
-could blame them for lengthening out an interview
-that was to be their last for months and perhaps
-forever?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I leave you, dear Mary,” said Edward, at length
-rising to go, “in obedience to the commands of my
-father. If God prospers me I shall soon again
-be with you. Cheer up my love, and remember my
-motto is ‘Brighter days will come.’ ”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When Edward arrived in London, he hastened to
-fulfil the object of his voyage and put his business
-in a train for speedy adjustment. Days seemed to
-him weeks, and Mary could not have doubted his
-love had she known there was none in that great
-metropolis who could eclipse her beauty in the eyes
-of him she so fondly loved. In about three weeks
-the business which took him to London was settled,
-Mr. James was preparing to return home, when one
-night, at a late hour, the cry of “<span class='it'>fire</span>” resounded
-through the long halls of the Hotel in which he
-lodged. In an instant all was alarm and confusion.
-He enquired what part of the building was on fire,
-and was told that the eastern wing was all in flames.
-He hastened to the scene of danger, which appeared
-to be entirely forsaken. Nearly suffocated with
-smoke, he turned to retrace his steps, when a wild
-scream arrested his attention, and the next instant
-he beheld a young and beautiful female in her night
-dress rushing through the flames.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Save, oh! save him, for heaven’s sake,” she exclaimed,
-“save my sick husband, he is perishing!
-who, who will rescue him?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I will,” said Mr. James, “but do not on your
-peril attempt to follow me.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In an instant he was lost to sight, but directly reappeared,
-bearing in a blanket the body of the helpless
-being he had been the means of snatching from
-an untimely death. He hastened to his own room
-and deposited his burden on the bed, and was administering
-restoratives, when his servant informed
-him that the firemen had succeeded in pulling down
-the eastern wing and were rapidly extinguishing the
-flames.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“We have nothing now to fear,” said Mr. James,
-addressing the young female, who had partly shrunk
-behind the curtains to conceal her thinly clad person—“but
-you are cold,” said he, as he threw his
-own cloak around her, “pardon my neglect.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh,” she exclaimed, bursting into tears: “talk
-not of neglect. You have been every thing to us.
-You have saved the life of my beloved husband,
-and an age of gratitude is ours.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Edward now left the room to seek for rest in
-another apartment. To sleep was impossible. The
-excitement of the past hour had been so great, that
-his nervous system was completely unstrung, and he
-passed the night in listening for some alarm. After
-breakfast, he hastened to the room of the invalid, to
-enquire for his health. Most joyfully was he greeted
-by both husband and wife, who now appeared to
-have recovered from the alarm of the past night. In
-the course of conversation, Mr. James mentioned
-that he was on the eve of starting for America.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“When does the vessel sail?” inquired the lady
-anxiously.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This afternoon, at four o’clock,” replied Mr.
-J——, “and I should like before I say adieu, to
-become acquainted with the name of those I feel so
-deep an interest in.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Our name is Levingston,” said the gentleman.
-“And yours, sir?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“James.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, this is remarkable. A Levingston and a
-James to meet under circumstances that have bound
-them together by cords that death alone can sever!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Long and interesting was the communion of that
-morning. All was told. The gentleman he had
-rescued was the long absent brother of his own
-Mary. The tale of love was revealed, and Edward
-persuaded to wait one week longer, that they might
-return together to their native land.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I shall send despatches to my father by the vessel
-in which you expected to sail, this afternoon,”
-said Mr. Levingston, “and if he has any love for his
-only son, he must receive us as brothers.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We now hasten back to Mary Levingston. After
-the departure of Edward, New York had lost its
-attractions for her. Mr. M—— returned home
-with Mary. She indulged strong hopes of influencing
-her father in favor of Mr. James, and inducing
-him to consent to his union with her sister. But
-she was destined to be disappointed. Mr. Levingston
-would not even listen to her. Ringing the
-bell, he ordered Mary to be summoned to his presence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When Mary entered the room, her eye fell instantly
-beneath the steady gaze of her father.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I have sent for you,” said he, “to express my
-deep displeasure at your conduct, and my utter abhorrence
-for the man who could impose upon such
-a child as you. Your sister says you love the son
-of one that has insulted and abused me. Can it be
-so, Mary, my child?” said he, bursting into tears.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In a moment Mary was on her knees before him.
-“Forgive me, dear father, I have sinned ignorantly.
-Forgive me,” she exclaimed, “for I here promise to
-renounce him forever.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“If this is your determination,” said Mr. Levingston,
-“rise and receive your father’s blessing. May
-you long enjoy the consolation of knowing you rendered
-the last days of your father peaceful and happy.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>From that hour, Mary Levingston was calm and
-happy. Innocence and an approving conscience
-supported her.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Never,” said Mary, to her sister, Mrs. M——, on
-the morning of her departure, “mention in your
-letters the name of Mr. James, who in future must
-be as one dead to me. Tell him, when he returns,
-that my determination is unalterable, and bid him
-seek some more congenial alliance.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Weeks rolled round and found the calm quiet of
-the Levingston’s unbroken. The rose was still
-blooming on the cheek of Mary. No change had
-taken place in any except Mr. Levingston. It was
-very evident to all his friends that he rapidly failed.
-Every step of the hill he was descending seemed to
-fatigue him, and the only cordial that revived his
-fainting spirit, was the presence of his youngest
-child. Was not Mary Levingston, as she gazed on
-his pale face and feeble frame, rejoiced at the sacrifice
-she had made to secure his peace? Yes, the
-happiness she now felt was of a calm, enduring
-nature. She could lie down and rise up without
-listening to the upbraidings of a guilty conscience,
-without having to reflect that it was her rebellion
-which had dimmed the eye and paralyzed the step
-of her father. Every night before she retired, she
-received his embrace, and heard him say, “God
-bless you Mary, you have been a dutiful child.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Late one evening, in the latter part of October,
-a servant entered the parlor where the family was
-sitting with a package of letters. He delivered
-them to Mr. Levingston, and retired. The hand
-trembled that broke the seal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This is from our dear son,” said he, turning to
-his wife, and holding up a letter, “and here is one
-for each of his sisters. Let me see, two of them
-are directed to Mary, here they are, take them.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>He now commenced reading the letter aloud,
-which told of the prosperity and marriage of his
-son, and his intention of leaving England for home
-the following week. Then came the description of
-the fire. The peril—the rescue; the name of him
-who had exposed his own life to snatch a stranger
-from the flames. At this part of the letter Mr.
-Levingston suddenly stopped and left the room.
-In his study he finished its perusal.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“What does this mean?” he exclaimed, rapidly
-walking the floor, “It seems as though the hand
-of God was in this thing. I would that some
-other one had saved him. He asks me to receive
-his deliverer as my son. Bold request—and yet I
-will do it. I will receive him as a son, for he has
-saved the life of my Walter at the risk of his own.
-For so generous, so noble an act, I here bury my
-enmity forever.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mr. Levingston, with a lighter heart than he had
-felt for months, returned to the parlor. Mary met
-him at the door.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“This letter, dear papa,” said she, “I return to
-you. I have not read it, neither do I desire to. It
-is written by one I have renounced forever.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Keep it, Mary,” said Mr. Levingston, “and
-cherish the memory of the writer. I have buried
-my resentment forever toward that family. From
-this hour shall we not bless the deliverer of our
-son?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Mary was astonished. She could scarcely persuade
-herself that all was not a dream. Still
-holding the letter toward her father, and gazing
-immoveably in his face, she seemed rather a statue
-than a human being.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Do you think I am trifling?” said he, as he
-pressed her to his bosom. “No, Mary, I love you
-too well for that. From this moment you have my
-consent to become the wife of him, who, although
-so tenderly loved, you felt willing to sacrifice to the
-peace of your aged father.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The intervening days, preceding the arrival of
-Walter, rapidly glided away in busy preparation.
-Suddenly, however, Mr. Levingston was taken
-dangerously ill at midnight. His symptoms were
-so alarming that a council of physicians was called
-before morning, when an express was sent to New
-York for his children.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Calm and collected, Mary Levingston might be
-seen noiselessly moving about her father’s chamber.
-No hand but hers could administer his medicine,
-or smooth his pillow. The thought of death—the
-death of her father—had not once crossed her mind.
-His life seemed so necessary to his family, that such
-an event appeared impossible.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Has he come, Mary?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Who, dear father?” she gently asked, stooping
-and kissing his brow.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Walter, my son, has he come?”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“It is too soon yet to expect him.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Too soon,” said he, faintly, “I fear then I
-shall never see him. The hand of death is on me,
-my child, I feel its chill.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You will kill me, dear father, if you talk so.
-You will soon be better. I thought this was to be
-the happiest week of my life,” said she, bursting
-into tears.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mary,” observed Mr. Levingston, “I wish you
-to be calm and listen to me. If I should not live
-to see my son, tell him he was his father’s idol.
-Tell him to transmit the name of Levingston,
-unsullied, to posterity, and to be the comfort and
-support of his widowed mother. One more message
-and I am done,” said he, wiping the cold sweat
-from off his brow. “Hark!” he exclaimed, hearing
-a noise, “perhaps that is Walter.” Finding
-himself disappointed, he proceeded—“request Edward
-James to tell his father that I die in peace
-with all men, and joyfully entrust the happiness of
-my daughter to his son. I had hoped to have
-given away the treasure with my own hand, but
-that is all over. Leave me now for a few moments,
-I wish to see your mother.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>That interview over there was a solemn silence
-for a few moments, when he exclaimed, “Did you
-say he had come? Oh my son, receive my blessing.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“You were dreaming, dear father,” said Mary,
-“Walter is not here.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Well, well, it is all right,” he replied. He never
-spoke more: in a few hours his spirit took its final
-flight.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was late in the evening when the mournful
-intelligence of Mr. Levingston’s illness reached
-his children in New York. They instantly set forth
-to gain, if possible, his dying couch in time to obtain
-his blessing.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Where is my father?” exclaimed Walter on his
-arrival at the mansion, rushing by his mother and
-sisters who had hastened to the door to meet them.
-“Lead me to my father,” said he, catching hold of
-Mary.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>As she went toward the room, he rushed by
-her; and entered, closed, and locked the door. Mary
-stood without listening to his wild outbursts of grief.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In anguish he called upon him once more to
-speak to him. It was the lamentation of the prodigal
-yearning in vain to hear his father’s voice. It
-was the pleading of the wanderer who had returned
-with the hope of cheering his last days.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Mary,” said a gentle, well known voice, “My
-beloved Mary, we meet with your father’s blessing
-resting upon us.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In an instant she was in the arms of Edward
-James, and weeping upon his bosom. Walter Levingston
-at this moment entered the apartment.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Did my father ask for me, Mary?” said he.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Oh yes,” she replied, “often. Almost his last
-words were, ‘My son receive my blessing.’ And
-he told me to request you, Edward, to say to your
-father, ‘I die in peace with all men, and willingly
-entrust the happiness of my daughter to your son.’ ”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Forever blessed be his memory,” said Edward.
-“Never shall his confidence be misplaced, or that
-daughter have reason to doubt my trust.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The door now opened, and Mrs. Levingston, leaning
-on the arm of one of her daughters, entered.
-“Beloved mother,” said Walter, embracing her,
-“from this hour it shall be my first care and study
-to promote your comfort. Here by the corpse
-of my father, I resolve to do all in my power to
-fill his place, and render your last days peaceful and
-happy.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Some months from this period, a party was seen
-to alight from a carriage early one morning in front
-of Saint Paul’s Church. The blessings of many
-were heard in low murmurs from the crowd that
-filled the vestibule. “She was the pride of her
-father,” said an aged female who stood leaning
-against the wall, “and I know she will be a blessing
-to her husband.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Early as was the hour, the Church was crowded
-with spectators. Many had risen to get a more
-perfect view of the fine manly form of him that
-was about to bear away the sweet Mary Levingston
-from her maiden home. The silence was intense
-as the impressive marriage ceremony of the Episcopal
-Church was read; and fervent were the
-responses of those who promised through weal and
-wo to be faithful to each other. As the party turned
-to leave the Church, a hearty “God bless them,”
-resounded from many. Mrs. James was greatly
-affected as she cast a farewell glance on these
-familiar faces. Her husband hurried her to the carriage.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“The blessing of many has rested on you, dear
-Mary, to-day,” said he, as they were borne to their
-new home.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Yes,” said she, “and I thought as I stood before
-the bridal altar, I heard the voice of my departed
-father saying, ‘God bless you.’ ”</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><h1><a id='iamy'></a>I AM YOUR PRISONER.</h1></div>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;'>———</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;font-size:0.8em;font-weight:bold;'>BY THOMAS DUNN ENGLISH, M. D.</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:1.5em;'>———</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'><span class='sc'>Lady!</span> I bow before thee</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;A captive to thy will,</p>
-<p class='line0'>A spell of thine is o’er me,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;But joy is with me still.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>I yield me, not to beauty,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Though thou, indeed art fair;</p>
-<p class='line0'>I yield me—not to lightness,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Though thou art light as air.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>I yield me, not to wisdom,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Thou wisest of thy kind,</p>
-<p class='line0'>But, rescue, or no rescue,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;To thy purity of mind.</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<hr class='tbk107'/>
-
-<div><h1><a id='aske'></a>A SKETCH FROM LIFE.</h1></div>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;'>———</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;font-size:0.8em;font-weight:bold;'>BY J. TOMLIN.</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:1.5em;'>———</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>The</span> subject of the present sketch has had in
-time, the most sincere friendship of the writer. One
-act, and one alone, has made them enemies—irreconcilably,
-forever. It is to be regretted that it is
-so, yet it cannot be otherwise, and the honor of
-both be preserved. There is in any and every one,
-that aspires to greatness, a tameless absurdity, when
-suffering a reprehensible action of an associate to
-pass away like the morning mist on the flower,
-without noticing it, or giving the admonitory reproof,
-that often corrects and finally subdues the evil. We
-are not such isolated creatures on the surface of a
-world passing away, as to require a more powerful
-impulse in the correction of an evil, than the blessings
-it gives to our fellow beings.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Gordon De Severn was my senior by some several
-years;—but in all of his actions, there was a
-freshness and youthfulness, so akin to what I did,
-and what I felt myself, that I could not keep away
-from him. He was a scholar, but not of the schools,
-therefore none ever complained of his dullness.
-His Aristotelian capacity grasped almost intuitively,
-what others could scarcely get by the most diligent
-researches; and with the perception of a Byron, he
-disclosed every beautiful thought that ever swept
-along the labyrinth of mind. He was a mighty
-genius, free, bold, and daring! He liked to see the
-bubbles of time vanish, and others coming in their
-places, but did not recollect, that soon, very soon,
-the vapour that supported his adolescent spirits,
-would dissolve, and be no more forever! He was
-an observer on the world—a spy on the tumultuous
-feelings that agitate, and corrupt the heart;—and
-he boasted that he was of the world, but a being
-removed beyond its temptations.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Six summers ago, Eliza Wharton was young,
-happy, and full of innocence. How altered now is
-this creature, from what she was when I first knew
-her. Time often makes worse havoc with the reputation,
-than with the body. A little while ago, Eliza
-Wharton was not more fair than she was innocent;
-but now at the heart the canker-worm preys voraciously,
-as is evidenced by the deep lines that mark
-the cheek. Retired beyond the precincts of the
-bustle of the multitude; lost to friends that once
-loved her,—she lives a solitary creature, ruined in
-reputation by the very being she once loved;—penitent
-in seclusion, she has wept her sins forgiven,
-and will win her way to heaven, in spite of a cold—cold
-world.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Being in affluent circumstances, she moved in the
-first circles of society in the little town that gave
-her birth. She was intellectual and beautiful, which
-made her an object of envy to the many. Women
-envy the beauty they see in every one of their sex,
-and man, the rich endowment of mind, that makes
-his fellow being more distinguished than himself.
-How apt are we to despise any noble capacity that
-we see in others, when we possess it not ourself—and
-the good qualities that show themselves most
-splendidly in our neighbor, are a bright mark, at
-which we level in bitterness, the wrath of our envy.
-Those that have but the most common endowments
-of our nature, are generally the most happy, and
-almost always move in a path, that leads to a peaceful
-destiny. Had Eliza Wharton been one of the
-common, ordinary creatures that move in humble
-life, in her fall, she would have had the sympathies
-of the world. But being of a superior mould both in
-body and mind,—her fall was unregretted, unwept.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>In an evil hour there came along a being in the
-shape of man, like herself of towering intellect, but
-unlike her in goodness of heart and benevolence of
-feeling. She loved him! She thought that she saw
-in him something superior to any thing that she had
-ever seen before in others. Nobleness of mien he
-certainly had—and the ways of the world he was
-familiar with, for he had travelled much. He had
-studied, but not from books. The volume of nature
-as it lay spread out before him, in gorgeous robes
-of mixed colors, dyed with the richest tints the every
-avenue to the soul, and he became a poet in feeling.
-His was the philosophy of feeling and not of reason—therefore
-he erred. Every emotion of the heart,
-he mistook for inspiration of the soul—and he fed
-the keen appetites of his nature from every stream
-that rippled his path. What to him was good, he
-never considered might be poison to others. His
-was the mighty ocean of mind, not cramped by <span class='it'>this</span>
-usage, or <span class='it'>that</span> custom—but free, bold and daring!
-He visited fountains that could not be reached by
-every one, and drank of waters that inspired different
-sensations from what were felt by the world
-in which he lived.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>I do well recollect the time when these two
-beings first met. It was on the eighteenth anniversary
-of Eliza’s birth—and at a <span class='it'>fête</span>, given by her
-father, in honor of the occasion. It was in May,
-the month of flowers; and though a moonless night,
-yet the bright stars looked down in myriads on the
-happy earth. Eliza was all joy and animation.
-Before her lay the rich fields of pleasure, and she
-seized on every moment as one of gladness, and of
-happiness. She did not know that in her path, there
-lay a serpent that would soon destroy her. Gordon
-De Severn, like some fiery comet, attracted
-every eye, and spell-bound the poor maiden that
-happened to come within the hearing of his magic
-words. Exclusively on that night, did he appropriate
-Eliza to himself. She listened, enraptured at
-every word he spoke, and fell at last a victim, to
-the snare he then laid. He played his part so well
-on that night, that he fairly captured the fair one’s
-heart—and for the first time in her life, she retired,
-to a sleepless pillow, bedewed with tears. De Severn
-admired her, but he was not in love.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>For several months after their first interview, he
-was almost a daily visitor at her house. He courted
-her—and he won her. She believed him, when he
-told her, that he would be her friend. She believed
-him when he said, that he loved her. She trusted,
-when he deceived. She fell because she loved one
-too much, that proved himself a villain, and not because
-she was base. She departed from virtue, not
-because she was in love with vice, but to oblige one
-that she loved much. She fell—and this vile
-seducer is now sporting in the sunshine of wealth—and
-has friends, and is received into the houses of
-the honorable, and is caressed, and is smiled upon;
-while the poor injured one—Eliza Wharton, is
-abandoned by the world, and by her relations, to
-pine in some sequestered spot, and die of a broken
-heart.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>How often does it happen in this world of ours,
-that the betrayer receives honor from the hands of
-the people, and the betrayed is scoffed at and reviled,
-for being so credulous as to believe even a tale
-of—<span class='sc'>Love</span>.</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span style='font-size:smaller'>Jackson, Tenn.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><h1><a id='invi'></a>THE INVITATION.</h1></div>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;'>———</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;font-size:0.8em;font-weight:bold;'>BY E. G. MALLERY.</p>
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:1.5em;'>———</p>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'><span class='sc'>Come</span>, altho’ fair is thy southern clime,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Where the sea-breeze fanneth thy cheek,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And the stars come forth at the vesper chime,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;With a beauty no tongue may speak;</p>
-<p class='line0'>Tho’ the moon-beam slumbers upon thy brow</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;As it slumbered in hours of yore;</p>
-<p class='line0'>And the night bird’s song has the same tone now</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;In thy life’s bright spring that it bore;</p>
-<p class='line0'>Come, tho’ from streamlet, from hill, and from plain,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Rush a thousand fond memories forth,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And cluster around thy light step to detain—</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Oh! come to our home in the North!</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>They tell you how bleak is our northern sky</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;When the storm-spirit spreadeth his wings;</p>
-<p class='line0'>How his shout is heard from the mountain high,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;How in glee thro’ the valley it rings:</p>
-<p class='line0'>How his strong hand bows the proud old oak,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And in sport uprooteth the pine;</p>
-<p class='line0'>How he folds the hills in his spotless cloak,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And the groves with his brilliants shine:</p>
-<p class='line0'>How his breath enchaineth the rolling tide,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And bids the chaf’d torrent be still,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Then dashes away in his might and his pride,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And laughs that they heeded his will!</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>They tell you our birds at the Autumn’s breath,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;When the flow’rs droop over their tomb,</p>
-<p class='line0'>Are off to the land where they meet no death,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And the orange-trees ever more bloom.</p>
-<p class='line0'>Tell them we ask not affection so slight</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;That at fortune’s first frown it is o’er,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And we’re certain again when our skies become bright</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;They’ll flutter around us once more,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And tell them there grows on our mountain crest</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;A plant which no winter can fade—</p>
-<p class='line0'>And, as changeless, the love of a northern breast,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Blooms ever in sunshine and shade!</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>Come, and we’ll teach you when Summer is fled,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And the rich robe of Autumn withdrawn,</p>
-<p class='line0'>To welcome old Winter, whose hoary head</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Is bow’d ’neath his sparkling crown;</p>
-<p class='line0'>For soon as his whistle is heard from afar</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Commanding the winds round his throne,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And echoes in distance the roll of his car,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;We encircle the joyous hearth-stone;</p>
-<p class='line0'>And eyes brighter flash, and cheeks deeper glow,—</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;The voice of the song gushes forth,</p>
-<p class='line0'>And ceaseless and light is each heart’s happy flow—</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;Oh! come to our home in the North!</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span style='font-size:smaller'>Wyoming, 1841.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><h1><a id='youn'></a>YOU NEVER KNEW ANNETTE.—BALLAD.</h1></div>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:1em;'>Written by <span class='sc'>T. Haynes Bayly, Esq.</span>—The Music composed by <span class='sc'>C. M. Sola</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='line' style='text-align:center;margin-bottom:1em;'>Geo. W. Hewitt &amp; Co., No. 184 Chesnut Street, Philadelphia.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/i090.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0002' style='width:80%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>You praise each youthful form you see,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And love is still your theme;</p>
-<p class='line0'>And when you win no praise from me,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;You say how cold I seem:</p>
-<p class='line0'>You know not what it is to pine</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;With</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/i091.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0003' style='width:80%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-
- <div class='poetry-container' style=''>
- <div class='lgp'> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>ceaseless vain regret;</p>
-<p class='line0'>You never felt a love like mine,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;You never knew Annette,</p>
-<p class='line0'>You never felt a love like mine,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;You never, never knew Annette.</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div>
-<div class='stanza-outer'>
-<p class='line0'>For ever changing, still you rove,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;As I in boyhood roved;</p>
-<p class='line0'>But when you tell me this is love,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;It proves you never loved!</p>
-<p class='line0'>To many idols you have knelt,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;And therefore soon forget;</p>
-<p class='line0'>But what I feel you never felt,</p>
-<p class='line0'>&ensp;&ensp;You never knew Annette.</p>
-</div>
-</div></div> <!-- end poetry block --><!-- end rend -->
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><h1><a id='spor'></a>SPORTS AND PASTIMES.</h1></div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>When</span> the shooter has been long accustomed to
-a dog, he can tell by the dog’s proceeding, whether
-game is near or not when pointed, or whether the
-birds are running before the dog. If he suspect
-them to be running, he must walk up quickly before
-his dog, for if he stop or appear to look about him,
-the birds instantly rise. Whenever it is practicable,
-unless the birds be very tame and his dogs young
-ones, the shooter should place himself so that the
-birds may be between him and the dogs. They will
-then lie well. The moment a dog points, the first
-thing to be done is to cast a glance round to ascertain
-in which direction the covers and corn-fields lie;
-the next is to learn the point of the wind; the shooter
-will then use his endeavor to gain the wind of the
-birds, and to place himself between them and the
-covers, or otherwise avail himself of other local circumstances.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><h1><a id='part'></a>PARTRIDGE SHOOTING.</h1></div>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/i093.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0004' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>We</span> commence our notice of feathered game with
-the partridge, as shooting that bird is generally the
-young sportsman’s first lesson, although in the order
-of the season grouse shooting takes precedence.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The partridge may be termed a home bird, for
-the shooter who resides in the country, finds it
-almost at his door, while it is requisite to undertake
-a journey, perchance a very long one, before he
-arrives at the grounds frequented by grouse. As it
-requires neither woods, nor marshes, nor heaths to
-afford them shelter, they are found more widely
-scattered than the pheasant, the woodcock, or the
-grouse, and hence the pursuit of them is one of the
-chief sources of recreation to the shooter. Though
-not so highly prized by the sportsman as the birds last
-mentioned, the abundance in which partridges are
-found, wherever they are preserved, renders the
-sport sufficiently attractive. At the commencement
-of the season, when they have not been much disturbed
-by persons breaking dogs, they are as tame as
-could be wished by the most inexpert sportsman, and
-at that time afford capital diversion to the young
-shooter, and to those rheumatic and gouty old gentlemen
-who—too fond of their ease to brush the covers
-or range the mountains—in the lowland valleys,
-“shoulder their crutch, and show how fields were
-won.” Partridges are most plentiful in those countries
-where much grain, buckwheat, and white crops are
-grown. While the corn is standing, it is very rare
-that many shots can be obtained, for the coveys, on
-being disturbed, wing their way to the nearest cornfield,
-where it is forbidden the shooter to follow them,
-or to send his dogs in after them.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The habits of the partridge should be studied by
-the shooter. In the early part of the season, partridges
-will be found, just before sunrise, running to
-a brook, a spring, or marsh, to drink; from which
-place they almost immediately fly to some field where
-they can find abundance of insects, or else to the
-nearest corn-field or stubble field, where they will
-remain, according to the state of the weather, or
-other circumstances, until nine or ten o’clock, when
-they go to bask. The basking-place is commonly on
-a sandy bank-side facing the sun, where the whole
-covey sits huddled together for several hours. About
-four or five o’clock they return to the stubbles to feed,
-and about six or seven they go to their jucking-place,
-a place of rest for the night, which is mostly an aftermath,
-or in a rough pasture field, where they remain
-huddled together until morning. Such are their habits
-during the early part of the season; but their time of
-feeding and basking varies much with the length of
-the days. While the corn is standing, unless the
-weather be very fine or very wet, partridges will
-often remain in it all day; when fine, they bask on
-the out-skirts; when wet, they run to some bare
-place in a sheltered situation, where they will be
-found crowded together as if basking, for they seldom
-remain long in corn or grass when it is wet. Birds
-lie best on a hot day. They are wildest on a damp
-or boisterous day.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The usual way of proceeding in search of partridges
-in September is to try the stubbles first. It
-not unfrequently happens that potatoes or turnips are
-grown on a headland in a corn-field; in that case the
-headland will be a favorite resort of birds.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>After the middle of October, it is ever uncertain
-where birds will be found; the stubbles having been
-pretty well gleaned, birds do not remain in them so
-long as in the early part of the season. When disturbed
-at this time, they will sometimes take shelter
-in woods, where they are flushed one by one. The
-best shots that can be obtained at partridges, in winter,
-are when the birds are driven into woods.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>When a covey separates, the shooter will generally
-be able to kill many birds, but late in the season
-it is seldom that the covey can be broken. In November
-and December the shooter must not expect to
-have his birds pointed, but must remain content with
-firing at long distances. In the early part of the
-season, when the shooter <span class='it'>breaks</span> a covey, he should
-proceed without loss of time in search of the dispersed
-birds, for the parent birds begin to call almost
-immediately on their alighting, the young ones
-answer, and in less than half an hour, if not prevented
-by the presence of the shooter and his dogs, the
-whole covey will be re-assembled, probably in security
-in some snug corner, where the shooter least
-thinks of looking for them. As the season advances,
-birds are longer in re-assembling after being dispersed.
-It is necessary to beat very closely for dispersed
-birds, as they do not stir for some time after alighting,
-on which account dogs cannot wind them until
-nearly upon them, especially as they resort to the
-roughest places when dispersed. Birds dispersed
-afford the primest sport. The pointing is often beautiful,
-the bird being generally in a patch of rushes, or
-tuft of grass or fern, and close to the dog. When a
-bird has been running about some time, dogs easily
-come upon the scent of it; but when it has not stirred
-since alighting, and has perhaps crept into a drain,
-or run into a hedge-bottom, or the sedgy side of a
-ditch, no dog can wind it until close upon it, and the
-very best dogs will sometimes flush a single bird.
-In the month of October, and afterward, the shooter
-will find it difficult to approach within gun-shot of a
-covey, nor can he disperse them, except by firing at
-them when he chances to come close upon them.
-Should he then be so fortunate as to disperse a covey,
-he may follow them leisurely, for they will then lie
-several hours in their lurking-place, which is chosen
-with much tact, as a patch of rushes, a gorse bush, a
-holly bush, the bottom of a double bank fence, or a
-coppice of wood. The length of time that will transpire
-before a dispersed covey will re-assemble, depends
-too on the time of the day, and state of the
-weather. In hot weather, they will lie still for several
-hours. A covey dispersed early in the morning, or
-late at night, will soon re-assemble. A covey dispersed
-between the hours of ten and two, will be
-some time in re-assembling. A covey found in the
-morning in a stubble-field, and dispersed, will next
-assemble near the basking-place. A covey dispersed
-after two o’clock, will next assemble in the stubble-field
-at feeding time. A covey disturbed and dispersed
-late in the afternoon, or evening, will next re-assemble
-near the jucking-place. A covey being disturbed
-on or near to their jucking-place, will seek a fresh
-one, perhaps about two fields distant; and if often
-disturbed at night on their jucking-place, they will
-seek another stubble-field to feed in, and change their
-quarters altogether. The most certain method of
-driving partridges from a farm, is to disturb them
-night after night at their jucking-place, which is
-usually in a meadow, where the aftermath is suffered
-to grow, or in a field rough with rushes, fern, thistles,
-or heather, adjoining to a corn-field. When a covey
-is dispersed on a dry hot day, it is necessary to
-search much longer, and beat closer, for the dispersed
-birds, than when the day is cool and the ground
-moist. A dog should be only slightly rated for running
-up a bird on a hot day.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The shooter, on entering a field, should make it
-a general rule, provided the wind or nature of the
-ground do not lead him to decide on a contrary
-course, to beat that side which is nearest the covers;
-or, if there be no neighboring covers, he should beat
-round the field, leaving the centre of the field to the
-last. In hot weather birds frequent bare places,
-sunny hill-sides, or sandy banks, at the root of a tree,
-or hedge-bottom, where there is plenty of loose loam
-or sand which they can scratch up. In cold weather
-they will be found in sheltered places. In cold windy
-weather those fields only which lie under the wind
-should be beaten. The warm valleys, the briary
-cloughs, and glens not over-wooded, but abounding in
-fern, underwood, and holly trees, and also those steep
-hill-sides which lie under the wind, are then places
-of resort. Heights and flats must be avoided, except
-where there are small enclosures well protected by
-double hedges, under the shelter of which birds will
-remain. The shooter who beats the south or west
-side of a hedge, will generally obtain more shots than
-he who beats the north or east side.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><h1><a id='rev'></a>REVIEW OF NEW BOOKS.</h1></div>
-
-<hr class='tbk108'/>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='hang'><span class='it'>“The Tower of London.” A Historical Romance.
-By W. H. Ainsworth. Author of Jack Sheppard.
-1 vol. Lea &amp; Blanchard: Philada. 1841.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The authorship of this work does a little, and but a
-little more credit to Mr. Ainsworth than that of Jack
-Sheppard. It is in no spirit of cavilling that we say,
-that it is rarely our lot to review a work more utterly
-destitute of every ingredient requisite to a good
-romance.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We would premise, however, in the outset of our
-remarks, that the popularity of this work in London
-is no proof of its merits. Its success, in fact, reminds
-us how nearly akin its author, in his treatment of the
-public, is to Dr. Sangrado. Blood-letting, and warm
-water was the making of the latter—and bombast
-and clap-trap is the Alpha and Omega of the former.
-In the present volume we have it plentifully administered
-in descriptions of the Tower of London, and
-the plots of the bloody Mary’s reign. It is this local
-interest which has given Mr. Ainsworth’s romance
-such a run in London, just as a family picture, in
-which a dozen ugly urchins, and sundry as ugly
-angels in the clouds, is the delight of the parents,
-and the envy of all aunts.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The Tower of London is, at once, forced and
-uninteresting. It is such a novel as sets one involuntarily
-to nodding. With plenty of incident, considerable
-historical truth, and a series of characters,
-such as an author can rarely command, it is yet,
-excepting a chapter here and there, “flat, stale, and
-unprofitable.” The incidents want piquancy; the
-characters too often are destitute of truth. The
-misfortunes of Lady Jane are comparatively dull to
-any one who remembers Mr. Millar’s late romance;
-and Simon Reynard is under another name, the same
-dark, remorseless villain as Jonathan Wild. The
-introduction of the giants would grate harshly on the
-reader’s feelings, if the author had not failed to touch
-them by his mock-heroics. Were it not for the tragic
-interest attached to Lady Jane Grey, and the pride
-that every Englishman feels in the oldest surviving
-palace of his kings, this novel would have fallen stillborn
-from the press in London, as completely it has
-ruined the author’s reputation in America.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We once, in reviewing Jack Sheppard, expressed
-our admiration of the author’s talents, although we
-condemned their perversion in the novel then before
-us. This duplicate of that worthless romance, and
-scandalously demoralising novel, proves either that
-the author is incorrigible, or that the public taste is
-vitiated. We rather think the former. We almost
-recant our eulogy on Mr. Ainsworth’s talents. If
-he means to earn a name, one whit loftier than that
-of a mere book-maker, let him at once betake himself
-to a better school of romance. Such libels on humanity;
-such provocatives to crime; such worthless,
-inane, disgraceful romances as Jack Sheppard and
-its successors, are a blot on our literature, and a curse
-to our land.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk109'/>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='hang'><span class='it'>“Visits to Remarkable Places, Battle-Fields, Cathedrals,
-Castles, &amp;c.” By W. Howitt. 2 vols. Carey
-&amp; Hart, Philada.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='hang'><span class='it'>“The Rural Life of England.” By W. Howitt.
-1 vol. Carey &amp; Hart, Philada.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Next after Professor Wilson comes Howitt. The
-same genial spirit, the same soul-breathing poetry,
-the same intense love for what is beautiful in nature,
-and often the same involution of style, and the same
-excursive ideas, characterise the editor of Blackwood,
-and the brother of the Quaker poet.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The latter of the productions above, is, as its name
-imports, a description of the rural life of England,
-whether found under the gipsey’s hedge, in the peasant’s
-cottage, or amid the wide parks and lordly
-castles of the aristocracy. It is a picture of which
-England may be proud. The author has omitted
-nothing which could make his subject interesting,
-and in presenting it suitably to his reader he has surpassed
-himself, and almost equalled North. The old,
-but now decaying customs of “merrie England;” the
-winter and summer life of peasant and noble in the
-country; the sports of every kind, and every class,
-from milling to horse-racing; and the forest and landscape
-scenery of every portion of Great Britain are
-described with a graphic pen, and a fervor of language,
-which cannot fail to make “The Rural Life of
-England” popular every where.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Among the most interesting chapters of this work
-are those on the Gipsies, and that respecting Mayday,
-and Christmas. The description of Grouse-Shooting,
-both in the north of England, and the
-Highlands is highly graphic; while the visits to
-Newstead and Annesley Hall are narrated with much
-vivacity.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>It was the popularity of these two last chapters
-which suggested the preceding volumes above, entitled
-“Visits to Remarkable Places.” Nothing can
-be simpler than the design of this latter work. With
-a taste for antiquarian research, and a soul all-glowing
-with poetry, the author has gone forth into the quiet
-dells, and amid the time-worn cities of England, and
-visiting every old castle, or battle-field, known in
-history, and peopling them with the heroic actors of
-the past, he has produced a work of unrivalled interest.
-We wish we had room for a chapter from the
-second of these two volumes, entitled “A Day-Dream
-at Tintangel.” It is one of the most poetical pieces
-of prose we have ever met with. The old castle of
-King Arthur seems once more to lift its massy battlements,
-above the thundering surf below, and from
-its portals go forth the heroes of the Round Table,
-with hound and hawk, and many a fair demoiselle.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Next, certainly, to a visit to any remarkable place,
-is a graphic description of its appearance. This, in
-every instance, where the author has attempted it,
-is presented in the “Visits to Remarkable Places.”
-Stratford on the Avon; Anne Hathaway’s cottage;
-the ancestral home of the Sidneys; Culloden battlefield;
-the old regal town of Winchester, formerly the
-abode of the Saxon kings, and where their monuments
-still remain; Flodden-field; Hampton Court;
-and in short, most of the remarkable places in England,
-are brought vividly before the reader’s mind.
-Indeed, many a traveller, who has seen these celebrated
-places, might be put to the blush by one who
-had attentively perused this work, and who yet had
-never crossed the Atlantic.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk110'/>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='hang'><span class='it'>“The Kinsmen, or the Black Riders of the Congaree.”
-A Romance. By the author of Guy Rivers, &amp;c. 2
-vols.—Lea &amp; Blanchard, Philada. 1841.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A good novel is always welcome; and a good one
-from an American pen is doubly so. Since the publication
-of the Pathfinder, we have seen nothing equal
-to the Kinsmen.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The story is laid at the period of the Revolution,
-and Clarence Conway, the hero, is a prominent actor
-in the partizan war, which then raged in the Carolinas.
-Many of the characters are well drawn, and the
-interest is kept up throughout. Flora Middleton is
-an exquisite creation of the novelist’s pen. She deserves
-to be placed alongside of James’s finest female
-characters.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We have room for only a short extract. In it,
-however, the interest is worked up to a pitch of the
-most intense excitement. The hero, be it remembered,
-having fallen into the hands of the Black Riders,
-has irritated their ruffian leader. To the outlaw’s
-threats he replies:</p>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“I am Colonel Conway, and, dog of a tory, I defy
-you. Do your worst. I know you dare do nothing of
-the sort you threaten. I defy and spit upon you.”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The face of the outlaw blackened:—Clarence rose
-to his feet.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“Ha! think you so? We shall see. Shumway,
-Frink, Gasson!—you three are enough to saddle this
-fiery rebel to his last horse. Noose him, you slow
-moving scoundrels, to the nearest sapling, and let him
-grow wiser in the wind. To your work, villains—away!”</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The hands of more than one of the ruffians were
-already on the shoulders of the partizan. Though
-shocked at the seeming certainty of a deed which he
-had not been willing to believe they would venture to
-execute, he yet preserved the fearless aspect which he
-had heretofore shown. His lips still uttered the language
-of defiance. He made no concessions, he asked
-for no delay—he simply denounced against them the
-vengeance of his command, and that of his reckless
-commander, whose fiery energy of soul and rapidity
-of execution they well knew. His language tended
-still farther to exasperate the person who acted in the
-capacity of the outlaw chief. Furiously, as if to second
-the subordinates in the awful duty in which they seemed
-to him to linger, he grasped the throat of Clarence
-Conway with his own hands, and proceeded to drag
-him forward. There was evidently no faltering in
-his fearful purpose. Every thing was serious. He
-was too familiar with such deeds to make him at all
-heedful of consequences; and the proud bearing of
-the youth; the unmitigated scorn in his look and
-language; the hateful words which he had used, and
-the threats which he had denounced; while they
-exasperated all around, almost maddened the ruffian
-in command, to whom such defiance was new, and
-with whom the taking of life was a circumstance
-equally familiar and unimportant.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>“<span class='it'>Three</span> minutes for prayer is all the grace I give
-him!” he cried, hoarsely, as he helped the subordinates
-to drag the destined victim toward the door. He
-himself was not suffered <span class='it'>one</span>. The speech was scarcely
-spoken, when he fell prostrate on his face, stricken
-in the mouth by a rifle-bullet, which entered through
-an aperture in the wall opposite. His blood and
-brains bespattered the breast of Clarence Conway,
-whom his falling body also bore to the floor of the
-apartment. A wild shout from without followed
-the shot, and rose, strong and piercing, above
-all the clamor within. In that shout Clarence
-could not doubt that he heard the manly voice of the
-faithful Jack Bannister, and the deed spoke for itself.
-It could have been the deed of a friend only.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class='tbk111'/>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='hang'><span class='it'>“The Hour and the Man.” A novel. By Harriet
-Martineau. 2 vols. Harper &amp; Brothers, New
-York, 1841.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>We do not belong to the admirers of Miss Martineau,
-though barring her ear-trumpet, and a few
-foolish notions, she is a very respectable and inoffensive
-old lady. Her present work is founded on
-the career of the celebrated negro chieftain, whom
-Napoleon had conveyed to France, and who there
-died. The good old spinster has taken up the Orthodox
-English account of this transaction, and as Napoleon
-was always a monster in the eyes of the
-Cockneys, Touissant, according to their story and
-Miss Martineau’s, was murdered. Nothing can be
-more ridiculous. Bonaparte never committed a crime
-where it could be avoided, and having once secured
-Touissant in a state prison in France, what farther
-had the first consul to fear from the negro chieftain?</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The story is, in some parts, well told. It has been
-apparently prepared with much care. But it fails,
-totally fails, in its main object; and though as men,
-we sympathise with a persecuted man, we cannot, as
-critics, overlook the glaring faults of the novel, or, as
-partizans of truth, forgive the historical inaccuracies
-of the narrative.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk112'/>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='hang'><span class='it'>“The History of England from the Earliest Period
-to 1839.” By Thomas Keightley. 5 vols. Harper
-&amp; Brothers, New York.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This is an edition, containing the same matter,
-with the two large octavo volumes lately published
-under the same title. We have it now presented in
-this cheap and portable form, as a portion of the
-celebrated Family Library. A copious index has
-been added, which is not found in the larger edition.
-The history is a work of merit; but to both the
-American editions we object, in the name of all
-justice. The alterations made from the London
-edition are scandalous. It is not, in its present
-shape, the author’s production. Good or bad, give
-us <span class='it'>his</span> work, and not that of an American editor,
-however talented, or an American publisher, however
-discerning.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk113'/>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='hang'><span class='it'>“Applications of the Science of Mechanics to Practical
-Purposes.” By J. Renwick, L.L.D. 1 vol. 18 mo.
-Harper &amp; Brothers, New York.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>The present is a practical age. Literature, science,
-learning, even the fine arts are popular, only as they
-can be rendered useful. Every department of knowledge
-is ransacked to advance the interests, and elevate
-the character of the age.</p>
-
-<p class='pindent'>Enfield’s Natural Philosophy, and the present work
-illustrate this remark. The former belongs to the
-past age; to the days of theory; to the men of profound
-philosophy: the latter is adapted more to the
-present time; to a practical generation; to men of
-excursive rather than deep, and available rather than
-profound science. Not a principle is stated which is
-not applied to some mechanical contrivance of the
-day. The action of the screw, the wedge, the lever,
-the spring, are described as they are adapted to
-mining, navigation, rail-roads, and the various species
-of manufactures. But, on the other hand, the
-knowledge imparted is not profound. Sufficient,
-as it is, however, for all practical purposes, the
-student leaves the work with a more thorough understanding
-of the principles of his study, than more
-elaborate, but less skilful treatises could afford.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk114'/>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='hang'><span class='it'>“Hope on, Hope Ever.” 1 vol. 16 mo. “Strive and
-Thrive.” 1 vol. 16 mo. “Sowing and Reaping.”
-1 vol. 16 mo. By Mary Howitt. J. Munro &amp; Co.
-Boston.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>These are three excellent tales from the pen of
-one of the most delightful of female writers. A
-chaste style; a love for the oppressed; a practical
-moral in her writings render them at once beautiful,
-popular, and useful.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk115'/>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='hang'><span class='it'>“History of the United States.” By Selma Hale.
-2 vols. Harper &amp; Brothers, New York.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>A compendious manual. It brings our history down
-to the end of Madison’s administration.</p>
-
-<hr class='tbk116'/>
-
-<div class='blockquote'>
-
-<p class='hang'><span class='it'>“Life of John Wickliffe, D.D.” By Margaret Coxe.
-Columbus. Isaac N. Whiting.</span></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p class='pindent'>This is an interesting, though scanty biography of
-the first of the Reformers. It does not pretend to
-give a philosophic account of his times, but simply to
-present a chronicle of the principal events of his life.</p>
-
-<hr class='pbk'/>
-
-<div><h1><a id='fash'></a>FASHIONS FOR MARCH, 1841.</h1></div>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>EVENING DRESS.</h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Fig. 1.</span>—Of plaid <span class='it'>Mous de Laine</span>. The head dress
-of buff crape, trimmed with roses.</p>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>FULL DRESS.</h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Fig. 2.</span>—Crimson velvet robe, a low <span class='it'>corsage</span>, it is
-trimmed with a row of <span class='it'>dentille d’or</span> in the heart
-style. Short sleeves, composed of two <span class='it'>bouffants</span>,
-with <span class='it'>manchettes</span> of <span class='it'>dentille d’or</span>, looped by gold and
-jewelled ornaments, corresponding with that in the
-centre of the <span class='it'>corsage</span>. The <a id='tab'></a><span class='it'>tablier</span> and flounce that
-encircles the skirt are also of <span class='it'>dentille d’or</span> of the
-most superb kind. The head-dress is a <span class='it'>toquet</span> of
-white satin, embroidered in gold, and trimmed with
-a profusion of white ostrich feathers.</p>
-
-<h2 class='nobreak'>DINNER DRESS.</h2>
-
-<p class='pindent'><span class='sc'>Fig. 3.</span>—Of plain white; the apron slightly ornamented.
-This is the prevailing style for the month.</p>
-
-<div class='figcenter'>
-<img src='images/i104.jpg' alt='' id='iid-0005' style='width:100%;height:auto;'/>
-<p class='caption'><span class='bold'><span style='font-size:smaller'>FASHIONS FOR MARCH 1841. FOR GRAHAM’S MAGAZINE.</span></span></p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='tbk117'/>
-
-<p class='line' style='margin-top:2em;font-size:1.1em;font-weight:bold;'><a id='notes'></a>Transcriber’s Notes:</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>Table of Contents has been added for reader convenience. Archaic spellings and hyphenation have been retained.
-Obvious punctuation and typesetting errors have been corrected
-without note. Other errors have been corrected as noted below. For
-illustrations, some caption text may be missing or incomplete due to condition of
-the originals available for preparation of the eBook. A cover was
-created for this ebook and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-
-<div class='lgl' style=''> <!-- rend=';' -->
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-<p class='line'>page 100, Calm, Heré-eyed Callirhöe?, ==> Calm, <a href='#hebe'>Hebé</a>-eyed Callirhöe?,</p>
-<p class='line'>page 121, reminded us of Shelly’s ==> reminded us of <a href='#shel'>Shelley’s</a></p>
-<p class='line'>page 144, The <span class='it'>tabiier</span> and flounce ==> The <a href='#tab'><span class='it'>tablier</span></a> and flounce</p>
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-</div> <!-- end rend -->
-
-<p class='line'>&#160;</p>
-
-<p class='noindent'>[End of <span class='it'>Graham’s Magazine, Vol. XVIII, No. 3, March 1841</span>, George R. Graham, Editor]</p>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Graham's Magazine, Vol. XVIII, No. 3,
-March 1841, by Various
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